The guy I spoke with that used to work for Dell is a good friend of mine and fellow tech. He said the noted reason for the returns was that the customers got a discount on the systems not knowing what Linux was and when they tried to set them up nothing they had worked. They were returned for Windows boxes.
I stand buy my statements. Untill you can buy regular software from places like walmart and hardware like printers and they just work on Linux it will never be a main stream desktop OS in the US. You can talk about cell phones and servers and netbooks all you like but I have only had one customer in 11 years who was running Linux on her desktop system and she called me over to install Windows XP on it.
Really? Ok lets test that. Go to walmart and buy some software. Lets see, how about Norton AV, Turbo Tax and Black OPS. Now, without doing any tweaking, hacking, terminal work arounds or downloading anything else, lets see you pop the Disc in your Ubuntu machine and it just work. If you can do this with a stock install of any Linux distro I'll be impressed. Hell, I just might take back everything I said about Linux...lol
vdub12 said:Dell systems running Linux are not cheaper. In some cases they cost a little more. I am a little ticked at Dell for this but thats there prices. I am glad that they are at least selling systems with Linux on them. If you search the web about this subject you will find that its a rumor and has no truth behind it. Michale Dell himself runs ubuntu on his personal notebook.
vdub12 said:I have never claimed that Linux is right for everyone. I have however claimed that most hardware and many software titles can run on Linux with no work at all. When I say no work at all I don't mean by me. I mean my wife could go to wallmart and buy an HP printer, come home and plug it in and start printing. The same goes for most other consumer hardware. I am talking about consumer hardware. Yes many customers might have a problem installing a new graphics card because they may need to install the drivers in the console. However, most consumers don't upgrade graphics cards they call us to do it.
vdub12 said:I have shown that this is not only possibly but it is a reality. I think you should give Linux another chance. Honestly its in every techs best interest to learn how to work on Linux systems because they are going to get more widely used in the years to come.
They received a $99 discount for buying Dell desktops preinstalled with Ubuntu. This is fact.
The fact remains that Linux is still no where near as compatible software or hardware wise as Windows or OS X. If it was more people would use it.
Show me. I still want to see you install Norton, Turbotax and black ops on a box stock install of Ubuntu. No work arounds, no installing a little something else, not going online searching for something to make it work. Put the disc in and install the software and it work. If you cannot do this with popular software you can pick up from Walmart and the like you have no argument end of story.
You say Linux systems will be more widely used and you are certainly correct. Cell phones, servers, ect. But not on end user desktop systems. On those you will see a sharp jump in OS X. But for the most part it will be a windows world.
vdub12 said:I would like to see a reference on this because all the research I have seen says there is no discount.
vdub12 said:I would have to disagree. I would say that Linux is more compatible with software then Windows. Can Windows run Linux software? No. Can Linux run Windows software? Yes.
angry_geek said:Until there is some sort of standardization in the Linux development community, or a decision on one or two distros, no one is going to care about Linux.
Exactly. But thats the problem with Linux. Everyone wants their own personal version, with its own quirks and problems. The Suse people hate the Ubuntu people and the Red hat people look down the nose at the Mint people. Then you have the puppy fans everyone hates. They can't even get along with each other. As if that was not bad enough you have their spokes person nut job extraordinaire Richard Stallman leading the madness.
Wow. Just wow.
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Ccomp5950 said:It works both ways. Anytime someone says "Linux is great, I can't see why everyone isn't using it" suddenly it's like someone ****** in aunt Thelma's gravy.
angry_geek said:For the life of me, I can't figure out why anyone would take this personally. Some of you act as though you're defending a family member or somehow have a personal stake in the success of Linux. Can anyone here demonstrate how switching people from Windows or OSX to Linux actually benefit them? Would it help your business? (Other than taking countless calls from users not being able to do something.)
I just don't understand it. This is supposedly about the viability of Linux in the typical end user environment. Any time a counter point is made someone gets personal or says "I use it with no problem every day." Of course you don't have issues; you're a tech!
I would love to see photoshop installed on a fresh install of some version of Linux. No crossover, no wine, no work arounds, just a clean install of Linux and photo shop. If you can do that I'll be impressed but I don't think you can. Prove me wrong.
However, the moment I discover that I can reliably use my QBO in Ubuntu, I'm going back.
I use quickbooks online and have been hitting them with emails about it, I use a useragent changer to make my useragent say:and then quickbooks would let me in.Code:Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.0; en-US; rv:1.9.2) Gecko/20100115 Firefox/3.6 (.NET CLR 3.5.30729)
Now it appears you get a minor nag screen that says "We don't support Linux but you can get in" instead of just outright blocking it.
Ok I wanted to get out of this thread just because I found it going absolutely no where and completely off subject. However, this comment I find hilarious. You want me to use photoshop without wine or crossover. Then I want you to use the Windows version of photoshop on a MAC. Think about your argument here. You start out with wanting to install an AV program on an OS that has absolutely no virus threat and you finish off wanting to run windows software on an OS without allowing an API system for doing so.
Its obvious your have a bias with the Linux operating system and that's fine no one is forcing you to use it but your comments are way off base. You tell me to do something, I show it can be done and then as a comeback you take the tools to do it away and tell me to do it again. Photoshop was written for Windows. Since many Windows developers refuse to write software for Linux the community has created a way to do it. This software is not native and all I am saying is Linux has said the hell with native we will build a system to make it work. I don't see how you can think you have a point when your point keeps changing to fit your argument. You said I could not go in to walmart and buy some software or hardware and use it in Linux. I proved that you can. However, that's not good enough for you. Next you will tell me I have to do it without a monitor and keyboard.
If you don't want to use or support Linux then fine. When you have a customer that uses Linux send him or her to me and I will support them.