Are you trying to start some kind of flame war?  I didn't see a post that
this was answering.  Do you often find yourself jumping onto a soapbox and
talking away?  You seem to be intelligent about your points; I just don't
see your cause.  I think we have a pretty good idea as to the strengths and
weaknesses of these operating systems and are looking forward to the
progress to come for Linux.  (In particular Red Hat since we are here)

Larry


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of Mirabella, Mathew J
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 11:01 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; redhat-list list
Subject: Linux vs Windows

This may not be a very structured and organised piece of prose on this
issue, but it includes all of what i essentially think on the topic.  Please
correct me if i am wrong on any particular technical issue.

Windows and redhat might cost similar regarding the enterprise edition of
redhat vs windows xp pro, but the average person would probably just get the
normal redhat cds or download the os and install it for pretty much next to
nothing.  So from this perspective, windows XP is more expensive for a base
system than is red hat.

Also, with a Windows system you do have to purchase MS Office to get a suite
of products like openoffice which is free with red hat and new linux
distros, or at least free to download.

Also with windows, you do have to purchase photoshop and a number of other
tools for audio editing, programming, etc. You can get freeware stuff for
Windows, but this is usually not as good quality and has less features and
less support.  So you mostly have to pay if you want good quality tools for
windows.

It can probably be argued that the applications that are free either with
red hat or which can be downloaded free are as good and in some cases better
than good Windows apps albeit sometimes with a few less features in the
guis.

So all things considered, red hat (and linux in general) is a lot cheaper
and more application rich at least from the standpoint of a base system.
And this is to be expected when you consider the GNU stuff and the open
source notions surrounding linux/unix apps.

In addition, it is widely suggested that linux is a far more stable OS than
windows, and certainly the filesystem (ext2 and ext3) is a lot faster and
more efficient than fat and ntfs).  Linux is also known as a far better
system for networking, web serving, and other such applications that are
still dominated by unix style systems.  You do not have to reboot linux as
often as windows, you can do more things without needing to reboot for those
things to take effect, and you dont get as many system crashes with linux.

However, there is another side to the story.  Windows does come with full
mp3 support, media players that support a wide range of media types, a web
browser that does really support css and xslt/xml stuff properly (netscape
and mozilla have a long way to go with css support, and in some cases, even
tables and frames).  with the addition of ms office, you have a range of
office tools that are very feature rich (still more so than openoffice), and
an email client that is very easy to configure (although, i have serious
issues with microsoft exchange, but that is another story).  while red hat
8.0 for their own perhaps reasonable reasons, have not provided mp3 support
out of the box.

In short, from the cds of windows and office, the install process is very
easy, it has worked well every time i have tried to do it, and once
everything is installed, you can basically do everything right away without
worrying about any special files to edit, things to compile in just the
right way with the right files in the right dirs or they don't work, etc.
etc.

The user interface of windows is still way ahead of gnome or kde, and way
less buggy (in my experience).  The user interface is and has been more
intuitive and incorporates far more accessibility features than gnome or kde
(although, these x systems are moving in the right direction, they have a
long way to go).  e.g. problems people have with graphics card support and
fonts stuffing up and system hangs... and new issues arising after updates.

in windows, graphics and sound are supported right away.  just install the
drivers if you need to and often you don't have to even do that... and it
all works.  I have heard of very few problems with windows in the same way
as those with red hat on this issue.

my experience with red hat (and other linux distros) is that the
installation process is slightly more complicated than windows, but once you
get it done, there are still many more things you have to fix to get it
working properly.  there are excentricities with what red hat does have and
does not have, excentricities with what yor given linux distro sets up as
default as opposed to others, and even what is the default across versions
of the same distro.  I find the maintenance of such an os much more messy
than windows.  especially when you have to even play around with the kernel
to get certain things to work properly that windows just does out of the
box.

for example, red hat sets utf 8 support as the default, but in many common
apps this is not supported, so you get strange characters in emacs, etc.
taking the utf.8 off from the i118n file leaves you with a font that does
not support some highlighting, so you have to change this as well.  I know
that gnu apps are seperate from any particular distro and i understand how
these things interact, but at least windows is a single os with a single
direction where all things that are intended to work together usually do so.

updates from red hat (or whatever distro) are often difficult to manage.
e.g. the glibc problems people are having, the issue of kernel updates being
different from other ones, etc.  With windows, just installing the update
and rebooting results in at the very least nothing broken that was not
before.  I have seen many posts to the litsts recently where people say "i
installed the latest red hat update and now application x does not work, but
it did before... what has happened".  this has never occured for windows in
my experience.

There may be some windows 95 apps that dont work in windows xp, but you can
usually get newer versions for the nt style of windows anyway.  What i
really mean here is that any updates to a particular version of windows
(e.g. updates of windows xp) do not break any currently running apps.

