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dragomix
11-06-2006, 00:07
I know that this is not place for Linux vs Windows fight, but I am new so i can't go where this can't should be.

I think that Linux is the best thing on this world. I know that some of you wood say NO, but you are wrong. I have it installed on my computer for a mount and i am weary satisfied whit it. It it faster, safer, and cheaper than Windows.

Some of you think that games canot be played on Linux but you are wrong. You hawe CEDEGA that costs 5$. Men 5$. Whit it you can play all the games you nead.

And for the end i want to know what is here Linux vs Windows ratio?

Monarch
11-06-2006, 10:16
Windows serves me fine, not sure why I shouldn't use it. Lots of programs don't run on linux too.

CrossLOPER
11-06-2006, 14:07
Windows does fine for me too. If Linux works for you, that's fine, but it does not serve everyones' purposes.

As for your question, I suppose that most people here use Windows.

ELITEofWARMANGINGERYBREADMEN88
11-07-2006, 00:35
I also Use Windows XP, I love it,nothing wrong with it.... :-)

dragomix
11-07-2006, 09:46
Windows is slow. Dont you think?

naut
11-07-2006, 10:53
Windows is slow. Dont you think?
:inquisitive:

If your using a computer terrible computer sure. However, with a decent computer Windows is great. Macs are nice (not a fan of the interface), good for graphics, wait awesome for graphics and movie editing.

However, I have found that the people who use Linux, mostly, not always, but mostly run it because they can't be bothered to upgrade their machines to a decent modern standard. Meaning that when they run Windows XP it would lag, so they resort to using Linux.

doc_bean
11-07-2006, 11:53
Popular Linux distributions like Kubuntu actually have higher system requirements than XP.

Linux is a little faster in some things (opening a pdf with Kpdf for example), but this doesn't apply to gaming since
1. Few games run on Linux, Cedega or whatever it's called uses a (Windows like) shell I believe, which inevitably eats resources
2. Hardware support for Linux is pretty bad

dragomix
11-07-2006, 11:55
On linux you do not nead to install any driver for anything.

naut
11-07-2006, 12:05
Popular Linux distributions like Kubuntu actually have higher system requirements than XP.

Linux is a little faster in some things (opening a pdf with Kpdf for example), but this doesn't apply to gaming since
1. Few games run on Linux, Cedega or whatever it's called uses a (Windows like) shell I believe, which inevitably eats resources
2. Hardware support for Linux is pretty bad
:bow:

Thanks for the knowledge.

R'as al Ghul
11-07-2006, 12:54
On linux you do not nead to install any driver for anything.

Of course you do. You always need drivers to communicate with your hardware or peripherie. You may have the impression that you don't need any but that's probably because your distribution has brought already a bunch of drivers or it downloads and installs them without you noticing.
Try to get the 3d features of an ATI card enabled and tell me you don't need any drivers.
CEDEGA, which I only know as WINE, does need a lot of resources and is therefore not the same as playing directly on an XP machine.
XP is only slow when you don't disable redundant services and programs.


R'as

satchef1
11-07-2006, 14:17
Anyone want to explain to me why i would want to use Linux? I tried it out once but i couldnt find any reason why i would want it over XP

caravel
11-07-2006, 14:38
I know that this is not place for Linux vs Windows fight, but I am new so i can't go where this can't should be.

There should never be a Linux vs Windows "fight" because both have totally different roles. For example it would be stupid of me to go and format an RTW gamer's windows partitions and install, say, Fedora Core 6 and then start messing about with Cedega, for the following reasons:

a) it was working before
b) windows is better for gamers
c) if RTW was able to run under cedega then it would run slower because cedega is in basic terms an emulator.
d) RTW won't run under cedega.


I think that Linux is the best thing on this world. I know that some of you wood say NO, but you are wrong. I have it installed on my computer for a mount and i am weary satisfied whit it. It it faster, safer, and cheaper than Windows.

It is cheaper than windows, correct. It happens to be free, as in speech not in beer, software. Security is better, not simply because it's not as popular/hated etc and doesn't get attacked, it's because it's permissions and overall architecture (UNIX) are much better overall. Windows NTx is full of holes, and always will be until it's redesigned from the ground up.


Some of you think that games canot be played on Linux but you are wrong. You hawe CEDEGA that costs 5$. Men 5$. Whit it you can play all the games you nead.

Cedega defeats the whole object of Linux gaming. While this proprietary emulation crap still exists, there will be no true Linux ports.

doc_bean
11-07-2006, 17:36
Anyone want to explain to me why i would want to use Linux? I tried it out once but i couldnt find any reason why i would want it over XP

Generally, if you're wondering why you'd need Linux, you don't need it. That said: Linux IS better in a couple of cases:

1. Cost.
You're buying a new comp or a second comp and you would require to purchase a copy of XP (90€) or Vista (around 200€ I think) if you want to run windows OR you could install Linux for free. Most distros come with a bunch of free software like OpenOffice (like Microsoft Office, but better, for the most part). If you're not into gaming or other windows specific apps this can be a very cheap alternative.
This is pretty much the only reason the 'common' user would/should install windows.

