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#811
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In article , Ron Hunter
writes Mxsmanic wrote: Ron Hunter writes: Or, you could just write your own driver for Unix. Isn't that supposed to be one of the great strengths of the OS? That may be practical for people with unlimited time on their hands, that might be an option, but not for most people. FWIW, you can write drivers for Windows, too, if you have the time and inclination. Which is one very good reason why most of us still use Windows. You write your own drivers then? -- Ian G8ILZ |
#812
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Ron Hunter writes:
Which is one very good reason why most of us still use Windows. I doubt that more than one in a hundred thousand users of Windows cares about writing drivers for the OS. -- Transpose hotmail and mxsmanic in my e-mail address to reach me directly. |
#813
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Ron Hunter writes:
Which is one very good reason why most of us still use Windows. I doubt that more than one in a hundred thousand users of Windows cares about writing drivers for the OS. -- Transpose hotmail and mxsmanic in my e-mail address to reach me directly. |
#814
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Prometheus wrote:
In article , Ron Hunter writes Mxsmanic wrote: Ron Hunter writes: Or, you could just write your own driver for Unix. Isn't that supposed to be one of the great strengths of the OS? That may be practical for people with unlimited time on their hands, that might be an option, but not for most people. FWIW, you can write drivers for Windows, too, if you have the time and inclination. Which is one very good reason why most of us still use Windows. You write your own drivers then? No. NOt any more. I got tired of that about 25 years ago, along with soldering my own connectors, and building my own equipment. |
#815
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Prometheus wrote:
In article , Ron Hunter writes Mxsmanic wrote: Ron Hunter writes: Or, you could just write your own driver for Unix. Isn't that supposed to be one of the great strengths of the OS? That may be practical for people with unlimited time on their hands, that might be an option, but not for most people. FWIW, you can write drivers for Windows, too, if you have the time and inclination. Which is one very good reason why most of us still use Windows. You write your own drivers then? No. NOt any more. I got tired of that about 25 years ago, along with soldering my own connectors, and building my own equipment. |
#816
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Ron Hunter writes: Which is one very good reason why most of us still use Windows. I doubt that more than one in a hundred thousand users of Windows cares about writing drivers for the OS. Precisely my point. If you want good driver support, you go with the most used OS/hardware combination. If you want CURRENT driver support, you have to keep up with the newest hardware and interfaces. |
#817
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Ron Hunter writes: Which is one very good reason why most of us still use Windows. I doubt that more than one in a hundred thousand users of Windows cares about writing drivers for the OS. Precisely my point. If you want good driver support, you go with the most used OS/hardware combination. If you want CURRENT driver support, you have to keep up with the newest hardware and interfaces. |
#818
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In article , Ron Hunter
writes If you want CURRENT driver support, you have to keep up with the newest hardware and interfaces. You do not have to have "current driver support" therefore "newest" is irrelevant, if it worked five years ago it still works. If you change to the latest for the sake of fashion not only are you wasting money but you are likely to encounter problems due to the system not having been subject to the extensive field testing that long established systems have survived. Incidentally we were supplying RS-422 today, something else that USB in no good at! -- Ian G8ILZ |
#819
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In article , Ron Hunter
writes If you want CURRENT driver support, you have to keep up with the newest hardware and interfaces. You do not have to have "current driver support" therefore "newest" is irrelevant, if it worked five years ago it still works. If you change to the latest for the sake of fashion not only are you wasting money but you are likely to encounter problems due to the system not having been subject to the extensive field testing that long established systems have survived. Incidentally we were supplying RS-422 today, something else that USB in no good at! -- Ian G8ILZ |
#820
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In article , Jeremy Nixon
writes Prometheus wrote: Incidentally Dell have rather more than eight models; that makes you wrong twice in one sentence, where did you look? At their consumer line. You know, the ones normal people buy? Now I see where you are going wrong, I looked for a laptop that would do the job whilst you looked for laptops that can not. I note that in their example list of uses for the serial port in the 'toy' range they do not mention GPS, perhaps they have never heard of GPS, or maybe they expect GPS users to want professional and not domestic machines. -- Ian G8ILZ |
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