sowens
Member
Registered: Sep 2000
Location: Rochester, NY
Posts: 284 |
quote: Originally posted by Toby
Perhaps if Linux were installed on the same scale, there might be, but in today's world, there are _far_ more potential options for Windows machines, down to there even being Windows 3.x installations out there in real world use.
The last I knew, there were still systems with 1.X Linux kernels out there. There are still a lot of Linux systems out there that are running 2.2 kernels, which is ancient in terms of Linux evolution, since large sections of the kernel were rewritten for 2.4.
Windows offers basically a single package system for the installation of files, not counting those companies that decide to write their own. As of my last count, there were at least 3 different packaging systems for Linux (Red Hat, Debian, and Slackware), each which use their own methods and databases for maintaining packaging harmony. Though each can be used on a single system, none are compatible with the others. Yes, there is software available to access all three from a single set of utilities, but that's another package to install, which means you already need one of the other packaging systems available.
Combine this with the fact that there are now at least 6 distros, each of which uses one of the above packaging systems, put their files in different locations, and use their own utilities to configure the system (which do occasionally work), and the nightmare just begins to unfold.
This is not to say there isn't work going on to correct this. There was an effort to create a set of specs that defined how a Linux file system should be organized, but you have no guarantee that a particular distro is going to support that. 
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