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#1270
What do you like about it? After adding a Win7-style Start menu isn't it pretty much Win7 but with annoying apps that don't work well? Did you uninstall them too to default to your preferred Reader, Player, etc.?
What do you like about it? After adding a Win7-style Start menu isn't it pretty much Win7 but with annoying apps that don't work well? Did you uninstall them too to default to your preferred Reader, Player, etc.?
I'm pretty amazed at the Chromebook, and I hate google and their spying. But its so featherlight, cheap and fast with a 10 second boot I might even adjust to the netbook format if necessary as a successor to 7. I'd need to test their office suite and cloud.
Why couldn't MS have taken this as their model to preserve the desktop experience, rather than going all William Tell with a bad shot?
with a bit of luck, Ubuntu will start appearing on oem machines early next year, alongside android/chrome os. That could be good.
Depends if the oems can be persuaded there is a market. They might think just putting Android on is what the public wants.
Ubuntu is a surprisingly good desktop os - works great on tablets/phones too. Linus should have the 3.11 kernel ready by then.
Greg I like this; I like it a lot.
Post #1273
Why couldn't MS have taken this as their model to preserve the desktop experience, rather than going all William Tell with a bad shot?
It would be awesome. Unity is no more crashy and you can turn off Amazon searches, there is even a linux steam client (it is more of a bridgehead atm, but they are pushing for Linux games as the guy seems to hate Windows 8 and is planning to start selling SteamBoxes and get into the console market).
Still, I suspect that major OEMs will not catch up with the wind and quite a few big ones will get shafted. Not that I'm going to cry over it.
Doesn't the take up of alternate Linux OSs also depend on what the software developers (eg Adobe Photoshop) will support? I also think MS Office still has a stranglehold in the business world. Businesses also using special accounting, inventory etc software running on Windows platforms (+ Macs).
Yes, for business, and there are some who have a special need for a particualr program, photogs want Macs for their photo stuff, etc.
But that is not the vast majority - they will be fine with linux.
It is surprising what is now becoming available for linux -steam of course, and lightworks is another example.
Lightworks
I know don't you just miss all those old Classic(drab) Legacy themes? I still kind of miss running 98SE too for the old Dos look or shutting down to dos mode to run the old dos games at times to. But XP? and then the much better Vista came along as well as finally getting into a 100% working OS. Try some dos emulators but have more or less gotten used to transparency applied to the main taskbar.
Can I wish for an Edsel by the way while we are on autos? Naaaaa. try a '53 Corvette! Progress can be terrible when going from 98SE an OS I was happy with back then to XPmareland and Blue Screen Special Delights all too often! Then a bail out was seen with Vista which proved to be a better OS but still was lacking a bit but not anywhere as "BUGGY"!
Finally an OS that came to the rescue was 7 yet lacking the Classsic Windows themes option. waaaaaaa..... I could or couldn't cry the less! Sorry it didn't have the "XP Look" any longer but I manage!