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Taking Control of
Your Software
Over the past fifteen years computing hardware
power has increased exponentially while at the same
time, prices has fallen dramatically. This is due to consumer
acceptance of a single hardware platform, the Intel compatible
processor. In an open and free market, completion from
manufacturers and mass production then take over and the results
you see in the vast range and power of PC hardware available
today.
Over the last fifteen years software has grown in
power and ease of use by consumer acceptance of a operating system
standard, Microsoft Windows. Given a free and open market one
would expect cost savings similar to what we have experienced on
the hardware market.
This column does not intend to explore why software
prices have continued to go up with even more computers being
built today than in the past. Rather we will look at what
you can do today to begin reducing the cost of using your computer
for basic productivity.
The core of your computing experience today is
built on the operating system, so any change you or I can make
should be base upon your current Windows experience.
To begin controlling the cost of your software
today, I recommend that you begin using Open Source software.
Open Source is publicly available code and is largely developed
and released in the public domain. This means Open Source is
a free way to get great software.
Once you begin using Open Source, like OpenOffice
instead of Microsoft Office, you immediately begin saving money, a
lot of money, on your computing experience. But more
importantly, if you carefully select which software you use, you
are also making your computing experience non-OS dependant.
This means that you can today begin using Open
Source and other software that is non-OS specific and in the
future take your application experience to a new platform.
Once you become comfortable with Open Source
applications then you can take it to the next level and switch to
an Open Source operating system like Linux.
On this page are best-in-class Open Source and
freeware software that will not lock you into a single OS so you
can begin saving on software upgrades today and pave the way
should you decide to change your Operating System in the future.
Should you decide that you want to move to a
non-Microsoft operating system on your current PC, Linux is by far
your best choice.
The Linux OS is now available in two formats.
Fee based and free versions. Possibly the best know fee
based flavor of Linux is Red Hat, while the free version is now
known as Fedora.
Should you decide to run Fedora or another free
Linux distribution for a totally free software experience you must
be willing to learn how to install software packages and initiate
OS updates. Neither operation is a easy to accomplish as you
are used to in Windows.
A benefit to Linux is that it requires less
hardware resources than Windows, so while Windows Vista will
require hardware upgrades to most PCs, Linux will continue to run
on your current hardware. |