hawker wrote, On 12/03/2014 15:23:
On 3/11/2014 9:27 PM, Dennis wrote:
hawker wrote:
On 3/11/2014 12:36 PM, WaltS wrote:
On 03/11/2014 11:43 AM, Ray_Net wrote:
cyberzen wrote, On 11/03/2014 09:01:
Le 10/03/2014 02:14, Paul B. Gallagher a écrit :
Arnie Goetchius wrote:
I have been struggling with this issue for nearly a month.
1. It is only a problem on my XP SP3 machines which also have less
memory and slower cpu. I have no problem on newer, faster machines
running Win 7.
<http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2014/03/08/millions-of-computer-may-be-at-risk-of-attack-next-month/>
Think about it.
think about Linux
If you like to be a geek :-)
No need to be a geek despite my geeky instructions to lxuser in
m.s.firefox.
I can give you the GUI instructions if interested.
More like need to not be using any real world applications and be less
productive with the simpler Linux equivalent of the others.
90% of the applications I need to use every day for work have no Linux
equivalent. For home use I could pretty much move to Linux but not even
close for work. I would still have to run some sort of PC OS.
Linux just does not have industry recognized business applications,
electrical engineering applications, CAD apps, PCB layout apps or
targeted embedded processor apps. All of which I use daily. Same issue
with Mac.
If your statements are in fact true, you are in a very small minority of
the work force. I wish people would stop spreading FUD about linux.
I would wager that 90% of the workforce could be transitioned to linux
with no major problems.
Dennis
To make that statement you clearly have no idea what programs the
business, sales and engineering community uses. There really are no
substitutes for most of it. Even programs like Open Office can't do a
huge percentage of the things that people who use Office every day
need to do - Especially when it comes to constant formatting of Word
and Larger issues with Excel.
Almost no large scale Sales or MRP/ERP programs exist in Linux.
Certainly no main stream accepted ones. Almost no CAD or Engineering
programs (outside of software) exist for Linux. No main stream
multimedia or graphic programs exist (GIMP is a toy). The software
that designs all those Linux boxes (PCB Layout - embedded programing
tools, Industrial design tools etc) - exists on PC only.
I have worked with many a die hard Linux (and Mac) head they all
either move to PC or run Windows in a VC once the reality of the
working world hits them.
The business world lives on Oracle, ACT, Quick-books, Office,
PhotoShop, Outlook, and a whole host of industry specialized
applications (such as ACAD, Pro-E, Solid Works, PADS) for each
industry, all of which have no Linux recognized equivalent and even if
it did it would have to seemlessly interface with those apps since the
rest of the world uses them. Even the fact that I try to use Seamonkey
rather than Outlook is a major stumbling block to me interfacing with
the rest of the world in a business sense since I get lots of e-mail
incompatibility issues.
I agree with you .. linux men did not realise what's outside their world.
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