Steve Jobs passed away.

Frenton wrote

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would otherwise have found them too

Nope.

Mindlessly silly with the Apple II.

Even sillier with the Apple II.

Utterly mangled all over again. They werent the only ones to do that and werent even first to do that either.

Reply to
Rod Speed
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Irrelevant in the context of the original discussion about the hardware, dummy.

Reply to
Clocky

We agree on something. The VIC20 was the first home computer to crack a million sales, the C64 then blew everything away in terms of sales. The TRS-80 was populare in the US (and other markets also) The poms produced systems that might have been popular in the UK, but had little impact elsewhere, mostly because most were cheap and nasty.

Reply to
Clocky

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Right again, you`re on a roll.

It`s amusing to see how many Apple fanbois have been sucked into believing the Apple version of computing history.

Reply to
Clocky

Linux *always* has been a lead balloon and it only became *worse* because of the zillions of - totally undeeded and undesired - different, incompatible, distibutions. It's the distros which killed Linux.

The *real* UNIX vendors were on their way to make UNIX a *real* standard. Then Linux 'happened' and we're stuck with a total mess which even Microsoft didn't manage to create.

Reply to
Frank Slootweg

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It's only usable for relatively simple tasks, for which Apple happens to have the needed software or/and hardware. And it's only usable if your correspondents also have Apples or only need the simplests of file formats.

Reply to
Frank Slootweg

Do you just love Linux bigots.

h
Reply to
hamilton

Iguess if you want eye candy then it might appear that way, but IME time and time again, when it came to serios work Linux just did the job

Reply to
terryc

Horses for courses for me. Ill use whatever does the job best. Sadly, I've never been able to completely ditch MS OSs as in some areas, using Linux apps was just very painful.

Jobs products were never considered as closed hardwae and software and more expensive.

Reply to
terryc

Horses for courses for me. Ill use whatever does the job best. Sadly, I've never been able to completely ditch MS OSs as in some areas, using Linux apps was just very painful.

Jobs products were never considered as closed hardwae and software and more expensive.

Reply to
terryc

For *servers*, run by (effectively) *professionals*, yes. For any other purpose, no.

FYI, I professionally supported, managed and ran real UNIX systems for two decades. Linux *could* have been a viable alternative for most of the servers and also for a reasonable share of the 'desktops', but the silly infighting ruined all that. Sad, but true.

Reply to
Frank Slootweg

Jesus... I can't believe the coverage his death has received. When Mother Teresa died, it barely made the news (relatively speaking). Some 'corporate demigod' dies and it's like Jesus himself has carked it. What a wonderful society we have made for ourselves.

Reply to
Jeßus

Agreed, but I have performed a lot of my personal and business desktop work on Linux. Saved about $5K pa in software upgrades compared to MS OSs.

Lol, started on a pair of CPM machines and didn't replace them till both irrevessibly died.

Reply to
terryc

"They" weren't Google. Microsoft are making a lot of bungles pissing their "devotee's" off. It is a gamble, as are all new ventures, having a pool of cash behind them helps. Linux was ahead of Apple (10% of market) in world use of computers. Apple under Steve Jobs has and were claiming more ground

--
Petzl
Million: 1,000,000
Billion: 1,000,000,000
Trillion: 1,000,000,000,000
Quintillion: 1,000,000,000,000,000,000
Sextillion: 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
Nonillion: 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
Centillion: 1 followed by 303 zeros
Reply to
Petzl

Can't disagree with you Linux was termed "The poor mans Unix" However Linux uder Chrome have paid experts now developing and marketing, this should be the best boost Linux has ever had

--
 Petzl
http://tinyurl.com/abba-money-money-money-midi
Reply to
Petzl

There was never that much money pushing it.. No business model. Google (IMO) is pushing Internet connectivity with the software run on servers. Rod will still use his shonky copperwire while the rest of us will use the NBN

--
 Petzl
http://tinyurl.com/abba-money-money-money-midi
Reply to
Petzl

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Just goes to show YOU, Jesus is no longer valid.

hamilton

Reply to
hamilton

Frank Slootweg wrote

It aint dead yet, it just flew like a led balloon on the desktop.

Reply to
Rod Speed

Pretzl wrote

And it remains to be seen if Google does any better.

It hasnt with browsers.

And while ever anyone with even half a clue ships their hardware with that installed, it doesnt matter a damn to Microsoft.

helps.

We'll see...

It aint about cash.

Yes, but that wasnt due to a pool of cash.

Reply to
Rod Speed

Pretzl wrote

Pig ignorant fools ran the same line about Apple doing that too.

Reply to
Rod Speed

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