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It's installed dual-boot with XP on my home desktop, which means my wife uses it too, so I guess that says something about it not being just for geeks any more. I moved to Ubuntu when XP slowed down to a crawl, for no apparent reason, and randomly stopped booting.
I use it on my laptop via a bootable USB drive. Which means I can carry it around with me wherever I go and get my whole desktop on any PC that supports booting from USB. Of course it's on a Seagate FreeAgent Go so that the glowy orange colour matches the default desktop theme!
The regular-ish reboots are a pain. But at least it lets you choose when to reboot rather than doing it automatically overnight, or nagging you constantly to do it, like XP does. The VM stuff (I use VirtualBox with Win2K) is a pain for Web Conf and sites that *have* to be viewed in IE, but liveable with. Eye-candy like transparent terminals and the Compiz 3D desktop is cool for showing off, but I find it gets on my nerves when I use it all the time, so I normally just run Metacity (and a black-on-white terminal). Some stuff was a right royal PITA to get working, like the Oracle VPN client, but I've got my machines set up pretty good now and hardly ever need to touch the config.
In summary; I continue to be bemused as to why we generate so much license revenue for Mr Gates. It's really possible for us to be at least a 99% MS free environment. Surely?
I like the portable O/S. I may have to give that a try for giggles, although I'll probably need a bigger USB stick.
As for eyecandy, it's more for a hoot now and then. The terminal doesn't really bother me, and it's been like that for a few weeks. I get bored with black/white, white/black, green/black, sometimes orange/black.
I'm with you about licensing. I really think there should be more Mac and Linux images, but I'm guessing there are forces at work here beyond our understanding.
I would really like to get Linux working, but am not sure where to start. Re. the modem issue - I guess I need to just buy a modem that Linux will work with?
I haven't used a modem for years. I'll bet if you Googled your modem and Ubuntu there are how-to resources out there. Seems like the USB modem would be a good bet for current resources, or buying one that you know in advance is recognized by Ubuntu.
Good luck with that. Its worth the switch, IMHO.
The only things I can't run (or find a replacement for) are my Logitech Harmony remote-control programming software and Oracle's web-conf. Pytrainer isn't great, and took some persuading before it talked to my Garmin GPS watch, but it'll do for now.
I did have it happily installed on an 8GB USB stick. Right up until I lost the stick! 2.5" hard-drives are harder to lose!
http://img530c.imageshack.us/img530/9998/mydesk...
I used to have FC6 at home, but installed Vista when bought new PC. Now, Thinking about installing FC/Ubuntu on dual boot.
It's now my primary OS now besides Windows XP Pro, as I don't install compiz fusion and something like that. It's been pretty stable now. I don't normally install too many new apps so maybe that's why my ubuntu does not have odd behavior?:) But I still have some day-to-day task that cannot be be finished as efficiently as under windows. I may raise the problem on connect and we discuss.
I do have a Macbook, I admit that I like Leopard. Especially expose/spaces and the UI. But as a hardcore opensource fan, I don't like apple. It derives UNIX(BSD branch)/Darwin but it's proprietary. Maybe they write only 10% of the codes but they sell it. And they hardly donate to the open source community. Anyway, my wife loves Mac OS better than Windows for her.
Overall, I think having that choice and exercising it makes us better users.