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Member since:
2006-11-12
You're right. I'm sorry. It was very insensitive of me to insult chimps by insinuating that they use Macs.
Here's a chimp deftly using a non-Apple touch screen: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5nTVF3uits& Wow! He certainly works a lot faster than those Ipad owners that I see in the coffee houses!
I would also like to acknowledge that you are never insulting and disingenuous on this forum.
Not that there is any point to your statement, but would you care to link that photo, or do we just have to take your word for it? If such a picture exists, I'm betting that number of Macbooks is in the minority.
Okay. Even if Ubuntu does require a CLI sometimes, it is just one distro out of hundreds! You can't characterize the whole of Linux from the problems of one distribution. Personally, I have never used Ubuntu that much because I think it is rather bloated.
A problem with X will sometimes give you a command line, although some distros go into a GUI control panel. At least one has a way to work through the problem.
I don't know how Windows and OSX respond to such a problem, but I guessing that one has to reboot into "safe" mode with Windows.
Mepis is a very solid, and, unless there is a serious problem, one should never need to use the CLI. Any distro based on Debian stable or based on Slackware (with a GUI installer and GUI control center) should be able to do everything without CLI use. There are probably quite a few others, but one would have to research.
I provided lots of OSX examples, and the ones that I linked barely even scratched the surface of the zillions contained in the official Apple "discussions" forum. There are tons of problem postings in this forum alone, astronomically more than I have seen on any Linux distro forum.
First of all, you have linked an Ubuntu post from March, 2006. That's very telling on the lack of current Linux problems. Couldn't you find anything more recent? All of my links to Apple problems were from the last two days.
Secondly, these days, almost every distro uses CUPS, which is the same printer set-up that OSX uses. So, if there is a missing driver for Linux, it is not the fault of Linux. Gladly, most printers work with Linux and CUPS.
Please find recent examples from one of the more solid Linux distros.
Edited 2010-06-19 23:01 UTC