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Linux on the Desktop

webmaven writes "Mitch Kapor's Open Source Application Foundation just released a 34 page report on the Desktop Linux market, written by Bart Decrem, who has discussed desktop Linux previously. The OSAF is working on Chandler, which the press have generally described as an 'Outlook Killer', but it's really intended to be in a completely new application category, more similar to Lotus Agenda in some ways than what currently consider a PIM (email + contacts + appointments). The report goes into some detail about the current state of desktop Linux, trends, and various limiting factors, and concludes that while a revolution is not immediately in the wings, a trend can definitely already be discerned, and they expect adoption of desktop Linux to increase over the next few years, and identifies leverage points to accelerate the process."

444 comments

  1. Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Frothy+Walrus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Look at workalike apps that run on Windows. They can't even make it. You expect users to adopt a new OS *AND* utilities? Get real.

    1. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by yppiz · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Mod parent as insightful, not flamebait. The poster is saying the following:

      If Windows users don't switch to competing apps on their current OS, then how can we expect them to switch both applications and operating systems?

      --Pat / zippy@cs.brandeis.edu

    2. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by mijok · · Score: 1

      It's pretty much just the apps that matter - what do most people do with their OS (if they even know what that is..)? They run the apps - clicking on icon X on the desktop to start a web browser, click on icon Y to start a word processor. So switching (a desktop) OS is not that much of an issue as switching apps.

      --
      Karma. Moderation. Is my .sig good now?
    3. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by IdleTime · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The switch to Linux on the Desktop will not start at home, just for the very same reasons you point out.

      Linux on the Desktop will start in the corporate world, just like Windows did. After adoption in the corp world, the adoption at home will follow.

      I have heard for years that Linux is not ready for the Desktop, the apps suck etc and every time I look at my PC and think: I wonder what their needs are?
      I have used Linux exclusively on the desktop for years, currently running Gentoo, but that is not a point. My point is that most people, both at work and at home will have more then adequate number of apps available and with features that covers their use. Remember the good old 80/20 rule? 80% of the users only use 20% of the feature in any given app. This still holds water, so there is really no need for an Outlook killer, most people will have more than enough functionality with already existing apps.
      I also fail to see the so called "un-polished" look or lack of interoperability, it's there, both in Gnome and KDE, and getting even more polsihed for each release. What you use is based on your perception of the available DE and Wm environments. I work for a huge company, 40000+ employees and have so far not found one single task that I or my coworkers need to perfom that could not be done under Linux, not one single!

      I would really love to see the list of programs needed for Linux in order to be a valid alternative to Windows on the Desktop. As far as I know, there are none!

      --
      If you mod me down, I *will* introduce you to my sister!
    4. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by yppiz · · Score: 2, Insightful
      IdleTime writes:
      I would really love to see the list of programs needed for Linux in order to be a valid alternative to Windows on the Desktop. As far as I know, there are none!

      You're right. It's not the apps that are the problem. It's that most PCs come with Windows pre-installed.

      Walmart selling Lindows PCs is the biggest threat to Microsoft's home market. If other stores join in, millions of ordinary users will enter the Linux world - without really knowing or caring (or needing to).

      --Pat

    5. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      - Microsoft Office
      - Adobe Photoshop

    6. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft Office serves absolutely no purpose and you know it! Give me one good reason to use it.

    7. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by cfuse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I can't believe that no one has mentioned games!

      If I can't run Office I don't give a damn, but if I can't run games, well that's a different story.

      If linux can run doom III faster than windows on equivalent hardware straight out of the box then I think it might have a future, otherwise don't bother.

    8. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A user who starts with linux should be able to stick with it, and not have to leave. You don't have to port everything from windows to make linux more usable. One should not think of the driver of change as migration from windows. The driver should be the creation of a relatively robust set of linux desktop features. There are too many holes now. There should be many many more things that operate easily and reliably from the GUI, versus from a shell.

      --ERIC

    9. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by VPN3000 · · Score: 1

      No kidding.

      This whole spiel reminds me of a sorority house sponsored study on the positive health benefits of binge drinking.

      I'm all about Linux, but positive CNN and Fox News articles are what gets the general public curious. Not this sort of thing.

    10. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      You're kidding, right?

      Of course apps are the problem.

      Not only games, but crappy apps like, say, Xine, whose open button says "://".

      How do you uninstall a program in KDE? Oh, well of coures you know, because you know what "RPMs" are and where to go for that--you look for "Package Manager." But normal users who actually expect sanity in their desktop systems will expect install/uninstall programs, not packages. You can't even drag around menu items.

      There is a severe usability problem in the Linux desktop world that people are in denial about. There's always something to blame. In your case, you take the tired route of finding some way to blame Microsoft. It's ridiculous.

      Of course users will care if they're in the Linux world and none of their software works, and they can't go to a store and find any. People who use Norton Antivirus or play the Sims or use Photoshop (Gimp sucks in comparison) or Dreamweaver or Office. The Linux clone versions don't compare.

      Next.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    11. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they could play the sims linux version.

    12. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by mejh · · Score: 1

      At work I've moved to a (Gentoo) Linux desktop, and can use it for a lot of my coding and everyday work stuff, but I still have to keep a Windows machine on a KVM because of:
      SQL Server (for testing)
      Visual Basic
      Visual SourceSafe
      Data Valley (our company timesheet application)
      Internet Explorer (for testing websites)

      So for me, at my company, these are the reasons I have to keep a Windows machine around.

    13. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by wilddur · · Score: 1

      are you joking? SQL Server (for testing)? Internet Explorer (for testing websites)? You may need to use both for COMPATIBILITY reasons but for the normal users there are plenty of databases and browsers much better than thouse.

    14. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux is fine.

      Those who are working on programs like "ardour" or "audacity" or "Broadcast 2000" tend to be part of mailing lists of industry users. Information about bugs, including the ones you may experience now, are already probably known and are in a list.

      If you break down linux into office programs, you already have open-office (looks fine, works fine) and Evolution works like outlook express on steroids... to coin a phrase someone I can't remember once used.

      If you know what you want in program terms, you won't have a problem "shopping" for RPM's....

    15. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I would really love to see the list of programs needed for Linux in order to be a valid alternative to Windows "

      "As far as I know, there are none!"

      Really?

      Powerpoint
      Outlook
      Anything from Adobe - Illustrator, After Effects, Photoshop, Premiere
      Anything from Macromedia - Director, Flash, Freehand. Fireworks
      Sage ACT!
      Sage Line 50,100, et al.
      3D Studio MAX
      Quark - OS X, but no Linux.
      AVID - not exactly desktop, but still not on Linux.

      Fancy training your 40,000+ employees in their Linux alternatives? Or paying for that training? Or reimbursing your company for lost productivity while the training goes on?
      And that's if there is a Linux alternative.

      And on a lighter note...

      Counter-Strike - Linux server, but no client
      Half-Life2 - Same as CS, according to HalfLife2.net.
      Who knows how many DirectX based games.

      As far as the home/office desktop is concerned, Linux isn't even in the same sport as Windows, let alone the same league.

    16. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      You can connect to MS SQL Server from Unix boxes, often using the Sybase client libraries. Of course I doubt that MS has made much of the useful admin functionality available over a remote connection.

      Internet Explorer runs well under Wine, you could try the other three apps as well (it probably depends which version of VB).

      In the worst case you could use VNC or rdesktop to view your Windows box in a window (heh) and avoid the need for a KVM switch.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    17. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 1

      Novell client for Linux...doesn't exist, for the University I do work for, that automatically excludes Linux as an option. Not to mention an entire range of Medical-specific software, PocketPC-syncing software (MD Everywhere comes to mind readily), Hardware-controller apps (cytometers, GCMS, etc) and on....

      --
      So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
    18. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by tlianza · · Score: 1
      I would really love to see the list of programs needed for Linux in order to be a valid alternative to Windows on the Desktop. As far as I know, there are none!
      1. Photoshop
      2. Quicken (home) / QuickBooks (office)
      3. A browser I can visit my bank's website with.
      I chose not to list Office, although from my experience with OpenOffice it just doesn't feel right. Others must notice too. Why is there a grey background behind every bullet in the document? Just bizarre.
    19. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      Frankly, the ONLY thing I really need for the Linux platform, is a good data modeling tool, like ERWin...

      cayenne.......

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    20. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      You don't need Norton Antivirus if you're using Linux...

      :-)

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    21. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have used Linux exclusively on the desktop for years, currently running Gentoo, but that is not a point

      No, you're right, it's a completely meaningless statement that was used only to flex that sad, sad ego and to ensure a positive mod for the undoubtedly inane commentary to follow.

      And it worked. I am shocked.

    22. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Oh, oh, I've got one -- "it works better than everything else".

      That, by the way, is reasons 1 through 24303 (inclusive). At least, in the world where people choose software that is the best tool for the job without heed of stupid politics. Have someone explain it to you.

    23. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1. Novell client for Linux...doesn't exist

      Are you sure about that? If that isn't good -- or can I say ~evil~ enough -- you might look here; http://www.caldera.com/support/docs/netware/linuxc lient/index.html

    24. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by Bio-Hazzard · · Score: 1

      1.GIMP (Gnome Image ManiPulater) (my spelling sucks) 2.I dont even know why you need this feature 3.Mozilla 4.Give office some time (version 1.0 right now). It'll get better, way better.

      --

      Give a man a fire, he is warm for a day.
      Set a man on fire, he is warm for the rest of his life.

    25. Re:Know why Linux will fail on the desktop? by tlianza · · Score: 1
      1. GIMP doesn't hold a candle to Photoshop... I think this is pretty much accepted.
      2. They are two of the most popular pieces of software in the world... shouldn't be overlooked
      3. Mozilla will not work with many bank websites, nor will Opera even when I tell it to emulate IE. Not the browser's fault per se, but market share being what it is, many businesses do not test (and thus don't support) alternative browsers. When I'm doing a funds transfer, I am unwilling to run the risk (no matter how unlikely) that something gets screwed up because of my [unsupported] browser.
      4. I hope you're right, and will wait patiently like everyone else
  2. SP by usotsuki · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Unfortunately you're right.

    We need a revolution in usability.

    -uso.

    --
    Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    1. Re:SP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, but also we have to stop competeing with each others (gnome/kde, all linux distros (need only two desktop/server damnit!!).. everyone gonna bash me about this but it is the thruth! 1. Start by making a competeting product (the whole package.. not only 1 app = read apache) ... 2. ??? 3. profit!

    2. Re:SP by BWJones · · Score: 2, Funny

      Unfortunately you're right.

      We need a revolution in usability.


      Hmmm. Like OS X?

      Ducks

      --
      Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
    3. Re:SP by Pxtl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No - we need an OS/windowing system that forces coders to make things usable automatically. Command line and graphical launch should be the same thing from a developer standpoint - instead of having to pop-over to the command line, the user should be able to pop-open a constext menu for the run-parameters of a program, and see limited options, not just an ambiguous text-passing system. It should be more convenient to write a configuration system through a graphical widget window then through a text editor. Basically, I think code should move away from the simple text config file, and more into a database-style concept of a header that defines widgets. So, the configuration simply becomes an onscreen list of widgets - with no text file to get confused by. Sure, if the coder leaves out the doctext then this thing is confusing - but at least widgets will give you a vague idea what the control does.

      The problem is that all major OS's are gradually evolutionary growths from the 80's. None are actually "designed".

    4. Re:SP by inteller · · Score: 1

      OS X isnt a revolution in usability. Just a different window manager. The revolution will be when we adopt something other than a WIMPs interface....whatever that is is anyone's guess...virtual reality? who knows.

    5. Re:SP by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      Bingo, you hit the nail on the head...

      Believe me, I always thought a keyboard/menu interface (a la MultiMate Advantage) was more intuitive than a WIMP GUI anyway.

      Then again I learned GUIs with GS/OS (Apple IIgs, 1988).

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    6. Re:SP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ducks

    7. Re:SP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GEESE!!

    8. Re:SP by gredman · · Score: 1

      A/UX did something like this called Commando. IIRC, MPW had it too.

    9. Re:SP by The+Almighty+Dave · · Score: 1

      Then the revolution is a long way off. Most of us are still using the same keyboard layout that has been around for over 100 years. If this is any indication of the speed of progress.

    10. Re:SP by chthonicdaemon · · Score: 1

      Now, the thing about usability is the target audience. What you are proposing will probably make things more usable for some people (mostly people who are not used to the command line). Other people (like me) have grown fond of the command line. It can be proven mathematically that the command line allows more options with less keystrokes than any GUI.

      I am all for it if it is optional and transparent to command line users, but I suspect you have fallen into the trap of thinking that open source tools are (or should be) explicitely developed for newbies.

      On the 'designedness' of OSs, I think that some of the aspects of design should be making people feel comfortable. This is why joystick driven cars haven't really caught on. Everybody kinda gets by with the steering wheel, and would have to re-learn driving if they switched. They are not willing to do that, so some stuff (dating from decades ago) stays. Further, I think that power and ease of use are usually diametrically opposed, so by making something really easy to use for a narrow band of uses (one click DVD encoding to 700MB mpeg), you make it harder to use it for other purposes.

      --
      Languages aren't inherently fast -- implementations are efficient
    11. Re:SP by master_p · · Score: 1

      As I have posted many times here on Slashdot, in order for Linux to succeed on the desktop (and kill Windows!!!), is a new revolutionary way of handling information. You are so correct when you are saying that operating systems are stack in the 80s. Instead of manipulating information, the programmer is forced to manipulate the mechanism that handles the information; in other words, the programmer has to go through guis, files, descriptors, sockets, databases, etc in order to build an application.

      A new way of thinking is required. If we see what most programs do, there is a large percentage of code dedicated on information input/output, viewing and editing. Yet, each application repeats it without mercy. But...if the operating system supported an "information system", instead of a file system, all this code would be a thing of the past!!! there would be no need to write huge monolithic applications like Outlook or Chandler!!!

      Let me explain what I mean about "information system" (programmer talk follows): A file system where: a) each file is an object; b)each directory is a collection object that implements the "information Input/Output" interface. Objects created under this system will be persistent, and the operating system would make sure objects are periodically saved as needed. The computer's RAM would act as a "cache" for the object residing in the hard disk. The operating system would maintain the classes (the actual code in binary form) of each object as well as the reflection information about each class. There would be no specific "application" that handles an object, but there would be object viewers/editors specific to each object (and each object could create its own viewer/editor through an abstract interface).

      This system would be tremendously beneficial to everyone. For the programmer, he would not need to write an "application": she just needs to write a few new objects and collections that correspond to the needed information. Then, the user could instantiate one of these collections and create the proper objects in them as needed.
      There would be no need for the programmer to write the whole I/O system, the viewers etc.

      Modern programming languages C# and Java already offer this type of mentality. It's a pity that is not implemented on the operating system level. Linux should go this way and provide such a layer above the Unix-like layer that it provides right now.

      After all, computing is about information.

    12. Re:SP by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I think the earlier poster's proposed system would make life more usable for command-line junkies as well. If there were a file which defined the legal command-line parameters of a program, then shell tab completion would become a lot more useful (better even than the limited programmable completion that some shells currently have). For example you could type 'diff --supp' and hit tab to complete the long option to --suppress-common-lines. Similarly if an argument expects an integer or a filename, the shell could hint this to you as you type or when you press Tab.

      We already have a formal description of the parameters a program expects - the string given to getopt() or Perl's Getopt::Long or any of a hundred other command-line-parsing libraries. Why not expose that knowledge in a known format to the outside world so that shells can use it to help the user?

      You could even type-check your shell scripts to make sure each command is always invoked with legal arguments.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    13. Re:SP by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I think I've seen a flowchart of your proposed system somewhere. Just remind me, where exactly should the miracle happen?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  3. You gave the wrong link to OSAF by smitty45 · · Score: 4, Informative

    here's the real link: http://www.osafoundation.org/

    1. Re:You gave the wrong link to OSAF by The+Bungi · · Score: 5, Funny
      Fate worse than death: Slashdotting by mistake.

      Of course this just bounces to a non-existent Yahoo group, so...

    2. Re:You gave the wrong link to OSAF by webmaven · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Oops, sorry. Thanks for the correction.

      --
      The real Webmaven is user ID 27463. I don't rate an imposter, because my ID is such a lame-ass high number.
  4. Clippie by whitelabrat · · Score: 3, Funny

    Forget "Outlook Killer". Just get rid of the damn clippy guy!

    1. Re:Clippie by Malc · · Score: 1

      Why are people still going on about Clippy? I haven't seen him for *years*. He's not hard to avoid. I don't even know if it's an option anymore, although if it is, I must have deselected last time I installed Office XP.

    2. Re:Clippie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clippy sucks, but I like the kitty.

      It's sort of... comforting.

    3. Re:Clippie by Osty · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't even know if it's an option anymore, although if it is, I must have deselected last time I installed Office XP.

      You can still choose to install the Office Assistants, but you've always been able to choose not to install them. I've never had to deal with Clippy, from Office 97 through Office XP. Of course, most people prefer to just bitch and moan rather than do something about the problem, so it's not surprising that people are still complaining about Office Assistants.

    4. Re:Clippie by Khakionion · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I am forced to agree with you. As much as the clip annoys me, the cat makes working easier.

      I think it's his personality. Instead of just doing a stoopid "trick" animation every now and then, he just goes to sleep. Or something else less invasive than "I'M A CLIP!!!1 IT'S SO COOL!!!1"

      --
      OMG! Wau!
    5. Re:Clippie by swordboy · · Score: 2, Funny
      --

      Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    6. Re:Clippie by My+name+isn't+Tim · · Score: 1, Funny

      Clippy isn't as bad as that swastika in the middle of the OFfice Logo. I mean who could have missed that O_O http://www.microsoft.com/office/ look for your self in the middle of the puzzle

    7. Re:Clippie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WARNING: goatse link!

    8. Re:Clippie by exhilaration · · Score: 4, Informative
      That's a wonderful observation. But you're not absolutely correct. The symbol you mention is pointing counter-clockwise, which technically makes it a Hindu religious symbol.

      A Swastika must point clockwise. It's supposed to represent progress, and in Nazi propaganda films, the symbol is animated and rotates clockwise too.

    9. Re:Clippie by EverDense · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You can still choose to install the Office Assistants, but you've always been able to
      choose not to install them. I've never had to deal with Clippy, from Office 97 through
      Office XP. Of course, most people prefer to just bitch and moan rather than do something about
      the problem, so it's not surprising that people are still complaining about Office Assistants.

      Most people working in an office environment DO NOT install their own software.
      Nor, initially, do they understand how to change configurations.

      So your argument is moot.

      --
      http://jesus.everdense.com/
    10. Re:Clippie by Osty · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Most people working in an office environment DO NOT install their own software.

      So your argument is moot.


      No it's not. It just means that the IT department who is doing the installation should better understand what they're installing. The people you're referring to are the same people that wouldn't use the help functionality anyway, so it doesn't matter whether they have the hand-holding Office Assistant or the standard HTML help to work with. In either case, they're going to call IT.


    11. Re:Clippie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And they were to know this during the install routine how?

    12. Re:Clippie by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      And most enlightened IT shops that push the installs out, do not install Clippy either.

    13. Re:Clippie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That also makes it the Navajo symbol for water.

    14. Re:Clippie by Smoking · · Score: 1

      Jeez: a fun page on MS' site...
      including a funnier poll than the ones here...
      And I could have dreamt but I saw the clippy on the left below the menu saying "all your base are belong to us"
      Q.

    15. Re:Clippie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IIRC, a default install of Office XP installs Clippy, but you don;t get him unless you turn the Assistant on.

    16. Re:Clippie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but many do...
      There are far to many people who *LIKE* that damn clip and would whine if it was removed - and I've noticed they're mostly women.
      "hehe - its cute!"

    17. Re:Clippie by Osty · · Score: 1

      And they were to know this during the install routine how?

      They would know this if they didn't just blindly click through the dialogs. If you took two minutes of time to browse through the options you can choose to install/not to install/to only install on first use, you couldn't help but find the Office Assistant option.

  5. Wow! : ) by Jonsey · · Score: 3, Funny

    Linux is for desktops too?

    Yeah, I'll go RTFA. : p

    --
    I assert that my comment is only my opinion, not that of any employer, past, present or future.
    1. Re:Wow! : ) by The+Lord+of+Java+II · · Score: 0

      Duh!

  6. I like.... by rayamor · · Score: 0, Troll

    Windows as a desktop. I like linux too. I don't see what's so bad about having windows as my primary OS. Cost? Yeah, right... like I've ever paid for any verion of windows I've ever had. Just as free as linux to me. Performance/Stability?... I never have problems with win 2k or XP. Never had problems with linux either.

    1. Re:I like.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You paid for the windows when you bought the machine dude! (if you dint know)

    2. Re:I like.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Not if he stole the machine! ;)

    3. Re:I like.... by drunk_as_in_beer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      like I've ever paid for any verion of windows I've ever had. Just as free as linux to me.

      So you're a criminal? I used to be one, too, but free software changed all that. The people who illegally copy Microsoft software are just helping Microsoft dominate the PC market (though paying for it is much worse, I'll give you that). The more Windows PC's out there, the more people depend on those Windows PC's, the harder it is for anything else to have a chance.

      --
      --Drunk as in Beer
    4. Re:I like.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or built the machine from parts and pirated windows.

    5. Re:I like.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Power, flexibility, not being tied to some corporation's upgrade timetable or being dependant on them for patches and continued maintenance. Those things are kind of important.

    6. Re:I like.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pay for it all, Linux and Windows, but I'm not paying for Windows XP, so I guess I'll do without.
      So far as a linux desktop goes, I like using FVWM
      (various flavors) on top of these linux distros:
      Mandrake, Redhat, Debian, and of course little GreyCat 3.0. On my linux files page, I have a fvwm
      section that has some of my .fvwm2rc's and a screenshot. I'm using that right now, on top of Mandrake 8, and find it very easy to use. Here's the link.. The buttons and desktop item autohides when the cursor is off of it, and can be brought back by right-clicking on the current window's titlebar. The start button has the entire menu, as well as stuff like reboot and shutdown, floppy mount/unmount. The menu also is available anywhere on the desktop by left click. So much more fun than Windows 98 and rock solid stable, too, running on top of linux.

    7. Re:I like.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      exactly. almost every person that runs windows that i know does it this way. Also I love the way anytime someone says anything positive about M$ they are automatically modded troll :P Yeah, we all know its an evil facist corp already.

    8. Re:I like.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      "So you're a criminal? I used to be one, too, but free software changed all that. The people who illegally copy Microsoft software are just helping Microsoft dominate the PC market (though paying for it is much worse, I'll give you that). The more Windows PC's out there, the more people depend on those Windows PC's, the harder it is for anything else to have a chance."
      And if your a gamer? Photoshop anyone?
      Other than that Linux is perfectly fine as a desktop OS for the general populace...err other than the fact that recompiling, finding drivers, learning tons of commands, and installing programs is way above the average pc users head under current versions of Linux.

    9. Re:I like.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if your a gamer?
      Photoshop anyone?


      Than be a criminal or pay for it like the rest of the suckers. If you're doing business with Photoshop, you better be paying for your Windows license.

    10. Re:I like.... by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      err other than the fact that recompiling,

      you don't need to recompile anything on a distro like redhat or mandrake.

      finding drivers,

      don't have to do that either.

      learning tons of commands,

      not necessary with either redhat's or mandrake's gui utilities.

      and installing programs is way above the average pc users head under current versions of Linux.

      same thing again. it is not a problem with most distos now. RPM hell is similar to DLL hell except most package managers in Linux have some form of automatic dependcy checking. just click the RPM and it's all set. not to mention the awewsome package managers that bot debian and gentoo have, just apt-get packagename or emerge packagename and a package and it's dependencies are automatically downloaded and installed. up2date for redhat and urpmi for mandrake work similary but are not as advanced as apt or portage.

      For anyone reading this comment who hasn't used Linux before, don't buy into any of this crap. it's the biggest lie that has been perpetuated about Linux. anyone can set up an rpm distro. it's easier than reinstalling windows.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
  7. The next few years.. by grub · · Score: 1, Interesting


    ...they expect adoption of desktop Linux to increase over the next few years

    At first glance that sounds terrible, almost like a death knell to Linux on the desktop. Virtually every person who will have a computer in a "few years" will already has one today. They won't be bringing in many new users, they'll be converting existing Windows users. That must keep Bill up at night.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:The next few years.. by npietraniec · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The biggest converts will be businesses who can save mucho bucks on a few hundred workstations. Joe homeuser won't switch for the helluvit.

