Linux "Dependency ****"

/ Linux "Dependency ****" #21  
Correct me if I'm wrong but I don't think Chromebooks have a hard drive. Everything is off of the internet. So if your a person like me that likes to keep files on a computer then Chromebooks are not a good choice. Besides Google is just as bad as Microsoft for snooping into your personal business.
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #22  
I just started using this new DELL desktop (about the size of a book) that I got already a year and a half ago. Totally frustrated. None of my printers and scanners will work, as drivers are not available. Now, I wanted to open WORD, and you have to sign in. This crap just keeps getting worse and deeper. I'm almost thinking of getting my Windows XP box repaired. I'm so sick of this stuff getting less user friendly all the time.

You are expected to learn stuff, that will shortly have no value what so ever. And I just can't see wasting my time that way. But what's the alternative?
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #23  
Correct me if I'm wrong but I don't think Chromebooks have a hard drive. Everything is off of the internet. So if your a person like me that likes to keep files on a computer then Chromebooks are not a good choice. Besides Google is just as bad as Microsoft for snooping into your personal business.
They have some local storage, not sure how much though.

Aaron Z
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #24  
For those using Linux, how do you buy hardware? All the laptops I see these days come preloaded with an OS.

Do you buy an OS license you don’t want and overwrite it?
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #25  
I just started using this new DELL desktop (about the size of a book) that I got already a year and a half ago. Totally frustrated. None of my printers and scanners will work, as drivers are not available. Now, I wanted to open WORD, and you have to sign in. This crap just keeps getting worse and deeper. I'm almost thinking of getting my Windows XP box repaired. I'm so sick of this stuff getting less user friendly all the time.

You are expected to learn stuff, that will shortly have no value what so ever. And I just can't see wasting my time that way. But what's the alternative?

If you know a computer techie, it might be worth verifying that the drivers really aren’t available for your printer.

Also, I recently setup a new computer for my FIL, and I recall that I still didn’t have to sign in to use Word. They definitely try to encourage you to sign in and use their cloud.

In regards to being continually forced to learn new stuff, I hear you. During 30 years of computer programming, I practically had to relearn my job every few years; otherwise, I’d be on my way to becoming obsolete. It gets old.

That’s one of the things I like about horseback riding. Once I learn how to train a horse, I have that knowledge for life. No one comes out with Horse 5.7, which works completely different.
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #26  
i have run gnu/linux exclusively for more than a decade. in debian/ubuntu based distros synaptic is the package manager as such as takes care of it all. so no worries. what kind of computer do you run? that would help. wifi hardware is either easy or difficult but has gotten better. i run thinkpads - - went from r-t-x series. like the x's a lot. smaller. ubuntu is fine - mint is fine and they have changed a lot good and bad over the years. ubuntu has all of the extra codecs available at install. i have run bodhi using moksha desktop - a for of e 17 - enlightenment which i love. totally unique to any other distro. i would suggest burning an iso on cd or dvd as opposed to usb installs - - i never could get that working and many others have had issues too - never with a disc. make sure you burn it as disk image!!!!! enjoy.

p.s. we have 3 laptops running linux!
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #27  
For those using Linux, how do you buy hardware? All the laptops I see these days come preloaded with an OS.

Do you buy an OS license you don’t want and overwrite it?

Yep.

There are sellers that install linux, but not on hardware I like. And if they also ship units with windows you're probably paying the windows tax anyhow.
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #28  
I want nothing to do with a cloud. I spoke with Honeywell Security Tech support at length today, and he was talking about his hopes for better product employing the cloud. I want my stuff as stand alone as possible. When you spend half the day on HOLD only to find out that after you pressed the right buttons, and ended up in the wrong que for reasons that will never be known, you want to be as independent from any large corporate entity as possible. The time used to be, that you would load the disks onto your computer, and it was on its own. Honeywell admitted, or the new owner, Risideo, whoever the (f) that is, that they don't have a handle on their software. But hey, it's FREE, so what do you expect?
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #29  
For those using Linux, how do you buy hardware? All the laptops I see these days come preloaded with an OS.

Do you buy an OS license you don’t want and overwrite it?
There are some laptops you can buy without Windows but these days the cost of the OEM license is relatively small.

If you put together a computer obviously you don't need to buy Windows.

Getting Windows with a laptop isn't terrible; you can always repartition the storage (disk/ssd) and install Linux on the system as well - at boot time you decide which OS to run, because there are the occasional things you may still need Windows for (games, or software you already bought for Windows that won't run on Linux - some s/w will [using wine or something], but a lot won't).
 
/ Linux "Dependency ****" #30  
For those using Linux, how do you buy hardware? All the laptops I see these days come preloaded with an OS.

Do you buy an OS license you don稚 want and overwrite it?

I bought a laptop and then installed Ubuntu in a separate partition and use dual boot if I have to use the original Windows system but I don't think I have in years. Instead, I installed the VMWare player software and have various versions of Windows as virtual machines to run old software and games when necessary. I also use the partition to run stuff like tax software because it won't run easily in Linux. Maybe someday....

I agree with previous comments that constantly learning new software eventually gets old. I was a software developer and analyst for 27 years. When our company got sold I decided I didn't want to continue with programming because it was no longer fun. When I started out, I was using Cobol and eventually got into system programming with Assembler and other challenging stuff. But over the years, being a programmer became more about doing design and paperwork than actual programming.
 

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