Your OS choice is stupid...

I`m Canadian......
As the devil`s advocate, I guess the stock-holders need something to stay interested.

Yeah and it always gets back to... you think (American?) people are making money... and you hate that? I am sorry you find Microsoft difficult to use. I know many do. I would guess that Apple has a more intuitive OS.. but they charge EVEN MORE.
 
Dave X10,

I think your posts embody the 'trash talk' spirit that roussel wanted when he began this thread.

Well done! It's so realistic I almost believe you feel this way about the rest of the planet. Keep it coming!
 
..... Well done! It's so realistic I almost believe you feel this way about the rest of the planet. Keep it coming!

Thank you. You should hear me in person! I actually sound like someone who loves their country and believes in freedom and the right to own personal propriety. I think Bill Gates is a great man... in that old fashion "captain of industy"... risk it all to make the world a better place... type of a great man.

I 've seen a bit of the planet... and as a rule.. I tend to like it and the people who live on it. (I have found many of Earths animals delicious as well.) I know... for a fact.. America has been under attack from all flanks for many years. I stand for all men of reason... who can not stand up for themselves.
 
...
Yeah and it always gets back to... you think (American?) people are making money... and you hate that? I am sorry you find Microsoft difficult to use. I know many do. I would guess that Apple has a more intuitive OS.. but they charge EVEN MORE.

Actually Apple charges LESS for their OS than Microsoft - it's the hardware cost that gets ya.
 
In the last couple of years used both MS VM and VMWare to test numerous applications. One of my long term goals was migration of a few application servers over to VM. I had some major issues with some server huggers though.....with a trickle down (up?) effect from Dell at the time....
 
Dave X10,

I think your posts embody the 'trash talk' spirit that roussel wanted when he began this thread.

Well done! It's so realistic I almost believe you feel this way about the rest of the planet. Keep it coming!

Yeah, Dave was either REALLY needing this thread, or really needs to talk to something other than his computer. ;)

Forget HomeSeer vs CQC. I say it's Signal vs Dave in a fight-club street brawl. B)

I'm a little sad that nobody took the bait on my "Java is Crap" sentiments earlier - I guess everyone agrees...

Dave, Signal - How did you guys feel about Lindows? That's just got to make you both feel dirty... :)

Terry
 
Actually Apple charges LESS for their OS than Microsoft - it's the hardware cost that gets ya.
I didn't realize. I had glanced longingly at an Apple laptop... which was a bit pricey for me... but it was so skinny and attractive I had to look.

Although I started out with a with a VIC-20 when Data General (?) dropped the price (when a grown man with a family).... and recently retired as a network admin on a DOD network. I've been around Apple... but not alot.
 
Back around the time when Illinois Bell was changing over to Ameritech (90's) I worked for them a bit in both PC / beginning networking - mostly DSL to the desktop in one building. Mostly PC's, Macs and Motorola machines (can't think now what they were).

I never had a VIC-20 but did have a C-64 (think it was around $599) when I first purchased it....then a C128....then an Amiga....(concurrently also had and used all versions of MS DOS==>windows - 8086, 8286, 8386....and so forth...)

I remember that my Amiga computer could run circles around Mac when introduced. (and run XWindows and Helios at the same time as Amiga's OS)....really liked IBM Warp and they had introduced it before Windows 95 and it didn't have plug n play nor many drivers....

Windows 3.0 GUI was very primitive when compared to the Amiga's. I still used it though...working with at first Windows for workgroups (3.11) and manually loading the network stack (LSL, etc)....I was impressed the Novell servers I managed as they never crashed....BUT I did start to install NT servers sometime in the 1990's (mostly concerned though with BSOD's happening all the time)....
 
.... I say it's Signal vs Dave in a fight-club street brawl.
First rule in fight club... we don't talk about fight club.

Please... I hope NO ONE takes what I've posted personally. I just think that [maybe] if signal15 would have had a stable mature figure (someone with a job) is his life when he was younger... he might feel differently.
 
