DrPhill
Cyber Heretic
- Joined
- 15 Feb 2012
- Messages
- 1,154
- Reaction score
- 314
RogerS":tspxrs9p said:DrPhill":tspxrs9p said:mark aspin":tspxrs9p said:Eric, kdampney and Paul Hannaby - Thanks for explaining it so clearly; I'll pass it on to my father on Friday. Convincing him to buy new work PCs may be difficult, however, as he still doesn't know what a virus is...
Mark
Hmmmm, if it is the parting with money that is the stumbling block then you could likely run a Linux on the same box instead of / as well as xp. Zero cost (well one dvd and a bit of download time). If you want to go this route someone here will burn the install dvd for you. That is the hardest bit if you live on ms-island.
I have been running without any virus protection for over two years now. I still do not know what a virus is. Actually, I do. We had one at work on our carefully controlled and monitored windows-based system. Not smug at all. Oh no. Really.
Trouble is, DrPhill, that there is a learning curve for the user interface surely? I have no idea how much of a curve that is but would suggest that it is perhaps not ideal for some users?
It depends upon which Linux. I use Mint (Mate 13). As standard it has a 'start' menu button at the bottom left, 'running app' buttons in the task bar, and a desktop that you can drop icons onto.
Windows have menus, maximise/minimise/close buttons. You get a free browser and mail client along with open office stuff.
I converted my wife to Linux Mint. She hated the idea until I gave her a laptop with it on. She was using it in minutes. 'Its the same as windows really' - after all the anticipatory resistance. I have recently offered to reinstall windows if she wants it. 'Why should I?' she says. She really only uses the browser, some games, the text editor, movie player. She never needs to leave the friendly desktop. I am more techy, and do development work. There is still very little that really needs the command line but then it actually makes those things easier. As a developer linux feels 'quality' where windows always felt 'gimmick'. Basic BMW versus tricked up Ford, maybe. The one thing that may put you off is no silverlight support (but that is where a dual boot to XP would be handy).
Some fuzzy images in this review, but it may give you the feel for the thing. Or the official site screenshots here.
Things are different, but less different than migrating from xp to, say, win8.
Plus it is free. Try it. You can run from the install dvd (albeit very slowly) without installing anything to see if your hardware all works (mine did, every time, apart from the multicard slot on one laptop).