Originally posted by: SickBeast
Originally posted by: soonerproud
Originally posted by: SickBeast
I recently made the switch from 64-bit Vista to Ubuntu 8.04 and have been quite happy with it so far. Now I just run my games in Vista (which is why I bought it to begin with, then DX10 turned out to be a bust).
Vista is incredibe bloat compared to linux. With numerous apps running, I only use around 400mb of RAM. With Vista I needed at least 3gb of RAM for equivalent system responsiveness. Ubuntu also boots up and shuts down faster, never needs defragmenting, and does not need a virus scanner or all of those annoying security features in Vista.
Just my opinion as a user that has switched.
There have been some downfalls, but overall I'm happier with Ubuntu than I was with Vista.
Wait until a kernel update breaks Ubuntu and come back and tell us how satisfied you are.
Ubuntu has way too many little things that drive me nuts for it to be my main desktop. Setting up Ubuntu to burn MP3's at an acceptable bit rate requires editing a damn string instead of simply clicking a button with your mouse.
I'm not putting down Ubuntu, just pointing out it has it's flaws too.
Ubuntu has made up for its lack of polish with its solid stability and super-fast performance.
I've lost count of the Vista BSODs I've seen on my system.
The difference I notice is that in Ubuntu I'm forced to learn a bunch of stuff, and the overall setup just takes longer. That said, my OS is far more customized that Windows ever could be.
I guess Vista is OK for people who know little about comptuers, and just want something simple that works out of the box.
Personally, Ubuntu 8.04 and Windows 2000 are my two favorite OS'es of all time. If Macs weren't prohibitively expensive, I'd probably just go with them. :beer: