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Actually... I recommend Ubuntu to linux noobs. My 2c on the Linux bottom line: if you're not doing things through a command line interface, you're doing it wrong.Isaac wrote:Nobody on this forum would have recommended Ubuntu. Ever want to try again, you might want to ask the Linux users here.
To people online or actual people you know? If you're just causally recommending Ubuntu, you might want to rethink that next time. I have tried putting people on Ubuntu and they can't warm up to it. Put them on a distro with a normal desktop, no problem.snoopy wrote:Actually... I recommend Ubuntu to linux noobs.Isaac wrote:Nobody on this forum would have recommended Ubuntu. Ever want to try again, you might want to ask the Linux users here.
Well that's not true for everything, but anyone depending on Linux would befit from learning the basics.snoopy wrote: My 2c on the Linux bottom line: if you're not doing things through a command line interface, you're doing it wrong.
Oh yeah, ubuntu used to be good. 11.xx and up is garbage that needs an overhaul if it's going to be used.Duper wrote:I placed with Ubuntu several years ago when it was 8.something iirc.
Well it pretty much had to be Ubuntu, because that was all that was officially supported by Steam when it rolled out on Linux, and still is in fact; I don't doubt that people are running it successfully on other distros now, though. The fact that Ubuntu has (or had, as I understand it) the handy "Wubi" installer meant that I didn't have to mess around with partitions...I was just able to fire up the installation as though it was a normal Windows program, which was far less of an investment on my part.Isaac wrote:Nobody on this forum would have recommended Ubuntu. Ever want to try again, you might want to ask the Linux users here.
See there's the catch for me: I don't see any sane reason why, in the year 2013, anyone should be doing daily tasks via command-line. Some sort of esoteric configs, sure, but we've had GUIs for decades, and there's no excuse for not being able to do normal maintenance via them. I felt the same way when my college compsci professors were teaching us programming using gcc and a Unix shell...hell, I'd never even seen an IDE until fairly recently, and I still don't really know what I'm doing with them, which is kind of sad. You're sure as hell not going to get any sort of mass-market adoption of an OS if you have to be typing in "sudo apt-get" all over the place.snoopy wrote:My 2c on the Linux bottom line: if you're not doing things through a command line interface, you're doing it wrong.
I definitely agree with this. Someone in another forum I frequent posted a Wiki link to a branched diagram showing most of the major Linux distro lines and how other distros have forked off from them, and, well...let's just say I've seen evolutionary trees in bio textbooks that were less complicated. I get that there are legitimate differences between some of them, but I have to think that there's been an awful lot of reinventing the wheel over the years.Duper wrote:I will say that it's one thing about the linux community is that it's a bit "Schizophrenic". I think if so many weren't off doing their own thing "best", there would have been a lot more interest (if not only slightly more) from the industry.)
Yeah... I guess that (and most of this) gets down to the mentality that I think matches Linux: an interest in tinkering with your computer. I don't expect mass market adoption of my philosophy on Linux.Top Gun wrote:See there's the catch for me: I don't see any sane reason why, in the year 2013, anyone should be doing daily tasks via command-line. Some sort of esoteric configs, sure, but we've had GUIs for decades, and there's no excuse for not being able to do normal maintenance via them. I felt the same way when my college compsci professors were teaching us programming using gcc and a Unix shell...hell, I'd never even seen an IDE until fairly recently, and I still don't really know what I'm doing with them, which is kind of sad. You're sure as hell not going to get any sort of mass-market adoption of an OS if you have to be typing in "sudo apt-get" all over the place.
