Re: [SLUG] Lindows?

From: Chad Perrin (perrin@apotheon.com)
Date: Sun Apr 25 2004 - 13:48:17 EDT


First of all, I'm reasonably new to this list, and am probably a
comparative newbie to Linux amongst the rest of you. Hello. My name's
Chad. Nice to meet you.

Travis R. Birt wrote:

> Well, a couple of things, first, why would you buy more than one
> version of Lindows? If you are a member
> of CNR, you get all updates for free. You can put it on every
> computer in your house owning just one copy.
> I can understand not wanting to pay for CNR, but for beginners, it can
> not be beat. Also, to clarify, I was ONLY talking about Linspire
> because someone asked about it specifically. I pretty
> much attempt to not mention distros on the list because I ALWAYS get
> responses like this. "My Distro is
> better because..." I am glad you are happy with your distro. Stay
> with it! However, when people ask questions
> about a specific distro, why run a commercial for your favorite
> distro? What is the point exactly?
> I think Linux needs to quit fighting with itself over its 10% market
> share and get to fighting MS who has the
> lions portion at 90%.
>
I think you might have misinterpreted Mr. Rodriguez's intent. Since the
original email in the thread asked for easy-to-install, user-friendly
distributions, it was only logical to offer another distro that might
suit his needs more closely, just like Mr. Ford is doing with Mepis. I
don't think anyone was attacking your enthusiasm for Linspire, either.

Forgive me if I'm stepping into a discussion I don't understand the
backstory behind, but your response seemed a bit hasty to me, Mr. Birt.

Speaking of Mepis, I've heard good things about it, and am considering
both that and Knoppix as possible end-user workstation OSes for a
business network I'm planning. The other option, at the moment, seems
to be a carefully tailored SuSE (which is simply the distribution with
which I'm most familiar), as I'm looking for something that doesn't
require licensing fees to avoid prosecution for multitudinous
deployment. Before I go out and start trying to evaluate all of the
above the "hard way", can anyone here offer any insight on my choices?
Are there better distros for my needs than what I've suggested already
(and if so, please tell me why)?

-- 
Chad Perrin

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