Ah well I held off (apart from servers, where I built one first around
1998) until essentially around 2010, which would ave been a bit later
than that you tried.
My windows 98 was dying the death.
And rather than plonking down cash, I decided that in all likelhiood a
lunx setup on a new machine was worh playing with. :Leaving the win 98
machine stiill tunning 'in case'
Eventually I discovered I wasn't using the win 98 machine any more
except for three programs. Then I discovered VMware/virtual box and
managed to install an old copy of XP in that, and te three programs I
neeeded. Which was a good thing, because the 98 box got rained on, and
that was the end of it.
Thts waa OK, but late last year I upgraded to a test MInt install. That
was so MUCH better that I ditched the old debian installation. Copying
the old Virtual XP machine across to the new installation. Windows, and
its now TWO programs only, came across unscathed.
I never went beyond XP. Linux mint is streets more usable. I have an XP
installation for the couple of windows programs I cant do without.
Everything including the windows installation is automatically backed up
onto a debian based server.
If I need XP, it boots from a saved image in less than 10 seconds. Up to
and including the programs and files that were open. Its just another
window apon another virtual screen. If I had more RAM., Id lesave it
riunning all teh time, but since shutting tit down gives me half my RAM
back and only takes 10 seconds, I don't.
I have a fully functional word browser and mail program
I have a decent scanner and printer.
I have a graphics program that will process my photos.
I have a TV dongle that allows me to watch and record TV..onto the
networked server, which feeds the smart TV downstairs as well.
I have a Quark/ Creative suite style page editor (scribus)that allows me
to generate documents typographically, though usually SWMBO does that on
quark and the Macintosh.
I have a nicer analogue of Execl/Word/Powerpoint in Libre office,
I have currently eight workspaces that entirely replace my screen with a
different one, so I can do multiple jobs just by switching between
screens. Windows sits in one of them
I have a weather miniapp pinned to the top to let me see at a glance
what the weather is like at the nearest RAF station that actually
publishes that data.
It is rock solid.
I never need to edit the registry. Or fight the firewall. I neither have
one on the desktop nor need one.
The disk never needs de fragging.
I have no CPU clogging virus scanner, because 99% of viruses don't work
on Linux, and of the ones that do, they cant fuck with the operating
system because I run as a user with limited privilieges.
I can use my digital camera in raw mode, because someone just wrote a
plugin to GIMP that reads it flawlessly. The camera looks just like a
USB drive, so accessing its pictures is really easy.
I comes with a free C compiler. And many free languages like PERL,
Python and PHP. If I want to write my own desktop apps, I can.
I can set up tasks like routine system backups or system checks, or even
reminding me which rubbish bin I need top leave out this week, easily
and tailor them to my needs.
I cant run Rhino CAD or Corel draw on it, so I run them in the XP. The
two programs I still cant do without. Yes the screen update is a shade
slower, but its well fast enough. It takes longer to load them into XP
than it does to boot XP from a saved state.
Its far and away a better environment for me than OS-X on a mac, or XP
on a PVC. I have not bothered to even look at Windows Vista/7/8.
I only reboot it after serious kernel upgrades, It has only hung on me
once when accesssing a mounted file system somewhere in London., when I
lost the Internet. I MIGHT have been able to restore it woithut
rebooting, but it needed one anytway. A good idea to fsck the file
systems every couple of months.
It cost me NOTHING. Beyond the bare bones hardware.
It is without exception the most stable and usable desktop I have EVER
used.
Yes, I did go hunting around for the 'best' programs to do what I
needed, and trying them all out took time as did getting the appearance
'just the way I wanted it' with the task bars and menu panels where I
wanted them with what I wanted on them. But at least I COULD do that. I
cant answer fort later windows, but XP is simply 'the way XP is' . Even
OS-X is not nearly as customisable. OK that may make it easier for
complete dorks to get it running, but we are, one hopes, not complete
dorks, and when you spend as much time as I do in front of a computer,
it pays itself back in making it easy to do what you routinely need to do.
If you want a toy, stick to windows. Otherwise if you want a stable
environment you can WORK with, get Linux. Even upgades - almsit daily
there are SOME - are simply a matter of clicking on the update icon
when it detects them, saying 'yes' and then getting on and doing
something else while it updates itself.
No need to reboot.
These days its comfortably AHEAD of at least XP, and OS-X. I've never
seen anything I needed on peoples WIN vista/7/8 setups. But I've seen a
lot of stuff missing.
The only downside is lack of commercial third party applications.
For those, there is windows stripped to the bone sandboxed to the hilt
running in a virtual box. Where its a devil of a sight safer.
The only conceivable reason I could ever want to run windows native on
the hardware, is to play games.
It's also true that Microsoft is now working with hardware manufacturers
to make it difficult if not impossible to actually load linux onto some
machines. If the machine wont run linux, I simply wont buy it.
Its always been more reliable and stable than windowos. These days its
even more usable. With MINT its even dare I say it more user friendly to
set up.
It just isn't quite so easy for total dorks, because it doesn't come
preinstalled.
well how many times have you had to reinstall windows? I've NEVER had to
reinstall linux, unless I was moving from one distro to another.
I gave up on windows, because it wasn't an OS for professional users,
just for dorks. Luckily they are now all fondling slabs, which come
with preinstalled linux (android) or preinstalled Macintosh crap.
The desktop workstation future and the server belongs to Linux really.