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Linux Is 'Bloated and Huge,' Says Its Creator

Creator Says Linux Is Becoming BloatedLinux has long been lauded for its low hardware requirements and fast operation. It's even been crammed into cell phones, like those powered by Google's Android. Yet Linux creator Linus Torvalds seems to think the little operating system that could is getting a little soft around the middle.

According to the Register, Torvalds told a roundtable during this week's LinuxCon that Linux was getting "bloated and huge," more succinctly adding, "Yes, it's a problem." As Linux has added features and support for more hardware -- necessary to compete against Microsoft and Apple -- the core of the OS, or kernel, has grown so fast that developers can't keep up with it. According to an Intel study, the performance of the Linux kernel has degraded by 2-percent with each of the last ten releases. Torvalds complained, "I mean, sometimes it's a bit sad that we are definitely not the streamlined, small, hyper-efficient kernel that I envisioned 15 years ago."

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Computers

Windows 7 to Have 29% Fewer Pop-Up Prompts, Says Microsoft

If you count yourself among the throngs of Windows Vista users who have been perpetually perturbed by Vista's constant prompt windows (known as User Account Controls, or UAC), you may soon be breathing easy. According to IT World, Microsoft developers are claiming that Windows 7 will feature 29-percent fewer UAC prompts than its oft-hated-on predecessor.

"We've reduced 16 different points of prompting," Paul Cook, director of Windows 7 client enterprise security, told IT World. According to Cook, users will not be bothered with UACs while updating their systems, viewing their firewall settings, or using Windows applications.

This should strike most Windows users as good, if not unsurprising, news. After all, way back in January, we gathered that Microsoft had finally heard the anguished cries of its denizens. [From: IT World]

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Computers

Windows XP Given Stay of Execution... Again

Windows XP Given Stay of Execution... Again
The old adage proves to be true -- you just don't know what you have until it's gone.

Eight years after its release, Windows XP simply refuses to slip quietly into the night. Despite the litany of complaints against the aging operating system, users and PC manufacturers are loathe to embrace its successor Vista.

We've lost track of the number of times that Microsoft has extended the life of XP since it was originally supposed to ride off into the sunset in February of this year. Now the boys in Redmond are planning to offer the operating system to PC makers through at least May 30 of 2009. That, of course, does not include the support it plans to offer for the operating system on low power computers like netbooks, which extends through June 30, 2010.

Considering the reluctance of companies like Dell to completely ditch XP, we wouldn't be shocked if Microsoft just continue to extend its life until it can get Windows 7 out the door. [From: Silicon Alley Insider]

Computers

Geek's Girlfriend Finds Linux Harder to Use Than Windows

http://www.pocketdaily.com/index.php/2006/10/06/download-tman-095/Linux, the free, open-source UNIX-based operating system used in trendy affordable computers such as the eeePC and the Zonbu, has been gaining huge ground over the past decade in terms of general usability, especially when compared to the competing (and decidedly not-free) products from Windows or Apple. Despite that, Linux is still lambasted as being unintuitive, overly complicated, and simply not ready for prime time.

To test this point, a Linux fan took a machine with a fresh install of Ubuntu, a popular type of Linux, and decided to challenge his girlfriend, a Windows user with no Linux experience, to see whether she could find her way around and do some generally simple tasks. Unfortunately for those hoping for Linux desktop adoption, she didn't fare too well.

The tasks ranged from simple ones, like looking up the capital of Bosnia online (she passed this one) and watching a YouTube video (failed this one), to more complex challenges, such as burning a CD (failed) and modifying an image using PhotoShop (passed). By our count she succeeded in only half of the challenges, meaning Ubuntu isn't quite ready for completely pain-free use by Windows users. So, if you were wondering why cheap, Linux-based computers, like the eeePC, are starting to offer Windows versions as well, now you know. [Source: Content Consumer]

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