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The Year of the Linux dissatisfaction
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<blockquote data-quote="mazskolnieces" data-source="post: 911918" data-attributes="member: 88422"><p>Keep Linux 100 % command line terminal, and there won't be a single typical home user in sight...</p><p></p><p>The guy in the article just wants bugs fixed. He can live with a 100% terminal environment or even a minimalist GUI enviornment... as long as all the programs and features work.</p><p></p><p>But, you know, those that build distros got more important things than to fix stuff... like making flashy GUIs and bashing their "competitors." The major flaws are of little relevance or priority to the Linux community - as Deidemondo so aptly points out.</p><p></p><p>I bet within 10 years, Microsoft's Linux kernel will be built out such that dual-booting will be relegated to the trash pile. The Microsoft OS will be a single OS that combines\integrates both Windows and Linux into a single OS structure that will be fully featured and the user can pick-and-choose what they want to use. That'll give Linux a huge boost, but at the same time give a lot of distros a black eye. Watch for the distropocalypse.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mazskolnieces, post: 911918, member: 88422"] Keep Linux 100 % command line terminal, and there won't be a single typical home user in sight... The guy in the article just wants bugs fixed. He can live with a 100% terminal environment or even a minimalist GUI enviornment... as long as all the programs and features work. But, you know, those that build distros got more important things than to fix stuff... like making flashy GUIs and bashing their "competitors." The major flaws are of little relevance or priority to the Linux community - as Deidemondo so aptly points out. I bet within 10 years, Microsoft's Linux kernel will be built out such that dual-booting will be relegated to the trash pile. The Microsoft OS will be a single OS that combines\integrates both Windows and Linux into a single OS structure that will be fully featured and the user can pick-and-choose what they want to use. That'll give Linux a huge boost, but at the same time give a lot of distros a black eye. Watch for the distropocalypse. [/QUOTE]
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