Users see wider desktop adoption in Ubuntu's future
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| "Setting up different users and permissions was simple, but I am
| still learning to use some of the technical parts, like setting up
| firewalls, installing upgrades and such," Jones said. "[Ubuntu] is
| much different than Windows but help is readily available on the Internet
| and in help files on the CD and DVDs," he said.
|
| "The one thing I still have not solved is importing email and address
| book entries from Windows Outlook 2003. Once that is done, I will bid
| farewell to all versions of Windows," he said.
|
| [...]
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| "The person there at Ubuntu that heads up quality control should get an
| award for assuring Ubuntu is as good as it is," McDaniel said. "I've used
| many distros and feel Ubuntu is good for home or office. It truly is an OS
| for non-geeks and makes everything so easy -- from installing new software
| to keeping updated. Anyone can do it with ease," he said.
|
| Kerr sees a market opportunity for Ubuntu in the small and medium-sized
| business space, while the larger enterprise deployments would still
| require something like Red Hat or Novell SUSE Linux. "This could change
| however, and we could very soon have a big three in Linux: Red Hat, SUSE
| and Ubuntu," he said.
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