Promoting Linux is a good thing, but misrepresenting the competition isn't the way to do it. Your experience may be different, but it is from hardware, drivers, or exploits that slipped past your defenses - the base OS is solid enough to be usable at least with a certain amount of grooming. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
Totally agree. Very much along the same lines as an argument I've made in the past when people have discussed security of Windows vs Linux. Misrepresenting Windows in order to raise Linux has the opposite effect on an educated user. Both OS have their roses and thorns. Give each fair representation and let users make an educated choice instead of trying to decide for them. One of the media relations tips they covered in a course I took was to admit the obvious. If Windows does something well, admit it. The fact that Windows has some good points doesn't take away the strengths of Linux. Ever walk into a car dealership and have the salesman start running down another brand of car in order to pump up theirs? I'm sure some have experienced that. It would be a turn off to me. Not a turn off from the brand - I do my research and make my own decision regardless what the salesman tells me - just a turn off for that salesman or dealership in particular if the trend for all their sales staff. But to some it would turn them off to the brand. Now imagine you've driven that other brand for the last 5+ years and have been reasonably satisfied with it. Sure a few shortcomings, but overall satifying your end user needs. You'd think to yourself, "This guy is blowing smoke up my *ss to try and make his cars look better. I haven't had 1/10 of the problems with my car that this guy claims they have all the time." That is the exact reaction you will likely foster in a Windows user with that approach. Most are satisfied with how Windows meets their end user needs. You aren't going to win them over by trying to convince them that they weren't really satisfied (or shouldn't have been satisfied). Because those people, if they do give Linux a try, will do so with a very critical eye now because you've been very, very critical of the product they are using and are satisfied with. I haven't been using Linux long enough to forget the challenges that a new user will face of setting up repositories, installing stuff from source, getting browser plugins to work, listening to video clips using codecs not installed by default, finding drivers for certain hardware and no doubt other instances of frustration that does not plague Windows users nearly as much. Now you have someone who's trying Linux to find things wrong with it and tell all their friends "Don't try Linux. I did and these are the things I found wrong with it ...". And they will find things wrong with it from an end user experience. Stick to telling them about the benefits of Linux as it relates to an end user (without running down Windows). Warn them that there will be some bumps in the road but well worth enduring because the payoff will be worth it, then you will have someone who will have a much better experience in trying Linux and who is more tolerant and prepared to face the challenges of migrating to a new OS. Jacques B.