    2. Re:The next few years.. by AnyoneEB · · Score: 3, Insightful

      True, homeusers will probably switch to Linux for the same reason they use Windows now: it's what they use at work.

      --
      Centralization breaks the internet.
    3. Re:The next few years.. by RajivSLK · · Score: 2, Funny

      That must keep Bill up at night.

      Yes, I can see him now... in his 50 million dollar mansion fistfulls of $1000 bills in each hand nervously cowering under his bed. Can't sleep the penguins will eat me. Can't sleep the penguins will eat me.

      penguins... penguins... penguins... can't sleep.

      But don't worry tommorow he has a swim in his money vault planned -- to take his mind of things.

    4. Re:The next few years.. by bfree · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Another VERY good reason why home users will use Linux rather than Windows is that DRM realted technologies will be abhorent to Linux so when they buy their CD and it won't play on their PC they'll just bring it back and tell the store to go to hell and download the tracks from XXX. Likewise when they pick up a few DVDs over in the US (or Europe) and come back home they will be able to just play them and not discover that they have locked themselves out from playing the rest of their collection. Now I know that Windows does not preclude them doing these things, but you have to venture into a seedier underworld of crackers where on Linux the hacking will be done out of the box (or else they will just have to get any DVD to play and then be able to play any other DVD without fear).

      --

      Never underestimate the dark side of the Source

    5. Re:The next few years.. by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      I can also see this...

      "My stock was at $120 share. It is now 26.91 (actually 2X because of split so 53.82). I am less than half the man I was a few years ago!"

      "My company has started to become just like IBM was" For this reference read his book... This is like living in hell to Bill Gates.

      "I have the possibility of loosing my monopoly" This may not be hell to him put probably purgatory.

      "The tablet PC sucks, the Xbox is considered a failure, .NET is three years old and few have adopted it, and I can't get anyone to buy anything but our core products Office and Windows"

      Now for the worst one yet.
      "I cant steal any more ideas from Apple/Novell/everyone.. and I must actually innovate!".

      I think you have to ask what makes Bill Gates happy? If it was the money, then I believe he would have cashed out years ago.

      The good news Bill....
      Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM errr I mean Microsoft! :-) You have become the old IBM.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    6. Re:The next few years.. by pyrrho · · Score: 1

      >You have become the old IBM.

      I have savoured this irony loe these many years now! so true.

      and cruel, quite cruel.

      especially since even IBM isn't the oldIBM anymore, but the new IBM.

      Shall we be able to praise the new Microsoft(s) some day?

      --

      -pyrrho

  8. Linux poised for desktop failure: Gartner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Despite a recent surge in interest in Linux, it will fail to make much of an impression on the desktop, claims a Gartner analyst.

    Linux will be deployed on no more than five percent of desktops over the next two to three years because of a lack of viable applications, claimed Gartner research director Phil Sargeant on Thursday evening at the Gartner Symposium and ITXpo.

    "There's quite a lack of tools in that particular space," said Sargeant. "We are going to need to see more tools if it's to make any inroads." He cited StarOffice and Open Office as examples of the few good tools available.

    "The other [operating systems] are not standing still," added Sargeant. "The real question is the application portfolio for Linux. If that increases out of sight [Linux' market share] may be larger, but if it stays where it is, as we expect it to, it will be about five percent."

    Lindows, which targets the budget-desktop market in the US, offers hundreds of programs for a single fee through its Click-N-Run Web site, but Sargeant does not see this as being a serious threat to Microsoft. "Lindows is a player, but not a big player," he told ZDNet Australia . "We don't see a mass migration from Windows to something else."

    Sargeant disagrees with industry speculation that Microsoft will eventually offer the Windows operating system free to continue selling its high-profit application software.

    "They will make some concessions over and above the shared source concessions already made, but will not offer Windows free," he said. Microsoft is beginning to take Linux seriously as a threat, however, with senior executives until recently deriding it at every opportunity.

    Microsoft has even offered third-party developers access to its code, albeit under strict conditions. "It's not quite open source, but shared source is a mechanism to address some of the threats [Microsoft] see," said Sargeant. Despite the analysts' predictions, a leaked document allegedly from Microsoft suggests the strategies appear to be failing.

    However, the Linux community is not focussing on the desktop, but directing its efforts to the server market, according to Sargeant. "Most Linux distributors, for example Red Hat, are focussed on the UNIX sphere, there's no desire to move into desktops," he said.

    "Linux is the fastest growing of the operating systems, it will account for around 18 percent of revenue from servers [in the next five years]," said Sargeant. However, he claimed Linux still had a number of hurdles to jump over. He sees Linux becoming more scalable in the next 24 months, while providing the same performance, and believes eight-way servers will be "doable".

    "Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) is a really big topic with everybody I speak to because there is a perception that everything is free," said Sargeant. However, there are lots of components to a business's IT budget, including the operating system, hardware, applications and maintenance costs.

    "They will probably be deploying a number of licensed products on a Linux base. So they have to ask themselves if, at the end of the day, they will save money."

    At the low end of town TCO could be a factor in implementing Linux, according to Sargeant. "As you move into high-end, heterogenous mission-critical areas it will be much harder to see TCO advantages," he said.

    "Distributors are going through a lot of turmoil as they change their business model to make money out of Linux," added Sargeant. Red Hat, for example, has recently released a reasonably expensive server. The extra money buys support and services contracts.

    "Support and services really become the key to the strategy of any vendor moving forward," said Sargeant.

    Of the Linux vendors, Sargeant believes Red Hat will remain the dominant player. "Red Hat is by far the biggest distributor of Linux. It's the only one to make money and the only one to be financially viable," he said. "Red Hat will maintain a market

    1. Re:Linux poised for desktop failure: Gartner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to know why all this is crap (especially the TCO stuff....please!) just ask Robert Enderle. I dealt with all of this with him.

    2. Re:Linux poised for desktop failure: Gartner by WindBourne · · Score: 4, Funny

      Gartner claims:
      In 1999, they claimed that Apache was not that good and that IIS would crush it in about 1-2 years.
      In 2000, they said that Linux would occupy about 1 % of the servers on the web (totally ignoring that netcraft already showed Linux as being on more than 10% of the web servers at that time)
      In 2001, they said that .net would dominate the net by 2003
      So, here is my prediction:
      Gartner is worthless and will be losing a lot of money in the course of the next 2 years.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  9. Leverage by poptones · · Score: 0, Insightful
    Innovation like this would be fantastic, but if "they" really want to leverage linux into the desktop they need to come up with a fucking desktop that doesn't feel like a clunky imitation of a real computer. Even the goddamn 33MHz IRIX workstation I used nearly ten years ago had a better desktop than any linux distro I have tried.

    I'd love to fully embrace linux, but when the only way to do that is by accepting yet another proprietary OS along with it just to get a desktop that doesn't feel like I'm driving a fucking Edsel, I might as well stay with windows.

    1. Re:Leverage by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Stop trolling.

      Linux isn't ready for the desktop but there are people out there willing to attempt to get it as close as they can.

      "An Outlook Killer" is something that apparently people feel is necessary but what I feel is necessary is an IE browser (no, no matter what anyone says Mozilla doesn't perform anything close to how IE does, and yes, I have used both (Mozilla in Windows and Linux, and IE on Windows)).

      No IRIX workstation was ready for the desktop as what we consider it today, believe me.

      Windows and apparently MacOSX are ruling the desktop and will most likely continue to do so.

      We are seeing movement towards Linux on the desktop but it's still got a LONG way to go. I guess as people become more and more concerned with getting it there, the timeframe will continue to shrink.

      Just my worthless .02

    2. Re:Leverage by The+Night+Watchman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't know, I find the latest versions of KDE and Gnome to be quite nice to use, and very pleasing to the eye. Granted, their actual functionality is very close to that of Windows, but as a standard desktop environment is concerned, KDE/Gnome are pretty nice. Of course, if you're talking about revolutionizing the Windows, Icons, Mouse, and Pointer model of desktop use, that's another story. I'm all for using a gesture-based system like in Minority Report, myself...

      --
      "Every jumbled pile of person has a thinking part that wonders what the part that isn't thinking isn't thinking of"-TMBG
    3. Re:Leverage by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 3, Insightful

      umm.....dude....People Don't give a shit about the browser they have. they use the one that came with the damn system.

      if you mean a single browser then yes...Mozilla 1.5 will be that....it is called firebird.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    4. Re:Leverage by ctid · · Score: 1

      Could you be more specific as to what you see as the big differences between the best Linux desktop you've tried and Windows?

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    5. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      they don't? So you are saying that no one wanting to use Linux won't be concerned that they don't have MS Office and no "little blue E"? You're wrong.

      That's what people interested in a "desktop" for Joe blow are going to be looking for. Their comfort apps.

      Get real.

    6. Re:Leverage by phippy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You call 5dwm *BETTER* than gnome or kde ?
      you have serious problems.

    7. Re:Leverage by Zelet · · Score: 1

      It isn't just the desktop that needs polishing. Each app in Linux just doesn't look polished and integrated well with the rest of the system. I think more care needs to be taken to standardize the look of the OS and the apps that people use. I use Linux on my desktop at home but I am thinking of moving back to Windows not because Linux doesn't do something but because Linux is still ugly.

      --
      ...And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak out for me." - Martin Niemoeller (1892-1984)
    8. Re:Leverage by slux · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Would you mind also telling us what exactly makes GNOME/KDE feel like "a fucking Edsel"? And why exactly was whatever was on that IRIX (maybe CDE?) so much better?

      For me it's the exact opposite. WinXP seems like an utter mess that is coated with "eyecandy" that I can't imagine anyone enjoying or tolerating longer than a week willingly. Mac OS X with aqua looks nice for a while but no thanks, I just want a nice and clean desktop. I think GNOME does a very good job at this and KDE ain't bad either.

      Seems to me like you're just trolling.

    9. Re:Leverage by minus_273 · · Score: 1

      i second this. No it is not a troll to say linux desktops suck becasue they do. the kde gnome feud doesnt help. I switched to OSX 1 month back and im not looking back. people shoudl seriously look at OSX and not windows as aguide. Look at panther, with native QT and X11 modes, there is seriously NO need for linux on the desktop

      --
      The war with islam is a war on the beast
      The war on terror is a war for peace
    10. Re:Leverage by WTFmonkey · · Score: 1
      SOmething like a minority report system might help some computer-bound slobs burn a calorie here and there.

      Seriously, though, what would a gesture-based system be like for disabled people? Surely more diffucult than a mouse (which can be hooked up to a mouth-based control or something like that). ??

    11. Re:Leverage by repetty · · Score: 3, Funny

      "no, no matter what anyone says Mozilla doesn't perform anything close to how IE does..."

      And that's a bad thing?

    12. Re:Leverage by Jellybob · · Score: 1

      My guess is you're mixing and matching apps then... I use nothing but apps designed to be used under Gnome 2, and it looks and feels integrated to me.

    13. Re:Leverage by gamgee5273 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I would say it's a good thing...God forbid that Mozilla act as porrly as IE...

    14. Re:Leverage by Vargasan · · Score: 1

      no matter what anyone says Mozilla doesn't perform anything close to how IE does, and yes, I have used both

      Then use Opera?

      --
      Putting the romance back into necromancer.
    15. Re:Leverage by jason0000042 · · Score: 1
      I feel is necessary is an IE browser (no, no matter what anyone says Mozilla doesn't perform anything close to how IE does, and yes, I have used both (Mozilla in Windows and Linux, and IE on Windows))

      My girlfriend says IE is faster over and over again. I don't see it, but then I don't go to a lot of sites running on IIS (which allows IE to cheat on setup time. IE does start faster, because most of it is loaded into memory before you ever click the IE icon. Mozilla can't do this because Mozilla.org does not own the operating system. Also, some sites use activeX controls and other IE specific things, (except for one site I use for work I'm lucky enough to not have to use any such sites, since I use Firebird the type of sites I look at (they adhere to w3 recommendations) actually look better).

      --
      i don't like my old sig.
    16. Re:Leverage by EzInKy · · Score: 1

      I just don't get. My desktop looks pretty damn good with 3d panels, zooming icons and all. Sky pilot classic with Mozilla is pretty damn sharp too. Whenever I boot into Windows it's like I've gone back in time. Maybe the "eye candies" should be installed by default instead of offered as add-ons as they are now? Those who don't want it can always remove it.

      --
      Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
    17. Re:Leverage by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      umm...the cluless people don't give a crap....just tell them what is the office replacement....what is the INTERNET, and what is their E-mail...they will be happy...it is the people that are just smart enough to know what they are doing on windows that HATE changing becasue they do not want to put in the effort to "Relearn" everything...even though there is very little to relearn since all desktop computing is the same...all the ideas and such are exactly the same...it is just a matter of looking for the thing you need and getting over the habits of the old system.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    18. Re:Leverage by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      Who the heck modded this down? :)

      In fact, you have excellent point. J. Random Luser is going to want everything EXACTLY like (s)he knows from Windoze, right down to the big 'e' and the ability of the browser to render broken HTML (cf. dosius.zzn.com's login page).

      I say someone should decompile IE and clone it for Linux. :) Isn't there a Solaris version though?

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    19. Re:Leverage by eidechse · · Score: 1

      As for the gestures, have you seen the TouchStream? Granted it isn't a new take on UIs, but until that happens it's a pretty damn cool way to interact with existing UIs.

      TouchStream

    20. Re:Leverage by damiam · · Score: 1

      It would be trivial to put the "little blue E" icon on Firebird.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    21. Re:Leverage by cgibbard · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've been using Galeon (based on Gecko) for a while, and it now actually pains me to have to use IE if I ever sit down at a Windows machine. Even the development releases (e.g. 1.3.5) which have had many features removed for rewriting have more nice features than IE. For example, the ability to add nice textbox widgets to your toolbar for search engines, and not just some limited set of search engines, but anything at all (I use the Google one constantly, but I also have one for PlanetMath, for example). Of course, there's also tabbed browsing, which is so useful and obvious that it's ridiculous that IE doesn't have it. Galeon is also quite fast. I've never had any performance issues with it.

      I've also tried Konqueror, and thought that it was pretty nice (though it lacked some things like tabbed browsing, but hey, it's a filemanager too). I don't use KDE however, so it takes too long to init all the KDE stuff the first time Konqueror loads. If you don't mind KDE though, it's probably worth looking at. It'll probably load as fast as IE does in Windows if you're running KDE (as it won't have to do anything to initialise).

      There are plenty of "IE Killers" already available for Linux - why not try these two?

    22. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      modded down because you are probably wrong.

    23. Re:Leverage by simp7264 · · Score: 1

      I too find it quite painfull to use IE these days. Not because of rendering or anything along those lines, simply because of the lack of tabular browsing and popup killing. I have been using Crazy Browser for a while now, which isn't really anything except for a new front end on IE with tabs and popup killing. I love it for the windows world, still loads fast cause it can take advantage of the so called IE cheats.

      The crazybrowser.com site seems to be down but if anyone cares to check it out:
      http://www.webattack.com/get/crazybrowser.sh tml

    24. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mozilla Quickstart. It's purpose is to keep mozilla in memory. Works great.

    25. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://dosius.zzn.com/ Renders exactly the same in Mozilla 1.3.1 and IE for me...

    26. Re:Leverage by Zelet · · Score: 1

      I have to use DV editing software and DVD playing software that don't come with the distribution of my choice (Mandrake) and they don't look like they fit. Also, the fonts in the web browser don't look like the fonts in Open Office don't look like the fonts on the desktop. This is where the lack of integration really shows.

      --
      ...And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak out for me." - Martin Niemoeller (1892-1984)
    27. Re:Leverage by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Look at panther, with native QT and X11 modes, there is seriously NO need for linux on the desktop

      That requires a commitment to expensive Apple hardware. Don't get me wrong. It's nice kit but very expensive for what it is. I can spend less than $600 on the hardware for a Linux box that will perform more than acceptably. The lowest end Apples start at $800 and will be handlily outperformed by the $600 commodity box.

      I would say an acceptable commodity desktop that isn't ruled by any one corporation is much needed. I would trust Apple not to screw me as a user more than MS but not a hell of a lot more. Basically, I don't trust any proprietary vendor. They're always looking to raise/collect the rent.

    28. Re:Leverage by morgajel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've found the easiest way to convert people to mozilla is use the modern theme, turn off popups, and switch icons from mozilla to the IE's blue 'E'. Tell people that you upgraded their web browser so they won't get all those stupid little popups- that's why it looks all new and shiny. run them through it a couple of times, and introduce them to tabs.

      Openoffice has a little ways to go before that happens but I did have one instance where someone asked me if I knew of a replacement of MS office. Apparently he was using a pirated version and it crashed and crashed and crashed some more. He tried reinstalling, but that didn't seem to help. He couldn't even open a file before it crashed.

      So I uninstalled MS Office, did a virus scan and scrubbed most of his system, then installed openoffice. Haven't heard a complaint since.

      Now, whether it was a corrupted version of Office or just the viruses, I don't know. I do know that he seems to be happy and hasn't complained yet.

      I was just proud because in one fell swoop, I destroyed some viruses, stopped some piracy, pushed the OS Agenda, and got a Political Science major asking "so what is this linux thing anyways?"

      --
      Looking for Book Reviews? Check out Literary Escapism.
    29. Re:Leverage by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. I have the same complaint about Windows. A lot of applications function poorly as part of the unified whole, and many of them are non-standard in very disappointing ways. I've also found that some of the default behaviors are the stupidest things ever... only with Microsoft, if there is a way to change some of that stuff, it's far from obvious. I find that Linux GNOME and KDE are far more flexible and eye-catching in the main than Microsoft. And yes, sometimes there are discrepancies. You get what you pay for.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    30. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you'd bother to read either the Slashdot or original pages, you'd have seen that the parent had NOTHING to do with preloading, and everything to do with RFC-noncompliant TCP sessions between IE and IIS.

      See http://grotto11.com/blog/?+1039831658 for details.

    31. Re:Leverage by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      Apparently they fixed the bug (&nbsp without semicolon).

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    32. Re:Leverage by poptones · · Score: 1
      I'm not trolling. And I don't need to "take your word" for any-goddamn-thing because I know what I experienced, and my stated opinion is just as valid as your opinion. Even ten years ago on that old IRIX system I never had a problem cutting nad pasting data, and I never found myself clicking an icon a half dozen times because I had NO FEEDBACK on the status of the app I want opened. Sure, you're gonna say "this stuff is getting fixed" and "it's better" - well, guess what? It's still not as good as either windows or Mac, and the fact it's getting better only reveals your own admission that it's not there yet. And, frankly, when I see new stuff like this latest Gnome build where they stuff kludge on top of kludge to make an already kludged system "look like" Apple's desktop I have serious doubts of anything ever "getting better" to the point of overtaking.

      My original comment got modded to -1 in less than an hour while a bunch of aplogists got modded up to "insightful." It is this fanboy penguinista attitude that has been holding linux back and will continue to do so. Until a Lindows or a Dell figures out how to put together a professional and appealing desktop that is not simply a hacked together mishmash of a dozen desktop kludges it simply ain't gonna happen. And I don't say this as a MS apologist or fanboy - I want nothing more than to fire up an installer, repartition away windows and never look back. But as ugly as windows is from that first install screen, it at least gives me the opportunity to do what I want to do, right off the bat, without having to recompile the fucking kernel or pore through a dozen goddamn .config files while trying to make sense of instructions that "just work" but don't fucking do anything of the sort.

    33. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a fucking windows trollboy. Mandrake 9.1 is EXACTLY what you described, take your god damned FUD elsewhere.

    34. Re:Leverage by minus9 · · Score: 1

      "I want nothing more than to fire up an installer, repartition away windows and never look back. But as ugly as windows is from that first install screen, it at least gives me the opportunity to do what I want to do, right off the bat, without having to recompile the fucking kernel"

      As long as all you want to do is play minesweeper. It's just as well you don't have to recompile anything since windows comes with no compiler. Incidentaly I have never recompiled the kernel on my home machine, ever.

    35. Re:Leverage by minus9 · · Score: 1

      "For me it's the exact opposite. WinXP seems like an utter mess that is coated with "eyecandy" that I can't imagine anyone enjoying or tolerating longer than a week willingly."

      Not true. I put up with it for 10 days before reclaiming the partition for something more useful.

    36. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, he was a "fucking windows and Mac trollboy"...

    37. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot. I never said Linux was there. I don't think Linux will be there for many years.

      What I did say was Windows and MacOSX rock the fuck out of what IRIX had 10 years ago and IRIX would NEVER perform like either of those two operating systems based on what we now consider a "desktop OS".

      You got to -1 because you deserved it. Don't troll.

    38. Re:Leverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may have been an honest opinion, but the inflammatory way you wrote it makes it a troll, idiot.

  10. Allow me to ask.. by xtermz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...a question which sounds like "flamebait", but it seriously isnt.

    Are there any real objective 3rd parties who investigate and report on the different aspects of linux ( ie TOC, benchmarks, etc ) who truly are impartial to either OS. It seems that anybody writing 'reports' are either slanted towards windows, or linux. I dont think i've ever read a report that says "well, linux sucks at x, and windows sucks at y as well. in summary, they both suck ( or they both rock, or whatever, etc. ) . "

    Where does one find unbiased reviews and benchmarks of OS's ?

    --


    I lost my concept of community when my community lost all concept of me.
    1. Re:Allow me to ask.. by nagora · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Are there any real objective 3rd parties

      You'd have to find people that don't use computers but then, of course, their opinions probably won't be insightful.

      The next best thing is to stick to people with an open bias and compare their arguments. It's a bit like reading newspapers.

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    2. Re:Allow me to ask.. by Acidic_Diarrhea · · Score: 2, Informative
      This guy did a comparison of some popular operating systems and it seems to be somewhat fair in what he notes certain advantages and disadvantages.

      --
      I hate liberals. If you are a liberal, do not reply.
    3. Re:Allow me to ask.. by MatthewB79 · · Score: 1

      I think one reason why you don't see many 100% impartial reports is that most people can't help but have some personal view to whatever report they are working on. Even a professional, being paid to be impartial must have some opinion. That's bound to come across somehow.
      Pretend you're a real objective 3rd party who has been commissioned to generate a virgin, clean-room style report. Pretend you've never heard of Linux. Now when it comes time to set up TCO research and benchmark testing where are you going to go to get information about how to benchmark? Linux has lots of avaliable support through the web, books, HOWTO's etc. but all of those usually come bundled with a boatload of angst toward MS and Windows. (I'm not commenting on whether this is a good or bad thing) Now how do you manage to be 100% unaffected by the FUD or the "David vs Goliath" story when it's all part of the atmosphere? I don't think you can.

    4. Re:Allow me to ask.. by krb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      i don't think your post was flame bait at all. it brings up a good point, but i think the real question is :

      are there any real objective and impartial 3rd parties that review or report on anything, ever?

      it's a fact of life that most people competent to review items in a product class are going to be experts of some sort with products of that class, with all the built up preferences and biases that come with being an expert.

      i've come to the point where i no longer look for objectivity, because it doesn't exist -- just add new information into a corpus of prior knowledge, along with whatever inherent slant it has, and base personal reasoning on that. objectivity and impartiality are best simulated with aggregation. i don't fell i can assume someone else is even capable of impartiality.

      it's like the news media. i could watch cnn, or fox news, or local news, and adjust whatever they say to normalize what whichever one says based on what i know of their inherent proclivities. I could watch all of them, but that's not feasible from a time standpoint, so i take the digest form : news.google.com. Not because it's new and flashy, but because it provides aggregation. I can scan the headlines and merge them into a global sense of the prevailing attitude towards a story. I can see which outlets are sensationalizing (or alternatively, downplaying) a story, or who's not covering it at all, with a quick scan. I can then choose to read the stories from any perspective i choose (which is often not necessarily my own) because i can trivially determine which sources have what perspectives.

