| >Personally discoverability and ease of use are the biggest issue(s), Personal discovery can be one of the main catalysts for easy migration. Google is not your friend. That ship has sailed. Nothing "personal", but knowing nothing about Linux, if you walked up to an already booted desktop of something like Linux Mint, there is a particular series of incantations you would need to make if you wanted to see something about the user accounts. I can only imagine what different people think about this. You would have to click the start button, then a popup will occur which may or may not be surprising. There would be a button labeled "Administration" in a field which is visible on most size monitors. You would have to click that then scroll to the very bottom of the resulting icon list where under careful observation you would find another button, labeled "Users and Groups". You would have to accurately click that before arriving at the exact little control panel which then pops up, where you would finally be able to create another account. Fortunately, no command line is needed, this is bad enough. Once you get accustomed to this type of thing you could always start abbreviating it something like; Start > Administration > Users and Groups. It might be a lot more advanced than Windows in some ways but not others, but eventually it's possible to get accustomed to it. Without giving up Windows at all if you don't want to ;) You've still definitely got a legitimate comment about discovery compared to Windows that has not been completely overcome though. |