On 24/08/05, Patrick Barnes wrote: > One of the complaints we hear the most is about games that do not work. > Because Windows and Linux are different operating systems, Linux cannot > run programs that were built for Windows. Old Linux games don't work either, since newbies simply don't know where to get missing compatibility libraries. > As an alternative, there are > many games available for Linux. A lot of these are available as packages > for Red Hat's distribution. There is a big advantage here: they're free! Please don't turn your reply into a joke. "There are many games available for Linux"? Huh? Really? Linux is not even at the beginning of being a competitor in the games market. > If there are games for Windows that you really want to get running, you > can look into Transgaming's Cedega. This is a commercial program that > may be able to get some of your Windows games running under Linux. Do you have special experience with this to back up your "may be able" theory? I would be very (!) careful with a statement/recommendation like that. > One of the best ways to really get moving with Linux is to get in touch > with the community. Right. And seek for a real dialogue, not just poorly written letters which lack any details and give the impression of somebody doing some role-playing. -- Fedora-marketing-list mailing list Fedora-marketing-list@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-marketing-list