by Ice Cream Jonsey » Tue Mar 20, 2007 11:21 pm
saintlupus wrote:Why is it that a bunch of penniless hackers can put together something like Debian, which immediately finds and configures all of my hardware properly, and yet the largest personal computer software company on Earth can't make something that detects an ancient onboard modem properly, let alone any of the reasonably modern hardware?
Man, usually XP is pretty good about this sort of thing, too. In the 98 days I used to have a CD wallet filled with drivers for things and devices that I encountered. There was a "Velocity" video card that we used at work and each card came with a disc. There were hundreds of them around. But man, should you lose it, good luck, because Velocity got bought by someone who got bought by 3dfx, which I think got bought by someone and those drivers are nowhere to be found.
I've heard good things about Ubuntu, and its user forums, but I can't offer any firsthand advice.
They sent me a free CD because they are awesome. It says something like, "Ubuntu. Linux for human beings." I don't know why, but that cracks me up. I'm going to put it on a machine one of these days, it's just very low in the queue.
Additionally, I use Unix all the time at work and it's the only way a keep a separation from work and home. Otherwise, I think I'd crack up. I expect that we'll all be moving to some distro of Linux around here sooner or later (upon an edit, I should mention that I live with Vitriola, because otherwise what I am saying here makes little sense) because there is nothing compelling in Vista and unless I get it for free I'm not going to bother. From what I understand about Ubuntu, there is little to think that Vitriola wouldn't be able to pick it up quickly, if not be able to install it out right if she chose.
How easy is it to get native Unix apps running under OSX?
I, too, am curious of this!
[quote="saintlupus"]Why is it that a bunch of penniless hackers can put together something like Debian, which immediately finds and configures all of my hardware properly, and yet the largest personal computer software company on Earth can't make something that detects an ancient onboard modem properly, let alone any of the reasonably modern hardware?[/quote]
Man, usually XP is pretty good about this sort of thing, too. In the 98 days I used to have a CD wallet filled with drivers for things and devices that I encountered. There was a "Velocity" video card that we used at work and each card came with a disc. There were hundreds of them around. But man, should you lose it, good luck, because Velocity got bought by someone who got bought by 3dfx, which I think got bought by someone and those drivers are nowhere to be found.
[quote]I've heard good things about Ubuntu, and its user forums, but I can't offer any firsthand advice. [/quote]
They sent me a free CD because they are awesome. It says something like, "Ubuntu. Linux for human beings." I don't know why, but that cracks me up. I'm going to put it on a machine one of these days, it's just very low in the queue.
Additionally, I use Unix all the time at work and it's the only way a keep a separation from work and home. Otherwise, I think I'd crack up. I expect that we'll all be moving to some distro of Linux around here sooner or later (upon an edit, I should mention that I live with Vitriola, because otherwise what I am saying here makes little sense) because there is nothing compelling in Vista and unless I get it for free I'm not going to bother. From what I understand about Ubuntu, there is little to think that Vitriola wouldn't be able to pick it up quickly, if not be able to install it out right if she chose.
[quote name="hygraed"]How easy is it to get native Unix apps running under OSX?[/quote]
I, too, am curious of this!