Let me give you a quick run down of why I use linux rather than windows 95/98.
1. At its core, Linux is a far superior, higher quality operating system than windows. The Linux operating system hardly ever crashes (well actually, has never crashed in my personal experience - the worst that has happened is that a couple of times X has frozen up so that the only way to fix things was to rlogin to my machine from another machine on the network.) In comparison, windows 95/98 seems to crash on a regular basis. The linux operating system is far better designed and coded than windows. It does multitasking much better. It handles multiple users. It does file protection much better. It does networking better. It has a superior filesystem structure. It is more efficient in its use of resources. It allows far more personal configuration. All in all it is miles better from a technical perspective. The only area you could argue that Windows does better is in its user interface and ease of use. There are a number of things I could say to this. Firstly, linux may be more difficult to understand and configure etc, but as a result, you learn a lot more about how things work and gain far more control over your own system. Secondly, having windows do everything for you is sometimes a pain, because it automatically does things for you that you don't want done. It is easy so long as you go along with what it wants, but if you ever want to do something different, windows makes life very difficult, or even impossible. Thirdly, linux is quickly becoming more user friendly. There are a number of projects under development to give linux a nicer user interface and make it easier to configure and manage. This will mean linux users will have a choice: either they can stick to a windows-like easy interface, or they can get "under the hood" and configure things by hand -- the best of both worlds. Linux hasn't reached this point yet, but give it a few years and I think it will. 2. Linux is much cheaper. I can get most of the software I want for free. This saves me a huge amount of money. Yes you have to pay for internet access, or for a CD or two, but it still works out much cheaper. If internet downloads cost too much, just get a $5 CD. Sure, if you want to get the absolute latest in software all the time then it might cost a bit, but the same is true on a much grander scale with windows, and besides, it's very rare that you need the absolute latest version of everything. Yes there are still a couple of commercial software packages which are useful to have for linux, but even these tend to be much cheaper than their windows counterparts - some of them are even free. It is true that there is some shareware stuff for windows, but in my experience it is generally far inferior to linux stuff. 3. It is far easier to get bugs fixed in linux. In Windows, if a program has a bug in it, you are generally at the mercy of the software company to get it fixed. You can't fix it yourself, nor can anyone else on the internet. You have to hope that they will get on to it quickly. With linux, the source code is open which means you can debug the code yourself (which I have done on a few occasions with success). But more often than not, someone else on the net does this for you -- only possible because the source code is open. In general, bug fixing happens much more quickly with open source development. 4. You learn a lot more with linux. Linux is more of a learning curve than windows, but in many ways that's good. I have a much better understanding of a whole range of areas of computing as a result of switching to linux. 5. Linux is good for the world. Everyone will be much better off if an open software operating system, such as linux, becomes the standard. Having a company like Microsoft control the dominant operating system and manipulate the market through this is bad for computing. I want to support an operating system which, if widely accepted, will result in a tremendous advance for computing worldwide. I believe it will be as significant as IBM's decision to introduce the PC. As for your comments about difficulties compiling things and installing debian packages etc, I can't concur with your experience. Yes I have had problems from time to time, but mostly I have had very few problems. And when I have had problems, there are lots of avenues I can try in order to fix them. And debian-user provides lots of assistence. In contrast, problems in windows seem much hard to fix, and require you to spend lots of money on phone calls to microsoft -- and even then, they can't always fix your problem. If you want to go to Windows 95/98 then feel free to do so, but I think you'll find it was a retrograde step. Cheers, Mark. _/~~~~~~~~\___/~~~~~~\____________________________________________________ ____/~~\_____/~~\__/~~\__________________________Mark_Phillips____________ ____/~~\_____/[EMAIL PROTECTED] ____/~~\HE___/~~\__/~~\APTAIN_____________________________________________ ____/~~\______/~~~~~~\____________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ "They told me I was gullible ... and I believed them!"