      To me, it's the best possible feature of the www -- true impartiality of reporting because the web crawler doesn't give a shit what the inherent slant is, just what words are in the document.

      as for benchmarks, they're often only marginally above statistics on the scale of truth (i.e. somewhere south of 'damn lies'), so they're *really* only useful taken as a broad average of many, many different testers and conditions.

      --
    5. Re:Allow me to ask.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      funniest .sig ever. keep up the good work...

    6. Re:Allow me to ask.. by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      true impartiality of reporting because the web crawler doesn't give a shit what the inherent slant is, just what words are in the document.

      Ideally, yes.

      But there's still slant due to the fact that money helps to publish a lot of what is on the web. The bias isn't so bad as it is for radio, TV and newspapers, but there's still a preponderance of "news" released by sources that accept money, push ads, etc. that can potentially color the reporting.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    7. Re:Allow me to ask.. by morgajel · · Score: 1

      Actually, what I'd like to see is some OSX fanatics compare and contrast linux and windows.

      That would be interesting.

      --
      Looking for Book Reviews? Check out Literary Escapism.
    8. Re:Allow me to ask.. by daeley · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      Actually, what I'd like to see is some OSX fanatics compare and contrast linux and windows.

      They both suck! Next question?

      ;D <--------------- please note

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
    9. Re:Allow me to ask.. by morgajel · · Score: 1

      actually, I was sort of expecting the "our shit don't stink attitude."
      I realize you said that in jest, but I think that an os fanatic who hasn't touched either would has a warp...er, different point of view- something we could learn from. I'd also like to throw grandmothers on that list. From what I've seen, they take to computers pretty fast, depending on the grandma. I'd like to have some try linux and give their impressions.

      I'm not saying we dumb down linux for newbies, I just suggest it as food for thought.

      --
      Looking for Book Reviews? Check out Literary Escapism.
    10. Re:Allow me to ask.. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      It is obvious. All the ones that say good things about Linux are the unbias ones. Any of them that say good things about Windows are bias. I am a completely unbias person and that is how I find the unbias articles and reports.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    11. Re:Allow me to ask.. by BlueLightning · · Score: 1

      You do have a valid point, however I don't think you could have too many complaints about this report in this regard. Having just skimmed over it myself, I think they've been brutally honest about the general flaws in Linux and what needs to be looked at.

    12. Re:Allow me to ask.. by uhoreg · · Score: 1

      Three Dead Trolls in a Baggie has a song called "Every OS Sucks". (mp3.com -- FRRYYY) (Or, if you've got QuickTime, you can try their video)

      --

      To get something done, a committee should consist of no more than three persons, two of them absent.

  11. What ever happened to the last "Outlook-killer"? by badfish2 · · Score: 2, Troll

    Whatever happened to Ximian, or Evolution, or whatever it was called? I thought *it* was going to be the Outlook killer. How many Limux apps does it take to kill MS Outlook?

    --
    "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog!" - a dog
  12. Outlook by nother_nix_hacker · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    generally described as an 'Outlook Killer'
    I have recently graduated from Uni and landed my self a job in the realworld where to my distgust I have discovered the most horrible application _ever_ written..Outlook. It slow bloated and buggy. It encourages the most aweful looking emails and when you view plain mails
    it wraps
    the text like this which makes any
    mails
    horrible to read. Outlook should be banashed.
    1. Re:Outlook by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 5, Funny

      Outlook should be banashed.

      Are you sure you didn't find the spell check helpful?

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
    2. Re:Outlook by badfish2 · · Score: 0, Redundant

      What about Outlook's spell-checker? Would you 'banash' it as well?

      --
      "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog!" - a dog
    3. Re:Outlook by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is indeed helpful:

      Not in dictionary:
      Hampster

      Change To: Hamster

      Suggestions:
      Hamster

  13. Cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux on tha desktop- whodda thunk it? I may have something insightful to add if Galeon stops segfaulting long enough for me to actually read the article.

    1. Re:Cool by acidtripp101 · · Score: 1

      Hrm... aren't segfaults usually an indication of bad ram? Thought so.

      --
      Not Free(as in beer). Free(as in "I'm free to beat you over the head for being a dumbass")
    2. Re:Cool by Nexus+Seven · · Score: 1

      Or at least that's what your software vendor keeps telling you.

    3. Re:Cool by buffer-overflowed · · Score: 1

      Vendors... lie? sniffle.

      --
      The key to the enjoyment of pop music is to replace any instance of "love" with "C.H.U.D."
  14. Sure... by Otter · · Score: 4, Informative
    Recently, I initiated a project on behalf of OSAF to take a careful look at the state of Linux on the desktop, and asked Bart Decrem to spearhead a short-term research project to assess the current situation and trends.

    Of course, the last time we heard from this guy, he was explaining, "My big gripe about KDE is I think it's butt-ugly. The main reason I keep using GNOME is that the icons on KDE are aesthetically offensive to me. And the letter K is kind of offensive, it's not very elegant." The new report is Slashdotted, but I'm curious to see what other letters are slowing Linux adoption on the desktop.

    At any rate, at least this story should generate some life on Slashdot. I'm trying to avoid doing work, and the last five stories are still in single digits for comments, including FP! trolls.

    1. Re:Sure... by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 3, Funny

      I find the image of feet and the letter "G" offensive, that's why I use KDE.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    2. Re:Sure... by el-spectre · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It would be nice, however, if someone would put out a goddamn program that isn't called 'kApp', 'kBrowser' or 'kCoolgame'.

      Cuteness has its place, but it's a real pain finding the right app most of the time.

      --
      "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
    3. Re:Sure... by grazzy · · Score: 1

      how can sorting on k* be any harder than on just *?

      beats me.

    4. Re:Sure... by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      Yeah they should do it like they do it in Gnome, where everything is called Gapp, Gbrowser, Gcoolgame...

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    5. Re:Sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll at +4? Now _this_ is truly state of the art Slashdot crack moderation. Pass the pipe.

    6. Re:Sure... by DavittJPotter · · Score: 1

      No harder than sorting g*. Or gk*app*. But WHY should it be that way? Just name the apps. Please. You can have it in Help/About, whatever - but just drop the funky names. Please?

      --
      "If there's hope, it lies in the proles..."
    7. Re:Sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The right app for KDE does exist. It's called kRApp.

    8. Re:Sure... by gurumeditationerror · · Score: 1

      Its handy though, you can usually tell from just the name that the app is tailored for KDE same with gStuff. When your looking to download a program to do something and sourceforge throws up two likely candidates it can be easier to see what will probably tie in nicely with your particular de

    9. Re:Sure... by Makarakalax · · Score: 1

      Actually I recently followed your advice and released my app with a name more related to what it does. It began with f. As a result if you browse the listings for filesystem tools on apps.kde.com my app is one of the first listed because f comes before k! A neat way to get ahead of the competition.

      If you want to find it, it begins with File and is fairly new (released end of June). I won't demean my post by linking and blatantly plugging it, although if you are actually interested I've made life harder for you. Oh well, you can't win them all.

    10. Re:Sure... by nutshell42 · · Score: 1
      Cuteness has its place, but it's a real pain finding the right app most of the time

      Why is it harder that way, imho it's the other way round most apps from KDE are named K*what that fscking app does*

      Let's assume a new user uses KDE and sees in the app-menu kmail, kwrite, ksirc, mutt, pico and bitchX - which apps do you think he'll use when he needs one? Having K... or G... respectively makes it much easier for new users to find the appropriate app that works well with their DE and power-users can keep their l33t recursive acronyms =)

      jm2c

      --
      Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
  15. So..? by frodo+from+middle+ea · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Predicting that Linux trend will continue to grow doesn't exactly take a genious , does it ?
    I mean even windows is continuing to grow ? So what's the point here ?
    If linux is replacing the desktop *nix market, albeit very small (solaris, irix etc.) whats the big deal in that ?
    How much M$ boxes are being replaced by linux ?
    Currently linux and windows on desktop are growing at their own pace, as they don't share a common user base. And what ever common userbase they have , use dual-boot option.

    --
    for the last time people, I am "frodo from middle eaRTH", not "middle eaST".
    1. Re:So..? by jarda · · Score: 1

      Most dual-boot users wouldn't be considered common user base anyway. They either use windows and keep linux around only to give it occasioall try so they can say "been there, done it, bought T-shirt". Or they use linux and keep windows around just to be able to run games (and occasional proprietary software).

      However, users with dual boot option sometimes through time migrate from first state to second state, and that's how linux grows into windows territory. This is slow, but it's quite common. OTOH, I am yet to here from anybody migrating from linux to windows.

      --
      "Two beers or not two beers. That's the question." -- Shakesbeer
    2. Re:So..? by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      Hardly "insightful".

      There is a big deal to Linux replacing desktop Soalris, Irix, HPUX, and other Unix desktops. Commonality and convergence.

      As these different systems get replaced by a single system base (i.e distributions differences don't matter here), a growing base of desktop apps get ported, AND the development costs for new ones decreases. Rather than tracking Irix, Solaris, HPUX, etc., the vendor tracks Linux.

      This increases the business case for Linux on the desktop. As this happens, Linux on the Desktop becomes more common.

      As this happens, more and more people will be taking a copy of Linux home for their home PC (which in this case is perfectly legal). This spreads it's use among home users.

      As far as Linux systems supplanting MS systems, yes it is occurring, more and more. To say you haven't heard about this would be tantamount to stating you either have been in the dark for the last several months, or are deliberately ignoring the news on it.

      But Linux' takeover on the desktop will happen silently, and it will be from people using it as business users first. This is Linux's fate. Look at it's history, then look at MS' history. Look at their paths.

      MS: Become popular w/Home users, then start getting into business because that's what users had at home. Next, proceed to attempt to infiltrate the server environment. Basically, from home and small business to corporate DT to server environment.

      Now look at Linux. It's path is from the server to the corporate desktop to home. It is also, however, taking the small business to home user path. This gives it an additional avenue to exploit in terms of gaining share. As mom and pop run their business on Linux, it becomes familiar to them. As does stability and not requiring larger and larger machines. This overcomes the inertia and "it's different" issue. Then mom and pop start using it at home.

      This is also in keeping with the fundamental differences and oppositions behind Linux and MS.

      The battle between Linux and MS will not be the home user; it will be the corporate desktop. Like two armies marching toward each other, they'll meet in the middle and duke it out. The battle will take place in the corporate world, at the corporate desktop. Once Linux wins there, it will come off that battlefield with it's victory and leverage that into the home market.

      After all, once the corporate world has chosen Linux on the Destop, the argument for apps will become even stronger, if it needs to at all at that point.

      Games! You say? Now we're talking. Here is how that one plays out. As Linux gains ground in the corporate deksotp, it beats out Mac as far as desktop market share (it will likely do so this year, btw). This in combination with MacOS-X running a BSD system underneath will make a powerful argument for porting/releasing games on Linux.

      The claim against Linux games has largely been "no market". Well, if Linux has a larger market share than Mac, that argument becomes a tool against games NOT being on Linux.

      As all these happen (and MS moves more toward software fascism on it's users), those who dual boot find they no longer need that MS partition, and stop using it. As people see less and less dual boot, they realize Linux is a viable desktop alternative, and begin dual booting to try it out, or outright getting it on a new or used PC to try it out. Then they switch.

      That is why it is a big deal.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
  16. Linux Customizations by dlosey · · Score: 1

    How many Windoze users do you see that have wierd (and ugly) color schemes once they figure out its possible. In linux you can modify much more. It fits the advanced user's needs as well as the everyday user. Simpson Quote: Oooo.. Pretty Colors

  17. Linux on the desktop... by TWX · · Score: 5, Informative

    I don't run Windows anymore unless I want to play Carmageddon II at home, and at work I only get into Windows if I need to use the custom workorder system that ties into Novell and MS Access. I can watch movies, play a few games, listen to music, surf, do email, and the like all without Bill and his Evil Empire.

    We need to start new-to-computers people with non-MS operating systems. They'll be much more inclined to use anything handed to them, and they'll dislike the crashing problems, popups, and weird behaviour of Microsoft's OSes. I repair Windows machines at work for my job, and every time something goes awry, I don't think of it as normal anymore, I think of it as bloody annoying.

    Being nearly Windows-free for the last three years or so has been really awesome. These things are tools, not cheap toys that break a lot.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:Linux on the desktop... by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      True, one big problem that I often encounter is that people are scared of change. You can explain to somebody that OpenOffice offers the same features as MS Word but the fact the the menus and shortcuts are different scares the crap out of people. The more people I convert to Linux, the more I see a need to emulate the Windows "workflow". This is especially true for older computer users who have an aversion to computers to begin with. Personally, I don't want a windows "look alike" desktop but if the goal is really to extend the Linux desktop beyond the hardcore techies, it's going to have to be done that way. In fact, this is the route Xandros is taking if I'm not mistaken.

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    2. Re:Linux on the desktop... by knightPhlight · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You actually detail some of Linux's problems quite well. Let's see:

      "I don't run Windows anymore unless I want to play Carmageddon II at home". I don't recall ever walking into Wal-Mart and buying a Linux game. Consumers want to be told what to buy. Such as: Get Armagetron here! 3D! Multiplayer! New, new, new! (No, really check it out). Windows has better games because Windows games have better advertising because Windows has a bigger market share. It'll be a long time until you hear some ten-year-old say, "I had to install Linux so I could play Doom 6.66. It just isn't the same on Windows."

      "at work I only get into Windows if I need to use the custom workorder system that ties into Novell and MS Access." Legacy software, hardware, and geeks will eventually fade into /dev/null. Until then continuing to use the same old crap will be cheaper in man hours and dollars. And as always management can almost always be convinced to keep using the same old thing if it worked well enough that they didn't get blamed.

      "We need to start new-to-computers people with non-MS operating systems." Great idea. But have you ever looked at the books or web sites these people try to learn from? You know the ones where there is a chapter on the mouse complete with blow-by-blow steps for double clicking? Try finding something like that for any distro. Your standard Linux distro has hundreds of powerful, Ghz using, bandwidth blasting apps that new-to-computers" people can live their entire lives without using. The community is great as long as you know that hard drive storage is different than system memory. If your knowledge isn't that advanced (like 90% of users) you'll be lucky to get any help at all.

      With all the incredible advances the community has contributed to Linux sometimes Windows is still necessary.

      Counter point away...

    3. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Ann+Elk · · Score: 2, Funny

      Being nearly Windows-free for the last three years or so has been really awesome.
      This sounds like a line from an A.A. meeting.

      Hello, my name is Ann, and I've been Windows-free for 3 years.

      Everyone: Hi, Ann!!
    4. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm sorry, but I have to disagree. I run Linux on my home computer, but as the resident computer geek I've been called in to install Windows XP twice in the last two weeks. Whether anyone wants to hear it or not, when it comes to an average user's needs Microsoft has really got it nailed down. Installing new hardware and getting it to work is very easy, wheras Linux seems to be in a "pre-Windows 95" state. This is probably Linux's biggest weakness, but at the same time, it's a source of strength. Allow me to illustrate with a recent example.

      Last night, I added a second hard drive to my computer. If I used Windows, the system would have booted up and the drive letters for my cdroms would have all been changed, and I'd probably have to fix a few programs. (tip: re-assign all cdrom drives to drive X or Y when you first install Windows to prevent this)

      On Linux I partitioned and formatted, then I edited my /etc/fstab file to automatically mount the partitions at boot. However I accidentally put a space between the comma and a second mount option. I rebooted (to check that I did everything right), and the system choked and mounted the root filesystem read-only. I managed to remount the file system as writable (mount -w -n -o /dev/hdbX) and I fixed the problem.

      So what point does that serve to illustrate ? Well, in Windows most things like are automatic, and it's very unlikely that something will go wrong. However, there's a lot of machinery involved, so in the unlikely event that something does go terribly wrong you may be left with no recourse. In Linux it's easy to fuck things up, but you always have options. It's a "do it yourself" kind of system. And I hope it stays that way.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    5. Re:Linux on the desktop... by paj1234 · · Score: 1

      > We need to start new-to-computers people with non-MS operating systems

      Yes, my friend, that is exactly what I am doing. My oldest customer is 83 and she uses Debian.

      The revolution is here, TWX. But it's not announced. There is no press release. Big companies don't change the world. That is a job for an ant-hill of little people.

    6. Re:Linux on the desktop... by geomon · · Score: 1

      Consider the following two sentences:

      "We need to start new-to-computers people with non-MS operating systems."

      and

      "I repair Windows machines at work for my job,..."

      Doesn't that imply that if you get your first wish, you will not have a job?

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    7. Re:Linux on the desktop... by MeNeXT · · Score: 0, Troll

      Your story reminds me of all these windows systems that I have to keep reinstalling (for people who keep on explaining to me how simple Windows is). If you purchase a Dell (or any system with windows pre installed) and never add anything to it, including software updates, you are probably safe. When you start moving away from the original install, then you have LOADS of trouble with windows. One example that I remember is an Intel NIC that was just a BITCH to install

      --
      DRM? No thanks, I'll just get it somewhere else...
    8. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Metaldsa · · Score: 1

      You lost me (and my gaming respect) at Carmageddon II.

      If all you do is surf, listen to music, email, and watch movies then of course you could use any system. Windows, mac, and linux all can play mp3s just fine.

      But when you use words like "Bill and his Evil Empire" you don't really drag the gamer crowd over to your side. And you lose us when you mention that all you play is an outdated game.

      I am a hardcore computer user but I still haven't had the desire to switch over to linux. All my machines come with Windows, they can watch movies, listen to music, surf, do email, and play just about every game. So why should I spend an hour(s) to switch over and learn all the new stuff?

      Also, I use opera becuase its better, meaning it was worth the time to switch over. So I am not pro-microsoft. I just need to see the time benefit of switching over. And PLEASE no exploit/privacy speeches. I keep my windows up to date and am not a secret agent. If someone wants to know me my name is Patrick Irish. Woopiety doo. In the past decade no one has tried to hack my computer and I don't forsee someone wasting their time in the future. Windows may be more unsecure than linux but with so many easy targets out there it can be like locking your mailbox. Sure it makes you more secure but how afraid were you in the first place if all you get is junk mail?

    9. Re:Linux on the desktop... by TWX · · Score: 1

      "Doesn't that imply that if you get your first wish, you will not have a job?"

      Not when we're low-bid, and we get cheap, crappy hardware that blows out (like 3,200 DEER 250watt ATX Power supplies)

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    10. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Cyno · · Score: 2, Funny

      This serious "flaw" with linux that you are talking about can very easily be resolved with a script.

      We Linux/UNIX users/admins/developers don't really care right now whether you can see your devices or not. We care if the system is stable, bug free, has drivers for all the hardware, is secure and efficient. When you do things the right way the first time it always takes longer and it might even be a bit harder, but when its finished there will be no alternatives because noone else took the time to do it right.

    11. Re:Linux on the desktop... by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      so why doesn't Red Hat or Mandrake write those "easy to resolve" scripts? I've been hearing that Linux will kill Windows on the desktop "Real Soon Now" since 1995.

    12. Re:Linux on the desktop... by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      well, at least you didn't need to recompile your kernel! These days, Linux is EASY!

      I've been hearing that Linux will kill Windows on the desktop "Real Soon Now" since 1995.

    13. Re:Linux on the desktop... by geomon · · Score: 1

      >>"Doesn't that imply that if you get your first wish, you will not have a job?"

      Not when we're low-bid, and we get cheap, crappy hardware that blows out (like 3,200 DEER 250watt ATX Power supplies)

      Good point. No shortage of work regardless of the OS choice.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    14. Re:Linux on the desktop... by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      There's no counter, all your points are valid. However, I have walked into Wal-Mart (ok so it was Target) and bought Linux games, namely RTCW, UT2K, NWN, and NWN-SOU -but- there's not a single mention of Linux on the box (that's another point altogether) even though Linux runtimes exist for all three. As for Windows having more games available for it, you bet, it's a market share thing and all we can do is hope Linux reaches enough of a critical mass that game publishers see $$$ in porting more games to Linux. I can only guess at what the magic number will be but I think 20% (1 in 5) market share is a number PHBs could relate to.

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    15. Re:Linux on the desktop... by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      s/three/four/gi

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    16. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Cyno · · Score: 1

      They will. Perhaps they won't do it right away. But whatever.

      Easy to resolve? I could write those scripts in few minutes. In fact I always do for my systems. Why are you too lazy to do it for yourself?

      Here, let me help you get started...

      in /etc/fstab it helps to create an entry for all the devices you want to hook up to your system. Those entries look like this: /dev/hda1 /mnt/hda auto defaults 0 0 /dev/sda1 /mnt/sda auto defaults 0 0
      tj:/mnt/sda /mnt/tj smbfs defaults 0 0

      You have to make the directories for /mnt/hda and /mnt/sda. If you are like me /dev/sda will usually be pointing to one of your firewire devices. So you could either type 'mount /mnt/sda' or 'sudo mount /mnt/sda' on the command line after plugging in the device. Sometimes this requires a 'modprobe sbp2'. Or you could write a cron job or a daemon to handle automounting, which is what I believe RedHat and the others are working on right now.

      So let's put this all together, shall we?

      #!/bin/perl

      my @partitions = `cat /proc/partitions`

      foreach ( @partitions ) {
      my ( $maj, $min, $blocks, $name, $blah ) = split( '\s', $_ );
      next if $min == 0;
      `mkdir /mnt/$name`;
      `mount /dev/$name /mnt/$name`;
      }

      Now add it to /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root or /etc/cron.hourly or whatever.

      Be sure to set it executable, etc.

      chown root script
      chmod 755 script

      If you were more creative than me you could have easily written this script and told it to save its state to a file, so whenever it gets called it compares /proc/partitions to that file to determine if any new devices have been added to your system. Then it could be called once a minute or every few seconds, whatever granularity you can handle.

      When there's a will there's a way. And there's plenty of willpower behind Linux, my friend.

    17. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

      I don't consider it a flaw, and I'm not particularily interested in a "fix". For things like hardware configuration, etc, which don't come up very often I prefer the flexibility of doing things manually. For things that come up all the time, like installing/testing new software, etc, I want that to be fairly painless and automatic, with the option to easily resort to the manual method if something goes wrong. Now, can you guess what distro I'm running ?

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    18. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

      I recompile my kernel all the time. I try lots of different kernels and patchsets, with many differnt options. I've only been using Linux for about a year, so I've got a ways to go before I reach guru status (ie: contibuting kernel patchs, etc), but I'm working on it. By the way, how did my parent post get modded "troll" ? Give me a break.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    19. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Cyno · · Score: 1

      Gentoo or Debian?

    20. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      and you didn't need to recompile your kernel!

    21. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

      I recently switched to Gentoo from Debian.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    22. Re:Linux on the desktop... by Cyno · · Score: 1

      I'm more of a Slackware geek myself. Have to know RedHat, hate SuSE, like the rest. But love Slack.

  18. +3 Funny? WTF ??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah another Clippy joke, that shit is tight!

  19. Lindows has a live distribution by burgburgburg · · Score: 2, Informative

    Article in news.com about Lindows just came out with LindowsCD, so that people can try Lindows Linux without having to install it. They're not the first, but since they're selling easy of use and ease of transition, this seems an especially smart way to show people they can function in a non-Windows world.

    1. Re:Lindows has a live distribution by Bigby · · Score: 1

      Now all they have to do is market the CDs like AOL (send everyone 5 copies a day to every mailbox for the next 5 years).

      But seriously, The CDs give people full Linux functionality, but without the ability to save anything (including network settings, etc...). This way, they get a "taste" of the OS, like AOL gave people 40/100/10000 free hours. Then people have that free trial and may consider buying the actual install CD so their settings will save and they finally use Linux on their system.

  20. When a linux company will have M$ money ... by gsergiu · · Score: 0

    and when it will use M$ marketing tactics thats when we'll ever see linux on all desktops. But ... I don't want that to happen. Linux forum are already bloated with stupid suckers, I can only imagine what is happening on windows forums. Oh no .... I like my linux just as it is now.

  21. I only want Chandler on my desktop if.. by mikeophile · · Score: 5, Funny
    Clippy looks like he's meant to snapped into the butt of an automatic pistol and says things like this.

    "I'm an occational drinker, the kind of guy who goes out for a beer and wakes up in Singapore with a full beard."

