Sorry, but I disagree. Having played with DOS, Win 3.1, Win 3.11, Win95,
Win98, C, C++, Visual C++ and Visual Basic, rebuilt several computers from
the motherboard up, and installed more drivers and configured more dip
switches (remember them?) than I care to count, the idea that an operating
system has to be told that a disk has been inserted into a drive is strange,
at the least. I'm planning on looking at (installing, etc.) Linux. It would
appear Linux has quirks that would not be apparent to those coming at it
from a personal computer angle (as contrasted with the Unix angle).

Deidre L. Calarco wrote:

> > For example:  ME: "You have to mount the disk before you can read it."
> > HE:  "Huh?  Mount?  What is mount?  It's already in the drive!"


> Somebody with those kinds of questions probably shouldn't be messing
 > around with Linix, IMHO


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