WhiteBlaze wrote:Hmm my opinion the big problem with Mac OS X or LINUX is, software they just dont have as much to offer.
Au contraire, my friend. As a typical desktop user, I find that there is almost always at least one suitable replacement for my Windows ap for GNU/Linux. If not, there is always Wine. ^_^ Debian linux has THOUSANDS UPON THOUSANDS of precompiled binaries for you to download and install with a few simple keystrokes. Sometimes if I need something, and I know what the program is, or sometimes I just imagine that maybe it exists, and I go, "apt-get install xxprogramxx" and.. Whoa, it really does exist! If something is not that obvious, I can simply go into my package manager and do a quick search to see what might suit my needs. I can update all of my current software to the latest bleeding edge version, by simply going "apt-get update && apt-get upgrade".
Here's my windows-to-linux success story.
I've always dabbled in linux a little, but not alot... I remember installing RedHat 5.2 on my old Pentium 200 and messing around with it a bit, although I was left mostly undocumented, as far as "newbie" docs goes. I had no access to the internet, and the man pages just don't cut it for me, usually... I played around with lindows-type things a little bit later on, and also did a dual boot of RedHat 7 (or 8, i forget) and WinXP once. However I still found myself constantly booting to Windows, because I didn't know how to do anything in linux and I never felt like learning.
A few months ago however, I said to myself, "I'm going to do this linux thing once and for all." No windows, no dual but, just plain linux. With a 97% full 40gig hard drive, and no alternative storage space other than CD-R, it was a nasty migration. I spent days burning, deleting, burning some more.. until I had freed a little over half of my space. Then I repartitioned, installed linux, and moved my keepable stuff to /home, fried the fat32 partition, and resized my /home partition. My first choice of distro was a poor one, Mandrake 9.2, but at least it got me into the game. I used it for the first month while I got the feel for linux.
Then I rid myself of drake and installed Debian stable, which I realized was grossly out of date. I immediately changed my apt sources to unstable/testing and upgraded to a 2.6 kernel. Contrary to what I was told by various people, Debian was actually a breeze to install. I used a 30meg netinst image linked from debian.org, though it's actually an unofficial image I believe.
I'd like to note that contrary to what alot of people say, linux is not simply "better" than linux just "because." It has its cons and pros depending on what functions you employ the box to.
And let's face it, not all open-source software is necessarily good or better than windows. (*cough, nautilus can be flakey just like explorer *cough*) Alot of linux aps are a bit lacking in the UI area, and usage is not always obvious, thus forcing you to actually *read* the readme's associated with programs. Be prepared for this.
If anyone is an experienced computer user at all, and has the time and patience to spend a few weeks becoming comfortable with a new style of computing, I would encourage you to give linux a shot, you probably won't regret it.
As for why I did it, well, I didn't actually have much of a reason. Maybe one day I just got frustrated with windows or something. I honestly don't know anymore. But I'm glad that I tried something different.