.... I say it's Signal vs Dave in a fight-club street brawl.
First rule in fight club... we don't talk about fight club.

Please... I hope NO ONE takes what I've posted personally. I just think that [maybe] if signal15 would have had a stable mature figure (someone with a job) is his life when he was younger... he might feel differently.

At least you two have chosen a side - The three monitors on my desk are each displaying a different OS...

Terry
 

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- directory structure is more scalable, mountpoints can exist anywhere. Your single directory structure can contain disk, memory cards, USB sticks, virtual filesystems held in RAM, and network drives. In windows, C:, D:, etc can cause application problems if you move something to another drive and the app has registry entries or config files that look for something on the original drive.

Yah the mountpoints are one of things done better with *nix. Case in point. OWFS (one-wire file system). Dallas one wire devices show up as files in a filesystem. You can treat them just like files in any script/program. Sweet!

The other thing I like is scripting. Scripting works well under *nix and lots of tasks can be easily simplified.

For me personally:

Work: Linux (for hardware engineering), Windows (day to day stuff, documents, web browsing)
Home: Linux (one machine for: server, PVR, webhosting, media hosting, etc....), Windows (browsing, gaming, video editing, etc...)

I am a big fan of standards and openly interoperable software. i.e. TCP/IP. Microsoft is/was going down the road of making it very difficult for anyone to interoperate with them. That is great for Microsoft and bad for everyone else.

Home automation has the same issue. Everyone makes their own stuff (and keeps it locked down). I like the idea of xPL/xAP because it isolates the phyical drivers from the automation engine. I hope it takes off more.

Globalization is what is killing first world jobs. Lots of people in the world with similar skill sets are willing to do the same job for 1/4 of the price. We can't work for that price unless the cost of living drops at the same time.

End result: I work on my own house (this costs revovator jobs), I work on my own cars (cost mechanics jobs), I write and use free software (costs programmers their jobs). Too bad everyone in the world is greedy and wants everything for themselves. At the same time, without greed, we would be living in caves B)
 
z/OS...most reliable "general computing" operating system there is. A little expensive though (both hardware and software), and I don't think there is any HA software that currently runs on it. B)
If I'm not mistaken, you can run a Linux VM on top of z/OS, so in a way you *could* run HA software...

That brings up a question: How many people are using one big box running multiple VMs for their various HA needs?

And that brings up the next item: Parallels vs. Xen vs. VMWare vs. $VMapp ? :-P

I'd love to see a VM thread! I personally run ESXi since it supports USB/PCI passthrough, which I needed for some of my HA stuff.
 
I'm a PC and I helped design Windows 7. B) I use most popular OS's on a regular basis and in my book MS finally has a real winner. Along with their server platform as well... and yes, I'm a fan of WHS.

This one might get me in trouble but my house is filled with Insteon, it always works, and I like it.

As for HA, I use an Elk and an ISY-99i. Both solid state devices with no internal moving parts to ruin my day.

I believe the iPhone/iTouch revolutionized the world and Apple wrote the book on OS's for Dummies. I don't believe in paying the "Apple Tax" but do believe their influence on the industry has significantly improved how we interface with our devices.

The older I get the more I lose faith in humanity. From watching/reading the news it would seem that all humans, at their core, are evil and every day is a struggle to be decent and abide by societies rules. This goes for the entire world, not just America.

Happy New Year!
 
No one took the bait on the "Java is Crap" line because everyone agrees with you.

I run XP, Win7, WHS, OSX and get work done with all of them. Managed to completely skip Vista.

I traveled over xmas and used my mac book the most. You know why? Because the darn thing wakes up and actually runs when I open the lid. Why won't my windows boxes do that as cleanly? The problem was that I then had to run XCode/Interface Builder and code in ObjectiveC. I think that might be the worst set of development tools I've ever used, ever. Come on Apple get out of the stone age. MS VS2003 is generations ahead of you, let alone 2010.

Haven't run *nix in a while but suspect that I could get much of my HA stuff running since HomeVision's PC interface supports PC/Mac/Unix.

Happy New Year!
 
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