I suspect this is partly be design.  Linux has never had a consistant binary
driver interface, and I'm convinced this is because they want people to
either release source code or nothing at all.

-----Original Message-----
From: ScanMan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, December 17, 2001 11:18 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Totally OT, but what the hell] RE: VNC is Powerful, could it
become like Citrix


On Mon, 2001-12-17 at 08:31, David Brodbeck wrote:
> If it's not, Windows has the edge.  With most modern cards and modern
> Windows versions, you install the card, turn on the machine, insert the
CD,
> and let it find the driver.  Then you reboot and you're done.

This is true, but it's really not Linux's fault. If hardware vendors
actally included a driver on CD, with a nice script to install it....

The other problem, of course, is that Linux is always a moving target.
It would be nice if I2C were to become more popular....
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