Ah. excuse me. I was not asking you to troubleshoot anything for me, nor is my hardware an issue, so I can't see how I am obligated to respond to any particular question you pose.
Well Lepton I am about to let you into an open secret about the Dynaverse Forums. They are full of people who when you say you have a problem will try to help you. Of course you are not obligated to take such help.
It would be nice however if early on you were to indicate that you aren't actually stating a problem that help would be appreciated on but just ranting.
I am not sure why you think that a free OS should somehow be held to a different standard than a purchased OS.
Do you hold a free concert in the part to the same standards you hold a concert that you paid to see? If you were given a free car would you complain that it didn't have the options you would have chosen?
I thought we were all in agreement that all computers should come with a free OS, but I guess what you really want is for people to buy linux and I can 100% guarantee you that this is not going to happen from what I have seen of free linux distribution.
Whatever makes you think that anyone wants only free Operating systems or free software in general? I personally like competition. I'm using OpenSuSe as stated. I have bought Linux versions in the past and would buy them in the future if they were being sold locally.
As I said, my point is simple. As long as you can break your OS, have to manually edit config file, and futz about to get simple multimedia functionality, linux is going nowhere.
Link 1Here is a link from Microsoft telling you how to handle it when Vista stops responding during bootup. So it is an example of Windows "breaking" without referring to "ancient versions" as you objected to earlier.
Link 2Here is another example of Window breaking. This time when creating a partition with XP when the system is set to dual boot with Vista. Microsofts solution "don't do that". How about fixing XP so it actually works or fix Vista so it works with XP?
Link 3Here is another XP one. How to fix (by editing the registry) your DVD/CD which has just "stopped working".
Link 4This is a good one. How to fix a corrupt registry in XP. It involves dropping to the command line from the install CD and doing extensive copying and deleting files by hand.
All this show is that Windows too breaks and it is acknowledged by Microsoft and that you can have to jump through a lot of hoops to fix things - Just like Linux.
Now, if your contention is that paid versions of a linux OS has solved these problems, then I'd say whoever is producing those distros needs a slap in the head for not porting such solutions over to the free versions of the distro. Or, if your contention is that different distros of linux handle some things better than others, then let me say that MPlayer is MPlayer, VLC is VLC, gstreamer is gstreamer, and their crappy plugin functionality with Mozilla-based browsers I would guess would be universal to any distro.
I have stated repeatedly already that certain functions CANNOT BY LAW be included in the free distributions without the distributors being sued to death over patents. I think that is pretty plain and easy to understand.
If you had a patent that you licensed to software companies what would you do to those who don't pay your fees but violate your license? Would you perhaps
sue them? That is exactly why such software is not distributed in the free versions - they don't have the legal right to do so. Commercial versions because they are paid for can use some of that income to pay the licensing fees.
And surprise, surprise, I check here (http://www.novell.com/products/linuxpackages/desktop10/i386/index_group.html) as to what comes with SLED and guess what, it's all the same stuff that comes with any other free linux distribution including Ubuntu. Yes, let me pay $150 bucks for a 3-year, one device license just so that beryl may or may not work on my hardware, or that I break my OS trying to configure it to work with beryl. That's cost-effective.
I repeatedly suggested
LINSPIRE for some very good reasons.
1/ It is intended for the home user
2/ It has licenses to allow it to include media playing abilities.
3/ It
sells more media playing ability as well
Just out of curiosity what type of software do you think that "Novell SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop" will include? That word "Enterprise" is very important. You see it tells what SLED is configured for - (big) business desktop use. Would you really need DVD playing and streaming media on the average business desktop OS? I don't think so my self.