I know that more immediate support with hardware is likely to be better for
windows because most hardware like sound cards etc are comercial in nature,
and thus usually come with windows drivers as a default.  e.g. creative labs
sound cards.  This is understandable, and it is not a criticism of red hat
or any linux distro.  However, if linux wantts to really hit the mass
market, they have to learn three things from windows.

1.  for the gui, it has to have a very intuitive and device independent
accessible user interface, or at least accessible as far as being a template
for making applications that are accessible to a veriety of access apps like
screen readers etc.  By device independent, i mean mouse + keyboard +
whatever oelse access, to ALL THINGS in the interface, not just one or the
other, with keyboard access being limited in some ways.  Gnome and kde are
on the way, but have a long way to go on this.  I know that windows screen
readers and access apps are expensive, and emacspeak and speakup for linux
are free, but the windows GUI offers rich features that are graphical PLUS
accessible to a screen reader.  whereas at the moment in linux, screen
readers only work in the text environment.  If you want a graphical web
browser that is accessible, IE is currently the only one (but you have to
get a screen reader of course).

2.  Maintain compatibility with older ways of doing things.  Linux could be
ahead with this.  i.e. providing good text based applications with rich user
interfaces as well as the gui apps.  But i find it disappointing that new
versions of distros of linux cut out old apps like linuxconf in favour of
only having gui based apps, leaving text users to have to edit conf files
etc.  This cuts off continuity leaving people wondering what app they have
to use now to configure their system as opposed to what was available in 7.3
where it is now different in 8.0.  Windows may use different styles and ways
to do things from win 98 to win nt to win xp, but the apps are fundementally
the same in the way they are accessed from the desktop.

3.  it has to work really well out of the box for the average user with the
kind of hardware that people are buying now as well as older stuff, not only
the kind of hardware that people had available a year ago.  e.g. creative
labs audigy 2 requires significant kernel patching to work, and even then
people have issues in linux.  All apps have to work well together without
conflicts, and the package management system has to automatically install
and configure dependencies etc.  the dselect and apt-get stuff for debian is
slightly ahead of rpm on this latter score.

It has to be powerful and app rich, and linux is just that, but it also has
to offer the basic user a wide range of ready to go applications that people
want to use every day with minimum of fuss to get them going and no sudden
rude issues of something not working right after an in-version update or
patch that fixes an old bug.

In short, out of the box, windows is intuitive and ready to go right away
with minimum config and maintenance issues, and a wealth of support for new
hardware.  While many modern linux distro versions claim this, it is usually
not quite the case, or at least not yet.

so which would I choose?  There are pros and cons of both.

If i have time to muck around, install and re install, configure,
experiment, work out how this and that works, and i have time and want to
learn the finer points of networks and programming etc, i would choose
linux. or maybe even free bsd! and i might choose to live with the
exentricities, taking them as a challenge.

but...

If i just wanted to start doing work, edit documents, write email, chat on
the net, browse the net, play audio stuff, and do all of this right away
with a minimum of fuss... I would use Windows with no hesitation, and i
would live with the issues of instability.

and that is all i can think of to say at this point.

Mat.



Mat Mirabella
Centre For Accessibility
Telstra Research 03 9253 6712
http://www.telstra.com.au/accessibility
http://www.in.telstra.com.au/ism/centreforaccessibility
Member:  W3C WAI WCAG Working Group.  http://www.w3.org/WAI/GL


-----Original Message-----
From: Ed Wilts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 26 March 2003 1:10 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Red Hat 9


On Tue, Mar 25, 2003 at 06:29:04PM -0500, Gerald Henriksen wrote:
> So your average person at home now has a choice of Windows XP at $300
> or Red Hat Enterprise Workstation at $300 ($60 a year after the first
> year for access to security fixes).  Guess what, XP comes with full
> multimedia capabilities including MP3 and DVD, as well as a full range
> of software available for purchase including games, tax software, etc.
> Which would you choose?

And Red Hat Linux comes with a full office suite, a Photoshop clone, a
bunch of other utilities, web development tools, and a whole bunch more.
You don't need to pay extra for Microsoft Office, Photoshop, and other
imaging software, nor a project management suite.  Add them all up and
you'll see that Windows is a *lot* more expensive.

>And by the way, so far at least Microsoft
> still offers free security fixes in the base price.

As does Red Hat.  However, your pricing is suspect.  Windows XP Pro is
$299.  Red hat Enterprise is $179/year for the download edition and $299
per year for the standard edition.

In the first 90 days, Microsoft offers you absolutely no support.  Red
Hat offers telephone and web-based support.  If you need assistance
setting up a desktop, this could save you a bunch.  The standard edition
includes both phone and web support with service level guarantees and
extends this for the entire year.  Microsoft support costs $245 for
phone support *per incident*.

--
Ed Wilts, Mounds View, MN, USA
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Member #1, Red Hat Community Ambassador Program



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