On 16/10/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">John Hearns</b> <<a href="mailto:john.hearns@streamline-computing.com">john.hearns@streamline-computing.com</a>> wrote:<div><span class="gmail_quote"></span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
Christopher Currie wrote:<br><br>><br>> Sorry to pick out just one message among the optimistic buzzes. My view is<br>> that FOSS for home users is about to start to decline, and could be dead in<br>> five years, because people want to be able to use Wifi connections at home
<br>> and while travelling, in hotels, caffs etc. That means Windows XP, for all<br>> practical purposes.<br><br>I agree with what you say. My laptop's wireless card works with<br>ndiswrapper and now with bcm43xx<br>
When I'm out and about, using Windows XP is just so much easier as you<br>get a point-and-drool interface for changing the ESSID and keys.<br>Yes, I'll be upgrading to Fedora 6 soon.</blockquote><div><br>It's probably worth pointing out that some distros are better than others at this. A certain distro starting with U deals well with a whole host of laptops/wireless cards out of the box. Then again, for a lot of these, they rely on ndiswrapper which is not so ideal, but at least works as a reasonable interim until drivers are written.
<br><br>Talking about regular users and Linux, I bought my better half a computer recently, and got it dual booting (actually tri-booting with Solaris 10 as well for me to play with). I spent about 2 hours getting everything working sweetly with Linux: essential stuff was browser, gaim, MythTV frontend, wireless card, sip and skype (with bluetooth headset). I also had no problems with the webcam it came with.
<br><br>Now with Windows, it took several days to get the wireless card to work and I had to re-input the (longish) WEP key at random intervals, I spent so much time trawling websites for the right drivers, I never got the bluetooth headset to work, and it can't even play the mythweb .NUV streams. Without a microphone Skype and sip are useless, but she can still use my laptop for that. But in her mind this was the decision:
<br><br>Windows:<br>* Proper Windows Live MSN thing - important because you can "send" cool animations when you're chatting<br><br>Linux:<br>* Lots of cool games<br><br>I kid you not, it was the number of cool little games under Linux that was the clincher. She's not into big games, but the fact that it had Gweled especially meant that she didn't really have a need for Windows and insisted on its removal.
<br><br>Stranger things and such...<br><br>Pete</div></div>