Almost feel sorry for linnux users

  • Thread starter Thread starter PerryFeral
  • Start date Start date
P

PerryFeral

google: "Windows problems" --> 153,000,000 results

google: "linux problems" ---------> 133,000,000 results

Nearly as many as Windows by about 1% of users.
Another reason why only 3 geeks and a dog use linux
 
CrucialHoax said:
I see no problem with those stats. As Microsoft is a huge corporation
with infinite resources and money. Linux however is people that try to
reach out with a simple, working OS with little resources. So yeah,
linux might be -very- undeveloped, but its amazing :) Plus it's free,
try getting MS for free and have it work. It doesn't. Point proven,
nothing is perfect.

Actually, you can run a pirated copy of Windows and it will run like the
"genuine" ones do.

Alias
 
Alias said:
Actually, you can run a pirated copy of Windows and it will run like the
"genuine" ones do.

Alias

Thought everybody knew that.

I have a couple here right with me now. Sold two copies today.

It's a real easy money maker. :-)
 
TheRealDanS said:
Thought everybody knew that.

I have a couple here right with me now. Sold two copies today.

It's a real easy money maker. :-)

Do you also have Ubuntu CD's? If so, I'll bet you can't even give 'em away.
 
An impostor or imposter is a person who pretends to be somebody else, often
to try to gain financial or social advantages through social engineering,
but just as often for purposes of espionage or law enforcement.
False pretenders to various thrones used to be common. Numerous men claimed
they were the Dauphin, the heir to the French throne who disappeared during
the French Revolution, and there were three false Dimitris who were serious
pretenders to the throne of Russia. Other notable royal pretenders include
Perkin Warbeck, Anna Anderson, and, more recently, Robert Brown, who claims
to be the son of Princess Margaret and Peter Townsend (RAF officer). The
case of Anna Anderson is unusual in that it is believed that her claim to be
the Grand Duchess Anastasia of Russia was the work of a third party, as she
was not considered to be in sound mind. It also differs from many other
impostures in that although hard, irrefutable scientific proof has arisen
making her (or the third party's) claim without a doubt false, many still
refuse to discount it.
 
Back
Top