CPUGuy - Actually I'm a CLI bigot. :) I think the CLI is more efficient than GUI on many occasions. But I use both, depending on what seems the easiest way. That's one of the things I do like about Windows is how easy it is to go back and forth. I can do a 'start .' to pull up the directory in a window, or a right-click 'command prompt here' to bring up a CLI off a explorer window...
RichardJC - Actually biggest problem I've seen with Gnome, KDE, Linux in general are small niggly quirks. Mouse doesn't respond correctly, buttons seem to have weird hot points. These are items that are difficult to describe, but subconcsciously they are bloody annoying.
"lets see, now where did the "reveal desktop" button first come from?" - Not sure, I've been doing Windows-M for years. I can't imagine it coming from any other OS as it was really the poor design of Windows that resulted in it being needed.(i.e. putting icons all over the desktop)
"How long before Windows gets virtual desktops I wonder." - Been there since Windows 3.1 at least, but dependent on video card drivers. Under XP it's in the powertoys collection.
"but why bother when Linux can run multiple user contexts on the same desktop at the same time. I think thats an upcoming feature in Windows, or is it already there?" - Well, uhh, because the point is just to switch Sam to the background so Joe can logon and use it. It's mainly for families. As far as multiple user contexts on the same desktop, Win2k introduced the runas ability and it's even easier within WinXP.(runas is su)
"I'm not sure Windows Terminal Services yet supports things like seamless cut and paste between apps running on different "servers" ("clients" in X speak)." - It works for me using the XP remote desktop client.
"I explained X's networking abilities to some terminal services users and they were quite amazed. " - X's networking abilities creates it's own share of problems, security being the major one. read more if you want... http://www.eax.com/umlug/display/
"the ELF binary format" - ELF came from SVR4.
"the CODA network filesystem (and support for other network cacheing filesystems)." - CODA came from the Andrews File System which I was using back in '92. If they've made it reliable, then that's a true innovation! :)
"Debian's package management system was (back in 94 whenever), and still is, far ahead of anything else I've seen." - Honestly I don't see much innovative here, it mostly addressed problems that are unique to Linux in a brute force method rather than solving the actual issue. What MS did with WinInstall, and especially the ability to advertise packages to users is far more useful in the Windows environment.
"There are so many places where Windows is catching up with Linux." - Ahh such comments remind me of the time someone claimed Windows 3.1 copied it's look and feel from Motif.
This post was edited by sodablue on Monday, September 30, 2002 at 18:15.
|