Tassilo Horn posted on Thu, 20 May 2010 14:51:23 +0200 as excerpted: > If you are ever going to visit them at home, install some nice virus on > their machine which activates as soon as you are back home. When they > call you, say: "Hm, if that was Linux I could help you, but with > Windows..." ;-) Eh, I don't even do enough MSWormOS these days to be sure I could install anything, even malware, successfully. =:^) Besides, if I was close enough, I expect it wouldn't be that hard to convince them, what with pretty much everything on Linux both free for the download, and available for installation right from the package repo. One thing I've done recently, is get my Acer Aspire One netbook setup with Linux (gentoo/~x86, tho it's compiled in a dedicated 32-bit chroot image on my otherwise gentoo/~amd64 no-multilib main machine), including kde4. At church (I run bibletime on it and use it as my bible, beats the 50 pounds (20+ kg) or so of interlinears, concordances, parallel bibles, and etc, I used to carry around, it's all on the ~2.5 pound (1.2 kg, with the high capacity battery) netbook now) and work (I originally bought it as a portable media player plus, tho I've been slower at transferring my media files to it than in setting up the bibletime bit) that's turning a few heads, especially when I trigger the cube desktop switch or the like. I expect it'd do likewise with family, thus enhancing the persuasiveness of my arguments. Unfortunately, my folks are in their 70s and the traveling they did over the last decade may be behind them now. Perhaps if I get a different job, I'll visit them now... (The first couple times I tried to write this paragraph, it got way too personal and OT, hopefully this one's the correct balance.) -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.