"Mike Schilling" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> There's a huge difference to the non-techy consumer. One of the >>> buggest reasons Linux has had a reputation of being harder to use >>> than Windows was the fact that Linux had to be installed, while >>> Windows just booted up. >> Is that really true? I mean, I remember distributions of Linux that you >> could just stick in the CD, boot from CD, and you were up in minutes. >> Installing was as simple as pushing the 'install to hard drive' button. [snip] > But picture that, when this was less true, you wanted to buy a machine > with the newest-whizbang graphics card or disk controller. For Windows, > the manufacturer would make sure the proper drivers are installed and > configured. For Linux, you the consumer had to find a driver, install it, > configure it (the phrase "drive geometry" sticks in my head) and deal with > the lack of useful feedback if anything goes wrong. [snip] That's a really good point. DS -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list