Linked by Barry Smith on Wed 26th Nov 2003 18:11 UTC
It seems to me that a lot of attention lately in the commercial Linux development area has concentrated on either large enterprise customers, or wooing the home user who can barely turn a computer on. Even distros claiming to offer the perfect solution for both ends of the spectrum don't quite seem to fit what I am looking for.
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how is it more user friendly to rename konqueror file manager as lindows OS file manager?
they say they have 'built in email' and then show a screenshot of evolution?!?! wft?
i have a completely free debian stable installation with kde 3.1.4 and kernel 2.4.22 i admit it took some blood sweat and tears but at least i have the freedom of apt-get. apt-get only fully works under stable. the whole point of debian is to use the stable distribution.
if someone wants an easy installation of linux they should go for suse, fedora or mandrake. if they want something a little more exotic, then go for debian, slackware etc.
the likes of libranet and lindows have nothing to offer except a bad reputation for linux.
how is it more user friendly to rename konqueror file manager as lindows OS file manager?
they say they have 'built in email' and then show a screenshot of evolution?!?! wft?
i have a completely free debian stable installation with kde 3.1.4 and kernel 2.4.22 i admit it took some blood sweat and tears but at least i have the freedom of apt-get. apt-get only fully works under stable. the whole point of debian is to use the stable distribution.
if someone wants an easy installation of linux they should go for suse, fedora or mandrake. if they want something a little more exotic, then go for debian, slackware etc.
the likes of libranet and lindows have nothing to offer except a bad reputation for linux.