Originally posted by ramlambmoo
My point was that in order to use linux with a GeForce 7800 GTX you must agree to a license which is not protecting your rights, and not like was stated in the first post of this thread. Open source license agreements are all good and well for linux however the fact remains you must still agree to many of the same types of licenses that windows users have to agree to anyway.
Your fault for going with a nVidia card. The license for the nVidia drivers has nothing to do with Linux, it\'s the same license as for using a nVidia card on Windows.
My current PC has an ATI Radeon 9250, and I never had to agree to such a license to use my card. Look here to see the differences:
http://x.org/X11R6.8.2/doc/LICENSE.html. My old computer had a Matrox G200, and I later added a Voodoo 2, no Windows-style EULAs there either.
I do see some of those licenses though, the last one was Doom 3. But Doom 3 is in no way necessary for any hardware to work, I can use my computer perfectly fine without it.
I dont generally base a $1500 investment in computing hardware on whether something is \'cute\' or not. As for the SGI, what would you use it for? I assuming you\'re going to actually do something with it, and as you will see (or probablly already know) those tasks aren\'t very common.
I would use it for the same things as any Linux machine I have. It runs the same software, it does the same things, basically there is no difference. As for the iBook, the advantage is that I could easily bring it wherever I go.
Again, if you\'re just buying something for the \'geek\' or the \'cute\' factor, i dont think it has much relevance in a discussion about o/s.
Say what? Maybe we think of things in different ways, but for me, there\'s the geek stuff (including gaming), and there\'s the work stuff. I buy things for the geek stuff, and I let my employer buy things for the work stuff. In short, if it\'s not for the \'geek\' factor, I won\'t be the one buying it.
As for the PS3, if you\'re buying it for the games, then it has no relevance to the discussion, because i asked about hardware you would like that runs linux not windows.
Your PC is for gaming too, right? So it\'s irrelevant too? Or are you simply declaring the PS3 for irrelevant, because it runs games AND Linux (although not at the same time), but not Windows?
The PS3 is a perfect example of consumer hardware made for gaming that doesn\'t work with Windows. And it does run Linux. I\'m not sure if the Linux disc is going to be included or not, we\'ll just have to wait until the launch to see about that.
Point taken. I was just showing that you could get a windows system that does the same thing, and just as fast anyway.
But I don\'t want a Windows system. I\'m not interested in Windows, why should I limit my hardware choice to fit your OS of choice?
Yes, however the point im making here is that linux has support for lots of (from a general computing users perspective) useless hardware.
Useless because it doesn\'t run Windows, and that\'s what \"general computing users\" use.
My point is that in the realm of everyday computing used for general tasks and gaming, windows has better support.
Of course. Because those tasks are what Windows is used for, of course Windows supports these things, otherwise they wouldn\'t be \"in the realm of everyday computing\".
Basically all you\'re saying is still that Windows is better at supporting \"Designed for Windows\" hardware.
As for wanting to install an operating system onto a computer which wasn\'t designed for it, well, I basically can\'t install Linux without doing so. Your \"designed for Windows XP\" computer is not designed for running Linux anymore than the PS3 or the Mac is.
Well i\'m sure someone here mentioned they had a designed for linux computer, so im sure you can.
Well, there might be one or two shops in the US that does that, but there aren\'t any around here. And even those shops just pick the best supported stuff from the \"Designed for Windows\" hardware, NONE of them design their own hardware. Look inside it, and it says Intel/AMD/ATI/nVidia/Matrox and so on.
And yes, my computer is not designed for linux any more than the PS3 or the mac. Thats why my computer running linux is about as functional as a PS3 running linux.
Wait, didn\'t you say that you had problems with hardware support? Then how can it be about as funtional as a PS3 running Linux flawlessly?