We had been doing pretty well with one computer. I've been able to cobble together a system where we have different user accounts but share the same music and photo library. But as I began doing more and more web work, we thought it would be best if we got another computer for times where the other person just wanted to check something on the web. I thought long and hard about what I wanted to do. I didn't really know XP that well, and had really no interest in trying to develop skills in understand that system. There really wasn't a low-power netbook-type of computer offered by Apple. We bought a Mac-mini first; that became our family computer with the Macbook being the mobile computer. But as we moved overseas, it wasn't that practical to have a desktop computer.
I did a little bit of research and I discovered something called Ubuntu. It was a free operating system, based on UNIX, and it was touted as being extremely user-friendly. One of the things that I'm hoping to do here is to leverage technology as a business. Piracy is pretty common-place here and I was wondering if this could possibly be polished enough to use in a work environment. So I decided to buy the netbook and install Ubuntu on it.
And after trying really hard to use it and like using for almost six months I've given up. There are a lot of cool things you can do in Ubuntu and I really appreciate its UNIX roots but it's just too much of a hassle to use.
- I found that the wireless and networking configuration were spotty. Sometimes I had have to toggle it on and off to get a connection.
- The suite of applications that it had to offer were as good as the ones offered for XP but not as good as the ones offered for the Mac (Textwrangler vs JEdit; iTunes vs anything-else; web browsers). Granted, there's some nerdy/programmy stuff that I could on Ubuntu that I really wouldn't know where to begin with XP, but in terms of everyday usage, I didn't find Ubuntu compelling.
- The software updating system seemed cumbersome to me and I felt that, unlike the Mac, I had to conform my usage behaviors to the system instead of being able to tweak the system to enable me to work the way I like to work. Some things I did like better because Ubuntu was UNIX, but I suppose that wanting it to be well-organized was something that I've been spoiled with on the Mac. Granted, I had the same experience with XP, but if Ubuntu is just as good as XP in some areas and not as good in other areas, wouldn't that make XP the better choice?
There are a lot of websites with instructions on "macosx asus eee pc 100he". Maybe a wifi problem, but this could be overcome with a card or swapping out the internal wifi adapter
ReplyDeletehttp://www.enik.ch/2009/05/osx-leopard-1057-on-the-eee-1000he/
I think that's the problem. Whatever OS is being proposed, it has to "just work" with little hassle. I looked into MacOS X and there seemed to be a lot of work to get things the way I wanted it (among other things I'd have to buy a DVD drive, new wifi card, and a copy of Leopard). I'd love to install MacOS X but it seems a little cumbersome right now.
ReplyDelete