Beanbag
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2003
- Messages
- 3,468
Just got through booting up an inexpensive ThizLinux system I purchased off-the-shelf, and folks, I gotta say it lived up (or down) to every expectation and fear I had for Linux.
It sucks royally from a new user's out-of-box experience. No understandable help files. No instructions whatsoever (either printed or online) on how to handle setting up the ethernet connections to the internet. A trip to the website on a Windows XP machine just gives prices and purchase options for buying a boxed distribution. No tutorials. No instructions. Nothing to help a reasonably computer-literate person figure out how to get anything up and running.
The monitor I'm using will support a higher resolution than what I'm getting. Some critical configuration windows are larger than what the OS will let the monitor show, and I can't scroll them up past the title bar. I can't say for sure what's at the lower half of the window I can't see, and NOWHERE can I find any damned method for raising the display resolution. What help files I can find are for KDE, which is nice, but damned if they help with a non-functional internet connection.
Unix/Linux always had "keep a tech available at all times" reputation, and now I see why. I want something I can use, not take out another degree in to try to get it to do something useful. Maybe it's this distribution, but from what I've seen looking over the others, like Red Hat, FreeBSD, and the others, this appears to be the norm. It looks and handles like Windows 3.0. This is the OS that everyone should migrate to? You gotta be kidding.
At least with Windows XP, Microsoft has taken the geek tweaking and bit-fiddling out of the setup. And until Linux gets to that point, it will always be the OS of choice for the dweebs, but no further. Forget the popular market -- it's too user hostile out of the box.
Well, at least I've got something new to swear at while beating the keyboard.
Regards;
Beanbag
It sucks royally from a new user's out-of-box experience. No understandable help files. No instructions whatsoever (either printed or online) on how to handle setting up the ethernet connections to the internet. A trip to the website on a Windows XP machine just gives prices and purchase options for buying a boxed distribution. No tutorials. No instructions. Nothing to help a reasonably computer-literate person figure out how to get anything up and running.
The monitor I'm using will support a higher resolution than what I'm getting. Some critical configuration windows are larger than what the OS will let the monitor show, and I can't scroll them up past the title bar. I can't say for sure what's at the lower half of the window I can't see, and NOWHERE can I find any damned method for raising the display resolution. What help files I can find are for KDE, which is nice, but damned if they help with a non-functional internet connection.
Unix/Linux always had "keep a tech available at all times" reputation, and now I see why. I want something I can use, not take out another degree in to try to get it to do something useful. Maybe it's this distribution, but from what I've seen looking over the others, like Red Hat, FreeBSD, and the others, this appears to be the norm. It looks and handles like Windows 3.0. This is the OS that everyone should migrate to? You gotta be kidding.
At least with Windows XP, Microsoft has taken the geek tweaking and bit-fiddling out of the setup. And until Linux gets to that point, it will always be the OS of choice for the dweebs, but no further. Forget the popular market -- it's too user hostile out of the box.
Well, at least I've got something new to swear at while beating the keyboard.
Regards;
Beanbag