Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian
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@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@DustinB3403 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
So I'm trying to think how you have a conversation with a lay person about switching to another OS other than Mac or Windows but leaving the kernel out of the conversation, but outside of Linux, well, you just do.
Hey did you try that new OS called Ubuntu? Nope - why would I? Because it's more stable than Windows. OK that sounds good - can I run my games on it? Well no. (let's assume you can't) Then who cares?
Wow - just writing I realize this is a near pointless conversation because users, lay people, just don't give a crap about the OS. They only care if they can get the apps they want to work on the device they have. Furthermore, normals will never install a non MS, non Mac OS on their own if it doesn't come pre-installed from the store. They just won't, and they don't care about it either.
The issue is developers create their programs for specific operating systems. Once software development drops this bad habit, the the OS becomes irrelevant.
Is that even completely possible? Maybe it is. Maybe there are enough horsepower at highlevel languages to get work done without relying upon knowing the OS native stuff.
I'm specifically looking at things like video editors, CAD software, etc.
I know these things have been made in HTML 5 versions - Heck MS Office apps are all HTML5 apps, but even those MS isn't/can't run on their own UWP platform. Instead they have to wrap them in Project Centennial. A wrapper that provides a Win32 environment to the apps. - WTH MS? Even you can't spend the money to completely re-write your software to be 100% UWP?
The shit thing about Centennial is that this does not make the applications portable. You still have to have Win32 on the system to run them. This of course limits these apps to MS OSes.
Right, there are things that are too different because of the kernel.
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@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
Here is where I disagree - I can no longer search how do I do x on Windows - I'll get answers for Windows XP, Win 7, etc. But I want an answer for Win 10 1703. So I either get to sift through tons of irrelevant trash, or be more specific in my search.
Come to think of it, I'm noticing that too.
Touche
The flip of that for Linux are lots of articles written that don't distinguish shell environments or package managers. You begin following instructions only to find some tool is not installed by default, or any number of other issues, paths aren't the same as their examples, etc.
But again, the qualification is not just a version. I can look for Windows 7 or Windows 10. But most users running a distro won't be looking for specific Linux kernels or package managers or shell environments, or even know to distinguish.
They will still say "I run Linux! That one Linux called Mint!"It would be nice to ignore the kernel, but it's impossible. As it stands, one has to know if it's Debian based or RH or whatever, which shell is used, what package manager, and what window manager is used. And all that just to know if they can install something.
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@guyinpv said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
But again, the qualification is not just a version. I can look for Windows 7 or Windows 10. But most users running a distro won't be looking for specific Linux kernels or package managers or shell environments, or even know to distinguish.
They will still say "I run Linux! That one Linux called Mint!"What users though? Are you telling me know you a rash of people who don't know anything about supporting their own stuff running Mint? I definitely don't.
It would be nice to ignore the kernel, but it's impossible. As it stands, one has to know if it's Debian based or RH or whatever, which shell is used, what package manager, and what window manager is used. And all that just to know if they can install something.
But those differences you mentioned aren't kernel differences, they are OS differences. Sure there could also be a kernel difference, but the OS difference alone can kill whatever they are trying to do.
This was a lesson (that Linux OSes outside of families, are rarely related) that I didn't fully understand until a few years ago (and was yet again reminded of recently).
I, like the masses, assumed they were all the same under the hood, that basically only the GUI (on a desktop flavor) was really like, like installing a third party GUI on Windows - but that didn't explain why one set of instructions didn't work on a different distro. And now I know why.The masses don't care that the kernel is the same across them, what they care about are the apps, and if the apps won't run, then the OSes might as well be as different as Mac OS is from Windows OS. And calling them Linux, or grouping them into Linux does nothing but serve to confuse things.
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@guyinpv said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
It would be nice to ignore the kernel, but it's impossible.
Why? I don't know anyone, me included, who doesn't ignore the kernel. Knowing my OS is necessary to do anything. But not my kernel. You can swap the kernel on people and they don't notice at all. If there is one thing you can safely ignore it's the kernel.
