10 features that Linux has and windows does not
Nikhil Dev | September 28, 2007 | 12:00 pmThese days, I am acting like an ambassador to have people switch to Linux from their crappy Windows machines. So what is it that Linux has and Windows does not ?
- A useful terminal emulator. So what if it’s only useful for developers: I’m a developer. I like a terminal with capable cut-and-paste, tabs, and resizing.
- All-in-one application sources. Man, I love my
apt. Finding and downloading applications for Windows is a crap-shoot in almost every way. I find this especially handy when building new systems: it takes far longer to build, update, and add needed applications on a Windows system than on most Linux systems. - Cut-and-paste, and focus handling. Middle-click cut-and-paste is even more useful than middle-clicking a URL to a new tab, and XWindows does scroll-wheel window focusing right (scrolls the window under the cursor).
- Frequent, painless patches and new stuff, all the time. I’ve had a 3d desktop (compiz) and funky search (deskbar) for more than a year now (and I avoid the bleeding edge).
- Multi-desktops. Using a single desktop now is a lot like working at a grade-school desk: it’s just too small to be useful.
- Good, free tools. Like vim (or emacs). I know they’re old and crusty, but they both live and breathe text editing.
- No reboots. I rarely have to reboot a Linux system when patching. Windows is getting better about reboots, but they’re still too frequent.
- Open formats and protocols. My stuff (and my network) is mine, locking my stuff in proprietary, costly formats doesn’t work for me.
- No need for paranoia. I don’t like the anti-malware tax: the cost, the CPU cycles, and the wasted fear. Signed application bundles are a big part of how Linux gets this right: you don’t have to fear installing new stuff (the rest is in frequent patching and limiting possible damage).
- Respect. Don’t tell me what or how to do it: give me choices. And don’t treat me like a criminal, because I’m not.
Scraped with respect from warpedvisions.org










