He has a point. When Windows breaks, what's the solution? You insert your XP disc and reinstall over itself, which overwrites a lot of stuff and all that. Doable, but hardly a quick fix.
The only time I've ever had to reinstall WinXP to fix something was when I changed every piece of hardware in my system except the hard drive and didn't want to do a fresh install.
I've certainly never had to do a reinstall to fix Windows Media Player. Maybe I am just the shizzle because I know how to navigate the Registry to find what I want, I don't know.
As I learn Linux, I do see where things are, and there are commands that you run and when something does not load, it basically tells you what the problem is.
You're right, "> int.14: soft raid" and a system hang is a far more descriptive way to deal with problems.
In Windows, if some part of the kernel gets borked or corrupted, it is not like you can boot into a command prompt and recompile the particular module with a single command...
While true, I've never had the Windows kernel get borked (and likely neither have you).
I typed YAST and it loaded a crude graphic utility that took me onto the net to Suse's FTP site and I was able to select, download and install the new kernel source so that I could recompile my NVidia drivers with this updated kernel and boot into the GUI.
I guess that's where you and I part company. There won't ever be a day where I want to boot into an ANSI graphics utility to download new source code for a kernel to recompile my video drivers that got FUBAR'd by a kernel update so that I could boot back to the GUI.
I suppose it's nice that you have this option when your automatic update does this to you - but I'll take the OS that has never put me in a position to NEED to boot into an ANSI graphics utility to download new source code for the kernel to recompile my video drivers that got FUBAR'd by a kernel update.
