Edited for clarity.

** Description changed:

  Hi sorry to report this as a bug - but I don't know any other way this
  it  has any chance of ever being resolved.
  
  Firstly let me say that this is not a typical n00b rant - I have been a
  Linux user at home for 6+ years and am well aware of all of the familiar
  arguments concerning the need to apply pressure on manufacturers to
- provide appropriate support - about the fact that it is very difficult
- to make any progress without that support and so on - as well as the
+ provide appropriate support, about the fact that it is very difficult to
+ make any progress without that support and so on, as well as the
  generally eternally optimistic hope that somehow some day this situation
- improve of it's own accord. However after 6 plus years of hearing the
- same message - and with virtually no movement on behalf of any of the
- major manufactures and despite an extremely supportive and vocal user
- base - it seems clear that this issue has now become a major and
- potentially insurmountable obstacle in preventing the wide scale
- adoption of Linux on the desktop overall.
+ improve of it's own accord.
+ 
+ However after 6 plus years of hearing the same message - and with
+ virtually no movement on behalf of any of the major manufactures - and
+ despite an extremely supportive and vocal user base, it seems clear that
+ this issue has now become a major and potentially insurmountable
+ obstacle in preventing the wide scale adoption of Linux on the desktop
+ overall.
  
  To explain a little about my own circumstances - for several years I
  have worked for myself running a small telecommunications business -
  which essentially involves traveling around the UK and Europe and
  selling cut price telecommunications services to the travel and tourism
  industry.
  
- In any case, I always resisted installing Linux on my laptop - as there
- were too many hurdles towards doing so - predominantly that managing
+ In any case, I always resisted installing Linux on my laptop, as there
+ were too many hurdles towards doing so; predominantly that managing
  contacts and compatibility between different platforms was not always a
  simple affair. However due to advances in other areas within the Linux
  platform this situation has been considerably eased.
  
  Nevertheless one major factor remains outstanding in preventing me from
- adopting Linux as my full time mobile/portable operating system - and
- that is printer support. One of the aspects of my job involves traveling
- and meeting people in a diverse range of office type environments - with
- an almost equally diverse range of printers and printing equipment. In
- the past resolving incompatibility's between printing equipment and the
+ adopting Linux as my full time mobile/portable operating system and that
+ is printer support. One of the aspects of my job involves traveling and
+ meeting people in a diverse range of office type environments, with an
+ almost equally diverse range of printers and printing equipment. In the
+ past resolving incompatibility's between printing equipment and the
  various laptops I have owned was largely inconsequential, as drivers for
  the 'rival' operating system I was using at that time were readily
  available - and for good measure I always made sure I had the most
  common drivers installed for the brands of printers I encountered the
  most. (Indeed I can't recall having done this a single time where I ever
  really ran into any significant difficulty in this regard).
  
  However I always had philosophical issues with the necessity involved in
  using a proprietary operating system for the work that I do - and
  leaving the office and using Linux as my home based operating system of
  choice. So recently (and inspired by the purchase of a nice new fast
  laptop), I decided to see if it was either possible, or practical to
  ditch MS entirely.
  
- However after installing Kubuntu 'edgy' 6.10 - it has become abundantly
+ However after installing Kubuntu 'edgy' 6.10, it has become abundantly
  clear that this is indeed not possible at all. I say this in light of
  the experience of 3 days trying (and failing) to set up a network
  printer (which is a Lexmark X1800) 'All in One' type combination of
  scanner, photocopier and printer - of exactly the kind that it is not
  uncommon for me to encounter in small office environments.
  
  The reason this is significant is that despite early aspirations at the
  beginning of the 1990's that one day we would all live in a 'paperless
  society', the reality is that for legal and many other reasons the vast
  majority of formal contractual and business type communications are
  still conducted on paper. If I meet a client and we make an agreement,
  that agreement invariably must be concluded on paper.
  
  I am aware also that my own personal experience in this regard is far
- from unique - as from the smallest of office environments, to the
- largest of corporate and multi-national conglomerate businesses, all
- business of any true and binding significance is still conducted on
- paper.
+ from unique, as from the smallest of office environments, to the largest
+ of corporate and multi-national conglomerate businesses, all business of
+ any true and binding significance is still conducted on paper.
  
- This is significant for Linux also - in that without the large scale
+ This is significant for Linux also, in that without the large scale
  adoption of Linux in the office and working environment, the hopes of a
  great many Linux advocates everywhere that one day Linux may supplant
  Microsoft as the dominant operating system of choice in the market at
- large, would seem a potentially forlorn, misplaced and unrealistic
+ large, would seem to be a potentially forlorn, misplaced and unrealistic
  aspiration.
  
  It is significant too in the sense that unless Linux is adopted in a
  whole sale manner within these environments, then Linux as a desktop
  operating system may always be restricted to being used by nothing more
- than a relatively few home based enthusiasts.
+ than a relatively few home based enthusiasts. It must be pointed out
+ perhaps that Microsoft conquered the work place before conquering the
+ world - and that computing originated in the work place and migrated to
+ the home when people became familiar and comfortable using the tools
+ they had.
  
  If after 6 years of using Linux, even I can still struggle (and fail) to
- get a basic printer configuration going - how is it reasonable to expect
+ get a basic printer configuration going, how is it reasonable to expect
  an averagely skilled office worker to quickly and efficient configure
  their laptops for fast printer and scanner access? No company in their
  right mind could afford to allocate this kind of time to their workers -
  and no worker in this environment should be expected to waste this kind
  of time, attempting to do what in 2006 should be the most basic of all
- possible tasks - which is simply to print out important documents and
+ possible tasks, which is simply to print out important documents and
  communications for their employers.
  
  There has been an assumption to date that 'if we build it, they will
  come', with regard to Linux printer driver support. However even though
  many of the main prerequisites are now in place, manufacturer support
- for printers and among printer manufacturers in particular has made very
- little progress whatsoever - nor is there any indication that this will
- change at any point in the foreseeable future.
+ for printers has made very little progress whatsoever, nor is there any
+ indication that this will change at any point in the foreseeable future.
  
- Unless somehow this situation is somehow resolved and is given the
- highest possible priority (perhaps through some project to provide a
- virtualised driver 'compatibility layer' of some kind), then it seems
- clear that the objective of wide scale Linux adoption may already be
- over before it has really had a chance to succeed.
+ Unless somehow this situation is resolved and is given the highest
+ possible priority (perhaps through some project to provide a virtualised
+ driver 'compatibility layer' of some kind), then it seems clear that the
+ objective of wide scale Linux adoption may already be over before it has
+ really had a chance to succeed.
  
  Again I know all of the old arguments about such things being out of
  developer's control etc - and I also know that some people are
  unrealistically optimistic and vocal about these matters. However the
  cold stark reality is that this situation has not improved, nor is it
  likely as initially hoped that it might eventually resolve itself.

-- 
Linux Is not a Viable OS without robust and extensive printer driver support.
https://launchpad.net/bugs/75965

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