Vadim,

You misunderstood me I was not talking about the actual starting of a 
program, but rather configuring the computer to so that it will rum a 
program like World of Warcraft to work on that computer. And my 
criticism of the developers is that they still design Ubuntu and all the 
other Linux distros with the assumption that the end user is something 
more sophisticated than a semi=literate computer user. I will admit that 
Ubuntu is better at fixing this issue than other Linux distros, but it 
still needs a lot of improvement in that area.

Vadim Peretokin wrote:
> "The attraction of Windows - which is the weakness of Ubuntu -is that it
> requires little effort on the part of the user to configure it to rum
> whatever programs the semi-literate computer user wants."
>
> I don't agree with you.
>
> To run a program in Ubuntu, it is maximum of 3 clicks, and as an added
> bonus, they're all categorized properly.
>
> To run a program in Windows, you have to (from what I remember), click
> on Start - Programs - and then you're greeted with a huge, unfiled
> mess of programs. Or I believe the latest version even introduces a
> search function for you to sort out through the mess? I can't recall.
>
> Anyway, I don't find your arguments valid, especially the ones in
> regards to what Ubuntu developers are doing. It's almost saying that
> the millions of Ubuntu installations are a fluke.
>
>

-- 
Microsoft has a majority market share
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1
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