End-user dont'care about splitting hairs. Iwas using Linux in the mid-90's and that kind of stance is what turned me off. The sound card would brek, the networking would break, configuring the modem would be hell after each upgrade.
The attitude that you must not break LibreOffice is not okey but breaking the file-system okay 'because it's a driver!' is just untenable.
Making people's computer fail will turn users away. It's not just a Linux thing. When Windows breaks stuff, all hell break loose on the Internet. The problem with OSS, is that its maintainers have no direct, immediate monetary incentive to amend. The long-term loss of confidence is hard to measure, but it's real.
End-user dont'care about splitting hairs. Iwas using Linux in the mid-90's and that kind of stance is what turned me off. The sound card would brek, the networking would break, configuring the modem would be hell after each upgrade.
The attitude that you must not break LibreOffice is not okey but breaking the file-system okay 'because it's a driver!' is just untenable.
Making people's computer fail will turn users away. It's not just a Linux thing. When Windows breaks stuff, all hell break loose on the Internet. The problem with OSS, is that its maintainers have no direct, immediate monetary incentive to amend. The long-term loss of confidence is hard to measure, but it's real.