2. You hate micro$oft, or you just want to try something different (my gf wants me to install linux on her comp, God help me...), or you're just a geek.

3. You're in research. A lot of academics *love* Linux, mostly because it's 1337, I guess. In certain areas where real time computations are necessary Linux is king (Windows doesn't have a real time version, Linux does).

4. You're running a network (server) Linux is far better with networks. It's also more stable.

5. Security. Linux is a lot more secure than windows, again this is mostly important for business users.

Of course, that's just my opinion as a Linux n00b. There are certainly more knowledgable members out there :bow:

caravel
11-12-2006, 01:17
To add to doc_bean's list :bow: :

6. Webservers. If you want a webserver that the lamest script kddy can walk into blindfolded Windows is the way to go. I mean all that stupid security, who needs it? Popular webservers such as Apache run on Linux after all.

7. Internet/WAN gateways. Pretty vital if you ask me. If you're running one of those home router/modem boxes then you're likely to be running a small NAT router that is running on Linux based firmware. The rest of your network, even if it's just your own single pc or laptop is actually invisible to the net, so you don't need to worry so much about your windows security because what basically amounts to a Linux box is protecting you. With your favourite Linux distro on an old laptop, connected to a network switch if you're connecting more than one PC, you can achieve much the same end. The router box is just alot easier, conventient and probably cheaper anyway.

8. Sick of product activation, entering keys, constantly having to verify that you're not a criminal in order to use M$ software? Linux distributions have none of this. You can download your ISO's burn them to disc and install on as many machines as you like never being asked to verify or "phone home".

9. Bugs get fixed quicker. Many new Linux users give up after complaining about bugginess. Wrong distro! Try a stable release next time. GNU/Linux and distributions are constantly being developed, so the latest version of a particular distro will take time to become totally stable. Another good one is the "hackers can look at the open source code and that makes open source software easier to hack" rot. Unlike M$'s closed source OS, Open Source software can be debugged and fixed by experienced users. The developers, who are constantly working on bug fixes anyway, can then verify and impliment these fixes in a few days. This beats waiting eons for service packs and other updates, which M$ usually refuses to admit to the existance of for a few months anyway. This enables Linux to be constantly tested for security holes in a very thorough fashion. Windows relies partly on keeping the source code top secret to secure the OS. The problem with this is that when a hole does occur it's usually a big one, as we've seen in the past. (i.e. the infamous DCOM RPC vulnerability (blunder))

10. Virtually virus free. All of that malware that is written for windows doesn't affect you. All of those IE browser hijacks, win32 viruses, trojans that try to install themselves in the fabulous registry and run as a service, don't affect Linux in the slightest. So not having to download hundreds of anti hijack tools while having a resource hogging piece of anti virus bloatware running in the background, makes a big difference.

King Noob the Stupid
11-12-2006, 01:52
I used Linux for a year (FC2, Gentoo, Ubuntu, than Gentoo again) as my only OS, first because I was "forced" to (FC2s setup had somehow managed to destroy important stuff on the NTFS partition, the sleazy comp trader hadn't given me any XP CDs with the PC and i didn't want to spend money), than I slowly grew to like it (installing software by simply typing a command to have it automatically downloaded, compiled (if necessary), installed and configured (well, most of times) in my opinion is easier and more useful than acquiring a copy (buy on CD or dl) and installing it the windows way), after a while I got a win2k CD from a friend, installed it, got a virus the very moment i had configured internet access (which, by the way, is easier using Linux) and after three days it informed me at boot-time that it couldn't find its kernel... so I continued to use Linux until the PCs old geforce4 broke and I bought a mac last year which now serves as my main comp for everything related to the internet and occasional schoolwork, whilst the PC (with a "new" graphics card, win 2k and no network) serves as kind of a gaming console under my desk... at the moment I think having 2 systems is the best solution if you don't want to stop gaming completely but got fed up with microsoft's behaviour and windoze's security, for non-gamers Mac OSX (usable for everything except games) or even Linux (in case you don't need more than a browser, ICQ, a mail prog and a little office) are best IMO.

doc_bean
11-12-2006, 10:39
at the moment I think having 2 systems is the best solution if you don't want to stop gaming completely but got fed up with microsoft's behaviour and windoze's security, for non-gamers Mac OSX (usable for everything except games) or even Linux (in case you don't need more than a browser, ICQ, a mail prog and a little office) are best IMO.

You could also double boot :2thumbsup:

Apparantly this also works with MacOS and Windows these days :book:

Miloshus
11-13-2006, 19:36
I dont know about you all,...
but I think that W Xp 64bit version works just fine.(its made for 64 bit processors)

caravel
11-14-2006, 18:26
Linux also has kernels available with x64 support. Again it depends on what you want to do with your PC. There is no point instaling Linux if all you do is play Win32 games.

SoxSexSax
11-17-2006, 20:05
I tried Linux once. Didn't much care for it so went back to XP.

To each his own. Oh, and by the way, you DO need to install drivers for linux. To say otherwise in plain silly.