Screw u M.S.
Screw u M.S.
So who says Iraqi's are dumb. While the worlds press focuses on death and destruction in Iraq, Linux has quietly taken control:
"A group of Iraqi computer enthusiasts are advocating the use of the operating system Linux to rebuild their country."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3830545.stm
If I were B.G. I'd be sending teams of operatives to donate software and expertise so Iraq uses windows as the platform of choice. Couldn't have a whole country going Linux now could we.
"A group of Iraqi computer enthusiasts are advocating the use of the operating system Linux to rebuild their country."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3830545.stm
If I were B.G. I'd be sending teams of operatives to donate software and expertise so Iraq uses windows as the platform of choice. Couldn't have a whole country going Linux now could we.
Re: Screw u M.S.
woodchip wrote:So who says Iraqi's are dumb.
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I think what a lot of people do underestimate is the adoption of Linux in third-world and developing countries. Iraq is one example of a much larger phenomenon. Where it is possible to afford computers, but not the software, many will turn to piracy, but the honest will turn to Linux. Even if Linux doesn't come to dominate the desktop market here, it's increasing presence in the rest of the world will force us to eventually take notice.
Germany continues to push for Linux solutions. China, Japan, and South Korea are all jointly working on a Linux distribution that can best support their languages. And, obviously, countries that don't trust the US aren't prone to run Microsoft software. What's more American than an enormous corporate juggernaut like Microsoft?
I've tried to use Linux exclusively at home. Slowly, I am overcoming the obstacles.
Germany continues to push for Linux solutions. China, Japan, and South Korea are all jointly working on a Linux distribution that can best support their languages. And, obviously, countries that don't trust the US aren't prone to run Microsoft software. What's more American than an enormous corporate juggernaut like Microsoft?
I've tried to use Linux exclusively at home. Slowly, I am overcoming the obstacles.
I'm waiting for Linux to become the dominant operating system, and then be brought to its knees by viruses.
My pet peeve with Linux, though I rely on it every day, is that it is comprised of so-and-so's grep, so-and-so's ifconfig, so-and-so's mke2fs, etc. There's no central authority to review updates/patches. Torvalds is indirectly paying for this with the SCO lawsuit, because if a tighter revision control were in place, he would be better able to prove the origin of every line of Linux code. Solutions such as BSD seem more secure to me, but Linux still stands.
My pet peeve with Linux, though I rely on it every day, is that it is comprised of so-and-so's grep, so-and-so's ifconfig, so-and-so's mke2fs, etc. There's no central authority to review updates/patches. Torvalds is indirectly paying for this with the SCO lawsuit, because if a tighter revision control were in place, he would be better able to prove the origin of every line of Linux code. Solutions such as BSD seem more secure to me, but Linux still stands.
I'd like to use Linux more, but there are two main things holding me up...
1) I use specialised software. Most of it isn't written for Linux.
2) Trying to install or configure or bugfix ANYTHING in Linux is such a pain in the ass I can't even be bothered.
Once those two things change there would be nothing to stop me from using it as a primary OS.
1) I use specialised software. Most of it isn't written for Linux.
2) Trying to install or configure or bugfix ANYTHING in Linux is such a pain in the ass I can't even be bothered.
Once those two things change there would be nothing to stop me from using it as a primary OS.