Clayton wrote:
4) this stoneold "reboot" legend seemingly never goes away. However it is mostly cited by people who did not use windows since w9x/NT4 times. Ex. I never had a single crash on windows since w2k and I cannot recall the last reboot I had to do because of an installtion.
I'd like to know what version of Windows you're using then. I recently got a nice blue screen on my XP install at home. I dared install a webcam driver - ok, you can blame that on the driver in this case.
XP, currently I am using an extremly slim and stripped down version that I built myself. If you are interested, please see: http://www.nliteos.com/index.html.
As for reboots... I counted reboots needed to get my computer up and running on XP - and I started counting after the initial install which does several reboots. At 13 reboots, I was getting close to done. I have to reboot after almost each and every install - especially drivers. It's so common, that I'm pleasantly surprised when I install some application and no reboot is needed.
ok, for install I had three reboots, then for OpenOffice, Gimp, wireshark, cygwin and anthing else. I cannot recall any one reboot. When installing hardware, this might be different, but I never had the impression that XP needs to many reboots. In contrast, I recall NT4 and even w2k to be "reboot machines". For sure windows needs more reboots than linux does, but does this qualify as a quality grade for an OS? I have my doubts...
I can't say that it is a stoneold legend. it's very much reality on my computer.
So we are lucky to boot only once per day, we Linux users, aren't we? Kind regards Eberhard -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org