caleb said:
2) When I say it is time consuming I speak solely form a novice point of view especailly due the scarcity of the available drivers & what not...it just takes far too long to set up a Liniux OS to achieve a "true" multimedia experiance.
I can't understand you. Here's what I do in my PC
1. Watch DVD/VCD Movies (Thanks xine/mplayer/libdvdcss2 and more)
2. Play/Organize Music (Thanks Rhythmbox)
3. Download MPEG4/xvid movies and watch (Thanks xine-libs, mplyer-codecs-all)
4. Encode movies to mpeg4/xvid format (Thanks ffmpeg, mencoder and many front ends)
5. Rip DVDs (Thanks ffmpeg, mencoder, dvdrip etc)
5. Create DVD/VCD Movies from video files (Thanks ffmpeg, ToVid etc)
6. Write CD/DVD (Thanks wodim, k3b, gnomebaker and more)
7. Edit Movies (Thanks cinelerra, kino etc)
8. Image Editing (Thanks gimp etc)
Want more??? What do you mean by true multimedia experience?
caleb said:
3) I purchased my first computer in 1999 and prior to that I had used my office PC to type some Word documents at office that's it...I even installed Win98 (pirated...which I did not know was illegal at that time) by myself...all I had to do was load the CD and I just followed that instructions and I recall very clearly the simplicity of installation & use of the system...besides that there were hunderds of tutorials and readme guides to make my learning a very smooth and painless process.
My first gnu/linux installation was on Jan 1998, and never found more tougher than a win installation.
caleb said:
Whereas Linux is a complicated affair. Even the tutorials and readme files somehow make it look complicated....after reading them you feel that it is meant only for geeks.
Being a newbie for several years, i never felt so. I won't agree with you about tutorials written for gnu/linux. Please check tldp.org once.
caleb said:
Look at it from a newbie's point of view...once again I am not blaming Linux but merely stating what a newbie has to go through to set up a linux OS so he/she can watch a simple thing like a DVD movie. On the contrary take a Windows XP all you have to do is inset the DVD and it plays...once again I am not saying that XP is better than Linux etc but merely pointing out the ease of operation.
The first thing I've done straightaway after a debian installation, is watching a movie. I popped in a DVD video, and bingo! Totem started playing the movie.
I agree that there are some licensing issues with several propitary formats with gnu/linux, but there's no other way to protect user's software freedom.
caleb said:
Take what desertwind said for example "I always choose hardware that supports my software, not a software that support my hardware" ... for someone like deserwind (who is a accomplished computing person) it is easier to find hardware that support your software requirements but do you think a newbie will have that kind of knowledge and the time to hunt for a hardware which will support a Linux OS (which most likely will release a new version of the OS faster than the hardware companies can produce new hardware?), so once again a newbie is faced with the decision of choosing the easier option of Windows are the difficult option of Linux starting with selecting the right hardware and the right drivers etc.
FOA, I'm not an accomplished computing person. Second, I have a little knowledge about computer hardware, though software is my playground.
And again I repeat, I will blame hardware manufacturers for not providing drivers. Drivers are the responsibility of manufacturers, not users. And It's my duty to protest against those manufacturers by not using their hardware, and adsking my friends not to buy it.
caleb said:
At the end of the day technology should be about how it can simpify our taks NOT complicate and if one wants to have a easy and uncomplicated OS it does not necessarily mean he or she is lazy or is not putting in the effort....because life does not revolve only around PC's & OS's.
I'm happy to say that gnu/linux made my life always easy, if not easier.
caleb said:
So my dear Linux gurus kindly do not take this as an attack on Linux because it is not meant to be. I like Linux and I think it will flourish
with time but making it more simpler for newbies will significantly shorten the timeframe of it's mass popularity.
Never. I had faced more attack than this.
And I'd say, GNU/Linux should remain some of it's geekness, otherwise newbies will remain newbies forever. I know people who doesn't know anything about computing even after using PC's for a long time. That won't be the case if one used GNU OS for six months.