Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 21st Jul 2006 20:55 UTC, submitted by anonymous
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Member since:
2005-07-06
1) "No gaming" is false, yes. "Poor gaming" is on the contrary no myth. Well you know, most PC games doesn't work on Linux.
2) "Poor" is an overstatement. I would call it just "worse". As you say, it doesn't always work on Linux. Also the feature set can be smaller or performance lower compared to the official drivers. Like my own printer. In Linux it prints at maybe half speed and the drivers have less features.
3) Yes, you said it yourself, ATI & nVidia. Wireless too in some cases. ATI & nVidia will never open source their drivers. I don't see why they should either. It is the Linux kernel that should have had a real, working, stable driver system. But the kernel developers don't want that...
4) A Linux system is based on RTFM and editing config files. All users will have to do this sooner or later. This philosophy will probably never change. For ordinary users this is worse because typing stuff on the command line or in files isn't as self explaining as clicking buttons and checkboxes. They don't know what to type and they don't want to read the manual. Even if they would find the man page (say xorg.conf) they wouldn't understand it.
5 & 6) If your distribution doesn't provide you with a particular application or you need a newer version you will often need to download the source package and compile because every author cannot provide binaries for every version of every Linux distribution. To compile you have to have a LOT of additional packages but an ordinary user cannot easily know what packages...