That's the American Dream, baby...anubis wrote: The author went on by saying that it was JUST for MS to be among the top by using a ruthless marketing stategy of suffocating all the competitors.

That's the American Dream, baby...anubis wrote: The author went on by saying that it was JUST for MS to be among the top by using a ruthless marketing stategy of suffocating all the competitors.
Now you come to the core of it.That is the problem. In my opinion, GNU/Linux as an OS (not as a kernel / technology) is not even close.elias wrote: its not an opinion. linux IS better as an OS.
In the opinion of the company I work for, Linux is a non-option due to total cost of ownership.
In the opinion of my boss, Linux is a non-option due to less scaleability.
(We're using Solaris instead.)
See? It is a matter of opinion. Claiming that Linux is "just better" is hubris.
Me personally, I loathe the command line unless I have to go to the nitty-gritty. I prefer a graphical "find" utility over 'find . -name "*.hpp" | xargs grep "whatever"' any time.also, its alot more powerful and there are so many things you can do on a command line you cant do on windows.
[@uote]
but however, it does all come down to a matter of needs. wat do most people who own a computer do?
Why should the tool become complex just because I have a complex problem to solve? It's the problem I need to be done with, not the tool. A lesson some command-line oriented people refuse to learn.surf the net, play games, and type things in a word processor. thats why something as simple as windows is good for them.
The OS that's better for your needs is, by definition, the better OS.windows may be better for 70% of the people out there, ut it is still not a good OS.
Their marketing is quite OK, and not worse than everybody else. It's their company politics I loathe.and i dont like microsoft because of their marketing, not because they suck at creating software.
Command line interfaces are not exactly the most efficient way for people to interface with their system if they are not good typists. Although its OK to allow the user to access powerful shell capabilities, the operating system shouldn't _force_ the user to _have to_ use the shell to accomplish necessary tasks.elias wrote:also, its alot more powerful and there are so many things you can do on a command line you cant do on windows.
I disagree. If Windows allows people to accomplish the tasks they want with less hassle than Linux, Windows can be ranked the better OS. In the end, people view their computer (and operating system) as a _tool_ to get things done. They don't care about any technical hogwash such as monolithic/microkernels, multithreading, kernel modules, etc.; as long as Windows requires less expertise to use and operates with reasonable efficiency, people will use it. As far as they're concerned, the interface _is_ the operating system.elias wrote:windows may be better for 70% of the people out there, ut it is still not a good OS.
For me, that's Windows. I couldn't get my WLAN to work under Linux, I couldn't connect my PDA, I couldn't find a file manager meeting my standards, and I absolutely loathed the user interface.elias wrote: someone above was saying that an operating system is a tool and should be easy to use. i do agree with that. but shouldnt an easy to use tool also work? and work correctly without falling apart?
UNIX server - 192.168.0.1beyond infinity wrote: *ggg* Cygwin can be used as "x-terminal" to connect to some unix server, so one can work on that server remotely - with gui and so forth.
'S been some hard piece of research to find out how this is to be done cuz the nitty gritty is allways hidden in a huge mass of come-along-information. registry.![]()
It may be, but GCC has unfortunately gotten quite a bit slower over time, and their insistance upon only implementing general portable optimizations hampers its ability to compete with other compilers (ICC) when it comes to the quality of generated code.anubis wrote: Linux has the best compiler in the world GCC
I wouldn't say they are _meant_ to crash; its just that as a desktop operating system, the user base will be stressing the system in a variety of different areas, so the system has to be a master of all trades and a jack of none.anubis wrote: Talking abt stability, though whatever may be said abt a OS it cannot and wouldnot become stable until strict rules are followed like those which are followed for real time OS. But even RTOS crash sometimes...Destop OS sadly r never meant that way and whatever happens all Desktop OS are meant to crash some day.
Hate to break it to you, but the motives of IBM and Oracle _are_ probably is due to "some selfish interest on their own part." They wouldn't bother investing their time and resources on Linux if they think could utilize it for better profit elsewhere. All companies are like that. I'm sure if Apple had defeated Microsoft back in the day, they'd be just as "evil" as Microsoft is now... Capitalism thrives on greed and selfishness : -)anubis wrote: Linux how much good cannot just workout to the top with just developers around the world, it also need some big-wigs like IBM and Oracle to succed. Good for us that they r taking an active interst in it, lets hope that its not for some selfish interst on their own part.