Saaa wrote:
Also - for me at least, learning Unix as an occasional activity (e.g. cygwin, the occasional ssh, trying a couple of things) has had very little value. Didn't work for me in the least. I remember how I installed cygwin for the first time and started it. It was very exciting - I could try Unix in a sandbox! So I started cygwin.bat and there it was - one black window with a "% " prompt. I knew only ls and pwd, so I ran those, and then closed the box. Unix wasn't telling me anything.
I did exactly that :D

I had to complete a sizable task before I felt I'd started to get the point.


If I were to switch right now it would take me a few days to install all the programs.
Most programs I use are open source anyways, so that wouldn't be a problem.
Even my old Photoshop is gold or so in wine.
But then I would just have a slightly crippled windows box
(less games, cs4 and office are garbage on ubuntu).
When would I start using things that aren't on windows?

When you'd be writing computer programs.

Andrei

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