Re: Migrated from Debian
You are absolutely correct. Kubuntu "just works".
With Hardy, I plugged in printers, and within a few seconds could print pages - no long waits loading drivers.
With Intrepid I recently plugged in a video projector for the first time to show a powerpoint presentation on openoffice that incidently didn't work on someone else's box running Windows, and it "just worked". All the other hardware ithat I've tried ncluding video card just works, (except for a GPRS USB device which depends on windows - tried under wine but failed).
My sound buttons, wireless, touchpad and everything just works with Kubuntu, very well.
Debian Etch worked but needed some tweaking but even Debian Lenny was still using Firefox 2 long after Firefox 3 was out - just one example. When something is stable, such as firefox 3, openoffice 3, then most users would expect it to be available and a distro will attract more users if it offers the latest working versions of the popular programs. Kubuntu does that. Debian allows you too but not as easily as Kubuntu.
Debian still has its uses as does Kubuntu. The internet cafe that I use is running Debian Potato and OOo 1.1 and it works well.
You are absolutely correct. Kubuntu "just works".
With Hardy, I plugged in printers, and within a few seconds could print pages - no long waits loading drivers.
With Intrepid I recently plugged in a video projector for the first time to show a powerpoint presentation on openoffice that incidently didn't work on someone else's box running Windows, and it "just worked". All the other hardware ithat I've tried ncluding video card just works, (except for a GPRS USB device which depends on windows - tried under wine but failed).
My sound buttons, wireless, touchpad and everything just works with Kubuntu, very well.
Debian Etch worked but needed some tweaking but even Debian Lenny was still using Firefox 2 long after Firefox 3 was out - just one example. When something is stable, such as firefox 3, openoffice 3, then most users would expect it to be available and a distro will attract more users if it offers the latest working versions of the popular programs. Kubuntu does that. Debian allows you too but not as easily as Kubuntu.
Debian still has its uses as does Kubuntu. The internet cafe that I use is running Debian Potato and OOo 1.1 and it works well.
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