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Linux is no more work (actually quite a bit less work) than windows once you understand what you are doing.
Exactly. The people that "Need" Excel, NEED Excel. So basically business is out. I've tried them all OpenOffice Sheets, Libre Office Sheets, Google Sheets, Bed Sheets, none even come close.
What an idiot. The problem with Linux is not apps; it's accessibility and the fact that installing stuff, especially drivers, is way too complex for most users.
Sure, Photoshop beats GIMP, but a VERY small percentage of computer users have any interest in either program.
You clearly have but actually used it have you? Fire up synaptic and actually use it.
I believe you, but the "once you understand what you're doing" sounds like just enough of a pain in the ass that I'd rather just pay $100 for windows.
I choose to remain ignorant to Linux's virtues purely due to the image I have created of what I believe working with Linux would be like. That's what the Linux community needs to overcome. I'm just trying to answer the OPs questions as to what's holding Linux adoption back from my point of view.
I have, its a great idea but it gets really annoying with some and meeting all the dependencies, and then meeting all those things dependencies. gets annoying when some things work with version 1.1 of some program and others want 1.3 and then theres a 2.0 of the same thing that looks really awesome, but it doesn't work with any of the stuff that needs 1.1 or 1.3.
Then you want to run windows programs and everyone is like just use Wine, its easy and works well! Hah, ya right.
Then you go on a linux forum and make a thread about what you want, and how it didn't work out, and get told to read a book 3 times longer than the bible.
I would say the one app its missing is a comprehensive installer and uninstaller program.
One thing Windows does well is make it easy to install and uninstall crap. . . . .except bitlocker
What are you talking about? MSI packages (modern Windows installation packages) leave no system files behind when uninstalled.No just typical Linux ignorance. The Windows uninstaller is god awful and leaves so much shit behind... It's so far behind things like synaptic that it's not even a comparison.
Bullshit had you actually used synaptic at no point would you be worrying about dependencies. Regurgitated FUD FTW.
What are you talking about? MSI packages (modern Windows installation packages) leave no system files behind when uninstalled.![]()
What are you talking about? MSI packages (modern Windows installation packages) leave no system files behind when uninstalled.![]()
Considering almost nothing uses msi installers or use them as part of a larger installer that point is invalid.
No just typical Linux ignorance. The Windows uninstaller is god awful and leaves so much shit behind... It's so far behind things like synaptic that it's not even a comparison.
Windows ends up costing less than nothing for the big computer vendors. They get their OEM copies very cheap, and then get paid to install junkware on the them making Windows computers cheaper than Linux.a free operating system can't gain more ground on one that costs hundreds of dollars.
Synaptic doesn't really handle that well either. If you install Package A which depends on Package B it will tell you and help you automatically get Package B. But if you remove Package A it doesn't automatically flag Package B for removal too.
When you 70 year old mother can install and configure cacti on centos I will give in.
Its not the installers... Windows Installer is waaaay ahead of anything else in the windows environment. It removes everything it installs, (for the most part) what is left behind is mostly stuff created by the application or OS rather then the installer.
Having a clean install or install engine is much easier on Linux... Mostly because it doesn't have a convoluted registry. The registry can make installations a lot more complex on Windows. Tons and tons of guids referencing keys, who reference settings. Though honestly if your app doesn't have drivers (or other tight integration with the OS) and just needs to "run", Windows Installer is powerful, clean and reliable in much the same ways as in linux.
I have no clue what the benefit of such a complex registry/OS system is, but txt files and folder only installs would make things things easier for me at times.
If my computer crashed when I developed on Windows, I would want to kill myself. I would have to download all these little tools, go through installer for anything that isn't on the image preinstalled. It was a nightmare.
Now that I develop on Linux, all I have to do is keep a txt file with a few apt commands and I am good to go. Copy and paste, done.
I do not know how you can get any easier than
apt-get install firefox
apt-get remove firefox
The biggest problem with Linux and its' variations and software is that it's free...
Linux's biggest problem is that it is likened to a $5 whore surrounded by men/women who will actually have sex with $5 whores. It's just not worth the hassle for most people.
Yes, it does. The thing is, Windows is "good enough" and it is established as the standard. The world is full of that. Doesn't matter if something else is better (you can argue if Linux is actually better or not), if the established solution is good enough, people will keep using it.
Line up a bunch of almost free $5 charging prostitute and one $500 prostitue, and the majority of people who can afford it will pick the $500 prostitute every time while laughing at the people who are doing the $5 prostitutes. Why? Because deep in our minds, there's something significantly "wrong" with both the people who frequent too-cheap hookers and the actual hooker who charges too little. Doesn't matter if it's true or not, but that's the average mindset. Sure, the too-cheap hooker has all the same physical assets as the more expensive hooker, but people generally believe, and are more likely to be correct, that they will get a better overall experience with the $500 prostitute.
Synaptic doesn't but apt-get does tell you and will even tell you what command to run to remove them.
In terms of installing things and removing things the package managers in Linux just do a better job. I don't know how many times I've been held up from .Net dependencies based on versions that pre-date braille or Jesus.
Until linux can run MS Office and has a single unified place were admin's can throw approved software that people can just double click and install thats super easy to understand and has one unified interface. It just ain't happening. Better doesn't matter when your dealing with stupid.
Then there's the fact of ownership and cost. Then there's the way to sell it. People insist on saying the software is free. No company wants to deal with "unsupported" software because they have to mitigate risk. Even when you tell them you can buy support packages they still wig out. I've been successful from the standpoint of saying the cost of software is x dollars a year (the cost of buying support).
But if you think for one second i can get the average corporate or agency user to get off of excel i got some land i'm willing to sell you.
As far as the windows installer. Your missing the point on easy. You say well these commands or theres this graphic thing here. Its not unified. Windows installer is super easy, it may not work well, but its super easy and the same process on all current versions of windows. When they go home its the same.
What non windows computers are having success penetrating the corporate desktop market at all? Apple. Why? because all of the problems above are addressed and you're still pissing up a rope because of GPO control and the like from the actual IT side of things.
Until there's no longer 70 distributions and things can be done in a few clicks as opposed to a few lines of apt-get, Linux will not catch on at the desktop.
Linux needs to boil down to around 4-5 distros with proper organised support and development.