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Reply to: OS wars?

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Previously on "OS wars?"

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  • Dr Evil
    replied
    There's a runtime error joke in there somewhere, I can just see it, but can't quite get my fingers to it - can anyone help?

    P.S. I nominate threaded for the Daily Prize for shoehorning a Lamborghini reference into a thread . . . anyone second it?

    Leave a comment:


  • Joe Black
    replied
    Originally posted by Mordac
    No, this might happen: (you do ask for it sometimes big fella)


    Is that a Windows Vista Lamborghini, because it seems to be at the same sort of angle as DP's screenshot?

    Leave a comment:


  • threaded
    replied
    Originally posted by Mordac
    I'm not sure the word "slight" belongs in that sentence. I assume the airbags worked OK?
    Didn't hit anything hard enough for the airbags to deploy.

    Leave a comment:


  • Churchill
    replied
    Originally posted by threaded
    No broken glass apart from the lights, slight panel damage, even the back wheel was rebuilt.
    That's what happens when you have such a large weight in the driving seat, it unbalances the car and makes it dangerously unstable.

    My advice is to lay off the pies for a while.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mordac
    replied
    I'm not sure the word "slight" belongs in that sentence. I assume the airbags worked OK?

    Leave a comment:


  • threaded
    replied
    No broken glass apart from the lights, slight panel damage, even the back wheel was rebuilt.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mordac
    replied
    Originally posted by threaded
    People like that should stick to a consumer OS. Would you lend a lambo to someone who's still learning how to drive?
    No, this might happen: (you do ask for it sometimes big fella)


    Leave a comment:


  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by white-anglo-reactionary
    Microsoft products are for kids who played with Fisher-Price toys - nice to look at, well-designed child-toy interface, but limited in what you could do. Linux is for kids who preferred meccano. A Fisher-Price activity centre is great if you want to spin a wheel or honk a horn, but you couldn't build a crane with it, could you?
    But I don't want to build anything here, I just want to get on with using my data. If I wanted to have fun with my OS I'd use Linux (that's how come I've already got it on the PC).

    But when I just want to drive to the supermarket, I don't start building a car with Meccano. I use the thing I've bought complete, that just goes when I want it to.

    Leave a comment:


  • white-anglo-reactionary
    replied
    Horses for courses, toys for boys

    Microsoft products are for kids who played with Fisher-Price toys - nice to look at, well-designed child-toy interface, but limited in what you could do. Linux is for kids who preferred meccano. A Fisher-Price activity centre is great if you want to spin a wheel or honk a horn, but you couldn't build a crane with it, could you?

    Leave a comment:


  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by threaded
    People like that should stick to a consumer OS. Would you lend a lambo to someone who's still learning how to drive?
    You mean an OS that works. Would you expect to get under the bonnet with your toolkit every time you wanted to drive your tractor?

    Leave a comment:


  • darmstadt
    replied
    My Redhat system doesn't recognise (i.e. automount) a USB disk or stick. I have to do that manually but it does find it so I know at what device it is to mount it manually (fnarr, fnarr)

    My SuSE system does automount everything automatically and opens up Konqueror automatically

    My Unixware system doesn't see anything

    My Solaris 10x86 doesn't see anything, but this one is early days yet

    Leave a comment:


  • wobbegong
    replied
    I have a dual boot Win2K/Xandros system at home. The Linux distro works fine, I've not tried it with USB disk drives but it's perfectly happy with USB keys.

    I tried Fedora Core 2; what a pain in the arse! Nothing worked (sound, modem, video) without patches and fiddling, but Xandros installs and runs perfectly.

    Leave a comment:


  • threaded
    replied
    Originally posted by OwlHoot
    That's not the worst of it - A linux geek colleague using Fedora Core 2 (I think?) about a year ago managed to trash an external disk by plugging disks in and out of a USB hub - Linux got in a muddle over the drive assignments, and when he did a format it formatted the disk containing his vast collection of mp3s! His latest backup was a year ago earlier, and only contained a tiny fraction of what he lost.
    People like that should stick to a consumer OS. Would you lend a lambo to someone who's still learning how to drive?

    Leave a comment:


  • darmstadt
    replied
    The background looks distinctly like a SuSE Pro system

    Leave a comment:


  • mcquiggd
    replied
    Is every document displayed at a wonky angle....?

    It will bring a whole new dimension to porn....

    Leave a comment:

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