This guide is pretty good, but the fact that there is a need for this guide demonstrates one of the larger problems with the Linux community. There are so many people working on developing linux, but so much of their efforts are not coordinated and are just being duplicated in other distributions. I think we should have maybe 3 distributions. One tiny distribution that requires very little hard drive space, very low hardware requirements, etc. that would work perfectly on an old x486 computer. One mid distribution that has a few extra bells and whistles and targets the same audience as WinXP Home. Finally, a third distribution that is full blown with everything a system administrator or enthusiast could ask for.
So many of the distributions try to differ from each other by the 'extra' things they add which aren't a part of the kernel. Why not just seperate each of those projects like they should be and let the user select the features they want when ordering. You could get a drop down list of media players, text editors, browsers, etc. that could just be tacked on. Or just download a bare-bones copy and you could get all the 'extra' apps on your own by visiting sourceforge.net.
If the Linux community were to become a little more united, I am sure it could take off much more than it has. If it were to offer a user experience that surpassed Windows XP or Windows Vista for the new user, then people would buy into it and use it. Right now there are too many problems with no standard installation system (there are usually multiple options for each piece of software), having to tweak things to get them to work (With Windows, things usually always work just by plugging it in or using the ONE installation file), and reliance on the command line to do any tweaking. The good news is that it is steadily getting better.
Of course I can look past the current faults with Linux, I just can't get past the lack of driver support for Printers, the bad drivers for ATI video cards, and the lack of game selection. None of that is directly the fault of Linux... but while moving to Linux will give me those drawbacks, I just don't see any benefits to counterbalance them except for the upfront cost. I have owned Windows XP for years and it hasn't cost me a cent and very little time to keep it updated. With Linux, staying updated can be much more of a pain.
-Signed, Wannabe Linux user who is stuck using Microsoft's inferior, but more usable OS.
So many of the distributions try to differ from each other by the 'extra' things they add which aren't a part of the kernel. Why not just seperate each of those projects like they should be and let the user select the features they want when ordering. You could get a drop down list of media players, text editors, browsers, etc. that could just be tacked on. Or just download a bare-bones copy and you could get all the 'extra' apps on your own by visiting sourceforge.net.
If the Linux community were to become a little more united, I am sure it could take off much more than it has. If it were to offer a user experience that surpassed Windows XP or Windows Vista for the new user, then people would buy into it and use it. Right now there are too many problems with no standard installation system (there are usually multiple options for each piece of software), having to tweak things to get them to work (With Windows, things usually always work just by plugging it in or using the ONE installation file), and reliance on the command line to do any tweaking. The good news is that it is steadily getting better.
Of course I can look past the current faults with Linux, I just can't get past the lack of driver support for Printers, the bad drivers for ATI video cards, and the lack of game selection. None of that is directly the fault of Linux... but while moving to Linux will give me those drawbacks, I just don't see any benefits to counterbalance them except for the upfront cost. I have owned Windows XP for years and it hasn't cost me a cent and very little time to keep it updated. With Linux, staying updated can be much more of a pain.
-Signed, Wannabe Linux user who is stuck using Microsoft's inferior, but more usable OS.