In a message dated 12/6/2001 6:14:43 PM Central Standard Time, jimc@math.ucla.edu writes:More web servers run Apache than any other Servers, who knows? I was talking about browser -- us's not they's. <Microsoft products are very good at what they're good at: word processing and spreadsheets and things like that. I'm not going to give them credit for e-mail because there have been far too many virus exposures caused by inept design of the security model in Microsoft Outlook and Outlook Express.> That is, MS does a good job at what most people use computers for, even though there are problems with the e-mail thing (which problems get fixes fast enough to not be a reason for dumping all the good stuff) <The learning curve is pretty steep to get to the next level, but for the high-end fanatic, there's a *lot* of worthwhile stuff up there that you can do in the UNIX context, that is a nightmare in the morass of Microsoft Windows. And with offerings like Star Office, and the various "Linux for dummies" distributions, Microsoft had better watch their tail. Not to say that Star Office has every feature in Word, Excel, Access, etc. or that someone trained on Microsoft products will have a 100% seamless experience, but Star Office (and competing programs in Gnome and KDE) are out there and are improving all the time.> I won't deal with this except to note the vast understatement at the beginning (the manuals mentioned earlier come in here, of course). Since it takes forever to get the operating system operating systematically, what runs on that system had better be pretty spectacular, but in truth it is about three cycles behind MS (that is, about as bad as Word is now compared to what Word Perfect was a couple of years ago). Why bother? (Admittedly, I like the extra control I can get -- when Linux is actually working approximately right -- for stealing music off of 33's, but that is already a fringe activity, I suspect). In any case, the point is about serving the public, reaching out to more people, not really about excellence, if any is to be had in any program. |