On 3/9/08, Jason Lixfeld <jason@lixfeld.ca> wrote:
So the overwhelming question for me is why? Is it simply the fact that the native *nix underpinnings are where most users (within the aforementioned demographic) spend most of their time anyway?
That's what did it for me - repeated attempts to get FreeBSD to run stable on the Inspiron I had at the time.
The slight differences in the OS X gui vs 'Doze or KDE drive me nuts, though. Full time Mac use doesn't interest me. Anybody that knows me from any of the other 90 lists I'm on has probably heard me talking up my Asus Eee PC, a $399 tiny Linux laptop, which I'm very happy with and works great. When I'm traveling, I'm all about small form factor and light -- and the Eee is far better (and far cheaper) than my previous travel computer, an OQO Model 02 UMPC. If you want a laptop with Linux out of the box, no weird driver issues (works great with my Sprint EVDO card), etc., etc., I'd highly recommend the Eee. Takes about 2 seconds to enable full KDE, comes with a bunch of stuff preloaded, and it only weighs a couple pounds. The downsides are few; the small disk space (4GB SSD) is probably the biggest. Since it has an SDHC card slot, I added a 16GB SDHC card to mine. I've also had a hell of a time getting the Cisco AnyConnect VPN client working (but normal pptp vpn support has been a breeze). Regards, Al Iverson -- Al Iverson on Spam and Deliverability, see http://www.spamresource.com News, stats, info, and commentary on blacklists: http://www.dnsbl.com My personal website: http://www.aliverson.com -- Chicago, IL, USA Remove "lists" from my email address to reach me faster and directly.