tphase wrote: » main work PC has been Unix/Linux for work since 1994 - Solaris, Redhat, Fedora and now Ubuntu - for data acquisition and control. I generally run Debian or a derivitive in new setups (cos mostly it's old hardware and doesn't need to do too much other than be able to communicate over a serial port). I do still have a CentOS machine which I want to kill off and a mid-90's Toshiba Satellite Pro laptop running TinyCore which will probably outlast me In the early 2000's, I switched to Linux more or less exclusively on my personal machines (ie which I use to work from home). No problem doing real work but unfortunately quite a few years ago, a Microsoft fanboy took over in the IT function of the crew I work for. He's long gone but everything now is MS-centric and Linux is barely supported. Sometimes that's handy (can't read that file, can't connect to that Teams meeting for some reason etc) but mostly stuff works well enough. I think Linux (or at least some versions of it) has been ready for the desktop for some time. If people who don't know anything different have it presented to them as their OS, they get on with it and figure it out in the same way as they would if they are presented with a version of MS windows they know nothing about. In my experience (well, in the experience of Mrs tphase), switching from an elderly to a modern version of windows (XP to Win10) is probably not much different to switching to Linux or MacOS. It's equally confusing, they only use windows because it's bundled with the machine and I'm still expected to do tech support
3d4life wrote: » What variant of Linux or Unix would y'all suggest
tphase wrote: » they have no more need of the command line than they would in windows
rom wrote: » Very much disagree. Much prefer linux. Have to use windows for work. Asked for a mac but it's mac is US only as they have no process to image them in EMEA. I find it hard to use a Windows machine as have used mac and linux for 20 years+ Have to google most things on Windows, use cygwin to feel a bit more at home. Sadly for enterprise you can buy a complete bundle from MS that will include all you need to run 95% of your enterprise. This is not the case with linux. Totally cost of ownership may be higher for complex orgs.There was a few Cites in Germany that went linux only for gov but moved back. Compatibility/ease of use /training are all additional costs. A cost to a helpdesk costs prob 20-30 euro each time. There is the salary of the person, the office, the infrastructure etc for the 5-10 min call email.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » I have used Linux exclusively since 2004 at home.
3d4life wrote: » What variant of Linux or Unix would y'all suggest Present config is W7 Pro on HP ProBook, W10 Pro on some other HP lappy and a standalone XP ( ! ) desktop HP running standalone stuff but might be nice to be able to transfer / share a few files with the rest rather than transfer via memory stick Priorities would be Secure, reliable, robust, straightforward Toyed with unix many eons ago ... presume it has come on a lot USB support ? Encryption ? Security updates ?
Lucky you! :-)
Fedora has been getting a lot of praise of late by distro reviewers. V37 is imminent.
I'm Slackware 15.0 on all my work and personal system. Not always been able to have Linux on my main desktop/laptop but the main part of most of my jobs has been Linux development.
I've never taken to Slackware. I tried Salix OS in a VM but didn't keep it for long. Debian is my favorite flavor. :)
It is a pretty conservative distro and in many ways it is nearer BSD (e.g. SlackBuilds vs. Ports collection) than the Linux mainstream. I found that away from A-list programs Ubuntu's LTS editions got stale a bit too quickly.