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Windows 7 Vs. Windows 8 Vs. Ubuntu for Laptops - LockerGnomeI recently purchased a laptop without touch screen. Which operating system is better for it: Windows 7, Windows 8, or Ubuntu?
Well, OverEdge, the answer to that question depends entirely on what you intend to do with it. If 99% of what you need to do can be done from a browser, the operating system itself isn’t very important. If you do, however, prefer to play DirectX-based games and/or use productivity software such as Adobe Premiere Pro or Photoshop, then you might consider whether or not you know enough about Ubuntu and the workarounds for making Windows applications available on it to make that transition work for you.
The differences between these three operating systems comes down to experience. Do you prefer the traditional desktop present in Windows 7 over the Modern UI of Windows 8? Without a touch screen computer, you might also consider just how useful the new features of Windows 8 will be to you when you’re still using a trackpad and a keyboard. For most users, Windows 7 is still just fine. It will run all the programs you already own on Windows at the loss of the latest apps made for the Modern UI. At this point, those apps don’t exactly make it worth switching over. It’ll take some time before developers shift their focus from desktop programs to the new interface, and it’s more likely that Windows 8 will continue to exist as a schizophrenic environment than something truly based in one environment or another.
Ubuntu shows some interesting promise. While I don’t personally use it every day, I do have it installed through a virtual machine on my iMac and have a large appreciation for the innovation present on the platform. If a love for open source runs through your veins, then the case could be made to make Ubuntu your platform of choice. Be mindful, however, of driver issues brought on by manufacturers not fully supporting Linux. Some of the latest processors and wireless devices out there may still have small compatibility issues that you’ll need to know how to work around. This is much less of a problem than it was five years ago, but it’s worth checking user forums to find out if your laptop will work seamlessly with the OS. The same could be said for Windows 8, which may work differently with existing hardware despite an overwhelming amount of support overlap between Vista/7 and Windows 8 drivers.
As much as I’d like to give you a clear answer, the choice is entirely your own. If you feel that Ubuntu offers you the flexibility and control you’d prefer over Windows 7 or 8, then it may well be the best choice for you. If, on the other hand, you’d rather stick to the Windows ecosystem and either go with the tried and true Windows 7 or the new experience featured on Windows 8, then that could be a better choice.
When Windows 8 is released on 26 October, it will be the third straight time a major Windows version is launched close to the release of arguably the world's most popular Linux distro - Ubuntu.
Ubuntu and Canonical have come a long way since their 7.04 Feisty Fawn release, which followed Microsoft's Windows Vista.
Back then, Canonical failed to capitalise on Vista's universal rejection by its users. If reviews of the Windows 8 Consumer Preview are any indication, it'll be a very cold winter for Microsoft.
But, more importantly for the Linux community, does Ubuntu 12.04 have what it takes to position itself as a more usable alternative?
The Ubuntu advantage
It's ironic how the one feature in recent Ubuntu releases that might have lost it some users will now work in its favour and attract new users by the bucket-load. We are, obviously, talking about Unity.
Microsoft's revolutionary Metro desktop is already facing criticism similar to that Canonical fielded when it introduced Unity on the desktop. They listened, learned and they evolved.
Furthermore, Windows 8 is a major departure from how Microsoft does desktops - offline installations that could connect to each other. Now, with Windows 8, you have an online desktop designed to deliver the best of the cloud to your visually new desktop. It can do things in a way that no version of Windows ever could before. And we in the Linux world know what that means, right?
Be it with KDE 4, Gnome 3, or Unity, suddenly introducing new paradigms and a dramatic new way of doing things displeases users. And while the changes might be new to Windows, they have long been mainstays on the Linux desktop in general, and Ubuntu in particular.
In this feature, we'll attempt to ascertain if Ubuntu's maturity and flexibility, and its range of options will score over Windows 8's radically different new desktop paradigms.
Customising the desktop
With 12.04, Ubuntu has refined further its simplified consolidated System Settings window. Users can now make the launcher a permanent fixture on the desktop, as well as tweak its behaviour for multi-monitor set-ups, which was a much-requested feature by Linux users.
This was well received by our bunch of testers, who had pre-conceived notions about the difficulty of setting up Linux.
Their experience with setting up Windows 8 was rather interesting. Their first instinct was to look for the Control Panel, which isn't readily accessible, at least under the Consumer Preview. It shows up when you bring up the Charms bar under the Desktop view, but not under the main Start screen. This discrepancy wasn't noticed by many users.
Like Ubuntu 12.04, Windows 8, too, tries to simplify its settings options, with the most common settings accessible from under the Charms bar. Other advanced settings, such as the BitLocker encryption, are still accessible via the Control Panel, or you can search directly for them from the Start screen.
While most didn't figure out the location of the Charms bar on their own, all our testers appreciated Windows 8's style of segregating its settings, making commonly used settings more readily accessible than less frequently used ones.
Accessing hidden features
Another similarity between Ubuntu 12.04 and Windows 8 is their focus on making less visible features, buried beneath nested menus, easily accessible.
Windows 8 is tackling this issue by adding an MS Office-like Ribbon to its Windows Explorer, while Ubuntu's solution is the Heads Up Display (HUD). Still, most of our testers preferred to stick to the Context menu when working with Windows Explorer.
According to Microsoft, Windows Explorer has more than 200 functions (a fact we shared with our testers), but many simply continued using it to just look at and launch files.
Surprisingly, HUD got more looks than we expected, even though it forces people to abandon the mouse and use the keyboard.
Linux users in general, and Ubuntu users in particular, appreciated the time-saving facet of HUD and how it seamlessly performs system-wide settings, such as setting up VPN, as well as app-specific actions such as saving a document or opening a bookmarked page.
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Windows 8 vs Ubuntu: battle of the operating systems: Cloud integration | News | TechRadar