Mailing List ArchiveSupport open source code!
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]tlug: Re: Transitioning to Linux/Linux in an MS World ver2
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: tlug: Re: Transitioning to Linux/Linux in an MS World ver2
- From: tjhaslam <tjhaslam@example.com>
- Date: Fri, 25 Sep 1998 21:05:16 +0900
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
- In-Reply-To: <13835.27320.199140.702565@example.com>
- References: <3.0.1.32.19980925170646.006e14a0@example.com><360B31FD104.624BWASHI@example.com><19980925130707D.andy@example.com><Pine.LNX.3.96LJ1.1b7.980925133911.14608F-100000@example.com><13835.14359.227552.980850@example.com><3.0.1.32.19980925170646.006e14a0@example.com>
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
At 19:04 98/09/25 +0900, ST wrote: > tjh> But I have to believe that the problem is distinctly NOT with > tjh> the customers who want Word files. > ST>Sure it is. Just like it's free-basers in Washington DC who are the ST>_real_ drug problem in Colombia. This is on par with your comment in an earlier post that becoming MS free is getting the ring out of your nose. But if that ring in your nose is what enables you to relate/connect with everyone else with a ring in her or his nose--and if those relationships are indeed necessary, then I suggest you leave it in until you have an alternative way of maintaining those necessary relationships. I`m hoping that for some people, not for everyone, Linux could provide that. As for the above analogy, in *theory* I agree the problem falls on the demand and the not supply side, as it were. But if you were free-basing cocaine as an adult because you had few choices otherwise as a child (i.e., it was unfreely freebased upon you) , then I would want to take a closer look at the cultural and institutional situation. In the US at least, I wonder how many people, as endusers, have--at work or at school--a viable option to MS OS, et cetera. Percentage in your informed estimate? What would make Linux a more viable option for at least some people? Or what might help end the cycle of addiction, to pick up your earlier analogy? Apps that could more readily deal with the production of MS apps, even if that production is nonsense. Again, not everyone has the *luxury* of being able to be MS free. > tjh> ... This is not--I repeat NOT--a technical debate about what > tjh> is superior. > ST>Arguable. Not because "the customer is right" is false; it's not. ST>But because it's not clear to me that the Linux community should ST>expend effort supporting people who pander to the necessary evil. I ST>for one won't, although I won't tell anyone who wants to to stop. Not sure there is *a* Linux community per se; rather, more like an overlapping collection of groups with related and divergent interests and goals, agendas and concerns. Not sure also that the ability to easily and readily import and export MS documents is pandering. Don`t see how that differs *morally*, as it were, from the ability to serve MS files--or serve webpages to people using MS browsers--or, et cetera. Am even less sure that what I have been suggesting would in anyway increase/ratify MS`s dominance. And for the reasons I suggested earlier, I think Linux should compete for desktop space/end-user functionality, and can do so without `dumbing down` the ongoing Linux projects, et cetera. Now, as for you personally won`t do, you already mentioned that you make MS apps at least available to your students who insist upon them. I wouldn`t consider that *pandering*. (I should just assume the phrase `necessary evil` does not apply here?) But what do you consider it, in light of your own critieria? I would think you were just doing your job--and doing your best. In other words, Steve (if I may), glad to have you on board. tjh> . . . yet. The applications are just aren`t there. At least > tjh> don`t transition a number of standard--dare I say > tjh> basic--enduser tasks. > ST>Agreed. Have a Linux box on hand, try to convince your customers that ST>they want something better. But not so hard that they go away :-P See, you have come around already. ;-) Have that Linux box on hand, and have on it some standard knee-jerk office and end-users apps so the customer is convinced that the Linux box can pretty much take care of all her computing needs (which it pretty much can), and the deal is closed: better and brave new world! Ring out of da nose! Ooops. One thing we forgot. The x years of files in Word, Excel, and whatnot. Steve, one decent `filtrix` like program for mass conversion--or even just a Office Suite with darn good filters, and we`re there, babe, we are THERE! Our imaginary but all too real customer; and John, you, and me. It`s like the three musketeers or something--my eyes are misting over now even as I type this. `One for all, and . . .` well, you know the rest. > tjh> Furthermore, if your documents have serious > tjh> formatting--graphics, charts, and what not, I suggest you > tjh> simply don`t risk it. You`re getting paid to do a job: > tjh> client wants it in Word, client goddamn gets it in Word. ST>DSSSL frosting. And Word will once again be there with its ST>non-standard standard, taking 128MB of VM.... But will it do DocBook ST>right? Will your client care? Just a little consumer education, helped by Linux`s desktop presence: the fact that our client actually--or will soon-- use(s) Linux and and has become a more informed entrepenuer (Steve: we can`t say `beaver` in this context). But MS Word`s a non-issue, my Man! We`ve given it the boot, and taken care of the debris. ST>I don't know. (This seems like a first). You`re doing great thus far, my man: stay the course. > tjh> Difficult and even scary as it will be, Linux has a helluva a > tjh> better future, finally, as an alternative/option to MS than > tjh> as the poor man`s Unix. > >Possibly. But it could very well turn into the rich man's Unix, too, >if Eric Raymond is right. I`d settle for both--which given MS`s direction Linux might well have to become anyway. I love this list--I really do. I actually was in a grad program a few years back (not for comp sci or anything good, though), and if I had been around people who were in anyway as informed, talented, and intelligent as the average Tlugger, I might be an intelligent person today. I`m not. I But once and if we can all get past the brilliance thing, well okay forget that . . . . ST`s cautions and rejoinders by no means aside, I am just hoping that some of you will kick the things I mentioned about. As for the Linux 2000 and all that, as Yogi Berra once said (to quote from memory--mine not his), `if there`s one thing I won`t predict, it`s the future.` Best to all w/all TJH --------------------------------------------------------------- Next Meeting: 10 October, 12:30 Tokyo Station Yaesu central gate Next Nomikai: 20 November, 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 --------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsor: PHT, makers of TurboLinux http://www.pht.co.jp
- References:
- tlug: Re: Transitioning to Linux/Linux in an MS World.
- From: tjhaslam <tjhaslam@example.com>
- tlug: Transitioning to Linux (was: Many Faces on Linux)
- From: John De Hoog <washi@example.com>
- Re: tlug: Re: Many Faces on Linux
- From: "Andrew S. Howell" <andy@example.com>
- Re: tlug: Re: Many Faces on Linux
- From: Jonathan Byrne - 3Web <jq@example.com>
- tlug: Transitioning to Linux (was: Many Faces on Linux)
- From: Marcus Metzler <mocm@example.com>
- tlug: Re: Transitioning to Linux/Linux in an MS World.
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <turnbull@example.com>
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: Re: tlug: TurboLinux case studies
- Next by Date: RE: FAQ Wizard and TLUG web site [was Re: tlug: NetWinder ?]
- Prev by thread: tlug: Re: Transitioning to Linux/Linux in an MS World.
- Next by thread: Re: tlug: Transitioning to Linux (was: Many Faces on Linux)
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links