Comments on: Microsoft gets a 'Blue Screen of Death' medal in Beijing
Microsoft got its brand on the Olympics. Just not the one it would have preferred.
Microsoft got its brand on the Olympics. Just not the one it would have preferred.
There were plenty of e-book readers on display at CES 2010, but many question whether the market for such dedicated devices can support all the new entrants.
Photos: E-readers at CES 2010
Vintage computer historians have long revered the Altair 8800. As it turns out, an unknown computer project at Sacramento State beat the Altair by three years.
Images: The first microcomputers
Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to the Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, a company that develops open-source software for content management. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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but as soon as one Linux can run everything Windows can, i'm moving
i've already changed IE for Firefox and MS Office for OpenOffice.org, so Windows to Linux might be my next upgrade, as long as i can do everything i did on XP(i'm also not using Vista)
Even some consumer sites (like Casio's G-Shock site), which runs a full-flash interface, loses menu functionality if you're not running Windows. You watch TV and your kids see a commercial for a fun site from their favorite breakfast cereal - I'm going to betchya that site is gonna expect you to be running Windows (and IE7) and nothing else will do.
And Ubuntu has its share of hang-ups and slow-downs too - Linux is not perfect! I remember more than once having to power down the laptop to get past a total system lockup under Ubuntu. For me, Windows appears more polished and professional and gets me access to the software and the web sites I need.
- by cjay554 September 30, 2008 8:12 AM PDT
- even tho its bad drivers, its still windows' fault for either not supporting it, or having a precaution against this fault. I've used linux with the worst hardware compatible devices, some don't even work, but are recognized in as different devices, yet my whole computer doesn't crash because of it. Generic drivers do the trick to fix any compatibility errors either way. That which microsofts generic drivers usually cause the problem.
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