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@guyinpv said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
The flip of that for Linux are lots of articles written that don't distinguish shell environments or package managers. You begin following instructions only to find some tool is not installed by default, or any number of other issues, paths aren't the same as their examples, etc.
If the goal of the person reading the guide is to learn then yeah I agree with you. If you use NextCloud as an example you could very easily copy guides here and have a workable dropbox alternative without learning a thing.
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This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
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@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
Guilty as charged.
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@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
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@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
Or "soder".
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@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
That's more Texas than the south.
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@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
The masses don't care that the kernel is the same across them, what they care about are the apps, and if the apps won't run, then the OSes might as well be as different as Mac OS is from Windows OS. And calling them Linux, or grouping them into Linux does nothing but serve to confuse things.
Exactly. And I wonder how much of that misnomer effect is caused by the competition? Say "Linux" enough and people will start repeating it. Eventually it becomes social unacceptable to provide correct information, even in IT communities, and there is little way to guide someone on how to do things.
The power of misdirection is significant.
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@coliver said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
Or "soder".
Soder is something you bake with. Baking soder.
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@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
But those differences you mentioned aren't kernel differences, they are OS differences.
Exactly. They care which OS they have, they can't even tell which kernel they have. This is so dramatic that Ubuntu on Windows will work with Ubuntu Linux software instructions, even though it is not Linux. Yes RHEL instructions are useless for Ubuntu.
Also, while a huge pain, you can switch the RHEL and Ubuntu kernels back and forth without anyone really noticing, it has no effect on the user or software. There are actually projects that do this.
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@scottalanmiller said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
The masses don't care that the kernel is the same across them, what they care about are the apps, and if the apps won't run, then the OSes might as well be as different as Mac OS is from Windows OS. And calling them Linux, or grouping them into Linux does nothing but serve to confuse things.
Exactly. And I wonder how much of that misnomer effect is caused by the competition? Say "Linux" enough and people will start repeating it. Eventually it becomes social unacceptable to provide correct information, even in IT communities, and there is little way to guide someone on how to do things.
The power of misdirection is significant.
That's why I always try to clarify that I run Ubuntu or Mint and leave the Linux out of it. If y'all catch me doing it wrong, call me on it.
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@dafyre said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@coliver said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
Or "soder".
Soder is something you bake with. Baking soder.
Yup, the same thing used to make the drinks
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@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
Nope, not even close
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@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
Nope, not even close
It's true. Pop is a nickname. Coke is a mistake.
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@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
Nope, not even close
I refer to carbonated beverages as "soda", and use the actual name of the drink when referring to a specific one such as Sprite or Pepsi.
I don't think I've ever heard anyone refer to a soda as a coke... only when asking for a Coca Cola specifically.
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@Tim_G said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
Nope, not even close
I refer to carbonated beverages as "soda", and use the actual name of the drink when referring to a specific one such as Sprite or Pepsi.
I don't think I've ever heard anyone refer to a soda as a coke... only when asking for a Coca Cola specifically.
Everything is "Coke" unless I want "Sprite" or "Dr. Pepper"...
The waiter / waitress will usually say "is Pepsi ok?"
To which my reply is, "Yeah, that's fine."
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@Tim_G said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@Dashrender said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@wirestyle22 said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
@PenguinWrangler said in Simple Proofs that Linux Is Not an Operating System with Ubuntu and Debian:
This is like my friends that are in the South that refer to all Soda drinks as "Coke"
It's better than "pop"
Nope, not even close
I refer to carbonated beverages as "soda", and use the actual name of the drink when referring to a specific one such as Sprite or Pepsi.
I don't think I've ever heard anyone refer to a soda as a coke... only when asking for a Coca Cola specifically.
In Texas they don't know what soda is most of the time. You say Coke for soda and Coke Coke for Coke, Pepsi Coke for Pepsi and so forth.