    "The kid's face had as much expression as a cut of round steak and was about the same color."

    "She opened a mouth like a firebucket and laughed. That terminated my interest in her. I couldn't hear the laugh but the hole in her face when she unzippered her teeth was all I needed."

    What do you mean Chandler wasn't named after Raymond?
    1. Re:I only want Chandler on my desktop if.. by Sunnan · · Score: 2, Informative

      Chandler (the program from OSA foundation) is named after Raymond Chandler.

  22. Re:PDF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Huh? use the SAME DAMN viewer that the windows and mac people have to use...

    It's called adobe pdf reader...

    if you want to use the opensource stuff that dfoesnt render good ,that's your prob...

    I use adobe's version for linux and and VERY HAPPY.

  23. Of Linux and Betamax... by GillBates0 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Having just browsed through the 34 page long PDF article for now, I found the conclusion very insightful: " Desktop Linux is no longer a technical challenge - it's a marketing challenge"

    Moreso, when the competitor is a monopolistic giant of a corporation, entrenched in a significant portion of the desktop market for about 10 years now.

    Let's just hope that desktop Linux doesn't suffer the same fate as Betamax in the disastrous Betamax/VHS battle. That's atleast one instance that I can recall, in which a superior product failed before a better marketed product.

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
    1. Re:Of Linux and Betamax... by pcs305 · · Score: 1

      OS/2 suffered the same fate against Windows.

    2. Re:Of Linux and Betamax... by geekmetal · · Score: 1

      and the qwerty keyboard and the pc over apple and so on..

      --
      There are two kinds of egotists: 1) Those who admit it 2) The rest of us
    3. Re:Of Linux and Betamax... by geekmetal · · Score: 1

      Behind every product, is a technically superior alternative which didn't make it.

      --
      There are two kinds of egotists: 1) Those who admit it 2) The rest of us
    4. Re:Of Linux and Betamax... by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      My stepmom had a Betamax machine, which of course came into our house when she and my dad got married. To be perfectly honest I could never see the alleged quality difference, and I very much suspect that most consumers couldn't either. The differences I could see, however, were that VHS had a longer record time and wasn't a proprietary product. Record time was something people really cared about back then, they were going crazy recording every stupid miniseries that came out on the off chance that they might want to watch it again, and all those lame movies you only see around christmas time (yes, I'm still bitter about my grandmother using my Monty Python's Flying Circus tape to record some stupid Santa Claus movie). In fact, record time was so important, and image quality so unimportant, that people were perfectly willing to sacrifice quality for record time. Ever watch any tapes produced by the early LP VHS machines? Yikes! But, everybody I knew had a shelf or two full of them.

      More importantly, though, Sony was restrictive about who could put out movies on Beta, and specifically that meant no porn. If there's one lesson that can be learned from every media revolution in history, it's that people love their porn. The second lesson might be that pornographers are THE early adopters on the production side. VHS, on the other hand, was almost totally open, so anybody and everybody put out tapes for VHS. Even back in the early days of video rental, when it was far from certain which format would prevail, the Beta section of every rental place I went to was miniscule. Strangely, people just weren't as interested in the platform with the more restricted content selection.

      What this all boils down to is that the best format DID win in Beta v. VHS. It was the format that gave the consumers what they actually wanted: content and record time. So shut the hell up about Betamax already. If it had really been as good as everyone likes to say it was, it would still have a viable niche market, just like Apple does.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  24. Linux is still waiting in the wings by curtlewis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "they expect adoption of desktop Linux to increase over the next few years"

    That's what they said a few years ago. And that's probably what they'll be saying a few years from now. Don't get me wrong, I like Linux. But it's just not for mom and pop and I doubt it ever will be given who is working on it and what they've been doing.

    Linux innovates very little except in technological areas. It's GUIs even today fall short of Windows and Mac GUIs, and several years from now I don't expect Linux will catch up. I don't see MS or Apple kicking back sipping pina coladas at the poolside.

    I think alot of great work has been done in Linux and I'm a Linux user myself, but not as my primary desktop. Linux is an OS made for geeks by geeks that love to push the geek envelope. That's great stuff in and of itself, but it's not going to put Linux in the mainstream.

    And does it want to be mainstream? Do Linux users want it to be mainstream? For the most part, I think not. When asking a technical question in Linux circles, the responses you get range from apathetic to offensive. RTFM! NEWB! It's pretty rare you actually get someone with a little compassion that has felt your pain and is willing to help you out.

    Everything about Linux (and Unix in general) seems to be as if it is some kind of rite of passage. You must fight the bear without weapons, then you must walk the fire barefooted and then you must master Unix! It is that final task at which the brave warrior often stumbles...

    1. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by beattie · · Score: 1

      silly n00b, it's not spelled newb

    2. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by thelexx · · Score: 4, Informative

      "Linux innovates very little except in technological areas."

      Not many have said as much in as few words.

      "It's GUIs even today fall short of Windows and Mac GUIs"

      I find KDE desktop behavior to be vastly superior to that provided by Windows. Try opening a full screen browser and a smaller window over it. Now try to navigate in the browser _without obscuring the smaller window_. This is but one example, and maybe it can even be done in Windows, but I've never seen it, heard of it or stumbled across it drunk.

      "It's pretty rare you actually get someone with a little compassion that has felt your pain and is willing to help you out."

      You aren't looking for help in the right places then. I've never been flamed while (groups.)googling. Or are you looking for a live hand-holder on IRC and/or simply can't/won't actually read any documentation?

      "Everything about Linux (and Unix in general) seems to be as if it is some kind of rite of passage."

      What can I say but that yes, it basically treats you like a fscking adult who has some grasp of fundamental computing principles. Some of us find that incredibly refreshing. Actually though, this is what distributions are for IMNSHO. RedHat and Mandrake or whatever for grandma and Debian and Slackware (or roll-your-own for crying out loud) for people who want more control and less automated hand-holding.

      Argh, it's the same thing, over and over and over and over....

      --
      "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
    3. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by foandd · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "they expect adoption of desktop Linux to increase over the next few years"
      That's what they said a few years ago.

      And they were right.

      And that's probably what they'll be saying a few years from now.

      And unless Linux's market share somehow magically increases to 100% in the interim, I expect they'll be right again.

      Don't get me wrong, I like Linux. But it's just not for mom and pop

      Hmmm. Is WinXP Pro ready for Mom and Pop? I suppose MS should just drop it now since it obviously doesn't have a future unless a blind 90 year old with a double digit IQ can figure out how to install and use it.

      Linux innovates very little except in technological areas. It's GUIs even today fall short of Windows and Mac GUIs

      I can't speak to Mac as I haven't used one. As for Windows, I've sat Windows users in front of a recent version of KDE and watched what they do. It takes them no time at all to figure out how to make it work. After using it for a while, they'll also start to discover all kinds of little things they like which make their time spent in the environment more pleasant. These discoveries will frequently be accompanied by "can you make Windows do that?" I have yet to see someone use KDE for any period of time who finds it lacking compared to Windows. Not once. The reverse has been true a number of times, though.

      I'd be interested to know what the results of your tests of this nature have been. Or are you one of those idiots who likes to spout off about something they know nothing about because they're pretty sure it'll make them look cool to what they consider the in crowd?

    4. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by Georules · · Score: 1

      I disagree with your last point. I found it that when I was new to linux and had questions to ask that there were many friendly communities and people to help me out.

    5. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by Soko · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm giving up modpoints on this article to respond to this. Here goes...

      "they expect adoption of desktop Linux to increase over the next few years"

      That's what they said a few years ago. And that's probably what they'll be saying a few years from now. Don't get me wrong, I like Linux. But it's just not for mom and pop and I doubt it ever will be given who is working on it and what they've been doing.


      Have you ever heard of the term "Strategic Advantage"? When we get Mom and Pop to use Lindows, we get one more reason for more people/companies/organisations to develop products for Free Software - like drivers for web-cams etc., which attracts yet more usrs, who attract more devs, snowballing support for OSS. This process will ingrain OSS into the normal lives of all people, making it very difficult to remove. Going after Mom and Pop isn't for $ or anyting, it's a stategic move to protect the future of OSS.

      Linux innovates very little except in technological areas. It's GUIs even today fall short of Windows and Mac GUIs, and several years from now I don't expect Linux will catch up. I don't see MS or Apple kicking back sipping pina coladas at the poolside.

      I disagree with your future looking statement, especially when Linux is now at the point of being very useable for most of the populace. Yes, MS and Apple will continue to innovate, and OSS devs will continue to integrate those technologies in the name of interoperability. Once Linux catches up to them, though, thier lives will be made miserable.

      I think alot of great work has been done in Linux and I'm a Linux user myself, but not as my primary desktop. Linux is an OS made for geeks by geeks that love to push the geek envelope. That's great stuff in and of itself, but it's not going to put Linux in the mainstream.

      Linux is being installed in more places everyday, by people who *gasp* aren't even geeks. I just set up a Linux server for a non-techie type, and he's quite at home in GNOME. Gracious, I even have him able to generate a report from the CLI! Again, I don't know if Linux will be "mainstream", but I think bringing it to the masses is a viable target , and would be beneficial to the OSS community at large. Most Linux advocates agree, too. BTW, with linux, you can have your cake (Debian for ubergeeks) and eat it too (the aforementioned Lindows).

      And does it want to be mainstream? Do Linux users want it to be mainstream? For the most part, I think not. When asking a technical question in Linux circles, the responses you get range from apathetic to offensive. RTFM! NEWB! It's pretty rare you actually get someone with a little compassion that has felt your pain and is willing to help you out.

      Try #linux on irc.arstechnica.com. Very n00b friendly - most of the people there were once n00bs too and remember what it was like. Actually, where most of the flamage comes from is people who are unwilling to learn or think they're owed something - "Help me set up my printer, dammit!" usually engenders the "RTFM" response. Once they learn the "share and share alike" mentality of the OSS community, all of the hostility usually fades quickly. 4 years ago I'd of agreed with you, but today with so many people learning *NIX through OSS, things are much, much different. At present, that statement is nothing but FUD, pure and simple. (Unless you're an unfortunate luser who happens by alt.sysadmin.recovery. *Clickety-Click*)

      Everything about Linux (and Unix in general) seems to be as if it is some kind of rite of passage. You must fight the bear without weapons, then you must walk the fire barefooted and then you must master Unix! It is that final task at which the brave warrior often stumbles...

      Counterpoint: Ask a regular Windows user to open the registry on your XP machine and edit it, with no help or backup. A task for a Brave Windows Warrior to do before they master Windows. As someone who's mastered Windows, it would be no trouble at al

      --
      "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
    6. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by cgibbard · · Score: 1

      What? What Linux circles are these? I find many Linux users to be helpful and considerate. When I was first learning to set up Linux back a few years ago, a few minutes on IRC were all that was needed to solve most any problem I ran into. Most of the people at the computer science club at my university are also Linux users, and I'd say we're all helpful to anyone who comes in wanting to know something about Linux. Even now, if I run into a problem getting a piece of software to work, or something that might be a bug, or if I need help with pretty much anything, I can generally log onto IRC and either a developer, or an advanced user of that piece of software will be there to help out. I'm not sure which circles it is that you're getting all the apathy and offensive comments from - I most likely haven't run into them - I recommend trying some other circles.

    7. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your sacrifice of mod points is not unappreciated. I think your comment is very informative and insightful, and I wish I had a few points to mod it up myself.

    8. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by inerte · · Score: 1

      develop products for Free Software - like drivers for web-cams etc., which attracts yet more usrs, who attract more devs, snowballing support for OSS

      You know, I was thinking about this today. But comparing to % of market share. A ridiculous account that I made to start my thinking:

      Linux has 3% of the desktops.
      Windows has 92% of the desktops.

      Well, we could say that the whole Windows industry, the software and services built around it, are 31 times bigger than Linux.

      Of course, it's not 31 times, you have to take in account to many factors. But let's be pessimist and cut this in half, as in, Linux generates half of the industry value attached to Windows.

      You still have a Windows market that's around 15 times greater than Linux.

      Now compare Linux to Windows. Is Windows 15 better than Linux? I don't think it is.

      Anyway, my point follows yours, altough with a different line of tought. Imagine what Linux will be when it has 10% of the market share.

      I know it isn't a straight line that you would draw in a graph, but hey, for 15 minutes of brainstorming, maybe someone will care to develop it further ;)

    9. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by freeweed · · Score: 2, Funny

      So bascially what you're saying is:

      - RTFM
      - if you don't get it, you don't understand computers enough
      - distro zealotry is alive and well

      Oh yeah, once again I remember why Linux isn't big on the desktop yet.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    10. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by badasscat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "they expect adoption of desktop Linux to increase over the next few years"

      That's what they said a few years ago. And that's probably what they'll be saying a few years from now. Don't get me wrong, I like Linux. But it's just not for mom and pop and I doubt it ever will be given who is working on it and what they've been doing.


      You've nailed it here. It's not that Linux can't compete with Windows in areas like ease of use and prettiness. It's that the people doing the grunt work on the OS don't care (or at least haven't cared until recently) about those things. This has been a real problem.

      Fortunately (for me, if nobody else), I am a bit more optimistic than you are. Even 3 years ago I would have never even considered running Linux on my home machine - I would have literally laughed if you'd suggested it. Not because I thought Linux was a bad OS, but because I saw it as kludgy, crotchety, cranky, geeky, difficult to use, difficult to look at, impossible to set up, and a bear to run. Today, I am running that same Linux on two PC's in my home and I am looking forward to the day that I can ditch Windows completely.

      Linux has come a long way in the past few years in the desktop area. Yes, I still had to buy my Linux for Dummies to get everything working right, and I've read more than my share of how-to's, usenet postings and other helpful articles around the net to get me out of jams. This is very different from Windows XP, which more or less works right and looks nice out of the box for 99% of people, with no configuration whatsoever. But it's at least at the point now that I can do it, which, as someone with very little technical knowledge (software-wise) and an attention span of a gnat, is a major milestone to me. It will only continue to get better, especially now that the focus is clearly shifting to desktop users (the server stuff seems pretty well in hand).

      Install apt-get (which is an application whose importance I don't think has been fully realized yet) and Linux is nearly as easy to use as Windows. In fact, with apt-get in some ways it's easier - download and setup wrapped into one, no worries about missing dependencies, and if you want an app you just pick it from the list (in Synaptic, if you have it installed) and apt-get goes out and gets everything you need. apt-get with the Synaptic graphical interface really needs to be installed and configured by default in every Linux distro. This is the kind of thing desktop users need and expect, and it's the kind of thing Linux developers are finally picking up on.

      Aesthetically, I think you pick your poison, really, and at this point it's up to the distro makers how aesthetically pleasing they can/want to make their interface. Red Hat, I think, is doing a really good job of it - everything in RH9 looks consistent and professional, at least to the level of Windows 2000. No, it's not at the eye candy level of XP or the insane Mac OSX (which I honestly find distracting after an hour or so of use - it's too much), but it's fine, and it's not far behind. Other distro makers are making a go of it, but I haven't seen anyone else really integrate the look as well as Red Hat yet. They will all get there eventually, though.

      I'm not worried, and in fact I'm confident that with all this attention now being paid to desktop Linux, it'll catch up fast. The developers just need to give desktop ease of use and interface issues some attention, and they are.

      What Linux does need is more professional graphic designers and interface designers donating their time - development is still dominated by programmers and programmers alone are not going to build a desktop OS to truly compete with Windows. Real attention is going to need to be paid to integrating the interface both functionally and visually, and it's going to need to be paid by those that know what they're doing in those areas. But we're getting there... KDE and Gnome have both come a long way recently along with Linux itself, and hairy but important issues like font rendering are in the process of being worked out as well. All of these are things that need to be done to attract desktop users, and they are now finally getting done.

    11. Re:Linux is still waiting in the wings by CBravo · · Score: 1

      I don't know what mailinglists you choose... On debian-user I've never heard rtfm or something. I even tried googling on it but I was not very succesfull.

      My personal opinion is that, especially on newbie lists, if you can't contribute positively then you should shut up. Often my posts mention the part of the manual that could have been read with the relevant part copied in the post. I only do this "handholding" because I want to know too...

      --
      nosig today
  25. Windoze? Hilarious! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windoze, wow that's hilarious! I just love how it makes fun of everyone using Windows in such a subtle way. This silly boring codgers playing the latest WinDOZE game are just actually sleeping! Too funny! Hahaha poor dumb bastards!

  26. My beef by Stalus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Really my main beef with linux is how hard it is to set the thing up when you haven't gone through the process in the last six months. I generally forget what the config file is named that I'm interested in, or where it happens to be located. Frankly, any setting that most users will have to change at some point in their life should be easily accessible through the GUI menu system.

    I will admit that it is a heck of a lot better than it used to be, but I still have to do a bit of googling to get my linux system usable. Windows on the other hand, you can go to the control panel and what you want to change will likely be in there somewhere, unless it's application specific, and you don't have to read any manuals or docs to figure out how to configure your system - it's intuitive.

    1. Re:My beef by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      linux is a kernel, it doesn't have a GUI. Windows GUI is far from intuitive, just activate the MMC snap-in for microsoft-dah-dum-newfangled-marketing-speak and then activate microsoft-dah-dum-more-meaningless-marketing-speak . And lets dispell this also, config file's are easy to understand! Ever had to manually edit the Windows registry?

      Substandard troll anyway

    2. Re:My beef by the+idoru · · Score: 1

      Really my main beef with linux is how hard it is to set the thing up when you haven't gone through the process in the last six months.

      this i can agree with, but

      Windows on the other hand . . . it's intuitive

      shows me that you have become thoroughly entrenched in the windows ui. you've used it so much and just "know" where everything is that you don't even realize how horribly cryptic/confusing it truly is. were you to exclusively use another os for a year or two (ie, forget everything about the windows ui) then were you to convert back to windows i think you would have an appreciation for how crappily things are arranged in windows.

      if you have the opportunity, i suggest playing with os x for a while and get an idea of what a more intuitive ui is like. it's far from perfect but things are arranged much more instinctive.

    3. Re:My beef by Stalus · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've always liked MacOS. I did about three years+ on it due to journalism back in high school. Also had some intro CS classes in 68k assembler on them. I've thought about moving over to it before, but issues always came up.. maybe if I had multiple machines I'd be happier doing that. I have yet to use OSX, though I think I'll be able to play with it a little starting in August.

      And I will admit that some things in windows aren't obvious where they are, but if I poke around the menus for a few minutes, I'm destined to run into it eventually - assuming they thought about the setting at all. Perhaps I should have said 'more intuitive' - most of the system settings I change often are in the control panel somewhere, or in the options/preferences menu of the window I don't like the behavior of.

      On the application side of things, there are two things keeping me on Windows - Visual Studio, and games. kdev was close to making me happy though. But of the openGL work I've done, linux has been significantly slower with the same code on the same machine. Perhaps that gap has closed in the last two years - I know that installation has become a heck of a lot better since then.

    4. Re:My beef by Stalus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, I know linux is a kernel, but for the typical desktop user (the subject at hand), a kernel is useless without a good associated GUI. And yes, I've edited the windows registry.. and thank god I don't have to touch it unless I did something incredibly stupid in the first place. If you're going to compare config files to the windows registry, you've proved my point completely.

    5. Re:My beef by RestiffBard · · Score: 1

      not a rebuttal, more an addendum. This is the problem through all the OSs. Intuitiveness. I've used all of the big 3 (MS Windows, Linux, OS X).

      Linux? Not intuitive.

      MS Windows? Kinda.

      OS X? I have never seen a more intuitive OS.

      There's a reason why Linux is so damn stable. Otherwise we'd all have to go around with crib sheets to remember how to get sound working when we re-install.

      --
      - /* dead coders leave no comments */
    6. Re:My beef by fracex · · Score: 1

      The only config file that I've had to change to get my system running was /etc/fstab, to get my win partitions to mount... DAMN YOU REDHAT.

    7. Re:My beef by sgtrock · · Score: 1

      This is really a distro dependent issue. My experience is dated with RedHat and Suse, although I understand they have made remarkable progress in this arena. I think that my personal favorite, Mandrake, has things pretty well sewn up. Virtually any system setting that you need to tweak or view is available through Mandrake Control Center in a clean and easy to understand fashion. Need to restart a service? Add fonts? Set date and time? Review system logs? Add/remove/update software? Check your hardware configuration? etc.

      All in all, I regard their toolset as a very well thought out and logical one. If you haven't tried it yet, give it a shot.

    8. Re:My beef by Jagasian · · Score: 1

      Recent Redhat releases do not require you to edit config files. Everything can be done through the user-friendly GUIs. I am using Redhat 9.0 right now.

      I am sure the same applies to the latest versions of Mandrake and SuSe. The installs are also most likely just as automatic as Redhat 9.

      From what I can tell, Linux has been this easy for a while now. You got to use the right distro, if you want an easy-to-use desktop.

  27. What about SCO? by Homology · · Score: 1
    For some reason, SCO is not mentioned as competitor to Red Hat on page 18 chapter 6.1, even though the other partners of UnitedLinux is listed.

    That SCO is dead and buried in the Linux market is pretty clear, but UnitedLinux was established in part to counter Red Hat dominance.

    Would be interesting to know why the individual Linux distributers making up UnitedLinux is listed, while UnitiedLinux is not mentioned at all.

  28. Photoshop on Linux? by ignoramus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The pdf states that "...one of the studios commissioned an open source company to make Adome Photoshop run under Linux. Thanks to the open source development process, all Linux users can now run Photoshop on their desktop"

    Anyone have any info on this? Photoshop is one of the last things keeping our web designer under the giant Windows thumb so I'd love to get more details. The Adobe site only mentions Linux in relation to the PDF reader, all other references I could find were about the crossover plugin.

    And no, please don't extol the virtues of the Gimp - I've tried that...

    1. Re:Photoshop on Linux? by Gandalf1957 · · Score: 1

      So Gandalf smote the beast google with his staff uttering the words "photoshop linux" and google replied http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=3352

      Shame on you.

    2. Re:Photoshop on Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Photoshop 6 seems to run just fine with Crossover Office on RedHat 9. You just have to make sure to copy COMCTL32.DLL over.

    3. Re:Photoshop on Linux? by berzerke · · Score: 3, Informative

      ...Anyone have any info on this?...



      I still think you're missing the boat with Gimp, but that is another story. To answer your question, you're looking for Crossover Office 2.0. This version adds support for Photoshop version 7.0 and earlier. The review I read said performance and installation (of both Crossover and photoshop) were not problems.

    4. Re:Photoshop on Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Shame on you.
      Oh, come on, give the guy a break. Sure, for you, a mighty wizard, those arcane search words were obvious. But if a regular Joe is looking for info on photoshop and linux, how would he guess what words to type into the search engine?

      Probably searched for "mitch kapor linux not gimp" and was astonished that the info wasn't on the front page.

  29. Re:PDF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess they must use 8x11 monitors or something.

  30. My review: by cK-Gunslinger · · Score: 2, Funny

    Article: :-|
    Document: :-)
    Slashdot: :-(

    Bottom Line: :^P

  31. I am by Mr.+Arbusto · · Score: 0, Troll

    I dislike Linux and Windows Desktop machines equally, when compared to my OS X

  32. Re:PDF? by 303 · · Score: 1

    how about gpdf?

  33. Huh? by octothorpe · · Score: 1

    What's wrong with xpdf or Acrobat Reader for Linux?

    1. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with publishing things meant to be read on the web in a web format? Pdf looks great on paper, not on a monitor.

    2. Re:Huh? by MidnightLightning · · Score: 1

      Well, actually, we've had the technology for years to make PDF's look good. It's called the Type1 font. (I'm assuming you are complaining about bad bitmapped fonts...)

      --

      -------
      Those who can, do, and those who can't, well ... teach.
    3. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can I use them in lynx? Will my screen reader read them?

    4. Re:Huh? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1
      I would have posted this yesterday, but slashcode was up the wazoo.

      xpdf uses a strange toolkit (motif?), which looks ugly. It's also unintuitive - left clicking drags a selection rectangle that selects.... what? Not text. Bitmap? Not sure. To move the area with the mouse, you have to use the middle button.

