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posted by mrbluze on Monday March 31 2014, @08:14AM   Printer-friendly
from the can't-resist-that-minty-freshness dept.

prospectacle writes:

How to best replace Windows XP has become interesting to a much wider group of people, due to the end of official support for the product. (a previous story mentioned an Indian state government that urged its departments to use India's home-grown linux distro "BOSS Linux").

Some people may be using XP because it came with their computer and they never gave it a second thought, but there are probably plenty of others who don't want to spend the money, don't like the look of Windows 8, have older hardware, or are just used to the XP interface.

To these people, ZDNet humbly offers Linux Mint as a suggestion to replace XP.

They provide fairly compelling arguments to their target audience like:
- You can make it look almost exactly like XP
- It's free
- You can boot the live CD to try before you "buy".
- Decent, free alternatives exist for email, office, book-keeping and web-browsing.
- Virtually no need for any anti-virus for home users.
- Installation is quite easy these days.
- Works on fairly modest hardwar

Ending free support for a 12 year old product seems like a sensible policy for a for-profit entity like microsoft. In the past they've been able to count on people upgrading from old microsoft products to new microsoft products, and so any measure that would encourage (or pressure) people to upgrade would increase their sales.

Seems like a winning formula.

 
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  • (Score: 2, Insightful) by michealpwalls on Monday March 31 2014, @10:38AM

    by michealpwalls (3920) on Monday March 31 2014, @10:38AM (#23589) Homepage

    This is all true, as ntfs-3g is implemented using FUSE, the Filesystem in USErland.

    However I think you and the original complainer are failing to see the forest from all the pesky trees.

    Running a distribution of Linux from an NTFS volume is a pretty silly idea. You can easily resize an NTFS volume and migrate the system to a more appropriate filesystem. Even if you're strapped for free space, it can still be done progressively..

    This entire discussion thread about Linux's support of NTFS is so 1990s it's really quite simply moot. Old copies of GParted LiveCD can solve this problem very quickly.. Most installers that ship with linux distributions are based on parted or something similar and can also easily solve this "problem".

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 31 2014, @11:54PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 31 2014, @11:54PM (#23885)

    ntfs-3g
    That's the big one. If you're reading *data* from or writing *data* to a drive that's already NTFS, you're golden. Been that way since 2007.

    GParted
    That's another other big one. The Gnome PARTition EDitor (think: FOSS Partition Magic) comes with pretty much every distro these days.

    Windoze users looking to switch should first defrag their partitions.
    Next, pop in the disc/thumbdrive with your bootable Linux ISO and resize your partitions so that you can make a partition for Linux.
    CAVEAT: I understand that the most recent versions of Windoze really hate it when you don't use MICROS~1's tools for this. You should investigate that further. (Full disclosure: I've never had an OS that required Product Activation.)
    When you have your partitions squared away, install Linux BESIDE your Windoze install (dual boot).
    When you're confident that all your needs are fulfilled with Linux, use GParted again to reclaim the space you had alloted to your Windoze partition.
    Now, that wasn't so difficult, was it?

    Finally, the one that all you guys have missed mentioning so far is that NTFS does not support *n?x permissions.
    If you want to put executables on an NTFS partition (a dumb idea, but, hey, it's YOUR box), you'll need to jump through some hoops. [google.com]

    Now, why someone would WANT to keep an filesystem that still requires DEFRAGGING is the thing that perplexes me. I'm going to guess it's just cluelessness.

    ...and the GGP who was griping about a Windoze user breaking his box:
    I'm having a hard time imagining that user NOT calling in a tech for anything even mildly complicated.

    -- gewg_