Originally posted by BO$$
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Intel Reverts Plans, Will Not Support Ubuntu's XMir
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This time BO$$ is right, Ubuntu is very important for non-technical people. Canonical should consider very carefully their choices, and intel too.. who is really going to use Wayland? Don't answer "red hat", because 99,999% of RHEL installations doesn't even have a display server installed.
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Originally posted by Andrecorreia View Postask in my college, all response ubuntu for you, inclusive the college
Most people use Windows. In my college, too. Even when there is a computers science career in there, and most of them either use Windows (and it's not for lack of hearing about Ubuntu or Linux in general), a few use Mac, and the rest are pretty much scattered between Ubuntu, Arch, Gentoo, Mint, etc. There are a few chemistry, physics and biology students using either Ubuntu or Arch. My college uses Windows XP on the chemistry/biology/few-other-natural-sciences building and a multi boot with Windows 7, Debian and Ubuntu in the physics, math and CS building.
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Originally posted by johnc View PostYup. Mired in 0.0001% desktop market share. It's amazing to see how most of you out there have no clue -- zero clue -- as to why nobody wants to use Linux. Even enthusiast users are taking a pass.
If we're talking about the reasons why Linux has such a (relatively) low share on the desktop, the reason is simple: lack of OEM preinstalls. Sure, you can order hardware from a few specialized stores - system76, ZaReason, Thinkpenguin come to mind - but besides that, if you walk into a random consumer electronics store that sells computers, chances are they're 100% windows machines. And why is that? Because of microsoft partnerships. Microsoft enforces strict monopolistic rules on their partners that penalize them for offering alternative operating systems. Microsoft penalizes OEM's for offering alternate OS's.
As for enthusiasts, I'd like to hear sources for that claim. Plenty of enthusiasts use Linux.
But I think there is some subconscious feeling of "l33tness" that many of you are trying to protect. Like spending three hours in a command line shell to install a wireless driver makes you feel better than everyone else.
Personally, I've never spent three hours on a command line shell installing any driver. The average user never even has to open the terminal, they can stay to the GUI for all the time, no matter if they use Ubuntu or pretty much any other modern Linux distro. Ubuntu is not unique in this respect in any way.
I however do like the command line for its robustness and flexibility: if there's a problem, and I don't know how to fix it, I can duckduckgo a fix, and pretty much just copypaste it to the terminal. That's convenient and something you usually can't even do on windows. The average computer-illiterate user doesn't have to bother, they'll ask their more proficient friends to help anyway when there's a problem. The fact that the CLI is there and allows the option to delve in and learn how your system works on the inside is great. Not as a mandatory thing, but as an option for those who can appreciate it.
I love that I'm now able to compile my own software from source. On windows, trying to learn how to compile software is, with no exception, an ordeal, requiring external tools, which aren't always even free. On Linux, all you need is build-essentials, ./configure && make && sudo make install. And yes, I'm sort of proud that I'm able to do that, however, I've never bragged about it to anyone, or acted like people who don't know how to do it are somehow worse because of it, nor have I really ever seen anyone act that way in the Linux community. In my experience, that behaviour has always been more common among the windows script kiddies than actual Linux hackers.
And frankly I'm sick of hearing about how "the community" is constantly "harmed" by Canonical. Hell I'm sick of hearing about "the community" at all. This is not group-think time, people. Everybody in "the community" is motivated by their own self-interests.
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???
Originally posted by mrugiero View PostFirst, that's not random. Ask people who don't go to college, and see how it changes.
Most people use Windows. In my college, too. Even when there is a computers science career in there, and most of them either use Windows (and it's not for lack of hearing about Ubuntu or Linux in general), a few use Mac, and the rest are pretty much scattered between Ubuntu, Arch, Gentoo, Mint, etc. There are a few chemistry, physics and biology students using either Ubuntu or Arch. My college uses Windows XP on the chemistry/biology/few-other-natural-sciences building and a multi boot with Windows 7, Debian and Ubuntu in the physics, math and CS building.
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Originally posted by Andrecorreia View Postask in my college, all response ubuntu for you, inclusive the collegeLast edited by blackout23; 08 September 2013, 01:19 PM.
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