      GGV would be great, but despite the "use antialiasing" checkbox being ticked, it doesn't use it (not here anyway). For most apps (like emacs) that's OK, but for some reason ghostview renders text horribly without AA enabled. It also tends to give me errors about GConf typing and such. It doesn't support all the PDF features, like bookmarks/content pane.

      AcroRead doesn't even bother trying to integrate. It uses the same on disk layout as on Windows, and also uses Motif, making it butt ugly as well as having a file open dialog box that doesn't even pay attention to the dotfile rules.

      I should probably have qualified my original post with this stuff, but now you know. So far, my quest for a PDF viewer that is feature compatible, renders as nicely and integrates as well as AcroRead on Windows does is not yet complete.

  34. Re:PDF? by Thoguth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If people are already using Linux on the desktop, they don't need to read a report about Linux on the desktop, do they?

    (not to mention that every "desktop" distro in the past two or three years has come with a pdf viewer by default ...)

    --
    The requested URL /iframe/sig.html was not found on this server.
  35. Here we go again... by KillerHamster · · Score: 1

    Linux will never be "ready" for the desktop. Neither will Solaris, AIX, IRIX, *BSD, or HP-UX. *nix is for servers and hackers, not Joe Sixpack and his PC. To succeed on the desktop, you need a UI designed for the LEAST computer-literate people out there, it has to support ANY hardware they can throw at it, installing/removing software has to be easy, etc., etc., ad nauseum.

    Besides, if Linux did gain wide acceptance as a desktop OS, we would all lose our elite status and have to go back to VMS.

    1. Re:Here we go again... by cbowland · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Mac OS X certainly refutes your claim that "*nix is for servers and hackers, not Joe Sixpack...."

      I do agree with your analysis of the state of the Linux UI, but Apple has demostrated that you can put an effective and attractive GUI on a unix machine.

      --

      Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.
      Teach him to eat and he will fish forever.

    2. Re:Here we go again... by minus_273 · · Score: 1

      huh bsd? have you used a mac lately? seriously

      --
      The war with islam is a war on the beast
      The war on terror is a war for peace
    3. Re:Here we go again... by KillerHamster · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected regarding the OS X UI. BSD can be made usable IF you make the command line completely unnecessary, but that isn't the only issue. Since Apple is the only company that builds Macs, they can ensure that all their hardware and software work flawlessly together. That will never be possible with Linux on x86.

    4. Re:Here we go again... by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
      True to a point, but there are old-school Mac users who are kicking and screaming about OS X (for no good reason, IMHO). One of them told me that OS X "scares me," another thinks that OS X is a money grab by Apple (I don't consider something I've been using on my desktop for close to three years, since the Public Beta, as a "money grab"...but to each his own).

      If Apple succeeds in creating an OS that doesn't scare her and people like her, then you'll be right. Until then (or until Sun realizes that Solaris can be a lot more than it is), *nix will still be for a specialized group of folks (but not just servers and hackers).

    5. Re:Here we go again... by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      I'm an old-school Mac user (since I wrote my thesis on a Mac Plus with MacWrite and MacDraw and scissors and tape...) I am not afraid of MacOS X. I choose to save my money. MacOS 9 works well enough for now, and I can save the $129, which is 10% of the cost of a nice new machine. And I don't have to upgrade any other software, or buy a new scanner.

    6. Re:Here we go again... by cbowland · · Score: 1

      Mostly true about the hardware/software connection. However, lots of 3rd party hardware pieces also work smashing well on OS X (and some doesn't too). (Of course, for printers, most of that credit should go to CUPS - Apple was just being sensible when they used it.) My digital camera, camcorder, and cell phone all just work, just like the ads say. The move to standard ram and disks also helps.

      I would argue that the command line is required, but my wife would disagree. The fact that we can have a single machine that suits each of us is what makes the OS X so cool.

      Still, it will probably never happen for linux. But for call centers and such, I really think the linux desktop is ready.

      --

      Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.
      Teach him to eat and he will fish forever.

    7. Re:Here we go again... by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
      I wrote my thesis on a Mac Classic that I borrowed from work - just because I couldn't afford an 8500. But, since it was English, I didn't need anything other than Word. Word 5.1, to be precise.

      However, more to the point - you're an exception. Now, I work for a university and, as many of us know, college-types, especially faculty, get set in their ways. So, perhaps I'm seeing a larger percentage of "scared" people than most. Of course, that also means I can use the education discount to get a much better price on Apple's products, especially things like the OS ($70 or $80 as opposed to $130 is quite worth it). But, again, OS X has been here for (two months shy of) three years (yes, I count the Public Beta) and some of us have been using it as their main OS for that entire time (I was very happy to leave OS 9, and its crash-prone ways, behind). I can tell you that, while it is still an Apple OS, it isn't the Mac OS of old and that there is some validity in being concerned that the OS will be completely different.

      I suspect that Apple will make it worthwhile for people to switch if they keep on bringing better and cooler things to market (the PowerBooks, iPod, iSight, etc.). That will be the point where *nix will make its mark on the desktop...but Apple has to keep plugging away. And users have to upgrade.

  36. But who's desktop do you want Linux on? by MROD · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Having seen a great deal of hype and discussion about how Linux is going to push Windows off the desktop I see a problem with the whole subject...

    No-one's actually defined who's desktop they want to aim at.

    Now, if it's the corporate desktop then distributions should concentrate on a small number of bullet-proof applications included on the CD's. They should be set up so that they're designed to be "plug-and-play" when it comes to setting them up for a specific task and they should only allow the admin to change the look and feel etc. After all, it's an interchangeable office tool like a desklamp. Or it should be.

    If it's the desktop of Aunty May then they should target with a few, easily used and bullet proof set of applications and a desktop which is very simple to use and only does a few things but does them extremely well.

    If the desktop is for the computer hobbyist then they need a core set of programs which are bullet proof and a desktop which is customisable etc. In addition to this a lot of optional toys should be available.

    Now, which of these "desktops" do you want to conquer?

    In my opinion, for the last two, Apple have got the right mix with MacOS X, so Linux distributions could do worse than following Apple's ideas on combing novice usability with UNIX nutter complexity.

    No operating system I've seen does the "desklamp" type interchangable desktop system all that well other than maybe Sun's SunRays and other thin clients, but they rely upon server CPU to run the applications.

    --

    Agrajag: "Oh no, not again!"
    1. Re:But who's desktop do you want Linux on? by burns210 · · Score: 1

      "...concentrate on a small number of bullet-proof applications...few, easily used and bullet proof set of applications...a core set of programs which are bullet proof"

      Ok, you want a set of programs that come on the cd that don't overlap, as in, 1 office suite(not 2), a media player, 1 text editor... So the distrobution picks the cream of the crop in each software category, and puts that and only that on their distro. Note, that you want that feature for all 3 desktops.

      You also want things to be plug and play. i assume that means, both hardware add/remove along with software (dependency checking, graphical install/uninstall, etc.)

      Well, knoppix, along with others have the auto-hardware(i have heard something like 3 different libraries are available). some distros have auto-dependency, and those that don't will get it soon enough. The core set of programs? Well, it is improving. :)

    2. Re:But who's desktop do you want Linux on? by MROD · · Score: 1

      By plug and play I mean, take new computer which is totally unconfigured out of the box, plug it into the wall socket and the network, switch it on and hey-presto it's downloaded the config from the central server, configured itself with the information it got and is now awaiting the secretary/manager/phone operator/office clerk to log in and work, all within a couple of minutes.

      ie. the computer + OS is an appliance, just like a desklamp. You wouldn't expect to spend a few hours getting a desklamp configured before use, would you?

      --

      Agrajag: "Oh no, not again!"
  37. Re:What ever happened to the last "Outlook-killer" by jason0000042 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just take Mozilla Thunderbird and Calendar, integrate them into the kernel. Then put in a feature that allows an arbitrary host on the network run arbitrary code on your machine in the interest of letting other people invite you to meetings automatically.

    That should infuse some of the old MS flavor into the dish. Should really get the punters switching to linux in droves.

    --
    i don't like my old sig.
  38. Re:PDF? by (startx) · · Score: 1

    precious few viewers? are acroread, xpdf, and ggv not enough for you? Windows users only get the first choice....

  39. Re:PDF? by forgetmenot · · Score: 1

    Since when? There's several and most distros include at least one. You can get a free Adobe PDF reader for linux no problem. If you don't like Adobe then there's Xpdf. Ghostview can also reads/write pdfs I believe.

  40. what happen with /. by trnsfer · · Score: 1

    it's a routine. SCO news, linux in the desktop, Wireless, but in fact they arent news, just opinions about the same topics, in fact these opinions should be in comments, not in the main page. where are the news?.

    1. Re:what happen with /. by Homology · · Score: 1

      Lighten up man! It's summer time; the season for stories about abnormally large and strange looking potatoes.

    2. Re:what happen with /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somebody set up us the bomb.

  41. Did we already forget... by night_flyer · · Score: 1

    this story?

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  42. Re:PDF? by berzerke · · Score: 1

    ...Publish the report in a format for which there are precious few good viewers available on Linux...



    It only takes one good viewer to view the file. xpdf worked find for me. Also, the only good viewer I can think of (off the top of my head; I know there are others out there somewhere) for windows is acrobat. For Linux, I know of xpdf, acrobat, and ghostview off the top of my head.



    ...What's wrong with good old HTML?...



    Nothing if you want to only view it on a screen. YMMV, but I've found pdf's print out more consisently across printers than html does. PDF also prints nicer IMHO.

  43. Re:GAY FP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about cross-dressing Gay Niggers who are transvestites, blind and missing 1 or more limbs? Do we count?

  44. Nothing new by ZoneGray · · Score: 4, Funny

    Nothing new. I've had Linux on my desktop for years.

    One of these days maybe I'll open the box and install it.

    1. Re:Nothing new by repetty · · Score: 1

      True coincidence...

      I used to have a Microsoft Windows CD. I haven't seen it for years and have no idea where it is.

  45. Are you high? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can use about four different programs to read pdfs under linux, including the one from Adobe themselves. Get a clue. And that goes double for the asshats that modded you.

  46. Re:What ever happened to the last "Outlook-killer" by smartin · · Score: 1

    The one single Linux app that would kill outhouse would be a proxy or a plugin that would allow other email readers such as mozilla or evolution to access an exchange server running in MAPI only mode. (No i don't mean the Ximian connector).

    --
    The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
  47. Linux on the Desktop by Silwenae · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've switched to Linux as my full time desktop.

    It is *ready*. It is usable. Even my wife gets it when she sits down at my machine. The only caveat is minor installations for the browser (Flash mainly).

    I'm an avid Gnome user - but applications such as K3B for burning, Gaim, even Grip are easy enough to use for an average user.

    The article did a fantastic job by going into details by category, and then summing up the good and the bad, and I like the smilies.

    1. Re:Linux on the Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to say, I used to think that Linux wasn't ready for the desktop. I was just converted 3 days ago.

      I was in Windows, surfing forums and checking my e-mail. I opened outlook, and lo and behold Windows XP restarted itself. My bootloader offered RedHat, as I installed it to program with. I selected it. I haven't been forced to reboot in the past 3 days. I haven't had a single crash. I have only been forced to kill one process, and that was because of my own stupidity.
      When I installed a printer on my mom's computer(which has superior hardware on all fronts,) I couldn't tolerate it. It was so horrendously slow(right after a fresh restart) and the interface so clunky I couldn't use it. I installed the printer, but told her that that would probably be the last thing I did on Windows.

      And insofar its been true. I may venture into the land of Mordor once again to retrieve stupid things like my AIM buddy icon and some music, but that is all.

  48. Works for me... by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 1

    Linux on the desktop scratches my itch. I can do everything I want to (even games) and if I can't do something I can usually knock up a script or a bit of C to bend it to my will.

    Sure, if Linux was no longer 'sexy' I might have to give up playing some new releases (UT2k3 for example, or NWN) but I could live with that - the Quake engines were opened up way before Linux was a buzzword and they are still fun to play. There might have been more GPL game development too that way.

    So in the long run all of the troll bitching about OSS desktops being 'not ready' or 'unsexy' means nothing. It'll carry on being used by the people who it is ready for, and the reast can join up gradually as it gets more mature or gains a feature they want. Doesn't mean much to me - and it's not like it's all going to stop working with vendor support yanked thanks to the GPL.

    If you like it, use it. If you don't fix your problem or use something else. If everyone took that attitude towards Linux specifically and OSS in general the world would be a less irritating place :o)

    --
    Beep beep.
  49. I stopped using Outlook + all the others by mlg9000 · · Score: 1

    After I discovered squirrelmail I stopped using email clients all together. Of course you need a IMAP server.. or access to one. In a corporate environment that's not a problem though. Neither is it one for the tech savvy Linux/Unix/BSD home users out there. So why create an Outlook clone aimed at these people? Why even use Outlook in these places?

    Added bonus... if you run your own IMAP server you can also use amavis-new and spamassassin.

  50. It's the gtk file dialog stupid! by anonymous+coword · · Score: 0

    Dig up an old copy of windows 3.1, run a program, look at the file dialog. Then load look at a gtk notice any thing similar?

    KDE on the other hand has a wonderful file dialog which is an enchanced version of the windows XP one, but with loads more flexibillity.

    I know that gtk 2.6 will imporve their widgets, but both KDE and gnome need to unify the look & feel of their widgets, such as file dialog, colour dialog, standardized colour and font configuration (geramik was the closest that could do that)

    Do that, and granny won't complain why the gimp looks like windows 3.1 paint.exe

  51. Devils advocate by geek · · Score: 1, Troll

    Ok so I started on linux back in 1996 with some old version of Red Hat, can't remember what release it was. I remember the 2 months it took me to initially figure everything out. Back then I was constantly on IRC and got a lot of help from OctobrX who was also sorta new at the time. I was 19 then and had nothing but time on my hands to sit and learn this stuff. Windows was just coming into Win95 and the nightmare blue screen of death was a twice hourly occurrence.

    Fast forward to 2003. WinXP is plenty stable, much more so than any windows OS thusfar. MacOSX offers all of the benefits a UNIX systems can plsu a stable non-beta interface with standards and a lot of really great off the shelf software. I don't see the appeal of Linux on the desktop and I don't think most others do either who aren't visiting this site.

    Linux is ok in servers, i use FreeBSD personally but to each their own. Linux makes a semi adequate desktop if you look past the old, antiquated install processes, weak package management, lack of uninstall options, the nightmare library system that's almost impossible to keep under control without spending more time on it than you do actual work. The GUI's are sorry to say, horribly old and overly complex. There is no standard GUI for developers to code too without pissing off one side or the other (KDE or GNOME). Commercial developers are treated like dirt when they actually want to charge for software and/or wont release their hard work to everyone open source.

    For the geeks Linux is ok. It's even fun to tinker with. Consider however most people could care less, and when I say most I mean MOST, I don't see any gains being made. My mom has enough trouble with MacOSX I can't imagine giving her Red Hat 9 and telling her how to use GNOME. "Here mom just compile this program with 'make install &' and then run it at the terminal". This is far far far from user friendly and as far as I can tell NO ONE is working to change this at all.

    Linux is doomed to niche status until people in the OSS community start caring about ALL users and not just people who know what man pages are. This is the same with Apple and their closed hardware and stupid advertising. I don't know a single person that understands apples commercials enough to research them and figure out what they hell they are trying to sell.

    Ok, so ending this rant I will say that Linux on the desktop is fine for some, even preferable. But don't even think that Linux in it's current state will be making any major headway into the desktop market. Servers and some business and scientific apps sure, but never the consumer desktop market.

    1. Re:Devils advocate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Couldn't care less, not could care less.

    2. Re:Devils advocate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      could it be that you are partly trolling:
      - antiquated install: maybe true on debian or slack. Certainly not on a distro like Mandrake. Hell, have you ever installed windows and Mandrake next to eachother? There is no way you are going to repeat this statement if you do.

      - weak package management: what's weak? For debian and Mandrake it is certainly very powerful. Dependencies are automatically solved, just search what you need and it will install. You do not even have to know what a package is. What exactly is weak here?

      - uninstall? Generally on windows you'll be stuck with numerous registry shit after removing some apps. Sometimes even DLLs all over the place. The whole thing doesn't look very standard to me, seems like every app has it's own uninstall tool. On mandrake its just "Remove packages" in 1 clean interface. And it will remove whatever you want.

      - libary system? Well..as a normal user you just do not have to mess with it. I think, if the distro did it's thing correctly, it will just work. And i think it can be debated wheter it is worse/better than alternatives....

      -GUI old? where have you been living? And what is "old"? Stuffy toolbar? That's no argument...Complex? Don't know..Gnome 2.2 looks overly simplified to me. I prefer KDE, more choices, that's my thing. Standard? Well, just use what you like, and stick with it. I hardly ever use a gnome app, but if I do, the theme fits nicely with KDE, and I do not even notice.

      -Commercials treated like dirt? Well...any proof of this? Seems some companies are perfectly happy with providing their stuff for linux. Although I have to say that in the case of hw drivers, I think they should be open, but then, hardware companies are not selling their software anyways.

      Do not get my wrong, I think things need to get even better, but 90% of your arguments are shit. My Mom can run Linux, so your's can do it as well (but IMHO RH9 is shit).

    3. Re:Devils advocate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Boy you havent used Linux in a long time have you!!

  52. SCORE ... -1, Boring by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Try to have an opinion next time.

    NEXT!!!

  53. Re:PDF? by Doobian+Coedifier · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's wrong with xpdf? or GGV?

  54. Wow, I can post OLD articles and troll too! by acidtripp101 · · Score: 1

    Actually, I won't... but anyone that reads that article should really look for the DATED version of the origonal... it's at least a year old, which in computer time is... well... a long fucking time.

    --
    Not Free(as in beer). Free(as in "I'm free to beat you over the head for being a dumbass")
  55. Error, here. by repetty · · Score: 1

    "To succeed on the desktop, you need a UI designed for the LEAST computer-literate people out there, it has to support ANY hardware they can throw at it, installing/removing software has to be easy, etc., etc., ad nauseum."

    Better or easier have nothing to do with anything.

    Network marketing is everything. Absolutely everything.

    In the end, nothing else matters.

    I wish it weren't so, but it is.

  56. Oh dear by niom · · Score: 1

    Somebody should post a comment about how the most usable desktop ever was some punched card contraption for the PDP-10. That'd learn the vintage snobs.

    --
    -- Repeat with me: "There is no right to profits".
  57. Mrkt Saturation/Brand Recognition & Reality by felonious · · Score: 1

    Until Linux or any of it's derivatives can get the word out to the average uneducated user then they'll have no hope for making any inroads in this area. Windows, albeit crash prone and such, althought XP is heads and shoulders above the rest, is the most well known and simple os out there. Yea I know Macs are simple too but they are over priced and have no where near the software that Windows does.

    What any form of Linux needs to compete on the desktop level is name/brand recognition, a good pr strategy, and massive advertising. I know this can be misconstrued as selling out but if you wanna compete on that level then you have to match the Windows effort which is massive to say the least.

    Linux rules on the server front IMO but on the desktop is needs more work for Joe Average. Most of us can get whatever we need to work on Linux but Joe Average doesn't want to have to mess with compatibility issues, be it, hardware or software. This would be the key factor in a lot of people's decisions but there's also the simple fact of why fix something that isn't broken in their eyes. If they are happy with Windows, which most are because they know nothing different, then they won't switch regardless

    Windows has the apps, games, and most market saturation.

    Mac has the design niche

    Linux has the uptime, loyal user base w/ Mac, and dependablity but needs to incorporate something major on the desktop level that the other's don't have. I'm not sure what it is at this point either:) In my eyes the dependability is major but people want something major in terms of bells and whistles. If there was true cross compatibilty with Windows apps then Linux would be a true contender. Until then it's desktop market share will be flat.

    **Disclaimer**
    I am no for any OS over another and refuse to debate OS's on a fanboy level. I just state what I believe and refuse to be tied to one OS over another because of all of the fanboy flames I always seem to encounter. They're all decent at the least and they all have their own drawbacks so I'll leave it at that although I could write a ton on the different factions and their ideologies

    --
    You aren't free to do anything, until you've lost everything.
  58. Why are workflow notifications always ignored by SIGPrez · · Score: 1

    PIMs always refer to functionality to manage things such as email, calendar and contacts and sometimes tasks.

    It seems to me that as organisations become more and more connected into multi-segmented operational processes, you would think that handling Workflow notifications and responses would be the next killer-app.

    Are there any PIMs which try to integrate notifications gracefully with the other functional elements?

    1. Re:Why are workflow notifications always ignored by BigGerman · · Score: 1

      I am working on one. Thanks for yet another accidental validation of the idea ;-)
      Mine will be peer-to-peer/web services/messaging based, on top of Arliweb framework.

    2. Re:Why are workflow notifications always ignored by jpmorgan · · Score: 1
      Microsoft Project

      *ducks*

      There's also Lotus Workflow for Domino.doc, but it's not as good at Project.

  59. Re:Linux will always have problems on the desktop. by saintjab · · Score: 1

    If this isn't pure troll, I'd be very curious to know what rock you crawled out from under. If p0rn is the most important factor for you in choosing an OS this message will go right over you. I personally use Opera on both my windo$e and *NIX machines. I am able to use the web the same on both OSs; granted I don't browse p0rn all day either. It is exactly your type of thinking (oh it used to be that way, I'm sure it still is) that is killing *NIX on the desktop. I also work in a heavily MS environment (as an admin) and I'm able to completely maintain our Win2K AD domain from my Linux machine. I've been using it as my primary workstation for months now. Stop trolling and try something new for a change (other than p0rn)!

    --
    "Reality is a crutch for people who can't handle drugs" - George Bernard Shaw (1856 - 1950)
  60. Linux on the Desktop? by sheared · · Score: 1

    What I need for Linux to be on my desktop:

    - Video editing ability (home user style) similar to what I can do with Pinnacle Studio 7/8

    - Functionality of MS Excel WITH VB for Applications

    Those are my two main sticking points. Other than that, I could probably switch full time (except for games).

  61. Re:PDF? by David+Hume · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If people are already using Linux on the desktop, they don't need to read a report about Linux on the desktop, do they?


    Yes, they do if they want to know: (a) what to do to improve Linux so others to use it on the desktop; and/or (b) how to promote Linux on the desktop.

  62. In my day... by billimad · · Score: 1

    One concern is the ability in future years to access documents in by then obsoleted file formats. Office 20002 no longer natively supports the ability to read Office 4.0 documents.

    Funk that! What about the flying cars?

  63. Slow stuff sucks by togofspookware · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, in my Cisco networking class that I took back in 11th grade, the thing took so long to load (first start Windows, then start Novell client, then log into the network, then start IE, then load up Cisco's crappy all-flash web site) that I actually did 'doze' off a few times :-/

    Good grief. We often spent half the class time starting the computers.

    And while I'm on the topic of slow, I tried out Knoppix 3.2 the other day. It was slow and bloated and couldn't keep up when it was playing some MP3s (I got skips and crap). Win2k on the same machine works beautifully.

    One of the great things about Linux is that it's FAST. I run it on my old 586 here as a server and I can download files off of it faster than my 1.6 GHz Win2k machine can download files from itself (but then maybe that's just somethng to do with Ruby's IO being optimised better on Linux..).

    Anyway, when you come out with these big, bloated GUIs that are less responsive and suck up more memory and CPU time than Windows, Linux loses some of its appeal...

    And then there's the issues with dependency problems, blah, blah, blah. So, yeah. I think it'd have a better chance as a desktop OS if it got *cleaned up* at a low level (not just write GUIs to do the dirty work for you, but eliminate the mess completely).

    --
    Duct tape, XML, democracy: Not doing the job? Use more.
  64. Try, thats all.. by saintjab · · Score: 1

    What needs to take place is for the MS biggots to give *NIX a try. I work in a mostly MS environment and I use my Linux box for most of my entire day. I am able to administer out Win2K AD domain, as well as the other mundane daily tasks. I very rarely go to my windoze bos for anything. I didn't think this was possible when I built the workstation but I wanted to ?try?. I've been on it since. In fact, for most of the stuff I do on a daily basis, this machine out performs the MS machines. In fact, I use Rdesktop a lot to connect to MS servers, and it is WAY smother and better than the MS TS crap. This is all a lot for me to come out with, as I even worked at MS for quite a few years, and at one time was hardcore MS (hold the flames please, no asbestos underwear today). But I've changed my thoughts and ideals, as would many others if they just give it a freekin try. Sure, there are million antiquated excuses as to why MS is better or worse, but you will never know what works best for YOU unless we try new things.

