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2) I wanted a more secure system; I was fed up with viruses, malware, spyware, etc. 3) I hate Microsoft for creating crappy software (goes back to Windows 95), for being limited by the license to only have about 11(?) devices connected to my pc (I never use more, but of I want to connect a million of devices to my pc I have the f*ck*ng right to do so), and for a lot more reasions you can find here. Quote:
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For the fun of it. Wanted to learn more. I've been a Windows user for as long as it's been out. Linux had always been in the background. And my curiosity got the better of me. ;) Now Linux is my primary OS at home, and I use it when I can at work.
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I switched from Windows to Linux in 2002. I had nothing against Microsoft or Windows back then. I just wanted to know how to use Linux; it was purely my intellectual curiosity.
The switch was relatively smooth. I had used CLI all the time with MS-DOS, Windows and some UNIX flavours both at home and at work, so the prospect of Linux requiring the extensive use of CLI wasn't a big hurdle for me... at least for the basic, everyday tasks. It's been five years since then. All my desktop computers at home run Fedora Core 6. My two home servers run FC3 and CentOS 4.5. My main desktop at work runs CentOS 4.5, too. I've learned a lot about Linux. I've also learned a lot on what Microsoft is really all about. I now truly believe in the sharing of knowledge and expertise in software, thanks to the FOSS philosophy I got to know through Linux. Had I not jumped into the Linux world, I may still have been a royal Microsoft user today. Scary! |
I've always had something against Microsoft. For example...
For Linux, you pay for the CDs, download and burn the FREE iso. It then (typically) gives you a stable, well-updated system. For Windows, you pay $300+ for something that costs them about $0.40 to make. Now tell me whats wrong with this picture..., and you get a system that is bloated and unstable. |
I think I'll be using Linux for everything internet related, with the exception of Flash-based pages (since Adobe refuses to release a 64bit edition). Until I can get the emulators I have in Windows going on Linux, I'll still be doing most other stuff in Windows. Renoise, the program I use to make music, will be coming to Linux soon, but I'll still probably use it in Windows more because of VST's and VSTi's. Photoshop I can pretty much replace with the Gimp--although there are a few things that I'm still not sure if it can do or not.
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First of all, nice to see a Fedora user Amberp ;)
To why I use Linux as my main system (Except for School, but I hope to Fix that :)) Windows XP on my machine was slow as Hell then died. I re-installed it and it is better than then, but it is still doing weird things and I wont forget how bad it got. Linux also for me is a much better gaming platform. All the corporate games I play have Linux versions or WINE well (Except for Age of Empires, and I am trying to Fix that http://freeempires.yoll.net) and I love the open source games I have on Fedora. I don't see why people criticize Linux as a Gaming platform. Linux is the only system on my Computer that the Sound is working, and It is the only system I have installed things on after the Re-install of Windows (Well I installed OpenOffice.org, Lotus Notes, SeaMonkey and a Math program but thats for School). And with LQ I never have to worry about getting help for Linux ;) |
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Why Linux over Windows?
The GUI is a layer. If it ever crashes, I don't have to restart Linux, I just have to restart the GUI. KDE is much more customizable than any GUI any version of Windows has ever offered, and if you prefer more of an OS9 kind of experience you can go with Gnome--but on either of them, if you put Beryl/Compiz/Desktop-effects on, you get something that blows away all the GUI's out there. I can run dozens of programs that benefit from having a gui and still run powerful programs in text mode, like htop process manager, and switch between them all without issue. I can analyze everything that's happening in the computer with relative ease, at any given moment because a CLI can always be available. I can edit ANYTHING about the OS, and if I look in the right places I can find out how, and it's considered okay to do and is even encouraged by many. A community of people who are very helpful, sometimes being really stubborn (but you don't become stubborn about those kinds of things automatically, wisdom is the reason) who, if I was to think of trying to do something unusual that they hadn't tried before, generally some will take a lot of interest in the matter, but only if the idea is actually feasible. If it's not, it will be shown for what it is right away. |
there's a Linux port of SL
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welcome :)
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And for the smartasses; yes I know 4gb RAM is the limit with 32bit. |
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Why I switched from Windows to Linux. 1) didn't like the "way of Microsoft". I liked two Windows versions: Win98 and Win2k. But those systems are not supported anymore. WinXP turned into a toy with a lot of things that I'll never need (like new ugly style for windows). I didn't like what's coming with windows Vista (a lot of resource-consuming useless features, and the DRM, and it's system requirements) I didn't want' to upgrade my hardware for Vista, and didn't want to buy Vista. This is the first reason. 2) price. I've got my Linux distribution for free. And it's legal to give a copy of distribution to anyone, etc. 3) flexibility. in Linux I can transform my system into whatever I want, on Windows I can't do that. 4) knowledge. Linux is an OpenSource, so it provides a good base to "upgrade" programming skills - it has real examples and real programs with source code. So I won't have to rely on Microsoft examples. 5) source code. On Linux if there is a bug, I can find it (If I have enough skills, of course) and fix it myself. On Windows, I'll have to wait for patch.. |
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