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Deadwood snapshot update; Windows XP is better than Ubuntu
February 27 2009
This is a copy of the blog entry which should be at
this location
I have uploaded a new snapshot of Deadwood today with tests added for
upstream_servers and upstream_port.
I have just moved and
haven't been able to get online at the new place yet. The place is
supposed to have internet, so I will work with my new roommate and will
look at the router this afternoon to see if the issue can be resolved
(it could be that the key changed when they changed the ESSID but no one
remembers doing this, much less the new key, or it could be that things
are broken upstream).
If I can't resolve the issue with
internet at home, I will not be able to release Deadwood again until
Monday. Update: I now have internet working at my new place;
expect to see a Deadwood update tomorrow.
This release
can be downloaded at
the usual place
While waiting
for
CentOS 5.3 to be released, I moved things around on my hard disk
and reinstalled Windows XP.
It's a relief compared to Ubuntu.
Everything
works. Without problem. Things that took me days to
resolve work out of the box in Windows XP: Getting a password protected
screen saver (In Windows XP, it's actually done with "Change session"
from the start menu) that doesn't crash the system and getting VMware
to work.
When I put in my 50 meg "hockey rink" business
card CD, it mounts within seconds. In Ubuntu, it would not mount at
all or take over a minute to mount; this is a problem I was never able
to resolve. Indeed, I spent a day pulling out my hair and wasting money
burning expendable media until I realized this was an Linux-specific
problem and not a problem with the media in question.
Sound
in VMware isn't a problem; I can have multiple guest operating systems
with sound active at the same time. In Ubuntu, only one application
can use the sound card at the same time.
The keyboard just
works in Windows XP; I needed to tweak configuration files to
get it to work in Ubuntu.
Windows XP is a good deal more
light and responsive running VMware player than Ubuntu; suspending or
restoring an OS would often take two or three minutes in Ubuntu but only
takes a few seconds in Windows XP. Windows XP and the Windows VMware
client are far more lightweight; I can comfortably run three guest
operating systems at the same time with 512 megs allocated for each
guest; Ubuntu could only run two and would thrash (swap excessively and
have the computer be unresponsive) with suspending or restoring a guest
OS.
Comprared to Ubuntu, things work like a dream in Windows
XP.
Nothing has changed since this blogger posted this
why
Ubuntu sucks blog back in 2007. Ubuntu still sucks (for my
purposes: Having a good VMware host operating system) and Windows XP is
a far better operating system.
I've been using Linux since
1995 and refused to dual boot my machine until 2003. Linux used to
be more stable but harder to use; Ubuntu is trying to make another
Windows but I just don't think it makes sense to try and shoestring
all of the open source projects out there to make an end-user desktop.
For example, Linux was never designed to allow someone to just insert
or remove a CD without mounting or unmounting it; trying to make Linux
do this just causes it to be unable to read media Windows XP can read
without problem.
I think the real solution to making a
open-source desktop environment is to make an operating system designed
to be on the users desktop from the start. There are at least two
projects that try to do this:
Haiku
OS (an open-source implementation of the failed 1990s BeOS) and
Syllable (an open-source OS based on
ideas from Amiga OS and other sources)
I will let people know
how things work with CentOS 5.3 once CentOS 5.3 is available.
CentOS didn't work; this was described in another blog entry