On 1/12/25 8:30 PM, Tim via users wrote:
Switching to Linux, you do have to "learn
something new", which frustrated a lot of my
customers to no end.  Linux usually has
alternate ways around those popular Windows
only packages.  Usually.

The common retort "you have to learn a new way of doing things" if you
leave Windows to use Linux gets me.  Windows constantly makes people
have to learn a new way of doing things, and people pay for that with
time and effort, and real money.

Ya, no fooling.  As soon as M$ gets their OS fairly stable
(well for M$), they start over.  It is like someone broke
into your house and re arranged all your furniture.

I have a Fedroa server at a customer site that is maybe ten or
fifteen years old.  I have never upgraded it because one of
their mission critical pieces of software is such a house of
cards, I do not dare change anything.  I can not tell the
difference unless I ask the operating system what it is.
It is pretty easy at a glance with Windows.

Open Shell get you around a lot of the M$ menu nonsense.

So here is the thing, when I set up a new computer -- be it
Windows or Linux -- I create desktop and task bar icons
of the programs the user wants to run. The user never goes
into the menus.  And they are happy.


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