    --
    "Reality is a crutch for people who can't handle drugs" - George Bernard Shaw (1856 - 1950)
    1. Re:Try, thats all.. by Uncle+Eazy · · Score: 1

      I broke down and installed SuSE 8.2 (default install) on my Dell L400 laptop. P3-700, 256mb RAM, 10g HD. I'm a Microsoft person, Exchange "expert". The main reason I installed Linux was to check out Evolution. Outlook XP, 2003 and Outlook Express have problems connecting to my home IMAP email server.

      Overall, I like SuSE. I installed it via FTP and whenever I need to install packages (YaST2 rocks) it gets them from the SuSE FTP site.

      My biggest complain with Linux in general, is dependancy hell. It is pretty hard to install anything, whether by RPM or by MAKE, etc., without running into: blah-1.2.1 requires GTK+-2.0.blah. Try to install GTK+-2.0.blah, that fails because it requires this other package. Mostly, if I use Yast2 this problem doesn't exist, but SuSE doesn't always have the latest packages available. Example, gaim. The version available through Yast2 only supports AOL, no MSN, no Yahoo!.

      I haven't tried getting my wireless pcmcia 3com card working yet, but I have tried to make PPTP/PPPD work to connect to work's MS VPN. No luck.

      The only real problem I had during the install was with the video. My little laptop screen went blank after bootup. After tearing up groups.google.com and SuSE's support, I got it working.

      As for what SaintJab said about rdesktop, it is a nice program. But it really can't compare to the Remote Desktop app that comes with XP (and can be DL'd for any modern MS OS). If nothing else, for me, if rdesktop is not in full-screen mode, then it has trouble with screen refresh (similar to VNC).

      I think Linux is a good little hax0r OS for the desktop. But for ease of use, hardware, install and uninstall, Windows is a better choice for people that don't want to mess around "under the hood".

      Uncle Eazy

      What needs to take place is for the MS biggots to give *NIX a try. I work in a mostly MS environment and I use my Linux box for most of my entire day. I am able to administer out Win2K AD domain, as well as the other mundane daily tasks. I very rarely go to my windoze bos for anything. I didn't think this was possible when I built the workstation but I wanted to ?try?. I've been on it since. In fact, for most of the stuff I do on a daily basis, this machine out performs the MS machines. In fact, I use Rdesktop a lot to connect to MS servers, and it is WAY smother and better than the MS TS crap. This is all a lot for me to come out with, as I even worked at MS for quite a few years, and at one time was hardcore MS (hold the flames please, no asbestos underwear today). But I've changed my thoughts and ideals, as would many others if they just give it a freekin try. Sure, there are million antiquated excuses as to why MS is better or worse, but you will never know what works best for YOU unless we try new things.

    2. Re:Try, thats all.. by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      This is going to sound a little far fetched, but I suggest you give LinuxTLE a go. They have a ready to work desktop with all the major plugins already configured, a Connectiva style apt, and update software regularly. For example, since I upgraded to 5.0 about ?three? months ago, I have been upgraded from mozilla 1.2.1 to 1.3 to 1.4. This never used to happen with RH or Mandrake. In fact, I read about Moz 1.4 on Slashdot and went to download, but found the look just ugly compared to the 1.3 I was running from LinuxTLE, then did my apt-get update && apt-get upgrade and found the next morning that I had a beautiful looking Moz 1.4 on my desktop, with my profile carried over.

  65. No more Betamax... by glenrm · · Score: 1

    I never want to hear about Betamax vs. VCR again, especially from "tech" or "nerd" people it is getting old move on the Netscape vs. IE or something like that ok...

  66. Re:PDF? by genglish · · Score: 2, Funny

    Having precious few good PDF viewers on Linux should tell you something about its readiness as a desktop OS. If someone like you, adept enough to be reading /. and hold opinions about file formats and viewers, has a hard time reading a PDF file then that probably tells you more than that report ever will. Take it easy, Guy

  67. Fix application installations! by zutroy · · Score: 1

    This is my biggest gripe with Linux, especially in X...

    When I install a program, I want to know how to run it. In fact, I want it to give me options on how it should install itself. I want to be able to choose whether I get an icon on the desktop, or in the menuing system.

    Windows does this quite well; people seem to have settled on an installer system. But in Linux, even RPMs can be a bitch to install. And you should never have to use the command line to install a program unless you want to do something very specialized with it.

    I also agree about standardizing on the look and feel of application windows.

    1. Re:Fix application installations! by grolschie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's not really about Linux at all (or X even). It more about whether the installer for a particular software package will place icons and shortcuts in the correct places - if at all. That is up to whoever packaged the software, and to a large entention the distribution being used (and their policies). There are default directorys to place shortcuts and menu items, whether you use KDE, Gnome or whatever.

      Installers in Linux can easily set up shortcuts, menu items, or display a message during the install process. If you install via .rpm or .deb, you can also do this. With many Windows applications, some installers don't install or uninstall properly. Bits get left behind, or shortcuts point to nowhere. Some stick shortcuts everywhere and create annoying start-up daemons for your taskbar (RealPlayer anyone?). In the same way, that is a fault of the software also.

  68. Bigger Office by Gandalf1957 · · Score: 1

    Anyone with Windows on their desktop needs a bigger Office........

    or is it the opposite......

    or is it a paradox and we'll all blink out of existance ?

    Head hurts, need more Tequila.

  69. Re:Linux will always have problems on the desktop. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Using a browser to get porn is so 1995!

    Dude, I've got a custom spider written in Perl that gets me all the porn that I want for free and no worries about cookies hanging around, browsing history for the wife to see, or any browser compatibility issues.

    Generally, I just fire this bitch up, do my regular work while it runs in the background. After a few hours, my porn repository has expanded by a couple hundred meg!

    I even wrote me a little proggie in Qt to parse the output of the log files and present me with a list of the new porn so I can go through and weed out the gay porn and other crap I don't want. This baby lets me add "skip rules" to the spider's configuration. (A skip rule is a string to skip when parsin URLs and HTML looking for stuff to download.)

    Then there's the little bash script that takes a directory or file list as arguments, followed by a number (as a parameter for a delay timer). It recurses down through directories and check file types and so on. If it encounters an image file, it opens it up in xv, waits a number of seconds, kills xv and then opens the next image file in xv. Bang! Instant slidehow!

    Yeah, baby, all this runs on Linux!

  70. Windows is free. Linux costs $$$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's the reality for Joe sixpack. Windows came free with his computer. Linux is an obscure box that he could buy at his local computer store for some unknown reason.

    Would he spend money and throw away the engine that came free with his pickup truck and replace it with one that doesn't work as well, he can't get it fixed at the local dealer and needs special gasoline to run?

  71. I predict new OS will emerge in next couple years by BigGerman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There seem to be an almost critical mass of ideas, tools, code, etc. surrounding "the Linux desktop thing" right now. It feels like something is about to happen.
    What if someone comes up with new OS where encryption and strong auth are built-in, X is thrown out or reworked to some kind of networked XUL thing, file system is more like Reisers namespaces, DRM is builtin as well (to satisfy future Palladium sharks), all configuration files are XML, etc?
    Seems like with consolidation of Intel hardware and availability of huge number of Linux device drivers to look at, this is not a remote possibility.
    Would not that be nice?

  72. What does this title do to RMS's blood pressure? by Rogerborg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I mean, he can get a bit annoying with the whole GNU/lunix thing, but even the most resolutely ignorant commentator should be able to distinguish between KDE/GNOME, and the linux kernel running under it. Normally it wouldn't bother me, but they are primarily talking about the desktops here.

    If you think this is splitting hairs, how many reviewers do you think would know how to tell the difference between KDE 3.1.0 running on top of linux and the same desktop running on top of BSD?

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  73. What is missing by chrisgeleven · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You know what I hate about Linux?

    - The lack of any common GUI among apps. Hell sometimes you can't even cut and paste between apps. At least with Windows and MacOSX there is enough similarity between apps that once you figure out how to use one you are well off to figure out the rest. Linux there is no comparison.
    - Application names...yeah, XMMS really screams to me that it is an audio player when I see it on KDE's equivelant of a start menu. Might as well call it asdkasdf@#3rafsdfa, there isn't a difference.
    - Software on store shelves...oh wait, what software on store shelves other then maybe one Linux distribution.
    - Forget support, doesn't do much good if my mom can't get a phone number for that replacement of her beloved Quicken.
    - Sure there is games, but call me when Battlefield 1942, High Heat Baseball, etc. are available instead of just FreeCiv. Get games like those and just about every young male in the world will switch.
    - Oh yeah, can I mention dependicies?

    1. Re:What is missing by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      - Sure there is games, but call me when Battlefield 1942, High Heat Baseball, etc. are available instead of just FreeCiv. Get games like those and just about every young male in the world will switch.


      I'll grant you GF1942, but I have never even heard of High Heat Baseball, so I'll just assume it's not important. As to Linux-games... Doom3, Medal of Honor, Neverwinter Nights, Return to Castle Wolfenstein, Quake 3, Quake 2, Unreal Tournament 2003, Tribes etc. etc... Many of those are THE hot games people play these days. So what are you complaining about? And you can get more games through emulation. If those games can't make "every young male in the world" to switch, I would guess High Heat Baseball wont either.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    2. Re:What is missing by Mistah+Blue · · Score: 1

      WineX will play some of these games. There are also native Linux ports of games (such as America's Army).

    3. Re:What is missing by cgibbard · · Score: 1

      The cut and paste issue has mostly (if not entirely) been solved. Applications now use the X clipboard in a consistent way. (Selection produces a primary which middle mouse button pastes, Copy (C-c) goes to clipboard which Paste (C-v) pastes.) That argument no longer applies. As for the multiple user interfaces, KDE and Gnome are now similar enough to each other that anyone familiar with using one (or Windows for that matter) shouldn't have huge problems using the other. It might be a bit uncomfortable, but not very much.

      XMMS is an acronym. It stands for X Multimedia System - that sounds like it might play audio. The real problem here is the menu - that's easy enough to fix. I'll agree that some programs are given strange names, but it's up to those who design the user interfaces to deal with directing users to the right programs. There might be some failings here, but they're not hard to fix. Putting the audio players into a menu called "Audio Players" would be enough to solve that, now wouldn't it? I'm pretty sure some, perhaps even most Linux distros are already doing this.

      Er, software on store shelves? That implies that it costs money. I'd rather download it for free (as in beer). Free Software doesn't necessarily have to be free as in beer, but it usually is, and that's why you don't see it on store shelves.

      For support, try IRC or e-mail. Both work quite nicely. Free Software is a community, there are people that will help you, and they're easy to reach.

      We have some games. The game situation is rapidly improving. I see no real reason to complain about it at this point. I certainly have enough games to keep myself entertained.

      Dependencies? They're much easier to deal with than Windows dependencies, in my experience. You want a program? If you're on Debian, you just apt-get install whatever, and it'll download the program, all of it's dependencies, then install and configure them in order, while making sure that nothing else will break as a result. Easy. Other distributions such as Mandrake have similar tools for dealing with dependencies. On Windows, programs generally include their dependencies, as there is no other way to tell the system to get them, and the installers are flaky enough to just trample over whatever other versions of these dependencies were already there. It's primitive, and it just barely works, sometimes it doesn't.

      So tell us what else you hate about Linux - there might be stuff that needs fixing, but you haven't exactly nailed it. Also, rather than complain, why not just fix the problems? Free Software means freedom to change what you want. Submit patches if you think something doesn't work the way people would want it to, and feel free to change stuff around just for yourself as well.

      I've been using Linux almost exclusively for a couple of years now, and not-exclusively for longer. My user interface is fairly customised to me. Most other people might have problems using my machine, but that doesn't matter, because it's very fine tuned to work almost exactly the way that I want it. You can have that with Free Software. It actually hurts for me to use Windows now, as its user interface seems so klunky and ineffective.

      So get out there and actually *try* Free Software for a while. You'll probably find that most of the problems you mentioned are not problems, and that the freedom it brings is worth it.

    4. Re:What is missing by tqft · · Score: 1

      European Air War - I tried under WINE (not the $ version), may I am hopeless at it, but it did not work (EAW wants DirectX 6.0 + - does this matter?).

      Have not seen or heard of anyone flight sim/air war games for linux.

      --
      The Singularity is closer than you think
      Quant
    5. Re:What is missing by Baron+of+Greymatter · · Score: 1

      >> You know what I hate about Linux?

      >>- The lack of any common GUI among apps. Hell sometimes you can't even cut and paste between apps. At least with Windows and MacOSX there is enough similarity between apps that once you figure out how to use one you are well off to figure out the rest. Linux there is no comparison.

      The cut-and-paste problem should have been solved in XFree86 ages ago. That is a system problem not a WM/Desktop Environment problem.

      >>- Application names...yeah, XMMS really screams to me that it is an audio player when I see it on KDE's equivelant of a start menu. Might as well call it asdkasdf@#3rafsdfa, there isn't a difference.

      That has been a UN*X problem/tradition since Day One. However, program names are up to their authors. If you don't like names, rename the file or name your own programs properly and get the ball rolling.

      >>- Software on store shelves...oh wait, what software on store shelves other then maybe one Linux distribution.

      Software won't be on store shelves until Linux has more than a 5% market share. Vicious circle.

      And even if it gets that far, someone will write a GPL equivalent that is even better (isn't that how Linux got started in the first place?)

      >>- Forget support, doesn't do much good if my mom can't get a phone number for that replacement of her beloved Quicken.

      GNU-Cash, anyone?

      >>- Sure there is games, but call me when Battlefield 1942, High Heat Baseball, etc. are available instead of just FreeCiv. Get games like those and just about every young male in the world will switch.

      Contact the authors of those programs, or dual-boot into both Linux and Windows for the time being.

      >>- Oh yeah, can I mention dependicies?

      As opposed to Windows' DLL-Hell? Same thing, although I still don't understand why programs linked with GLibc 2.2.4 (for example) aren't backwards-comaptible with 2.2.anything-else. 2.0.x or 2.1.x incompatibility I can understand, but there shouldn't be problems between minor versions of a library. I see it all the time (KDE 2 was notorious for this).

      --
      Microsoft's VP of Customer Service is Helen Waite. If you are having problems with their products go to Helen Waite.
    6. Re:What is missing by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      I don't know about your desktop (I seriously suspect that it has a start button), but my KDE menu entry for XMMS says, (well, it's in Thai, but I'll translate) "program for listening to music." Similarly, I've got "web browser" (Mozilla), "FTP program" (gFTP), and "downloader program" (Xdownloader). Seems to be a moot problem for most of us.

    7. Re:What is missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doom3 runs on Linux?

    8. Re:What is missing by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      When it ships, yes.

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    9. Re:What is missing by Mistah+Blue · · Score: 1

      From what I've read on Transgaming's (WineX) web-site, flight sims aren't there yet. They mainly work with FPS games. I think they are working on flight sims (as I've seen some message traffic under Falcon 4.0). I think there are some open source flight sims that work under Linux. I seem to recall seeing them before (you might try Google).

    10. Re:What is missing by tqft · · Score: 1

      I did google and have searched etc, and just done it again - still doesn't look good.

      The problem is European Air War is a good game, with lots of users. If I can get it working I will be looking at my last boot into W98 for a long time.

      --
      The Singularity is closer than you think
      Quant
  74. At work maybe, but not likely at home by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can see Linux gaining desktop share in corporations, but IMHO it will not be a major force in the home market for some time to come. All the current development focus seems to be on server functionality.

    Linux needs better support for hot-plugged devices, a better GUI, easier configuration, a cleaner file system, and better applications.

    By far, the majority of home computer users care about ease of use and simplicity rather than configurablity. They want applications and hardware that are easy to install and use. This is something that GNU/Linux with XFree86 does not have. And, it will have to change before Desktop Linux is common in the home.

    Check my journal for further thoughts on this.

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    1. Re:At work maybe, but not likely at home by DocStoner · · Score: 1

      I can see Windows 3.1 gaining desktop share in corporations, but IMHO it will not be a major force in the home market for some time to come. All the current development focus seems to be on server functionality.

      Windows 3.1 needs better support for hot-plugged devices, a better GUI, easier configuration, a cleaner file system, and better applications.

      By far, the majority of home computer users care about ease of use and simplicity rather than configurablity. They want applications and hardware that are easy to install and use. This is something that Windows 3.1 does not have. And, it will have to change before Desktop Windows is common in the home.


      The above did happen when Win95 was released. Compare 3.1 to 95. There was an incredible amount of change and once it happened... you know the rest.

      This is the intensity of change that will have to happen to Linux for it to become more prominent on the desktop.

  75. Re:PDF? by exhilaration · · Score: 0

    You guys must have missed the sign: DO NOT FEED THE TROLLS.

  76. Bottom line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You NEED WINE and VMWARE to succceed on the desktop in the near future. Even Mono.NET has WINE dependencies for WinForms (unless u choose the GTK 100% incompatible path).

  77. Unbiased reviews by DVega · · Score: 1
    "Where does one find unbiased reviews and benchmarks of OS's ?"

    In the same place where you can find unbiased comparisons of VI vs Emacs, KDE vs GNome, Mac vs PC, etc.

    nowhere

    --
    MOD THE CHILD UP!
  78. Re:PDF? by simp7264 · · Score: 1

    ghostview is for windows as well. I would assume it would display PDF for windows as well as linux. Never actually used it myself, acrobat suits my limited PDF viewing needs.

  79. MOD PARENT UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here here! Mac OS X is the best operating system, period. Apple is a visionary corporation, and choosing Mac OS X really does indicate a more thorough understanding of computers and technology in general. If all you are interested in is tinkering with cheap PC hardware and drawing unprintable pictures with "GIMP", then Linux or Windows is okay, but if you are a serious computer power user who is interested in developing advanced software, movies, image editing, or any of a million other things, then nothing else really compares.

  80. Re:Linux will always have problems on the desktop. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No operating system powers your p0rn viewing better than linux. No operating system powers your actual computer work better than Apple Mac OS X!

  81. A Linux Newbie's Perspective by tabdelgawad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've been using Wintel for over 15 years and have just recently installed Red Hat 9 on an older K6-2 550. Here are a couple of points I think are worth mentioning (ubergeeks can exclude themselves from the classifications below):

    1. Linux is ready for *some* desktops only, namely ones where users won't be constantly tweaking and installing new software and hardware. You want a computer for grandma to browse the web, send email and view a few grandkid photos? Linux is great! You want to roll out corporate desktops where employees don't really need to be able to download and install the latest version of KaZaA? Linux is a godsend (provided the business software you need is supported).

    2. Linux is *not* ready for the average user desktop. The average user wants to do everything grandma wants to do, but they also want to be able to install or upgrade software and hardware *easily*. In addition, they want a fully functional GUI, with no *necessity* of dropping to a CLI for everyday tasks. They want to be able to go to a third party software/driver website, follow the 'click here for Linux version' hyperlink, download the file, then double-click to install it.

    Needless to say, as long as Linux distributions and desktop managers continue to proliferate, the average user's requirements will never be met. I say this as a *fact* not a *prescription*, so spare me the Linux-strength-in-diversity comments. I just think you can't have your cake (freedom/diversity) and eat it too (Linux on average desktop).

    --
    Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
    1. Re:A Linux Newbie's Perspective by Tony · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Needless to say, as long as Linux distributions and desktop managers continue to proliferate, the average user's requirements will never be met. I say this as a *fact* not a *prescription*, so spare me the Linux-strength-in-diversity comments. I just think you can't have your cake (freedom/diversity) and eat it too (Linux on average desktop).

      I've not seen any credible evidence to back this up. I agree with your two numbered points; however, this addendum is from the perspective of a self-admitted 15-year Wintel person. You state it as fact; but, I believe it is simply 15 years of Wintel indoctrination talking.

      If diversity were a bad thing, we'd all be driving the same kind of car, or eating the same food.

      Now, computers in general must get easier to use; but that's the truth for every single computer out there. I mean, right now we judge computers by their varying degrees of suckitude. All computers (and operating systems) suck; just some suck less.

      Also, allow me to wander a bit, and talk for a moment about evolution. One of the primary driving factors of evolution is genetic divergence. During good times, a population's genes will mix up nicely, allowing for a wide distribution of all kinds of genes. Then, during tougher times (when nature is selecting), certain phenotypes provide for better survival traits. It's difficult (or even impossible) to be able to tell which phenotype will provide advantage beforehand.

      Certain populations with small genetic diversity are at risk; if the environment changes even slightly, they may not have the necessary survival traits within the population. (Cheetahs and condors are examples of species with extremely small genetic diversity.)

      What's this have to do with Linux? Should be easy to spot: Linux has very broad genetic diversity. This allows it to survive in many varied environments. And, if the computing environment changes (as it does almost daily), some phenotypes will be more suited to survival than others. Some fall by the wayside; others survive.

      So, I won't spare you the "Linux-strenght-in-diversity" comments. Because it is not only a strength, it is a necessity if we are going to move forward in any meaningful way, instead of the monolithic singularity of commercial operating systems.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    2. Re:A Linux Newbie's Perspective by Xtifr · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I've been using Wintel for over 15 years and have just recently installed Red Hat 9 on an older K6-2 550.

      Keep in mind that you're evaluating a primarily server-oriented distro there. If you want to see how well a linux desktop can work, you really need to check out one of the desktop-oriented distros, like Knoppix, possibly Mandrake, or maybe even Lindows.

      1. Linux is ready for *some* desktops only, namely ones where users won't be constantly tweaking and installing new software and hardware. You want a computer for grandma to browse the web, send email and view a few grandkid photos? Linux is great!

      Even though I don't agree with everything you say, you deserve your insightful mods for this point alone. Linux is, and has been, ready for Gramma for quite some time, and I have the experience to prove it.

      The average user wants to do everything grandma wants to do, but they also want to be able to install or upgrade software and hardware *easily*. In addition, they want a fully functional GUI, with no *necessity* of dropping to a CLI for everyday tasks.

      Here, I think we're seeing your bias from having been exposed to a server-oriented distro. The more desktop-oriented distros have solved both of these problems to a much higher degree than RH has. Or needs to - the servers actually benefit from the CLI, as it makes mass, remote administration much easier in general.

      They want to be able to go to a third party software/driver website, follow the 'click here for Linux version' hyperlink, download the file, then double-click to install it.

      This one is still a valid point. On the other hand, as more corporate desktops and grandmas get Linux installed for them, the more "click here to install the Linux version" links we'll see. This one will be solved before too much longer.

      Needless to say, as long as Linux distributions and desktop managers continue to proliferate, the average user's requirements will never be met. I say this as a *fact* not a *prescription*, so spare me the Linux-strength-in-diversity comments.

      Here I really disagree with you. Spare me the "fact" claim about what is, honestly, just your opinion. The real issue here is not "strength-in-diversity" - that's just a fringe benefit for those of us who aren't average users. The real issue is the openness of things like file formats. When you use MSOFfice, you're dealing with a vendor who wants to shut out the competition (and this is true even with proprietary software vendors who don't have a monopoly). When you're dealing with FLOSS, you're dealing with people who want to maximize interoperability. Thus, Gnome and KDE get closer and closer, day by day, and it becomes less important all the time which (if either) you use.

      Of course, we're not there yet, and time could prove you right, but I seriously tend to doubt that you are. This is a whole new ballgame, played by different rules, and assumptions based on the old rules are quite likely to be wrong.

    3. Re:A Linux Newbie's Perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish that more people would reply to stories and comments like you have here.

      Thank you. :)

    4. Re:A Linux Newbie's Perspective by tabdelgawad · · Score: 1

      First, let me clarify that when I claimed a 'fact', I was just emphasizing that I'm not trying to tell Linux developers what to do, but rather emphasizing what I view to be a genuine dilemma for OSS development. I apologize if I came across as a know-it-all :)

      I'm certainly no expert programmer, but regardless of how many grandmas and businesses run linux, I just don't see how third party software and driver developers can offer distribution-independent binaries unless the distributions themselves converge and standardize. There are always efforts in this direction, like the LSB and even things like Red Hat Bluecurve (even that pissed off many developers!), but there are also trends in the oppostite direction. DistroWatch adds something like 2 new distros every week on average. Even within distributions, different binaries are needed for different versions (see the situation with Mozilla RPMs for RedHat as an example).

