Windows or Linux for parents' PC?
John Chambers
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Wed Jan 28 11:21:49 EST 2004
Duane Morin writes:
| I dont know about your folks, but I'll mention that the primary reason I
| can't switch my dad to Linux is his collection of USB toys. He's always
| getting something new that he expects to just plug in and work (his most
| recent toy was a set of binoculars that have a digital camera in them).
| Many of these USB devices do not have Linux support. It would be nice if
| they all just supported some kind of generic storage driver, but they do
| not, for the most part.
|
| If it weren't for that I would switch him to Linux with mozilla, xine or
| mplayer, cdparanoia.... in a heartbeat.
Another possibility, if/when your dad is contemplating a new machine,
is switching him to OSX. A few months ago, out of my wife's growing
frustration with Windows, I got her to try a Powerbook. Within an
hour or so, she was saying how much she loved it, and how much better
nearly everything worked there than on Windows. Macs have better USB
support that just about anyone, and all our USB toys seem to work
fine on the PB by just plugging them in. A few days ago, she took the
big step of unplugging the Windows box and carrying it and its
display down the hall to the spare bedroom where it's sitting not
plugged in. The space on the desk had become more valuable.
Now we just need to get linux to recognize USB gadgets as well as OSX
seems to do. Linux is in general a better system than OSX. But there
are still a lot of problems with USB support.
Funny thing is that OSX gets it wrong when you unplug a USB device.
It pops up a window that chides you for not doing it properly. But
the way to do it properly is something that neither of us can
remember, and is different for different devices. Finding the proper
way takes much longer than just unplugging the device, accepting the
chiding, and clicking on the OK button. So in reality, Apple punishes
you more for doing it properly than they do for just unplugging.
It does remind me of some advice that I read years ago: You should
always "turn off" computing devices by unplugging them. The reason
was that this will happen eventually, when you have a power failure,
someone trips over the power cord, etc. If the device can't handle
this, you want to know about it now rather than at some time in the
future. If you learn about its problems early on, you can either fix
them or document the problems and how to recover. If you wait until
the device is in regular use and nobody remembers anything about
setting it up, a power failure will be a much bigger disaster to your
operation. The general principle applies to comm links as well as to
power supplies, of course.
Not that I always follow this advice ...
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