Re: MS Access

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Sujet : Re: MS Access
De : nospam (at) *nospam* needed.invalid (Paul)
Groupes : alt.comp.os.windows-10 comp.os.linux.misc
Date : 18. Aug 2024, 18:55:11
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v9tci0$2fjdn$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2
User-Agent : Ratcatcher/2.0.0.25 (Windows/20130802)
On Sun, 8/18/2024 4:43 AM, Jack Strangio wrote:
Charlie Gibbs <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> writes:
>
Linux is doing well in the server world, but the desktop will be a
much harder sell.
 
For God's sake, not so loud! Keep it down!
 
My desktop knew nothing but UNIX for 10 years, then has known nothing but
Linux for 20 years after that.
 
It would have a mental breakdown if it found out there were other operating
systems out there in the world.
 
Jack
 

I can see a plan is coming together here.

Well, we had a plan, but we drunk all the beer,
and now we're passed out on the floor.

Oh well, maybe next year.

*******

A lot of newer computers, no longer come with an optical drive.
Burning an ISO9660 is not a practical option for those.

Utilities for "making" USB stick setups, are fraught with problems.
Even if you gave the average user instructions, with the state of
USB handling, they could hardly be expected to succeed at the
task of making the media for the OS in question. USB setups have
silly requirements like "present a stick with a partition on it",
then the USB tool "formats" the stick and removes the partition in
question. The process then, is "logical and makes so much sense".

If you wanted to provide an easy path for a Win-to-Linux transition,
use a stub.exe to pull down the OS and put it on the disk. That's
how Microsoft does it. And even they don't do a good job (can't
run their MediaCreationTool.exe on WinXP).

On older machines, we can be using our Nvidia binary blobs, and
the years-of-support are limited. My 7900GT (suitable for Optiplex 780
refurb with Core2 Duo processor), Linux media now, the screen freezes
with graphical noise on it, and I can't flip to terminal and do anything
(function keys). A copy of Windows runs that screen fine. How is it
that a Windows can run a screen when a Linux can't ? There used to be
a time, when Linux was proud to outdo Windows on the length of support
for old hardware, but no more. Linux has succumbed to the same
hardware snobbery as every other ecosystem.

Puppy is the only shining example. It uses XVesa for X11 and that
"drives just about anything". Yet, no other distro seems to be
able to take a page from the Puppy play book. Puppy is so good,
it even runs on hardware, where there is hardly any alignment
between drivers and hardware at all! Which is most impressive.
Puppy is able to modprobe older hardware, and do a good job on
drivers, but for newer hardware, not many things have drivers,
and yet it still works.

*******

But I'm still on the floor right now, I'm drunk and passed out. Later.

The current plan, is for Power Users to embrace Linux, which
would be... oh... about 3% of the desktop population.

Google has prepared media, to use their ChromeOS intellectual
properly and install it on Windows hardware. They're a bit prepared.
They've been sipping their beer, and haven't passed out.

https://support.google.com/chromeosflex/answer/11552529?hl=en

   Paul

Date Sujet#  Auteur
18 Aug 24 * Re: MS Access2Jack Strangio
18 Aug 24 `- Re: MS Access1Paul

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