A retrospective on actively using ReactOS ========================================= After i recently noticed that i haven't posted anything about ReactOS after July, and then noticing that i haven't linked the posts i have written about the installation "adventure" to my "Computer Stuff" category i thought it is on the time to correct this missteps. Well, where do i start... first things first: I am still running ReactOS on my Thinkpad and surprisingly it works. After i have fiddled around with drivers and various settings i have it in a state where it runs pretty stable for alpha-stage software. Yes, it can (and will) bite you in your backside if you treat it like a super stable Unix system, but if you treat it the same way you would have Windows 95 everything is fine. What does i mean with that? Well... NEVER put data or software you are not ready to lose on your OS partition, NEVER!!! It also calms the mind to have a backup (preferable an full drive image) of your system at hand. And if everything fails, just remember: A fresh install only takes about 5 - 8 minutes on an nearly 2 decades old laptop... Well, that said, i am really not THAT masochistic as it may seem at a first glance. The last time i had to make an rollback was around August of last year and since than i really had no major issues. I can send and receive emails, can use the K-Meleon browser to access the web and code using Freepascal and / or Lazarus. All in all considered, it is somewhat like back in the day when i used to use an ...unofficial... and very premature beta release of Windows 2000 i got from a friend as my daily driver. Would i use this system to work on mission critical stuff? Hell no, but as a day to day writing / coding / gaming system its indeed surprisingly nice. What i absolutely not get is why ReactOS is getting so much negativity in the web. On every video or article that is published you have this bunch of people that claim "that is trash... why not simply run Wine on linux"? Or people that harshly critisize the developers why they "waste" their time working on this project, it would be so much more useful if they would help to improve Linux. Wouldn't it have been so much more useful if Linus Torvalds had spend his time writing accounting software instead focussing so much on his "hobby project"? And after all: In my personal opinion everything computer related has become too much focussed on "what use does this have?", what has become of the "computer" hobby? Was an Altair 8000 really that much of a practical tool (it could be) or was it in most cases just an explorational tool to "play" around and try out things? To quote an famous philopher: "Why so serious?".