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by zxcvcxz
4150 days ago
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It sounds like you were running Linux on hardware that wasn't Ubuntu certified. This is like complaining about how hard it is to get OS X up and running when installing on a Dell, but I see where you're coming from and realize this wasn't you whole point. Anywho.. I would say it's easier to take skills learned from using Linux and apply them to the Windows OS than the other way around. |
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Admittedly, I did learn many skills with the command line but this DIDN'T translate to me being a wizard with the DOS prompt on Windows 98 back then - I didn't use the DOS prompt. Task manager didn't show a hierarchy of processes like pstree does now, and pstree didn't come (or even exist?) with RedHat 5.0 or 6.0. This was RedHat, not RHEL.
I got OSX up and running on my Acer Aspire :-)
You're right though, that was difficult.
I think the skills for the different OSes are only mainly applicable to their OS, despite how we think and how easily you and I can use the different platforms.
Using a keyboard and a mouse translates, but nothing else does really. Getting my wife to use OSX is frustrating for her, my brother gets angry using OSX too, my brother is lost under Linux, my mum gets lost under Windows (she's fine with iOS mostly now) and my dad is fine with Windows 7 and before but hates Windows 8. My wife gets lost under Android after using iOS for years.
Don't even think about programming for any of them on any of the platforms!