--- On Wed, 10/8/08, Billy Crook billycrook@gmail.com wrote:
I'm not going to say it runs fast, but a PII-300Mhz (192MB) laptop I have runs the GIMP decently well, and even OpenOffice.org 2.0. I know this because I recently had to do some website development while out of town, and the laptop managed to do everything I needed. The PII-600Mhz machine has 512MB RAM, so I'd expect it to perform even better than the adequate performance of the laptop.
Personally I think you just *assume* that Linux won't run well on older hardware, rather than have any personal experience with running current applications on older hardware. You assume Linux isn't that good on older hardware, so you *arbitrarily* limit what you do with older hardware.
Try some Firefox plugins. Try compiz. Actually, try kde 4.1 or gnome 2.24.
The laptop is running Gnome 2.20.1. Nothing anyone says will make me like the KDE GUI. Compiz requires a high-end graphics card, but its mostly eye-candy, like Aero.
As for firefox plugins, the laptop is running a Flash blocker and has and runs Chatzilla as well.
Yes, Linux is better/faster than windows. No, old crap isn't the right place to show it.
Insulting someone else's opinion is a great way to try and get them not to express it to others, I.e., keeping others from being informed. If you wanted others to be informed, you wouldn't have bothered with the insult.
We're just going to have to differ on this one. People will see the brand new computer and think "so Linux benefits from dual-core processors just like Vista, so why bother switching?" Running Linux on older hardware makes them sit up and notice that the bloat in Vista is missing from Linux.
Funny, you were the one insisting up and down and left and right that the audience coming to the KCLUG booth was computer illiterate middle management, not IT professionals.
However, even if the only folks who come by the booth are IT professionals, middle management are still the folks who need convincing, because they control the purse strings. Middle management hears and believes the FUD trolls, so IT has to put together an older PC and point out how it hasn't trashed the hard drive on the demo system.
The best you can say is a thumbdrive? Yes, lots of room to show off software on a thumbdrive system.
I never said everyone hates Windows,
No, you just decided that people didn't want the system in their closet because it was old, forgetting completely that the reason they thought they can't use their closet system was entirely due to Windows not running on it very well. You tried to claim that people don't like old hardware when what they really don't like is Windows.
It would have been very easy not to mention Windows, and hatred thereof, if you hadn't been the one to bring it up in the first place.
On Wed, 10/8/08, Billy Crook billycrook@gmail.com wrote:
Your very first paragraph made a case for "hatred of Windows", and also tried to put the blame for this case-making on me. I never said that Linux is comparable to Windows 98. You claimed I was making the comparison, when I never said anything of the sort.
And why are they slow? Because the Windows OS that runs on them is slow. You're taking their ignorance of what is causing the problem and claiming it is the real reason for their troubles.
People don't like old computers because they think they can't do anything with them, because the only way they know to do anything with them is with the Windows OS that came with their machine. If they had Linux to bring those old computers back to life, they wouldn't dislike old hardware.
An analogy would be a guy who owns an older, working diesel car, and can't afford diesel fuel. He doesn't know about how he can convert used vegetable oil from a local fast food place into (nearly) free biodiesel. Now, does he hate his diesel car because (a) he hates diesel cars, or (b) because he can't fuel the car with fuel the oil companies are pricing out of his ability to pay for it? The correct answer is (b). If he finds out how to make (nearly) free biodiesel fuel from used vegetable oil, he will like his diesel car because he can now make use of his diesel car.
And earlier in this same E-mail message, this message where you claim it was never your goal to prevent people from learning about Linux on older hardware, you said:
Stop it? As in "do not inform others" about Linux on older hardware? As in the message you claim you aren't saying?
You spent a sizable chunk of the original message, and now a few more sentences in this same message, insulting me about my desire to tell people about Linux running on older hardware, in fact telling me to "stop it." You took a demo PC on older hardware as a personal insult. If you didn't want to be thought of as "insisting that people should not be informed", you shouldn't have expressed so much annoyance at the thought of people being informed.
On Wed, 10/8/08, Billy Crook billycrook@gmail.com wrote:
Rather disingenuous to claim that you never intended for people not to be informed when you wrote a huge E-mail to me saying it would be a terrible idea for me to inform people about Linux running on older hardware, and reiterated your "stop it" command within the same message where you tried to claim you didn't want to prevent my message about Linux running on older hardware.
Was trying to convince me my idea was stupid somehow a reverse-psychology ploy to get me to do it?
Apparently you've missed the news of the past few months entirely, so I'll summarize in a single sentence:
If you're trying to market Linux in an economy where banks aren't lending any money whatsoever to companies so that they can buy modern hardware, the ability of Linux to run on brand new (i.e., newly-purchased) modern hardware is not nearly as attractive as getting better performance than alternative software on *existing* hardware.
I like how you CC the mailing list on a personal argument so you can try and get support from the peanut gallery. When you were a kid did you run to the teacher every time you didn't get your way?
J.
On Thu, Oct 9, 2008 at 3:28 AM, Leo Mauler webgiant@yahoo.com wrote:
Ok folks- i move to squash this *RIGHT NOW*
The best phrasing we could use? Declaring "stupidly antagonistic" cruft as not in anyone's best interest. And further- originating that sort of thing is acting against the best interests of Linux and Open Source as a whole... As is letting it go beyond perhaps the seconding of a motion to take it OFF LIST!!
IF that is too complex? Two simple words. Grow up!
I do not say this lightly. WE are judged by our posts. Linux is judged potentially by US being what people associate with Linux. How then do you wish KCLUG to be thought of? As a list of scholarly discourse? Or petty displays of frank stupidity.
Think before posting!
On Thu, Oct 9, 2008 at 2:02 PM, Jeffrey Watts jeffrey.w.watts@gmail.com wrote: