Moderator: Community Team
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Examples?john9blue wrote:about a week ago i used a live USB with ubuntu to recover my files from a corrupted hard drive. linux definitely has its uses (copying large amount of files is way easier using a cp command instead of copy-and-paste). i just don't think it's as suitable for general computer use as windows is.
When you say Linux isn't as suitable for general use as windows is, I don't really understand where you are coming from. I can boot to either Linux or Windows 7 on my laptop and 99% of the time all I ever use is Linux. I really can't think of anything that I'm limited to. On top of that, at any time I can go to the Software Manager and select from around 40,000 packages that will download and install automatically free.john9blue wrote:about a week ago i used a live USB with ubuntu to recover my files from a corrupted hard drive. linux definitely has its uses (copying large amount of files is way easier using a cp command instead of copy-and-paste). i just don't think it's as suitable for general computer use as windows is.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Wine is not able to run every application designed for Windows. In fact, honestly, most people just use Wine for playing video games that are designed only for Windows or Windows/Mac. But you said that Linux is not as suitable for general computer use, and the reason I take exception to that is that there are plenty of suitable alternatives to Windows applications that make Wine compatibility irrelevant. For example, Open Office (now LibreOffice) is actually fairly good lately, and can do the normal things that Microsoft Office can.john9blue wrote:i was under the impression that wine doesn't run all windows apps. does it?
Actually, Flash memory is inherently faster than hard disk memory, so, all other things being equal, I'd expect any OS to run faster off of a USB drive if you can fit the whole OS in memory. But it's not so important because most people who use Ubuntu regularly obviously install it to hard disk.and is a live usb OS slower than an OS on the hard disk? because like i was saying earlier, ubuntu runs slower than windows on some occasions.
It is true that all Windows apps will not run in wine but I can't think of any program in Windows where there is not a comparable one for Linux. The live CD runs much slower than Linux installed on the hard drive. However, many Linux distros (Linux Mint for example) will automatically partition the hard drive in half and install Linux to run side by side with Windows. The boot manager will give you the option to run either Linux or Windows.john9blue wrote:i was under the impression that wine doesn't run all windows apps. does it?
and is a live usb OS slower than an OS on the hard disk? because like i was saying earlier, ubuntu runs slower than windows on some occasions.