Originally Posted By: Mystic
I don't know where Amiga was for video editing in 1990, but I do know both Apple and Microsoft make it hard to develop videos that can be put on a DVD and played on a TV set.
Back in the day, Amiga was pretty much the be all and end all of video editing, including for commercial television. With respect to creating and/or modifying a video that can be put on a DVD and played on a normal DVD player and TV, that's easy in Linux, since there are a couple open source packages that do that. Additionally, one of those packages (FFmpeg with the WinFF GUI frontend) is cross platform, and will do the job in Windows. Give it a shot - it's ridiculously easy. It has "presets" for whatever you want to do.
With respect to printer and scanner usage in Linux, one just has to be a bit cautious. HP develops a lot of stuff they intend to work very well with Linux, and keep updated lists of that. And, it's not like they charge a premium for that stuff. My laser printer was around $100 a few years ago. And it was completely plug and play. What else could I ask for?
Photo printers are a bit different, and you know that from experience. There are way, way too many photo printers out there that are cheaply built and way too cheaply priced and rely on too much proprietary software. Instead of creating proper drivers or support for alternative operating systems, they create abominations of user software that are utterly useless for anything except their own equipment. If I were in the market for a photo printer, I certainly would be checking HP's list first. Some manufacturers are interested in providing cross platform products, others are not.
And, I'd agree that there's nothing wrong with a DVD. There are many times when they are still necessary as a storage medium.
Overkill: A while back, I had to give a tech a hard time when he was setting up the surveillance system (on Ubuntu) at one of my businesses. Actually, I had to give two techs a hard time, and those are the only two techs in this city that I trust. One said that a security camera system couldn't be set up in Linux. It should be only set up in Linux, since that's more crash resistant, and I have it set up in Linux, so it's clearly not impossible. It's proprietary software, but that's fine. If a computer is just sitting there and operating a camera system, it doesn't need Windows in the least.
The second tech got a rough time from me because he didn't realize that the Linux command line was case sensitive, nor could he understand that he couldn't monkey with root directories without root access.