So.. I just confessed to replacing XP with a drive-scrubbing clean install of Windows 7. Why didn't I move to Linux instead?
Three things, really:
1) Text boxes in Microsoft Word 2003: These things have defined my process for creating scripts, and are now so integral that I can't imagine life without them. I tried Open Office, and the boxes didn't
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Computerprogramms are tools.
They should enable us to do what our real work is.
If on a different OS there are better tools, enabling us to earn with less work, we switch. ( maybe )
Possibly one could talk you into using Macs. Design and graphics have traditionally been strong points of the Mac.
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I'm a mostly Linux programmer, working at a mostly Apple shop, using mostly Windows on my work laptop. I can name quite a few strengths and weaknesses on all sides, but none that matter for you. For many purposes Windows is just great right now, and you don't need to defend yourself for your choice.
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(The comment has been removed)
And thank you for a polite and insightful reply, with no reheated half-understood arguments.
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I mean, you can get in a Ford and then get in a Toyota and then get in a Purgeot and then get in a Hyundai and driving them isn't terribly different.
I look forward to the day when a similar statement can be said about computers.
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#ignore
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I've never had trouble opening a document and not then been able to solve the problem with a quick Google search and a free download.
Microsoft understands this, and they know that lock-in is not a strategy for success. The free market will always, always, ALWAYS drive for free movement of user-generated content. Lock-in, like the more egregious forms of DRM, will always, always, ALWAYS end up being unlocked.
This is why I love the Open Source movement. But again, I don't need to use Open Office or Linux for these things to happen. Market forces are already at work ensuring that the computing environment continues to offer future portability.
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I've had Linux boxes go south on me in the past too. These days pretty much no modern OS in my experience bluescreens unless there's a hardware fault or someone has allowed some piece of junkware to have rights it shouldn't. This is more common on Windows boxes that are used by kids and for gaming, but it's not necessarily the fault of the OS - I think if you let the kind of software in to your Linux box with the kind of admin rights that are granted to some of the crud installed on a Windows box, the Linux box would probably be pretty unstable too.
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The platforms are designed from completely different mindsets, and that is the main difference. It takes a skilled hacker to break a typical UNIX box. It takes a website to break a typical Windows box. And that is the fault of the OS.
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I'm not paid at all for dicking around with computers.
So, "I don't want to use Open Source software" translates into "I want to be paid for a larger percentage of the time I use."
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This is why rephrasing is so useful, and why the works of Isaiah and the other Hebrew prophet-poets are so beautiful: sometimes when you say the same thing twice, and say it in two different ways, you create meaning that could not have been created in a single statement.
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