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Official Mac vs. PC vs. Linux Thread (pg. 5)
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iammesol
quote:
Originally posted by enydo
I use whatever the I personally prefer.


david.michael
quote:
Originally posted by echosystm
seriously guy?... seriously?

why do you need to do all that when you could just push ONE button instead? As I said, s retarded and having a bigger button for your uncoordinated hands is no excuse lol.

"why have a home key when you can just push shift+ctrl+letter". more to the point, why have any non-function keys at all? lets just make a keyboard with 5 buttons and make every character out of an elaborate key combination. AWESOME!


That doesn't really make any sense.

On my Dell laptop, I use my middle finger to track and my thumb to left or right-click.

On my Macbook Pro, I use my middle finger to track and to left-click because the whole thing is a button. Add the index finger to right-click.
LeopoldStotch
i agree. as long as i have access to the command prompt / terminal / shell / insert another term here i am happy. :o I think when we compare these 3 OS's, it all comes down to the interface, compatibility, and UI for the high end uers, and the libraries, resource management, I/O usage, standard OS functionality, and kernels for the low end user. :D each one of the OS listed has their own niche in the OS world.
KiNeTiC ENeRgY
Linux is the one OS I haven't really messed around with too much. Add to the fact there are soooo many variants of it, can be overwhelming.
gehzumteufel
quote:
Originally posted by iammesol
Oh, and sweet, Ben. Hope you enjoy it. Your incredinerd personality may not like it in the end though.

Yeah, I am open to that at this point. I am going to be in the market for a new laptop soon since I am going to need one I can actually use for school. Cost is the big factor here though. And with how picky I am with my machines, I don't know that I could afford it at this point in time. All depends on how much I get from the government.

quote:
Originally posted by enydo
This argument is so beaten to death and dry at this point it's not even funny.

This is what prompted my comment earlier. While I have my reasons for hating on MacOS, I am sick of the debate of which one is better.

quote:
Originally posted by KiNeTiC ENeRgY
Linux is the one OS I haven't really messed around with too much. Add to the fact there are soooo many variants of it, can be overwhelming.

Agreed, but if you have never used it, or haven't used it enough to understand the differences of the distributions (what they call the variants), you should check out Ubuntu. Or if you prefer a more Windows-like experience, Kubuntu. Same company, different interface.
Joss Weatherby
quote:
Originally posted by gehzumteufel
Agreed, but if you have never used it, or haven't used it enough to understand the differences of the distributions (what they call the variants), you should check out Ubuntu. Or if you prefer a more Windows-like experience, Kubuntu. Same company, different interface.



If we want to get really nerdy we could turn this into an argument about GNOME vs. KDE!

Or how about Vi vs Emacs?
LeopoldStotch
quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
If we want to get really nerdy we could turn this into an argument about GNOME vs. KDE!

Or how about Vi vs Emacs?


oh hell yeah. there's a good reason why I installed cygwin (unix shell) on my work computer (windows), because quite frankly, windows doesn't have the appropriate tools or windows tools are pretty crappy i need to dev, like grep, sed, head, tail, find, and secure shell. for secure shell, i can always use putty or secure ssh app, but i feel more comfortable with the unix version of it. :D
gehzumteufel
quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
If we want to get really nerdy we could turn this into an argument about GNOME vs. KDE!

Or how about Vi vs Emacs?

nano man. them both. lol jk :p

quote:
Originally posted by LeopoldStotch
oh hell yeah. there's a good reason why I installed cygwin (unix shell) on my work computer (windows), because quite frankly, windows doesn't have the appropriate tools or windows tools are pretty crappy i need to dev, like grep, sed, head, tail, find, and secure shell. for secure shell, i can always use putty or secure ssh app, but i feel more comfortable with the unix version of it. :D

Win7 has PowerShell, which supports a bit of UNIX commands. Although the PowerShell is imho, incomplete. They should just support bash totally.
Joss Weatherby
quote:
Originally posted by gehzumteufel
nano man. them both. lol jk :p


Win7 has PowerShell, which supports a bit of UNIX commands. Although the PowerShell is imho, incomplete. They should just support bash totally.



Nano ftw, it came from pico which was used in pine which was made at the UW! :D

And yea, I hate command prompt in windows, and powershell or dev console or all the other things are wacked out too...

Full on bash would be nice but the whole OS would have to change in some ways... at least the file structuring and such. Its just easier doing stuff how linux lays out its files.... of course that is if its consistent across the distros, which its not. :(
gehzumteufel
Yeah it blows they aren't more consistent. This has a movement though to change that. More standardised in things like updating and package management.

LeopoldStotch
quote:
Originally posted by gehzumteufel
nano man. them both. lol jk :p


Win7 has PowerShell, which supports a bit of UNIX commands. Although the PowerShell is imho, incomplete. They should just support bash totally.


if it supports bash, i would be very very very happy. standard dos scripting is very , and i still am confused why Microsoft doesn't want to furthur solidify the scripting language. I can do things with vbscript, but then that will get my antivirus crazy, and start complaining it is malicious. :stongue:

// edit

ok nerding it out too much. time for me to get back to work. :(
Joss Weatherby
quote:
Originally posted by gehzumteufel
Yeah it blows they aren't more consistent. This has a movement though to change that. More standardised in things like updating and package management.


I have found apt and the deb packages in debian/ubuntu to be the easiest package managment system available.

I used to be a Redhat kid when I was younger and I hated RPMs! Its annoying that most everything still is in RPM, thats slowly changing though. Lots of people are offering binary debs and the ubuntu repositories pretty much have everything under the sun in them.

I just hate getting some random 3rd party binary that installs itself in some ing /var/opt/local/COMPANY NAME/ folder and then puts all its configs, binaries, dependencies and such in that one folder. :wtf:
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