Hello All, Not to waste BW, but I wanted to introduce myself to you all while I have some free time to do so. Also, most of this is leading somewhere, so please be patient. My name is Chad, and I'm a Windoze-alcoholic. I'm not dry at this time, but have been experimenting with Linux for a few weeks now, and I really feel as if I will be able to get on the wagon, soon. I'm a consultant in the KC area. My experience includes web design, web app design (html, asp, javascript, vbscript- notepad, sql, access, photoshop), technical writing, software documentation, instructional design (word, powerpoint, photoshop, visio, animation master 99) and technical, manufacturing and soft training. I hope to drop many of the latter, in favor of the web app design gigs I've enjoyed more recently. I've been reading everything I can on Linux- news, newbie books, programming books, community sites- and the things I'm reading indicate that we are trying to make Linux a "user friendly" OS, that is approachable to the masses. In my experience as a newbie, I have a few concerns that I thought I could share with you in this forum. Here are my concerns: 1. My clients, for the most part, use Windoze, therefore I have to use Windoze (when in Rome... blah blah blah) 2. There seems to be a lack of accurate, true-to-format conversion tools for the ms apps (largely considered the standard). I know the StarOffice and Applixware offer compatibility, but I don't know how closely they stick to the format, nor could I afford to risk betting on them. 3. Configuration in those gosh-derned black screens is not going to please my Aunt Terry... not very approachable. I know that many distributions use a GUI installer, but it still lacks good SAMBA for my Win98 workgroup with the wife's PC, and sound card support. 4. All the distributions I have include a vast array of packages, with which none I am familiar. I running through the list, I -know- that I have multi-redundant apps, and it kills me to trade off the space with no payoff. Admittedly, they have put in the hours to include a short description of the packages, but there does not seem to be a source for feature comparison that is readily accessible to the user. 5. FUD (sorry, I like to work in "5"s) I'm excited about getting into it, and I don't think that these obstacles are insurmountable. In fact, I know that some are being addressed in up-coming versions of Kernel, XFree86 and Window Managers/Desktops. Just throwing out some food for thought. The most encouraging things to me are GIMP, Apache, Perl and PHP. many of my skills can be ported to these apps relatively painlessly, but there are still holes. BTW, do you guys have the Linuxcare Bootable Business Card? I'd like to be able to demo Linux for my family in Jefferson City, but they won't make the trip to see mine, and I'm not -about- to drag my PC to them. Hope to hear from some of you soon, and I hope that we can learn a little from each other while kicking this puppy around. Chad LaFarge No animals were harmed during the drafting of this email.