- Why does my choice of distribution determine my hardware compatibility?
It doesn't though it may
make detecting your specific hardware easier because diffrent drivers
come with diffrent distributions.
- Why do I have to download 5 CD's if the install only uses 2?
That really depends on
what distribution you use and depending on how much packages of the 5
CD distribution you install you could very well use all 5 cds.
- Why are there so many distributions that are seemingly identical except for the logo?
Because there are only a
few magor desktop enviroments that are used (Mainly GNOME and KDE) and
their can be quite a diffrenence among the distros. For example on
Redhat based distros you go yum install <package name> for Debian
based ones its apt-get install <package name> and while that
looks similair they are quit diffrent.
- Why do I have to burn a CD at all? It is possible to install an OS without a CD. Physical media is so 1990.
How do you install
Windows? With a CD. Though if you want to you can install it over a
network just like Windows.
- If
you type "Install Linux" into Google. The first 20 or so pages are
unhelpful and likely to scare users away. Compare this to the results
when you type "Install Firefox" into Google.
Thats because there are a
bunch of diffrent Linux distributions varying from hard ones to install
like Gentoo to simple ones like Ubuntu. There is only one firefox. Try
searching for install <insert distro> instead.
- Why do I
have to choose between so many platform choices? AXP, SPARC, PPC, etc.
The server can tell I'm running IE 6 on Windows XP. Just give me the
obvious choice.
Because some people are
using a x86 when they are downloading the ISO but are going to install
it on a SPARC or PPC. What your saying sounds like a good idea but it
could be a pain to other people.
- Most sites assume I know what a Torrent
is. Several clicks estimate 2 days to download the 3gb download using
Torrent. Very few tell me where I can get torrent software.
Valid point.
- I
have yet to see a distribution that packages up my email settings, IM
settings, browser settings and hardware configuration to ensure that my
transition to Linux is smooth from Windows.
Not quite sure what you mean by that.
- Several
installations kick me into a login screen with no user name and
password. I'm supposed to know that the password is 'root'. I guess I
didn't get the memo.
Well distributions vary in
how they handle this. Yes that is one problem with Linux, the diffrence
in distributions. But once you learn your way around one distribution
using (Or setting up) any other one should be a snap.
- Most distributions don't separate the
idea of software and platform. This is really surprising since many
people in the Linux community came down hard on Microsoft for bundling
IE and Media Player. Many distributions bundle everything. I haven't
decided if this is a good or a bad thing.
Ok.
- The Linux
software world seems to be 'free.' While this is great for the end user
who likes free things it's hard to convince developers to write
software for a platform where the users have an expectation of
everything being free. I haven't found any obvious Linux shareware
sites or resources for Linux sharware authors.
I don't agree. Their are
alot of commercial packages for Linux (I don't know about shareware
things.), UT2004, Maya, Slickedit, etc.
- Why
isn't WINE part of most distributions? This seems like an obviously
useful tool that would ease migration and provide specialized
applications that aren't found on Linux.
Because diffrent
distributions have diffrent philosophies and include diffrent things.
- Overall many
applications feel rough and un-polished. This may be partly because I'm
not used to them but OpenOffice, Gimp, Gaim and others don't feel like
refined polished applications. In the words of Tyler Dyrden ...
Everything is a copy of a copy of a copy. The applications just look
dull, muted and faded. There is no 'new car smell.'
I don't think GIMP and Open Office are
as good as photo shop and MS Office but they are coming along (I like
gaim...). I think there are alot of tools that are polished though,
GCC, GNOME, Firefox, and much more.
- Multiple
desktops - A nice concept but should probably be turned off by default.
It's too easy to loose your stuff and not know where to find it again.
Personaly preference, I can't live without multiple desktops.
- Accessibility
is really bad. I can't believe that the windows keyboard button doesn't
open the primary application menu in either KDE or Gnome by default.
This was really surprising. I assume that most advanced computers users
are far more productive with a keyboard then with a mouse. In windows I
have keyboard shortcuts, tab, ctrl+tab, shift+tab for every single
feature. In Linux I can't even launch an application. This button is
printed on every keyboard so even though it has a picture of a windows
flag there is no reason not to use it. (Draw a little penguine in
white-out if it makes you feel better.)
GNOME and Linux have
diffrent keyboard shortcuts then Windows because they are NOT WINDOWS.
Same thing with Mac.
- Both KDE and Gnome
seem similar enough on the surface to warrant a unification effort.
Each has it's pros and cons but since both offer a fair amount of
customization the idea of having both and encouraging users to choose
seems misguided.
To bad KDE and GNOME vary
alot on beliefs. GNOME are die hard FSF guys and KDE are more
pragmatic, GNOME was started becayse KDE was using QT and the FSF guys
didn't like it.
- I couldn't figure out the namespace. It
seems that in some builds my CD rom is in one location and in others
it's in a totally different place. There's no global 'network browser'
but in some areas I can get to a network folder list. Weird. What's
even stranger is that the guts of the OS are there to see in all their
glory. /bin /etc /mnt. This is about as bad as C:\ System32 documents
and settings. I understand these files need to be somewhere but most
users shouldn't ever see them. That pesky 'soft barricade' screen in
windows that says you shouldn't mess with certain folders actually
helps keep beginers out of trouble. On Linux it's the wild west and if
you screw something up, good luck.
I think the user should be
expected to know how his system works and should have access to
everything he can. This isn't windows and if you want to use windows
use windows.
Im home sick and very bored.