Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies
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Coincidentally, a thread just popped up on SW where a guy can get Linux on his workstation no problem but can't install Windows
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
What I'm saying, is that on personal systems... Linux is easy, yes. But, I'm also saying that Linux doesn't work on most personal computers the way Windows does.
Sure, because most personal computers are Windows designed machines.
But for end users, this doesn't matter, because they don't do the installs.
Okay, so what personal systems are built for Linux, with manufacturers providing Linux drivers for whatever Linux distro I choose?
I also want to know why you even bothered trying Korora on your Asus ROG if you know it was designed for Windows?
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@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
I also want to know why you even bothered trying Korora on your Asus ROG if you know it was designed for Windows?
Because Windows is awful. That something is designed for something is hardly the only deciding factor.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Coincidentally, a thread just popped up on SW where a guy can get Linux on his workstation no problem but can't install Windows
Ahh, so an anomaly. It must be that way for everything then!
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@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Okay, so what personal systems are built for Linux, with manufacturers providing Linux drivers for whatever Linux distro I choose?
Linux provides them nearly always. It's part of the OS that you choose. Dell, System76, white boxes that you build and loads of smaller makers make Linux designed machines. However, that you are asking this, means you are still distracted from the topic of this thread which is end users, NOT people installing OSes. Any talk of INSTALLING being hard means we aren't on the same topic.
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@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Coincidentally, a thread just popped up on SW where a guy can get Linux on his workstation no problem but can't install Windows
Ahh, so an anomaly. It must be that way for everything then!
Actually, like most installs of a different OS, it happens on older hardware and Linux is generally far easier to install on older hardware. In the real world, installing current Linux distros vs. current Windows on older systems, Linux almost always is easier. That's actually the majority installation case.
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Remember, this thread is ONLY about end users receiving working systems regardless of what hardware is used or what it is initially designed for. This is about users only. NOT about installations or IT use.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Okay, so what personal systems are built for Linux, with manufacturers providing Linux drivers for whatever Linux distro I choose?
Linux provides them nearly always. It's part of the OS that you choose. Dell, System76, white boxes that you build and loads of smaller makers make Linux designed machines. However, that you are asking this, means you are still distracted from the topic of this thread which is end users, NOT people installing OSes. Any talk of INSTALLING being hard means we aren't on the same topic.
Right, I'll get back on track then. Take a 100% issue-free system running Linux. Then take a 100% issue-free system running Windows... I agree that Linux can be easier for a computer newbie with doing certain tasks.
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@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Okay, so what personal systems are built for Linux, with manufacturers providing Linux drivers for whatever Linux distro I choose?
Linux provides them nearly always. It's part of the OS that you choose. Dell, System76, white boxes that you build and loads of smaller makers make Linux designed machines. However, that you are asking this, means you are still distracted from the topic of this thread which is end users, NOT people installing OSes. Any talk of INSTALLING being hard means we aren't on the same topic.
Right, I'll get back on track then. Take a 100% issue-free system running Linux. Then take a 100% issue-free system running Windows... I agree that Linux can be easier for a computer newbie with certain tasks.
Right. That's the topic at hand. And the point was that the newbie will often find those tasks easier than the experienced Windows user will find those same tasks.
Like how the more high school history education someone gets, the harder college history courses are for them.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Remember, this thread is ONLY about end users receiving working systems regardless of what hardware is used or what it is initially designed for. This is about users only. NOT about installations or IT use.
But, lets say a user has both and is introduced to a Korora and Win10 system at the same time. It's equally easy to click on a task bar icon to launch the web browser. I don't see how either can be easier than the other.
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A completely separate topic, and one worth discussing but in its own space, is "why are so few companies making Linux designed hardware?" And the answer is.. I have no idea. Loads of people want it. My guess is that because several do and you can find it, and because people who want Linux often also want to build their own machines, that Linux machines mostly exist in the whitebox market rather than in the prebuilt market.
Although if you consider devices like the SBC market which is now huge, the Steam machine market, the Chromebook market... there are more Linux designed devices out there than we picture. Half of the devices in my house are Linux based. Of the ones that are not, only Windows specific gaming machines are easier to get Windows on than Linux. The HPE and Lenovo (eww) laptops were actually better with Linux than Windows with zero install issues. Only the Asus RoG, which is gaming hardware, has the issues. Without the gaming hardware, I expect (and hope) that Asus laptops are broadly compatible with most Linux. I hope to test this as I really want a ZenBook.
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@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Remember, this thread is ONLY about end users receiving working systems regardless of what hardware is used or what it is initially designed for. This is about users only. NOT about installations or IT use.
