Obviously, this isn鈥檛 true. Their underlying architectures are quite a bit different, Gnome looks different than the 7 UI, etc., but to an average 17-year-old, there just wasn鈥檛 any meaningful difference between the two operating systems.
The other day, I posted a blog titled 鈥淲indows 7: Good enough to pay for?鈥 I described how I鈥檇 installed the Windows 7 Release Candidate on my son鈥檚 computer for his take on the OS after living with Ubuntu 9.04 (and 8.10 before that) for a few months. It鈥檚 summer break, so he basically spends every waking moment when he鈥檚 not actually interacting face-to-face with friends on the computer. No better time to have a kid do some serious testing, right?
I asked him last night about his initial impressions of Windows 7 and, in typical teenage fashion, as he was bouncing between Meebo windows and browser tabs, he said it was 鈥渘ice.鈥 I managed to extract from him that his favorite feature was that he was able to use his Zune with it, something that had never worked terribly well with Ubuntu. Otherwise, he said, 鈥淲indows 7 is the same as Ubuntu; there just really isn鈥檛 anything different about them.鈥
Of course there isn鈥檛. He lives in a web browser. The underlying OS is irrelevant. He has no need for聽Office 2007 and I expect his next portable music player will be platform independent.
For some, Windows 7 may, indeed, be good enough to pay for, especially if they are power-users of Windows-only software. For my oldest son, if he gravitates to any machine, it鈥檚 to my Mac because it鈥檚 so easy for him to create and share video content. For the average student, though, the old Windows vs. Mac vs. Linux debate may finally be dead. For someone who 鈥渉ated Linux鈥 a year ago to now happily switch between Windows 7 and Ubuntu in a completely transparent way certainly signals an end to that age-old flame war.
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