I would like to agree and disagree with Jeremy. I agree that Linux crash less and that it is much more stable than Windows. I disagree on the easiness of some actions and of corrective measures. The reason is that windows is GUI while Linux, is more command line (which I see great if I get to know how :)). For example, to mount a drive you need to know the command and the options (I know most of it now but keep forgetting it as I do not use it often) also when I get a program source code and I am stuck during linking and compiling. I know it is simple for you guys, but for someone switching and really eager to switch (I even bought Zaurus PDA as it is Linux pda :) :)). 

I think a hands on for Linux will be great. I can get books but experience is better. And as many of you guys have Linux machine as their main machine, you have gone through a lot. I would love to be like you and completely migrate to Linux.

By the way, I was playing around with Trixbox and I updated it beyond repair :) :). I mean, when updated, zaptel is not working anymore. It can be as simple as changing a line in a config file, but that is the kind of problems newbies fall into :) :).

Please consider Hands On Series.

p.s.
I would love at some point to learn how to charge and fine tune my linux box too :) 

p.s.
Most of the crashes that happened to me were self inflected, meaning playing around too much and causing damage as I try. And also I was unable to migrate Linux another computer


------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2007 16:22:19 -0500
From: Jeremy 
Subject: Re: [tclug-list] Crash
To: tclug-list at mn-linux.org
Message-ID: <200709181622.19318.tclug at lizakowski.com>
Content-Type: text/plain;  charset="utf-8"

> Personally, I have been on and off with linux for 2
> reasons 1) Not knowing how to recover a crash (steps and what so ...) 2)
> Not being able to move it to new hard drive or change partition size
> without messing up the system.

Windows and Linux are the same.  If windows crashes, you boot from a rescue 
disk, migrate data. and reinstall.  It's the same for Linux.  

There are some advanced things you can do to get fancy with Linux and avoid 
reinstall, things which I imagine are not easily possible on windows.  Those 
are a bonus, not a drawback.

> Think it over and I think more people will get interested in Linux as it
> comes clear how to solve some basic but serious problems. 

In my experience, it's the other way around.  I see crashes less often with 
Linux.  When using windows, I'm also always surprised how they demand reboots 
all the time whenever they install something or update software in the 
background.  It very difficult to accomplish tasks on Windows that take more 
than a few days, with all the reboots.  My Linux boxes are usually up for 
months at a time, and go down only for lightning storms and major upgrades.

If there are Linux adoption issues, I think it's partly because windows ships 
by default on pretty much every PC.  If Linux shipped by default, and you had 
to buy windows CDs and install them yourself, the tables would be turned.

Jeremy






       
---------------------------------
Boardwalk for $500? In 2007? Ha! 
Play Monopoly Here and Now (it's updated for today's economy) at Yahoo! Games.
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