      Diversity *is* good. Competition drives innovation and Linux wouldn't be where it is today if developers hadn't forked projects or tried to reinvent a better wheel. But software also benefits from what economists call 'network externalities', where the benefits from using a particular program increase with the number of users. There's an unavoidable tension here between decentralized innovation and convergence (which I think, and you seem to agree, is necessary for desktop success), and I don't really know how it can be resolved.

      --
      Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
    5. Re:A Linux Newbie's Perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think it matters if there are a thousand different Linux distros. If RH and LSB hold 90% of the Linux desktop then it is effectivly converged. The other 10% know enough to deal with any problems that arise or they wouldn't be using a specialized distro. Your point about Mozilla rpms for RH seems reasonable except that you are holding Linux to a much higher standard than Windows. There are many apps that will run on 3.x but not 95, or 95 but not 98, or 9x but not NT, or NT but not 2000, or 2000 but not XP, and every other combination.

      I agree completely with your last paragraph. I like to think (or hope) that Linux is like a fluid which changes to fit its environment and mostly sticks together from surface tension yet always finds the shortest route to the sea.

    6. Re:A Linux Newbie's Perspective by MyRuger · · Score: 1

      This is the point.

      Linux is what you need it to be. Thanks to feedback like you give in the above post, the developers know where they stand. One of the major benefits of the bazaar style development cycle is that user feedback is crutial to continued development.

      In reeding all of these posts you can see that, while "the linux desktop" has some issues which need to be adressed before it becomes the standard, these issues are being adressed.

      Even if you have never written a line or code in your life, you can contribute to the development of linux. As a linux user you will find many opportunities to give feedback to the community. This is the true power of our development style. Please keep the feedback coming so we can make linux better for YOU (and your gradma).

      This is why we love linux. The users are truely involved, and it is OUR OS.

    7. Re:A Linux Newbie's Perspective by mpe · · Score: 1

      There are many apps that will run on 3.x but not 95, or 95 but not 98, or 9x but not NT, or NT but not 2000, or 2000 but not XP, and every other combination.

      Actually it's even more fine grained than that quite a few apps broke between 95 and 95b. Some specify 98SE not 98. As well as it it some cases mattering which order apps are installed on Windows.

    8. Re:A Linux Newbie's Perspective by Jagasian · · Score: 1

      What is so hard about installing applications on Redhat 9? Using Redhat's update tool or apt for rpm (with Synaptic GUI), installing and updating to the latest apps is a breeze. If I want an IRC client, I look under the correct category (apps - internet - irc), then I select the one I like, click a button to tell synaptic to install it. Synaptic then automatically downloads the necessary packages and installs the IRC client.

      BAM! The IRC client is available under the Redhat "start" menu, listed under "Internet"... same place you find the web browser and email client.

      I am not sure how much easier that can get. How do you install an IRC client on Windows? I assume it starts by searching the net for an IRC client, downloading an installer, running the installer, tell the installer where to install, answer a few questions, etc...

      Seems like Windows requires you the extra steps to search for what you want, find a place to download what you want, download it, and install it.

      Windows gets even harder when the software can't be downloaded from the net. Then you have to find a vendor that sells the software you want, drive to the store, buy it, drive home, put in CD, run installer from CD, etc...

  82. actually.... by tuber · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I tend to agree with him. Starting everything with a k or a g is annoying as hell. Everytime I used to boot up the 'konqueror', I started thinking about how much I hate the Mortal 'Kombat' where you use 'Koins' to unlock 'Koffins' in the 'Krypt'. IT'S FUCKING ANNOYING TO HAVE EVERY PROGRAM START WITH THE SAME LETTER. The g's in gnome are still annoying, but as much to me because i dont get reminded of the whole 'kombat' thing. I mean, say what you will about microsoft, at least it isn't Microsoft mOffice that comes with mExcel and mOutlook and mWord. That's why I use enlightenment, no omnipresent prefixes there, no-siree. Now let me go fire up ETerm..... Oh dear god no, what have they done???? And in the new version, E17, they have about ten more built in apps on the way that all begin with E. Jesus christ it felt good to get that rant out though....

    1. Re:actually.... by armyofone · · Score: 1
      I mean, say what you will about microsoft, at least it isn't Microsoft mOffice that comes with mExcel and mOutlook and mWord
      You're right, they don't preface it with a letter. They put the whole damned company name there! Microsoft Office, Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Word, etc... Check the title bar next time you're using an MS product. It's called branding - I suggest you get used to it, (I do agree with you that it's really effing annoying - but that doesn't mean it's gonna go away ;-/)
      --
      "A revolution without dancing is... a revolution not worth having"
    2. Re:actually.... by Tyreth · · Score: 1

      I think the irritation of the 'k' extends more than just a mortal kombat reminder. The 'g' is sometimes pronounced softly, like in gnome. It flows smoothly half the time. Whereas 'k' is always pronounced with a sudden gush of wind from the mouth. I find it very, very irritating - a lack of diversity.

      Not to mention I find 'k's to look worse than 'g's. I also hate the incorrect spelling it encourages when a 'c' is the correct letter.

      Worst of all, for *all* the characters, is alphabetical listing. I despise having 50% of my apps in a list all starting with the same letter.

    3. Re:actually.... by Ragica · · Score: 1
      The KDE Usabilty Team should abandon their mostly unnoticable tweaking of kicker and get on this "k" thing right away.

      Until someone manages to rename all the apps to something sensible, perhaps the following could options could be implented:

      1. Automatic spellcheck on all filenames and menu items... in cases where the difference between a real word spelling and the filename/menu item is only Ks, display the correct spelling.
      2. Same as above, but also check for initial K's that can be stripped to produce a real word...
      3. Rename "KDE" itself to some unpronounceable (or at least awkward to type) symbol to discourage the use in [file]names.

    4. Re:actually.... by babbage · · Score: 1
      Be glad you're not a Mac user. While it is of course fun to use iSync to coordinate with iCal while listening to music in iTunes and editing photos from your last vacation in iPhoto & iMovie so that you can copy them over to your iDisk or use iDVD to make a hard copy ...after a while iYou iHate iThe iFucking iLetter iI.

      iAnd iThe iFucking "iClever" iMis-iCapitalization iThing, iToo.

      iYou iKnow iWhat iI iMean?

    5. Re:actually.... by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      I have some sympathy with what you said...but not much. You and all the people who agreed with you must be mere whippersnappers, considering that this was all done ages before with programs written for first Athena and then Motif. How many programs on your computer beginning with a 'K' or a 'G' do you have? Well, now compare them with the number you have beginning with the letter 'X'. See?

  83. imho functionality goes FAR BEYOND that of Windows by rokzy · · Score: 0

    I have SuSE 8.2 Pro with KDE.

    I run my monitor at 1600x1200 with KDE and it looks beautiful and text is very clear and large. the taskbar is a good size.

    I run Windows ME at the same resolution and it looks crap because Windows doesn't scale anything. the taskbar shrinks to a thin strip, text is just a blocky as at lower resolutions but is also smaller.

    multiple desktops in KDE/Gnome are also fantastic.

    I know XP has taskbar icon grouping, but nothing approching the flexibility of eg. KDE

  84. ... and in Other News from OSCON ... by land · · Score: 2, Interesting

    During his keynote, Mitch Kapor also announced that OSAF supported Senti-Metrics (analyist consultants who help companies communicate with their online constituencies) in the launch of OpenSector.org, a news and discussion site that aims to help public sector types meet open source software developers, projects, advocates and ideas.

    OSAF is also supporting Bart Decrem (author of the Linux Desktop paper), who helps develop the site's content. Like /., the site accepts story submissions from the community, which are reviewed by a team of editors (also from the community: the site asks folks to sign up if they're interested in being considered).

  85. You need to focus on sales by geomon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If any company has even a thought of entering the desktop market, they have to focus on their commitment to sales. Sounds easy, right? But that commitment means showing up for sales meetings and making sure the customer is happy not only with your product, but with your company as well.

    Microsoft didn't get to market dominance by ignoring their customers. The problem they have had in the past has been a pit bull aggression toward their competitors. This often left the customer with half finished products, but their early focus was to move the product closer to what the customer wanted at all times. Their focus has changed now that they dominate the market, but their competitive drive still remains on steroids.

    Compare that to a Linux vendor who was supposed to speak at our company today. They set up two consecutive meetings with our company and a LUG to show how their software would not only provide a good user experience, but would also convince skeptical IT personnel that their product was a ready replacement or alternative to Windows.

    They decided to 'no-show'. And they did it without providing adequate notice. Through their actions, they have told both organizations they scheduled meetings with that the customer is not important.

    I know that things go afoul and that sometimes a scheduled event must be cancelled. But if Microsoft had scheduled the meeting where they thought they could have an opportunity to get to a competitors customer, they would have shipped a sales representative with a 102 degree Fahrenheit fever rather than 'no-show'.

    That is why they dominate the desktop market, and probably will for years to come.

    --
    "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    1. Re:You need to focus on sales by StarTux · · Score: 1

      Yuck, who was the vendor and the LUG?

      Don't compare this to the whole thing though, hopefully some other vendor and maybe LUG will step in instead. LUG's may not be the best for this, especially during normal business hours as they are run by volunteers.

      You're talking corporate desktop here, something Linux should be ready for. Home desktop requires high visibility and marketing on TV and radio.

  86. no, he means this .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (download cygwin then type this ...)

    cd "c:/Program Files/Microsoft Office/Office"
    mv OUTLOOK.EXE banashed.exe

  87. PDF written w/ Word on OSX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PDF written w/ Word on OSX

    If you read the document property, he sure isn't using Linux to write the article.

  88. They're not going for cuteness... by Moskie · · Score: 2, Funny

    ..They're going for Kuteness. Get it right.

    1. Re:They're not going for cuteness... by el-spectre · · Score: 1

      kMy kbad kyou're kright k!

      --
      "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
  89. Chandler details coming out any minute by squashed · · Score: 1
    the following is from Mitch Kapor's blog

    OSAF will out in force be at OSCON, the O'Reilly Open Source Conference, July 7-11. We'll have a session "Chandler: An Open Source Personal Information Manager" with Mitchell Baker, Katie Capps Parlante, Andy Hertzfeld, and Chao Lam on Thursday, July 10 at 2:30 (my keynote is Thursday morning).

    We'll also be having a BOF Thursday evening "Chandler -- An Open Source Personal Information Manager" at 7:00pm. If you're at OSCON, come see us.

  90. Re:What ever happened to the last "Outlook-killer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One, if it really works, and is really Free. My office only uses about 20% of the features of our Exchange server; but we wouldn't be able to live without it. Most of the 'outlook killers' I've read about seem to either not really work 100% (Ximian) with Outlook/Exchange, and/or are not truely Free (Ximian, and whatever-the-hell-one-slashdot-already-posted-abou t-earlier-today).

    If someone made a low-cost or Free PIM that could share info with a server & properly Sync to a Palm & work on multipule platforms then you'd have a real winner on your hand, esp. for small businesses, to whom software licence fees are *not* a drop in the bucket, but who need some kinda address/schedule/groupware thingie. The Isync/ICal/Mail/Address book combo that comes with OS X comes close, but it don't jive with Windows & I don't know how well it jives with non-.Mac servers; Mozilla comes close, but it doesn't jive with Palm; Ximian is close, but it doesn't run on Windows & has issues with Palm support...

  91. Number one priority by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Linux companies really want people to be able to use Linux on the desktop, it has to be made easier to install, maintain, update, etc. software packages. Comparison: On windows, you download an automatic installer that installs all of the files you need or (in my case) you download a .zip file of the program (that contains all of the files you need), unzip to a directory, and run. On Linux, you have to go through dependencies and all that junk. I had to spend 2 hours once installing apt4rpm on my Mandrake machine because I had to find, download and install all the dependencies first.

  92. Linux is not ready for the desktop. by eniu!uine · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why are we using this arbitrary word 'ready' anyway? This clearly depends on who's using it and what they're using it for. People say that their mom can't run it, but forget that their mom can't run Windows either. It's a pointless argument anyway.. people wondering whether or not linux will 'succeed'. This isn't a commercial product, it's a bunch of open source projects. Look at how much developement was done before anyone knew about it or was interested in using it. It can't really fail. The real question is will Linux ever occupy the majority position on desktops the way that Windows does now. I think the answer is obvious. If Microsoft doesn't come up with some serious innovations then EVENTUALLY they will lose the desktop, where eventually could be a matter of a few decades.

  93. Re:Nothing new... But Seriously by Talkischeap · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the hearty laugh, Zone man .

    I also have at least seven different distro's or versions thereof, sitting around here that have never made it on one of my several computers for longer than a month before I finally gave up and wiped it clean, because of hardware/software/driver conflicts/problems/unfuckingbelievable hassles.

    I'm no dummy, but I sure felt like it wasn't worth the effort.

    And please, before you hassle me for that last statement, I've been working with, and building computer systems since 1978, I know what I'm doing.

    And KDE IS butt ugly, especially the K.

    Sure, just what I want to see all the time, a BIG K.

    I really wanted to see what LINUX was all about, but it hasn't been happenin' for me.

    So now it's been a few years, and I want to try again.

    So whats a good distro these days? Anybody?

    --
    If it don't GO... chrome it. ~ Frank Banks
  94. Re:I predict new OS will emerge in next couple yea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ?!?!?!?
    Gee, let's call it BuzzOS 'cause we used all the buzzwords i read in whatever trashy IT rag was on my desk. Get real. Perhaps we may someday again have real innovation in OS research, and then experience another great period like the *good* years of UNIX.

  95. Well, according to slashdot... by siskbc · · Score: 1
    Where does one find unbiased reviews and benchmarks of OS's ?

    www.apple.com, of course! Where else? ;)

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

  96. Everyone talks about the Linux desktop... by sakusha · · Score: 1

    but nobody does anything about it. Press releases about the latest "Chandler" vaporware fell like snow, but it's no closer to the desktop than a scribble on a napkin.

    Meanwhile, I'll keep using my Unix desktop.. MacOS X.

  97. What most people don't get... by RandyF · · Score: 4, Interesting
    is that the switch to Linux is really a war of attrition. I've used it almost exclusively for for over three years now. But then, I'm a geek.

    Every so often, another 10 or 12 M$ users get fed up an try Linux. Two or three stick with it. Every now and again a few hundred people buy a Lindows-based cheap PC from Walmart.com.. Most of those keep using it because it's simple and runs pretty good. Every now and then one of us geeks gets fed up, decides to try Linux, needs the skills for our jos, etc... and we're hooked. The rest is history.

    The whole Open Source community is a different way of thinking. It's a whole new world that takes some getting used to. Once on board, however, a small percentage of the "users" become the "contributors". With more contributors, more problems get fixed, more features get added, more things are moved to the new environment.

    As more people move to the new environment, more commercial vendors of those really cool apps decide it's worth the cost to port their apps. From Games to server-side to productivity, more new commercial apps are deciding to join the fray.

    As this "war of attrition" continues, we slowly reach the point refered to as "critical mass". That is where the percentage of users is high enough, the ease of use is good enough, and the level of "public expertise" is great enough that the Joe Sixpacks out their don't see a difference and start choosing Linux on purpose (or maybe just gets it because it's already loaded on the PC he wants and "oh, this one IS cheaper isn't it...")

    At that point, M$ quickly loses it's $ and becomes the fringe radical OS, much like what happened to OS/2 and nearly happened to Mac/OS.

    Something that is free (as in freedom), almost free (as in I didn't have to pay --much-- for it), and has a huge following that is constantly improving it will continue to increase in market share until it is the dominant player.

    In the long term (that may be a few or many years) the only people not adopting OSS will be the dinosaurs that refuse to change and have a rabid, unexplainable attachment to the M$ OS.

    As far as being a "threat to the software market", markets change over time. If a large group of people are willing to build, for free, the commodity pieces, then there is no market to sustain those software makers.

    In a "for instance": Netscape went out of business (yea, I know, AOL bought them... they still went out of business!!!) because M$ decided to offer their new, buggy browser for free. Now, M$ is going to go out of business because the public has decided to offer their new, not quite as shiney, OS for free.

    In the same vain, Oracle has, arguably, the best RDMS on the market, AND IT RUNS ON LINUX. None of the OSS dbms packages can really compete on their scale... yet. It is realy only a matter of time before the scalability, stability, and breadth of services of one or more of these OSS dbmss catch up or even pass Oracle. It will still take a while after that point for widespread adoption to kick in. I don't see that happening for another 7 to 15 years.

    M$, however, only has about 2 to 4 years left in their profit cycle... and they know it. That's why they are getting soooo nasty. Linux has already passed them up on general stability and scalability. It's really only the flashy stuff that remains to be polished.

    Yea, OSS will take over the market, with only a few niches left for commercial apps. The app vendors that don't port will go quicker because non-ported specialty apps give a valid target for the OSS crowd. (Take not Sdobe, Autodesk, Intuit, Macromedia etc...) A popular movement, like OSS, is like a train: get on board and enjoy the ride or stand in the way and get squished...

    'nuff said...

    --
    --==-- I've found Karma to be a relative thing... Ya know, the kind you invite to Christmas... ;)
    1. Re:What most people don't get... by Mistah+Blue · · Score: 1

      I agree. I constantly evangelize Linux amongst my fellow consultants at a big software company. Some run MacOS on their personal Powerbooks. We are a small bunch (that are not running Windows), but we are usually successful once someone shows interest in switching. We do suffer setbacks (I know of two that have tried the switch but failed for whatever reason, and gone back to Windows).

      I use RH9 on a Dell Latitude C840. I have to use Windows apps for my job. I use Crossover Office for Word/Excel/Powerpoint/Visio. I use VMware for a Siebel application as well as a VPN client for one of my customer's networks. Other than that I use native applications. Oh, I do run some games under WineX.

      I am contemplating making the move on my home PC (probably when I get a new one). Quicken is the stumbling point (and yes I've looked at Gnucash, but I'm not going to use it -- I've been using Quicken since 1989). If Crossover isn't perfect, I'll just use VMware to run it.

      Microsoft is worried and they should be. I personally think they should release an Office for Linux. I'm not a free software only person -- I'll pay for good software. Others have different opinions. I think we can all agree that the lifespan of Windows is nearing it's end (be it 2, 4, or 10 years) because there are good alternatives (Linux and MacOS X are the ones that immediately come to mind -- I don't use the *BSD's so I purposely am not mentioning them).

    2. Re:What most people don't get... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right on! Man. Very insightfull. But I have just one little bone to pick. When you say 'Linux has already passed them up on general stability and scalability'. Linux was way ahead of Windows in stability almost from its infancy. Even the pre-1.0 kernels were way more stable than windows 3.0 and 3.1. In fact I think Microsoft is beginning to catch up a little now, probably because of all the jokes about BSOD and windows crashing.

  98. Re:What ever happened to the last "Outlook-killer" by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1
    The one single Linux app that would kill outhouse would be a proxy or a plugin that would allow other email readers such as mozilla or evolution to access an exchange server running in MAPI only mode.

    How would something like this be an Outlook killer? As long as the Exchange server is required, you're not exactly you're not exactly 'killing' anything.

  99. Check the motives and history. by twitter · · Score: 1
    Do you trust someone who:
    1. Tries to sell you service to something that's completely open and can be reproduced by anyone or
    2. someone who tries to sell you a black box that's constantly changing and requires just as much or more service than 1.

    Finally, you must trust yourself. Free software is easy to try out, though it may require more effort in the short run. If you feel like it's time to "upgrade" your operating system, try dropping a knoppix CD and judge what people are saying for youself.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  100. Re:PDF? by Otterley · · Score: 1

    Compare the quality of the rendered output from xpdf/ggv with that of the real deal (Acrobat) and I think the answer is pretty obvious.

  101. Re:Nothing new... But Seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So whats a good distro these days? Anybody?"

    Why bother? All your going to do is come back to /. Bitching and complaining that linux isn't windows or that in Gnome or KDE too many program start with the same letter.

    Fuck off whiner. If youv'e been building computers since the 70's and still can't figure it out you need to find a new hobby.

  102. Re:Nothing new... But Seriously by laserjet · · Score: 1

    So whats a good distro these days? Anybody?

    Can't you do your own research? I mean, for fuck's sake, is it that hard to find a linux distro to try? Get off your ass and try one. Redhat. Mandrake. Debian. SuSE. Gentoo. Fucking pick one and stop asking stupid questions you already know the answer to.

    --
    Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
  103. Re:What ever happened to the last "Outlook-killer" by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1
    Whatever happened to Ximian, or Evolution, or whatever it was called? I thought *it* was going to be the Outlook killer. How many Limux apps does it take to kill MS Outlook?

    Evolution is practically a clone of the Outlook client. It is not an Outlook killer - it does nothing particulary new or revolutionary.

    On the other hand, Chandler is a total rethink of how we will interact with our email/calendars/contacts.

  104. Re:PDF? by Doobian+Coedifier · · Score: 1

    does acroread count as the real deal??

    I've never noticed any lack of quality with xpdf...

  105. PS. by MROD · · Score: 1

    And by take the computer out of the box I mean a generic, untailored copy of the OS on the hard disk and standard application set (as distributed with the OS). ie. as a manufacturer would supply the unit.

    Any local applications would be held centrally on the server which are accessed via a central network disk. This means that the sysadmins only have to upgrade an application once and all the desktops are automatically updated because they all use the same networked copy.

    This would require that the base OS and the applications are logically separated on the filesystem so that a networked copy could be mounted over the top replacing the ones on the hard disk. (And by applications I also mean the desktop interface!)

    --

    Agrajag: "Oh no, not again!"
  106. Commodification? by eyegone · · Score: 2, Interesting

    4.2.3 The commodification of the operating system

    I'm pretty sure this isn't a word.

    --
    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    1. Re:Commodification? by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 3, Informative

      Dictionary Nazi says,

      http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Diction ary&va=commodification
      One entry found for commodify.

      Main Entry: commodify
      Pronunciation: k&-'mä-d&-"fI
      Function: transitive verb
      Inflected Form(s): -fied; -fying
      Date: 1982
      : to turn (as an intrinsic value or a work of art) into a commodity
      - commodification /-"mä-d&-f&-'kA-sh&n/ noun

    2. Re:Commodification? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm pretty sure this isn't a word

      But it became a perfectly cromulent one, right after he wordifisized it.

    3. Re:Commodification? by RdsArts · · Score: 2, Funny

      Are you kidding? I useify that work all the time.

    4. Re:Commodification? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft already commodified my desktop years ago, based on the root word of commodify which is commode. They must have cause there is crap all over it!

  107. Parent is NOT a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please, moderators -- this could be modded as anything, but not a troll. I just checked and did see an inverted swastika in the middle of the Office logo. That's something.

    Why don't I ever get imbecile moderations like this one when I'm meta-modding?

  108. Impossible... by ZxCv · · Score: 1

    Let's just hope that desktop Linux doesn't suffer the same fate as Betamax in the disastrous Betamax/VHS battle.

    No worries. It'd be impossible for desktop Linux to suffer the same fate, because the real people behind it aren't out for the same things as those that pushed BetaMax. The real guys working on KDE and Gnome and such aren't out to make a buck (although that is a perk for a select few), but are out to make a better product for themselves--and anyone else that wants to use it. Now, I realize that companies after that lucrative buck have jumped in and done a lot of work to improve desktop Linux to where it is today--but so what? When/if those companies cease to exist, their improvements (for the most part) will still be around for the community to use and enjoy.

    --

    Perl - $Just @when->$you ${thought} s/yn/tax/ &couldn\'t %get $worse;
  109. Decrem Admits: "I am Butt-Ugly" by webmaven · · Score: 1

    Decrem later issued a rather funny retraction which can still be found on archive.org. I wish the images that went along with the retraction were archived too, but it's still pretty funny.