But, lets say a user has both and is introduced to a Korora and Win10 system at the same time. It's equally easy to click on a task bar icon to launch the web browser. I don't see how either can be easier than the other.
One is clean and clear. The other is cluttered, full of moving images and such. Windows 10 is way more intimidating. It's hard to figure out even what is installed vs. what is an ad.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Windows 10 is way more intimidating. It's hard to figure out even what is installed vs. what is an ad.
I'll have to score a point to @scottalanmiller for this one.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Remember, this thread is ONLY about end users receiving working systems regardless of what hardware is used or what it is initially designed for. This is about users only. NOT about installations or IT use.
But, lets say a user has both and is introduced to a Korora and Win10 system at the same time. It's equally easy to click on a task bar icon to launch the web browser. I don't see how either can be easier than the other.
One is clean and clear. The other is cluttered, full of moving images and such. Windows 10 is way more intimidating. It's hard to figure out even what is installed vs. what is an ad.
The same can be said when using KDE, it can also be intimidating to use.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Remember, this thread is ONLY about end users receiving working systems regardless of what hardware is used or what it is initially designed for. This is about users only. NOT about installations or IT use.
But, lets say a user has both and is introduced to a Korora and Win10 system at the same time. It's equally easy to click on a task bar icon to launch the web browser. I don't see how either can be easier than the other.
One is clean and clear. The other is cluttered, full of moving images and such. Windows 10 is way more intimidating. It's hard to figure out even what is installed vs. what is an ad.
Yeah, the start menu is very cluttered on a default install and I can see it being intimidating to a new computer user. But, the have you ever hit the "start" button in Ubuntu or Korora? All kinds of stuff comes up and is also very cluttered with stuff. Both OSs can be equally cleaned up as part of the install process, which as you mentioned, this thread is not about.
Leaving the start menus out of it and things that can be set up for the user during install..
There's a launch bar on the side in Linux, and a launch bar on the bottom on windows. Both have a web browser icon. No moving images or clutter there. Both are equally visible and equally easy to click to open and start web browsing. Same with Email and other simple tasks.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Without the gaming hardware, I expect (and hope) that Asus laptops are broadly compatible with most Linux. I hope to test this as I really want a ZenBook.
Keep me posted on this, please.
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@black3dynamite said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Remember, this thread is ONLY about end users receiving working systems regardless of what hardware is used or what it is initially designed for. This is about users only. NOT about installations or IT use.
But, lets say a user has both and is introduced to a Korora and Win10 system at the same time. It's equally easy to click on a task bar icon to launch the web browser. I don't see how either can be easier than the other.
One is clean and clear. The other is cluttered, full of moving images and such. Windows 10 is way more intimidating. It's hard to figure out even what is installed vs. what is an ad.
The same can be said when using KDE, it can also be intimidating to use.
True, which is why that's not considered a desktop for new users. It's a power user interface. Although if you use it on Gecko or Korora, it's totally as easy as anything else.
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@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Remember, this thread is ONLY about end users receiving working systems regardless of what hardware is used or what it is initially designed for. This is about users only. NOT about installations or IT use.
But, lets say a user has both and is introduced to a Korora and Win10 system at the same time. It's equally easy to click on a task bar icon to launch the web browser. I don't see how either can be easier than the other.
One is clean and clear. The other is cluttered, full of moving images and such. Windows 10 is way more intimidating. It's hard to figure out even what is installed vs. what is an ad.
Yeah, the start menu is very cluttered on a default install and I can see it being intimidating to a new computer user. But, the have you ever hit the "start" button in Ubuntu or Korora? All kinds of stuff comes up and is also very cluttered with stuff. Both OSs can be equally cleaned up as part of the install process, which as you mentioned, this thread is not about.
My default Korora menu is clean, my default Windows is not. Not sure how it got cluttered, but mine isn't like that on either system that we run it on.
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@Tim_G said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Linux is Hard for Windows Users but Easy for Newbies:
Without the gaming hardware, I expect (and hope) that Asus laptops are broadly compatible with most Linux. I hope to test this as I really want a ZenBook.
Keep me posted on this, please.
It's not a "about to happen" purchase. Finances are lean right now and I have no actual need for a new machine. Next on the replacement list is the wife's Lenovo (we HATE that machine) and she might go ZenBook but might go Chromebook. Those are the two plans currently. Really for what she does, a Chromebook is ideal. She uses Korora now and likes it, but just doesn't need the power most of the time and has access to my Ubuntu laptop when she does.