Roger wrote:
Yes, we have a problem with the financial model which includes buying hardware
in hopes that it will be useful before it's obsolete. That means it works on day one.
The one thing I can't accept is breaking support for systems which worked fine on older releases. I don't want people running FC9 any more, but FC13 no longer supports the hardware. By support I mean a default install will display a graphical login screen a opposed to locking up so hard the battery must come out.
Several people point out that Win7 runs on these systems nicely. Daily. Loudly. Insist on putting "Linux upgrade problems" on agendas. Those people, the MS fanbois.
We are running ubuntu on fairly basic equipment, but I do agree, forget Fedora past ver 11 for older equipment. With respect to cutting edge and the necessity thereof, much of the world still uses neolithic windows versions. Fedora 10 and 11 are light years ahead of those, is there any reason they too could not be acceptable on low end systems?
The only issue is security. Capability isn't an issue.
The questions could be, what apps 'need' to be run?
Clearly the latest versions of browsers and media players.
Can you get away with openoffice, gimp, inkscape, audacity and so many other early version apps. Do you need compatibility with late version apps? What are the fears/problems with running an OS that is only 1-2 years old?
Unfortunately the world is filled with evil. :-(