Re: Linux: simply a novelty?
Linux a novelty?
Linux, as a flavour of Unix is a serious bit of kit - a Porsche an Aston Martin. MS Windows is a 'boy racer' - a standard small car, with fancy paint job, wire wheels, tinted windows, noisy exhaust and sound system. It looks pretty, but because of all the extras, doesn't perform well and keeps breaking down. Nah - Fisher-Price Windows is the novelty!
Forget the pretty and seductive graphical windowing systems on Windows and Linux - get in front of a Linux box and hit ctl+alt+F1 to get to a text terminal with a CLI and explore the traditional Unix utilities. The command shell bash, sed, vi, grep and the rest of the tiny utilities that 'do one job, and do it well' - that you can pipe the output of one to the input of another. They've been there for years for a reason - because they're an indipensable box of tools for anyone engaged in serious computing activities. There are also a whole host of scripting languages available from awk/gawk, through to perl and python, in addtion to compilers. The casual computer user - whether they be Windows or Linux, cannot begin to comprehend to power available to them using the traditional Unix tools! And I've not even mentioned the king of all utilities - emacs, which is a stunningly powerful tool on its own.
If I had to choose between Windows XP/2000/98/95 (and probably Vista), and a just a plain Unix/Linux text terminal with that magical bash prompt, there would be no competition - it'd be the text terminal!
If you want a toy - Windows. If you want a tool - Linux!
Jim Ford
Linux a novelty?
Linux, as a flavour of Unix is a serious bit of kit - a Porsche an Aston Martin. MS Windows is a 'boy racer' - a standard small car, with fancy paint job, wire wheels, tinted windows, noisy exhaust and sound system. It looks pretty, but because of all the extras, doesn't perform well and keeps breaking down. Nah - Fisher-Price Windows is the novelty!
Forget the pretty and seductive graphical windowing systems on Windows and Linux - get in front of a Linux box and hit ctl+alt+F1 to get to a text terminal with a CLI and explore the traditional Unix utilities. The command shell bash, sed, vi, grep and the rest of the tiny utilities that 'do one job, and do it well' - that you can pipe the output of one to the input of another. They've been there for years for a reason - because they're an indipensable box of tools for anyone engaged in serious computing activities. There are also a whole host of scripting languages available from awk/gawk, through to perl and python, in addtion to compilers. The casual computer user - whether they be Windows or Linux, cannot begin to comprehend to power available to them using the traditional Unix tools! And I've not even mentioned the king of all utilities - emacs, which is a stunningly powerful tool on its own.
If I had to choose between Windows XP/2000/98/95 (and probably Vista), and a just a plain Unix/Linux text terminal with that magical bash prompt, there would be no competition - it'd be the text terminal!
If you want a toy - Windows. If you want a tool - Linux!
Jim Ford
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