RE: Linux killer!

From: STYMA, ROBERT E (ROBERT) (stymar_at_lucent.com)
Date: 10/31/05

  • Next message: Robert P. J. Day: "Re: Security, Hacking & Social Engineering Presentation."
    To: "'Robin.Laing@drdc-rddc.gc.ca'" <Robin.Laing@drdc-rddc.gc.ca>, "'For users of Fedora Core releases'" <fedora-list@redhat.com>
    Date: Mon, 31 Oct 2005 10:21:29 -0600
    
    

    >
    > If they are not supposed to be watching the videos on the school
    > computers, then block them at the firewall as our business
    > does. When
    > they cannot watch them on Windows it won't make any difference.
    >
    I think the point is that if Linux is to make a bigger dent in the
    Windows desktop, more things have to "just work". In a similar experiment
    to the one which started this thread, I slowly converted a non-technical
    family with three computers from windows to Linux and recorded the
    issues which came up. (http://www.swlink.net/~styma/LinuxForTheMasses.shtml)
    The current distributions of Linux still need a technical person
    to get things working. The technical person would still have no clue
    as to how to get these things working. Many of them require a fair
    amount of research on the web. I understand the reasons mp3's and
    wmv's don't play right out of the box, but to get "Joe Sixpack" using
    Linux requires an update process simple enough for "Joe Sixpack" to
    use to get this functionality working.

    If making Linux really simple is not working out, another model might
    be to have pay subscriptions to remote maintenance services. The FC3
    and FC4 boxes I maintain for my friends I can access remotely via
    SSH and VNC. On a Windows box, if tech support cannot talk you through
    the problem, the user ends up taking the box in and paying big bucks.
    ssh, /etc/hosts.allow, and iptables could provide a very effective support
    mechanism. On my friends boxes, I am the only one with the root password,
    not that they would understand what root was anyway.

    Just my 2 cents worth. My point is that Linux needs to be simple in
    addition to being better.

    Bob Styma

    -- 
    fedora-list mailing list
    fedora-list@redhat.com
    To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
    

  • Next message: Robert P. J. Day: "Re: Security, Hacking & Social Engineering Presentation."

    Relevant Pages

    • Re: Demand That Microsoft Sell No Code Before Its Time
      ... > would find that linux vulnerabilities are on the up. ... >> Gate$ a chance to fix a lame product with patch after patch after ... >> patch as they continue to struggle to keep their computers working. ... Windows is less secure just because it is installed on 95% of all PCs. ...
      (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
    • Re: novell-suse linux dead meat?
      ... >> And your income writing Windows software vs that from writing linux ... however if one's work computer utilized Linux rather than ... > who has bought their computer with Windows already installed. ... place, considering what Dell, etc sell computers for. ...
      (alt.os.linux.suse)
    • Re: Future of IT in Lebanon
      ... working knowledge of Indian programmers DNA, nor of their intuitive Java ... > So Longhorn is not an experiment and Linux is an experiment? ... another chapter in the Windows story, and the Microsoft marketing machine is ... > application opens, Check the about, it says Microsoft Visual Basic 6.3. ...
      (soc.culture.lebanon)
    • Re: Multiple keyboards with only one routed to windows...
      ... > I find it stupid to buy three computers for three people costing three ... > times the price for one when beeing able to solve such problems with ... Windows has terminal server. ... > The answer is simple but complex: I donīt like Linux. ...
      (microsoft.public.development.device.drivers)
    • Re: Can Vista be "locked down" ?
      ... Standard users group-These are the least-privileged users, ... It's true that Linux won't run MS software. ... You're one of the two out of five Windows computers that aren't infected. ...
      (microsoft.public.windows.vista.general)