Hi, On Tue, 12 Nov 2013 08:32:55 -0500 Miles Fidelman <mfidel...@meetinghouse.net> wrote:
> Ralf Mardorf wrote: > > On Tue, 2013-11-12 at 23:01 +1100, Zenaan Harkness wrote: > >>> Install a Linux and call it Windows 2014 - super > >>> professional special admin edition and this kind of user > >>> will have no issue, call it Linux and they will ask you > >>> to remove it and reinstall Windows again. > >> I agree :) It is painful but I can't say it's not true. However, it might change in the future, and given FLOSS licensing principles, (mostly the FL part), future is on our side. > That's a very interesting point, but I wonder if it's true. > There are real-world reasons to run both windows on linux on > the same machine (personal example: running Linux on my > laptop for development and demonstrations; running Windows > for office applications). In my case, it's: * Debian for browsing, occasional gaming (mostly Flash games, Indie games, old ones in DosBox or even some native Linux games), browsing, movies, music, programming, sometimes a little vector or raster graphics, * Windows for occasional gaming (titles too big for DosBox) or (very scarcely, always hoping for no more) working with hardware like Nokia phones and TomTom GPS). > But, having said that, when one really uses two operating > systems on the same machine, I expect it's more common to run > one under virtualization, so you can run both at the same > time - dual booting is a real pain if one is really USING > both operating systems. I have a 5 year old ThinkPad R500 with 1.8GHz dual core and 4G RAM, and while the setup is still really enough for most of what I do, attempting Win XP in VBox for even the most simple tasks was a royal PITA. An I'm not fan of buying new hardware every 2 years just because it allows for more convenient scenario. (Also one reason to keep the Win in the dual-boot manner is that I have a valid OEM license there, which I believe cannot be migrated to VM.) So given that most of people who have hardware do not have later than that and with hardware virtualization support in CPU, I would not expect that to be the most common case. Thanks, aL. -- Alois Mahdal -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20131112213631.2ec07...@hugo.daonet.home