I totally get that Snoopy. Tinkering can be great fun and there's nothing wrong with that. But it's not practical where mass consumption in involved. Now, more than ever, the market needs a viable option. Steam/Id has managed to win the trust of much of the gaming community (such as it is) and the Industry. That is amazing, really.snoopy wrote:Yeah... I guess that (and most of this) gets down to the mentality that I think matches Linux: an interest in tinkering with your computer. I don't expect mass market adoption of my philosophy on Linux.Top Gun wrote:See there's the catch for me: I don't see any sane reason why, in the year 2013, anyone should be doing daily tasks via command-line. Some sort of esoteric configs, sure, but we've had GUIs for decades, and there's no excuse for not being able to do normal maintenance via them. I felt the same way when my college compsci professors were teaching us programming using gcc and a Unix shell...hell, I'd never even seen an IDE until fairly recently, and I still don't really know what I'm doing with them, which is kind of sad. You're sure as hell not going to get any sort of mass-market adoption of an OS if you have to be typing in "sudo apt-get" all over the place.
It sounds like you can appreciate how you can operate a computer via keyboard/CLI much more efficiently than via GUI.
But here's the thing: I really shouldn't have to. I shouldn't have to search several Linux support forums and even post there myself in order to get something as mundane as video card drivers working. Now I know in this case that I was hamstrung both by the fact that it's an AMD card, and that AMD for some inexplicable reason decided to shunt the whole 4000 series into their "legacy" drivers, but the point stands. If I need to upgrade drivers on Windows, I download the executable from AMD's site, install it, and *poof* it works. I don't have to touch a command-line, or install a user-created hack to get things working (which I did in this case). And I'm in the 5-10% of people who actually would try that...what about the vast majority who would be completely lost?Isaac wrote:Uh, Lubuntu, Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Linuxmint, Bodhi ... there's hundreds of others that support debian installer files and that are based on 13.04. Again, if you have a Linux problem, there's no shame in asking the community for help.
Isaac wrote:Ferno, Steam Box is an actual console.
You buy the box and plug it into your TV. Its OS, Steam OS, just happens to be a Linux distro and its games can run on any Linux distro on the Steam Linux client, which is already available.
So if you have Lubuntu 13.04 you go to the steam website, right now if you wanted, and you can download steam, download Linux ported games, and play! I have around 24 Linux games that run on my little netbook (my only computer). No windows emulators* are needed, like Wine*.
*Wine is not an emulator. It is an API for Windows. But nobody understands what that means so I say "emulator".
This is the attitude we don't need if people are to adopt Linux. It's showing linux users as elitist, while at the same time the same users want more adoption. Can't have it both ways.snoopy wrote: My 2c on the Linux bottom line: if you're not doing things through a command line interface, you're doing it wrong.
Video drivers are not mundane, they are a complex thing, particularly because they are unique to operating system, manufacturer, whether you have dual-graphics and a gazillion other things.I shouldn't have to search several Linux support forums and even post there myself in order to get something as mundane as video card drivers working.
Ferno wrote:but honestly, we don't know if it will be what's needed to give Linux the kick in the pants it needs to be in equal ground with windows.
I was only making fun of you.Foil wrote:Where did I say 2003?
And this is partly why I called it schizophrenic. (but I was joking really)Isaac wrote:I'd like to remind people that,
Linux has no single goal, no single mentality, nor one single purpose.
I think that day is coming sooner than many think. The PC we know today will relatively become something like the Muscle car project that people do in their private garages.Krom wrote: I would even give it good odds that the desktop computer will die out as a commonly used device before people switch away from Windows.
Agreed, but #1 is unlikely to ever happen on America's average internet speeds or costs, and the Cable / DSL duopoly is too deeply anti-competitive for this to change enough even in 10+ years to make a thin-client model economically practical. Sure, the client will be inexpensive and cheap (power) to operate, but the slow internet speeds will make it sluggish at best and then you run into the soon to be commonplace 5 GB cap with $5-10/GB overages billing model which will make even moderate use cost hundreds of dollars a month on top of the already absurdly expensive base price.Sirius wrote:The only way to completely obsolete the desktop PC as we know it is
1) Offload everything you currently need it for to datacenters and just go with a thin-client model (kind of like Chrome OS, but not only for the easy applications but also stuff like Creo, Maya, Dreamweaver, Visual Studio)
2) Obsolete the form factor - for which you need to find something better than keyboard + mouse for standard keyboard + mouse tasks