Dave Ihnat wrote: > On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 11:17:13AM -0500, m.roth@xxxxxxxxx wrote: >> Yes, we do. This was an incredibly silly question, and I wasn't sure it >> wasn't intended as a joke. If not, then it indicates that the poster >> doesn't begin to know what the phrase multi-user o/s means, and also, if >> serious, this is *NOT* the right mailing list to ask that. > > Well, kinda yes, kinda no. It's OK to laugh and make a joke, but it's > also a good idea to provide an answer--a quick one, in this case, since > it's off-topic for this group. But unless the poster was trolling, it's > a good idea to give a fair answer when someone may be trying to > understand why they should use Linux over a competing OS. > > As a practical matter, Windows is "kind of" multi-user. You can: <snip> Hi, Dave. Sorry I missed you at Windy. Anyway, yes, you can sorta-kinda do all that, but the reality is that except for what some folks might consider exotic, only one user can use it at a time. Also, though I haven't tried, I suspect that with two users, the system slows down, and if you actually tried a third or fourth, esp. if they were using the WinDoze GUI, it would be unusable for all practical purposes. M$ did intend it as a desktop o/s, and was not intended to act as a real multiuser o/s. mark -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list