Fresh from download, various Linux distributions include levels of security. However:
- To grant yourself (the user) permissions, one has to go thru the high learning curve I mentioned in the other thread
I won't disagree. It took a good 30-40 seconds to for me to learn how to properly type "sudo" prior to executing a command in terminal or understanding that I need to install a utility that would give me root access in Nautilus without letting my wife or daughter have it on their login. My 7-year old, by the way, figured out how to log my desktop off and log into her own in a single session. When she was 6.
- This hacker challenge is merely a selection of 3 machines, with (to me here) an unknown flavour of Linux. I know someone with the skills to blast Linux out the door. And if there's one hacker that can...it is reasonable to assume that there are more.
I believe it was the plain vanilla wrapper of Ubuntu. But I'm going off of memory based on a podcast of Security Now or This Week In Tech.
When last did you install something for Windows? Everything major is available for download. Even Microsoft makes software available for download, albeit thru their MSDN services. Antivirus programs, media players, DVD burning tools, firewalls etc...download em while they're hot. Of course in Windows not everything's free...
Very little is actually free unless you turn to pure Open Source from SourceForge.net or a similar source. There are "trial" versions of many of the popular software packages, but unless you're willing to steal from the corporations, they require eventual purchase to continue to use or to unlock/obtain features that are "premium."
I will say, however, that I do miss WinAmp. There are a few up-and-comers in the Open Source/Linux community, however, that will undoubtedly rival WinAmp's current build. But WinAmp went through many, many builds to get there.
I'm not "evangelizing" Linux by any means (to use a trope of the word). I'm saying that the days where Linux distros were only useful to the geek and nerd that was willing to spend countless hours tweaking his build are gone. Out of the box distributions are very good and easy to run. Wine permits the use of many software titles like Photoshop if you already own it (I do and use it in under Wine and it functions seamlessly in Linux) and many Linux titles exist that are more than just functional -indeed some applications have features that Windows apps just don't compete with.
...and the "open source analog" is just that: a hodgepodge of code by various software writers who may or may not be focused on the same strategy. I have not come across any desktop software on Linux that could come anywhere close to competing with desktop software for Windows.
That may have been true just a few years ago, but there are many, many apps that compete very strongly with their windows equivalents. Perhaps that would be a good thread topic -I hate to admit I've somewhat gone way off topic here.
What's the open source equivalent of Photoshop? GIMP? Pity you can't hear skepticism in type
I've used Gimp and prefer Photoshop, but that's because I already know how to do everything I want to in PS. If I were just starting out in a graphics application, Gimp would be my choice since I could have saved a couple hundred dollars. It does just about everything PS can do and without the cost.
Is Open Office a true competitor for MS Office 07? Outside of being free.
Yes. The newest release runs on my machine now. I own MS Office 2007 and have only found one or two things that OO does different that annoy me, but this is probably mostly nearly two decades of using MSO first. I remember feeling the same way when I switched from WordPerfect 5.1 to MS Word. I ran WP in a dos window for years even after I had Win95.
The newest release of OO is cool, slick, and very, very efficient. Give it a try -there are Windows versions.
Dude...that's more than a big reason that Linux isn't ready for general desktop usage: "can't sync with a Blackberry"? Corporations have basically bought into Blackberry lock, stock and barrel. Why even waste time to install an OS that won't give their employees any of the BB advantages?
True. However, there are relatively few BB users compared to others. I'm told by friends that there is decent IPhone/Ipod support. There's also some rumor that RIM is looking at Linux platforms for support since a good chunk of the BB population
are Linux proponents (Geeks/nerds/etc.)
Your situation probably means you don't use your Blackberry often enough

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