    --
    The real Webmaven is user ID 27463. I don't rate an imposter, because my ID is such a lame-ass high number.
  110. Outlook Killer? Is this a good thing? by moosesocks · · Score: 1

    Are you sure that an 'Outlook Killer' would be a GOOD thing? Quite frankly, I find that the monolithic design of outlook makes it overcumbersome, and excessively complicated. However, Outlook does a relatively good job at all of its functions (Email, contacts, calendar, etc)

    The 'Free' clients, however, all try to imitate Outlook by providing all the same functions. Needless to say, they do a lot of things, but they do them poorly. Why can't we have an application with a narrow focus that does its job WELL?

    Look at the apps included with Mac OSX for an example. All the functions of outlook are separated into several standalone applications. Each application (Mail, Address Book, iCal, etc.) excels at its specific function, and tightly intergrates with the others using a simple XML interface.

    Why can't we create a standardized XML interface for PIM applications to talk to each other (and even store their data on a server)? That way we can chose the best combination of apps which suit our specific needs the best. It would also standardize a method for storing this data on a server (the current open server-side mail protocols are designed ONLY for mail, not contacts, calendars, etc. M$ Exchange is the only application which can store all PIM data on a server)

    --
    -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
  111. Re:Nothing new... But Seriously by TheRealJFM · · Score: 1

    hear hear I actually have an unused, legal Windows XP cd. Also if you use Mandrake Linux it has a really nice custom theme, Galaxy, that is far nicer to look at. Also I could easily complain about all the programs called Win something in Windows. Wincustomize, WinZip, WinWord, need i go on?

    --
    Joseph Farthing
    http://josephfarthing.com
  112. Re:PDF? by Xtifr · · Score: 1

    Good plan. Publish the report in a format for which there are precious few good viewers available on Linux.

    Heck, there's even fewer good PDF viewers for Windows! There are plenty enough good PDF viewers for Linux (even including acrobat, which is pretty much the only one available for Win). If this were an MSWord file, you might have had a valid argument, since there's only a couple of viewers for that format in Linux, and none of them are all that great, but PDF is an open, well-supported standard, and it works fine. Everywhere.

    What's wrong with good old HTML?

    Not as well suited for printing. PDF is really just an enhanced form of postscript. And is easier for Windows folks to view than postscript. But from a Linux user's perspective, its almost hard to tell the difference between ps and pdf.

    I realize I'm probably feeding the troll here, but there do seem to be a fair number of people still who don't realize that PDF is as well supported on Linux as it is anywhere, and it's for these people that I post.

  113. Re:What ever happened to the last "Outlook-killer" by smartin · · Score: 2, Informative

    It sure would kill outlook in my life. I have a machine sitting under my desk running w2k that i use for exactly one thing, running outlook. Why? because our company runs their exchange server in monopoly mode. If i could get at my email from my linux box, i'd wipe win2k off that puppy and find something useful for it to do.

    --
    The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
  114. Well by Cyno · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here's how I see it. Linux on the desktop is inevitable. It is an option that businesses can choose to ignore at their own cost.

    Now if their competition somehow cuts costs using Linux and outmaneuvers them they will be answer to their share holders. But if they can somehow leverage proprietary software to make their business work more efficiently then it is still possible Linux might not become the dominant OS.

    Speaking from experience I serious doubt proprietary software can be as dynamic and efficient as OSS. But I will give them the benefit of the doubt.

    Listen up folks. Proprietary software NEEDS all the help it can get. Because we all know software doesn't build itself. ;)

  115. Games by TWX · · Score: 1

    So, would Total Annhilation, Warcraft II, Grand Theft Auto, Duke Nukem' 3d, Quake, or any other host of games impress you?

    I don't play games because they're new. I play them because I like playing them. I've played Battlefield 1942 a few times. It's okay. Some interesting concepts for vehicles and team play, but nothing that I particularly require. Why should I chase something because it's the latest and greatest?

    Folks, play what you enjoy playing. If you want to play the newest "If it moves, shoot it, if not, shoot it and see if it moves" first person shooter, go ahead. It's cool. If not, so what?

    I even still occasionally load up DOOM on a computer with an FM Synth MIDI sound card, so I can run through the levels with my adrenaline pumping to that Overdriven Guitar synth, shooting at loud monsters.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:Games by Metaldsa · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying its impossible to get enjoyment out of an old game but it sure can be tough when the game is based partyl on graphics. Carmegeddon now looks like a game full of poster board cut out people with red MS paint being splattered everywhere.

      I still like warcraft but only when I am forced to be at a P1 computer. I prefer the updated Warcraft 3 because graphics, AI, level size, content, and complexity is all added.

      Doom, Duke Nukem, and War2 were all impressive for ther time. But loading up Duke Nukem today is a little less because every FPS game can do 100 more things than Duke Nukem did (except supply attitude).

  116. The report was not written in Linux. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Checking 'Document properties' of the pdf file I noticed that the report was written in Mac OSX 10.2.6. Bad publicity for Desktop Linux!

  117. Linux perhaps sometime, but not gnome. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try this for fustration/a good laugh/being witness to retardation; using gnome's file manager, try copying the rh9 install cd's to a directory. mount cd, select all, drag or pulldown menu/copy paste to a dir on hd, repeat for all three cds. Note, the way it behaves, they did it by design. For sane/nonretarded comparision; try doing the same process in kde, any windows os, unix command line.
    With coders like that, who needs enemies/microsoft?

  118. Re:PDF? by Xabraxas · · Score: 1

    You're right. The answer is obvious. xpdf is perfectly capable of replacing acrobat reader.

    --
    Time makes more converts than reason
  119. Linux is ready for desktop and we are the proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have been using linux as desktop at home and work since redhat 7.3 almost a year or so. My home network is running redhat 9 and I have all devices like scanner, printer servere and smart card reader running. I can rvpn to work from linux to catch up on emails and daily code fixes. AT work my desktotp and server and laptop is running redhat 9.

    My wife uses her linux desktop for scanning editing pictures in gimp and building websites using php. We also use open office as our standard from word and excel docs. Life at work and homee is just a bliss. II think linux in desktop has surpassed windows . It is time to ask does windows do what linux can as desk op.

  120. I use Linux Desktop all the time by Nicholas_D · · Score: 2

    Been using linux as an absolute desktop OS for 4 years now.. never had a problem... people see me using it and are impressed and they see how easy it is! Nick

    --
    Home Sweet Home Linux
  121. you krazy klod! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    kut the krap, kool guy.. the "K" is klassy, OK? plus it makes naming apps easier. just take a random word, add "K" to the front, you're done.
    Korganizer, Kate, Kedit, KornerKutter (yes, I made that one up - sharp bunch, you guys!) and the list goes on... well, it's so much fun that I'll repeat a little bit here!

    kmodbox! kmousetool! Kmud, Kmuddy!! Kmuser, kmusicchoice, Knapster, KmyMoney2, KnewsPost, Knights (actually appropriately named, too!!!), Knob (see, i told ya it's cool!) knoda, knode, knokiisync, KnowIt, Koctave (sounds suspiciously like COCK-tave, don't it!), kodicefiscale (tricky...) Koffice (COUGH-iss! say it twice!) Koffle, Kolorizer, Komba, Konstellation (ouch that's beginning to hurt) Konstruct, Kontour, Kontrol-Alt-Delete, Konverse, Kooka, Kopete, Koutline, kover, kpasman, kpictorial, Kpilot, Kpinger..... etc etc. ad nauseum, ad infinitem!
    OK, I humbly admit, you were right. This is sick. We need help.

    1. Re:you krazy klod! by el-spectre · · Score: 1

      korrect, heh....

      --
      "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
  122. Feet by Latent+Heat · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    The stylized "G" of the Gnome emblem is viewing the bottom of someone's foot -- the supposed Gnome Creature.

    I believe that Middle Eastern culture takes offense at seeing the bottoms of feet -- it is like showing someone your bare ass.

    What is so offensive about feet? I think these things are cultural or perhaps species-specific. Why is smiling considered "nice"? That gesture among most primate species is considered a threat (especially a smile that shows teeth).

    So what about feet? I think that showing your feet implies a certain degree of undress (you are barefoot in the shower, in the bedroom, in the privacy of your own house, on the beach where you are wearing minimal clothes), even in the let-it-hang-out Western culture. Hippie culture made a big deal about bare feet as a means of iconoclasm, and there is this vogue to show pictures of models and celebs in glossy magazines showing their feet (remember that cover of Time with a barefoot Andreeson and all the letter writers to Time saying he needs to trim is toe nails?).

    There is a certain kind of hippie-counter culture aspect to using a G as a stylized foot sole as the Gnome symbol. I am personally a little hung up about feet, and I am bothered by it, but in a way, even if I didn't have a thing about seeing people's feet, it is kind of cutely unprofessional -- I and most other people (except for Middle Easterners who dress their women in tents) don't have anything about faces, but if the Gnome emblem was a Smiley or a scowling or wizened Gnome, we would get tired of that pretty quickly as well.

    So why make a big deal about a little icon? I think it speaks to the difference between polished graphics that have appeal to broad segments of the population and ideosynchratic graphics that appeal to some software dude's personal desires, and it speaks to market share. If the Gnome people were serious about gaining more mindshare for Linux on the desktop, they would ditch that foot, and if they are wedded to that foot, they are probably committed to a bunch of other things on principle and will forever stay a tiny slice of the market.

  123. Wrong question by panda · · Score: 1

    The real question is:

    "Is the desktop ready for Linux?"

    --
    Just be sure to wear the gold uniform when you beam down -- you know what happens when you wear the red one.
    1. Re:Wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you answered your own question. If desktops (and I am assuming you mean average pc users by desktop) were ready they would be using it. Looks like the desktop is still pointing and clicking its way around the net on Window$ to me.

  124. A beard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I'm an occational drinker, the kind of guy who goes out for a beer and wakes up in Singapore with a full beard."

    I though beards were outlawed in Singapore and you had to shave to get through immigration and customs. Surely if you grew a beard while over there, you'd get a fine and your photo in the morning paper. :-)

  125. Redhat does not represent all GNU/Linux's by grolschie · · Score: 1

    "2. Linux is *not* ready for the average user desktop. The average user wants to do everything grandma wants to do, but they also want to be able to install or upgrade software and hardware *easily*. "

    Ever heard of Debian and it's "apt"?

    Ever heard of SuSE and it's hardware detection with every boot?

    Surely Redhat 9 does not represent all GNU/Linux distributions.

    1. Re:Redhat does not represent all GNU/Linux's by tabdelgawad · · Score: 1

      Surely Redhat 9 does not represent all GNU/Linux distributions Of course. And neither do Debian and SuSE. And this is exactly the point I'm trying to make!

      --
      Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
    2. Re:Redhat does not represent all GNU/Linux's by grolschie · · Score: 1

      And neither do Debian and SuSE.

      Who said they did? These were only examples.

    3. Re:Redhat does not represent all GNU/Linux's by Lord+Kholdan · · Score: 1

      Problem with apt is that most software (or at least the latest versions) are mostly available as source. Why isn't there a double-click/drag'n'drop compile?

  126. It's not ready yet. by io333 · · Score: 1

    I've run linux for years, and unix before there was linux. It's fine for what it is. Here is an example of why it isn't ready for prime time, and maybe never will be:

    I was visiting an old friend last month, but could only stay another three hours before running off to catch a plane.

    She asked if there were any way I could install a scanner, and a new printer(old one was broken) before I had to leave.

    She was running Windows 98.

    No problem. We went down to Staples, bought the cheapest scanner and the cheapest printer. I don't even remember the brand names, although I think the printer was a bottom of the line HP inkjet.

    I slapped it together. Or tried too anyway. Sh*t. I needed another USB port. Back to Staples. Bought cheapest USB2.0 card. *Finally* slapped it together. Everything worked, stable. Ran off to catch my plane.

    Now let's say it was running any modern distro. Could I make it work? Sure. Would I have caught my plane?

    That's why it's not ready.

    1. Re:It's not ready yet. by ctid · · Score: 1

      I've been trying to find a logical and well-reasoned response to your post. I'm afraid the best I could come up with is, nobody cares about you and your fucking plane!

      Seriously, what you describe seems to me to be a bit of a contrived situation. If most tech support was conducted under that sort of time pressure, I'd agree with you. Or even, if most tech support involved installing scanner, that might also be true. But the situation you describe is not the norm. So it doesn't matter how long it would have taken for you to help your friend out with this particular problem.

      I could easily contrive a situation where you went round just before your flight and she said, "my PC is infested with viruses and spyware, and I think something is deleting files from my hard-drive". You might very well miss your flight trying to sort the mess out. By your definition, that makes Windows unsuitable for the masses. And of course virus problems are more common that installing scanners, I guess. But then again, by your argument, Windows would be suitable for the desktop if you had turned up an hour earlier, because then you'd have had time to go to the store and buy Norton anti-virus etc and install it and run it. But then again, Windows would have been unsuitable for the desktop if your friend lived too far from the nearest Staples. Et cetera.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    2. Re:It's not ready yet. by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      Now let's say it was running any modern distro. Could I make it work? Sure. Would I have caught my plane?

      Assuming you had the synapses to grab ssh access before you left, a plane wouldn't be much of an issue.

      (take a flight, go home, take a wired laptap to the shitter with you and bang away until you hear your lungs hitting water)

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
  127. Know why Linux will succeed on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    - OpenOffice.org
    - The GIMP

    1. Re:Know why Linux will succeed on the desktop? by tzanger · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and both run totally different widget sets. No thanks. That's why I've banished GTK+ from my system; I don't want KDE, GTK+, AWT (Java), TCL, WxWindows, etc. methods of working, I want one. I chose KDE. Others will choose Gnome. And yet others will claim that it's best to have it all different.

  128. Re:Nothing new... But Seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't get a girlfriend, huh? Talk about losers...

  129. You forgot something important... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So, here is my prediction:
    Gartner is worthless and will be losing a lot of money in the course of the next 2 years.

    You should give a probability rating for the statement like Gartner (and the weatherman) does like this:

    So, here is my prediction:
    Gartner is worthless and will be losing a lot of money in the course of the next 2 years. (0.8)

  130. Re:Nothing new... But Seriously by Talkischeap · · Score: 1

    My, aren't you a nice fellow, and good day to you too.

    I have researched, but I wanted some of the insights of /. readers on distros they've tried, why is that such a problem for you?

    Thanks for nothing.

    --
    If it don't GO... chrome it. ~ Frank Banks
  131. Re:PDF? by tordia · · Score: 1

    Don't forget ghostscript and ghostview or GSview, which are available to both windows and Linux users.

    --

    Frogs are primitive animals - so the occasional extra toe is not that unusual. But this is very unusual.

  132. OH please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    As another poster points out, OpenOffice and GIMP.
    Unless you're a professional artist, face it, you don't need photoshop.
    But, OK, let's say that you absolutely HAVE to have those two apps (and I'm sure you're oh-so-willing to pay retail price for those apps, no?).
    Get Crossover Office and run both those apps through that. They both run quite well under Crossover Office.

  133. Leverage Point #1 should be... by Luveno · · Score: 1

    Quit giving apps stupid names like Chandler. What the hell does this thing do, automatically record Friends or something?

  134. chandler... killer app? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    First of all, Chandler is a dog. Its slow as shit. If you have a Gig of RAM and a 3.0Ghz CPU, execute Chandler and then go off and start to brew your morning coffee, come back and the main window might be visible, but the other widgets probably have not loaded into memory yet... Chandler: Good idea. Bad implementation.

  135. Can't be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was thinking simoniker meant I'M ON KISER who must be his boyfriend.

    He wouldn't be ON Kiser. He's a bottom.

  136. Or... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (and this actually happened to me when I accompanied an alcoholic friend to a meeting)

    Everyone: And who's your friend?
    Me: Hello. My name is Jim.
    {dead silence}
    Someone from the everyone crowd whipsering to me: It's OK. It takes time.

  137. Actually, you brought up another good point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If all you do is surf, listen to music, email, and watch movies then of course you could use any system. Windows, mac, and linux all can play mp3s just fine.

    Depending on which distribution you use, you mayu not be able to:
    1) play mp3s. Redhat, since at least RH8, does NOT do mp3s. You need to go out and find a plugin for XMMS. (I like RedHat, but this truly pisses me off. There's NO reason they shouldn't be able to handle mp3s. They cite legal issues, but every other distribution I know of ships XMMS with the plugin)
    2) I don't know of a SINGLE Linux distribution that will play DVDs straight off. And it ain't as simple as going and getting Mplayer either. You still need to go and find extra libraries elsewhere.

    So, no, Linux doesn't do multimedia like Windows or OSX.
  138. Apples Job by mholt108 · · Score: 1

    You are right, but really, this is the job for Apple to have tackled. That is why the zealots pay them - it gives them the freedom to inovate. When the beautiful Aqua interface was introduced it was noted by various HI people that it was not revolutionary at all - examples of Palm OS were given as a revolutionary step up in HI - but Aqua was accused, rightly, of being no more user friendly than Win95. I think if Apple would really take a chance on something new that innovation would make its way down to GNOME.

  139. Linux on the desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1st my experience.. I installed Redhat 7.1? as a dual-boot install with 98SE (I was a died in the wool $erf then) as a cheap way to learn Unix (yea, yea KNOW I know about *BSD), and the funniest thing happened. WinDoze got used less and dramitically less. While a lot of things lacked a lot of polish it worked, had cool "geek" features not in windows, and allowed (ok forced) me to learn what actually is happening behind all of those wizards and dialog boxes.
    2nd. I really don't think Linux will take over the desktop or that it should. The only thing I want it to do is to break the monopoly and allow other OSes into the market. I think that a diverisity of OSes will encourage/force open standards so that it doesn't matter if you wrote the document using etcha-scetch writer on coleco OS (PHB Edition), I can read it using MY EDITOR OF CHOICE on my l33t hax0r box. I'm really hoping thatr Palm will put BeOS back on the market when it has a chance of success!

  140. Gentoo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, did someone say Gentoo?

    Wha... no?

    Gentoo is clearly superior to Debian because Debian is old and unstable!

    Slackware is lamOrz!

    Gentoo!

    Gentoo!

    Gentoo!

    GenTooL

  141. KDE says so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The contextual info in KDE 3.1 says:

    Type: PDF Document
    Size: 298.9 KB
    Modified: 2003-07-10 17:01
    Owner: andy-users
    Permissions: -rw-r--r--
    Creator: Word
    Producer: Mac OSX 10.2.6 Quartz PDF Context
    Created: 2003-07-09 02:38:21
    Modified: 2003-07-09 02:38:21
    Encripted: No
    File Size: 305976 Bytes

    Isn't KDE great! Linux IS READY for the desktop!

  142. irony by pyrrho · · Score: 1

    nice twist

    --

    -pyrrho

  143. Not so sure by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    You point to a very real problem but I don't think it is as clean cut as that....

    The problem is that for corporations, the training costs of teaching employees to use a new computer system is very real and so they want to use what the workers use at home (Windows). for home users, OTOH, the time cost of learning a new system is very real and so they usually opt to use what they are familiar with from work (Windows).

    Add to this the following problems: Large mindshare/lockin of VB programmers who maintain in-house applications, lack of extremely easy end-user installable Linux applications (without needing to read directions). Soon you have a situation where there is quite a lot at stake and software licenses are not so scary anymore.

    All that being said, is Linux ready for the desktop? Yes. My parents use it. of course they are not trying to download the newest freeware/scumware on the net so it works fine for them. And they are not afraid to read directions, even though they know very little about computers. Their learning has been gradual and focused (like for all of us) around a need-to-know model (when I need to know it, I will learn it).

    In a corporate environment, there is very little that Linux lacks, although many of the best network management tools are still under development. The only real thing it lacks is a good way to run VB inhouse apps (WINE may not cut it, and GNOME-BASIC seems to still be very immature). Fortunately, Microsoft came along with .Net and now all we need is Portable.Net or Mono and we will be in business.

    The thing is that the corporate market is the cornerstone of anyone's desktop market. Microsoft saw this, and Apple missed out, IMO. If people learn the basics of Linux at work, if a computer manufacturer offers them $400 (or more as market saturation forces prices up) off the price of their new computer to run Linux, do you think that they will? Of course they will.

    So it cuts both ways. And it may eventually be to our advantage.

    It is the business customers who we need to target and the home user will follow.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Not so sure by mpe · · Score: 1

      The problem is that for corporations, the training costs of teaching employees to use a new computer system is very real and so they want to use what the workers use at home (Windows).

      Which version of Windows might that be? Considering that Windows keeps changing it's user interface... Also how many people have Windows machines hooked up to client-server networks at home?

    2. Re:Not so sure by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Various versions of Windows have more in common than Windows does with GNOME or KDE. But I think that we will see Linux take the desktop (starting the corporate market).

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  144. linux on the desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did the use linux to write that report?

  145. Re:PDF? by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

    Their names.

    XPDF and GGV. It's sad that it's not geeky to me, and I understand what they are.

    Seriously, though, I wish people would actually come up with names for their programs instead of slapping on a prefix of x, K, G, or using an acronym.

    --
    "Sufferin' succotash."
  146. Re:PDF? by chthonicdaemon · · Score: 1

    gv? xpdf? maybe even the Adobe Acrobat Reader for Linux?

    Strange, but my Linux distro (Mandrake) came with PDF readers, I had to download and install Acrobat Reader for Windows....

    --
    Languages aren't inherently fast -- implementations are efficient
  147. Re:Hey, it's Phriday Phunnies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to the date on your post it's Thursday genius.

  148. Re:PDF? by Ashtead · · Score: 1
    I'd say XPDF is at least close to a reasonable name. Considering that the reference application is called Acrobat ... what kind of circus act are we getting ourselves into here if we didn't know better?

    It's just because of marketing exposure and brand name recognition that we do know better.

    --
    SIGBUS @ NO-07.308
  149. Found One kinda Unbiased review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Australia Personal Comput mag(APC) only covering desktop and devel stuff not really into the server. They made it as unbiased as able 1 ms guy 1 linux guy Then face off time and work out the result.

    It came that linux rules the Web and most of the development side Microsoft rules the drivers and most of the Office side. But this is like a yearly thing see what OS is doing better 12 months ago linux did not do as well basicly it is getting better.

  150. Re:CONSPIRACY UPDATE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Presumbaly you are a windows user...
    What do you make of Bill's LongHorn??
    I know where I wont be sticking LongHorn
    XP not too bad - kind of got windows 95 right at last
    LongHorn - not on my hardware thanks

  151. Multimedia Support: lacking? by stock · · Score: 1
    Multimedia support is lacking says the pdf report on page 16. Well i guess the author's forgot to do some essential home work. If i want to play Windows Media Player stuff i use MPlayer. And that works superbly :

    http://www.mplayerhq.hu/

    I wonder if the authors also forgot to do their homework on other parts of use of Linux on the Desktop.

    Robert

  152. Linux on desktop : a marketing issue by stock · · Score: 1
    The bottom line is that for Linux on the Desktop to succeed they need Marketing. Thats a valid point.

    What also is needed is close integration with the major PC vendors. One could think of Integration depertments at the major PC vendors, where Linux distro vendor staff design/implement/testdrive Linux preload's on PC's and Laptop's and also testdrive extra needed Linux drivers to get all the hardware of new to be released PC's/laptop's going.

    Further i think the report is rather RedHat Linux oriented and they better rename it from desktop-linux-overview.pdf into desktop-redhat-overview.pdf. Lots of sections are too negative because they are describing RedHat's point of view?

    For instance this section on page 19: OpenSource application developers : quantity : good quality : lacking. I guess Micheal Tiemann lately doesn't get so much bugfix reports at Bugzilla anymore. Maybe their techie beta-drive audience has left?

    Robert

  153. macromedia mx by jonnyfivealive · · Score: 1

    i havent found a good web editor for linux that has all the built-in ftp and the bells and whistles that dreamweaver has. i do flash at work too, so...

    now, there are two results that could come from this post.

    1. you could say, "hey, hadnt thought of that, youre right."

    or...

    2. you could say, "hey moron, havent you ever heard of $perfect_MX_replacement?"

    so im thinking to myself i win either way, id love to switch back to debian at work, but win2k has the macromedia stuff. and dont start talking about Wine, okay? ive spent several hours trying to get that to just run the installer for MX with creeping success. maybe im a moron, i dunno.

  154. Binary formats by KermitJunior · · Score: 1

    'One concern is the ability in future years to access documents in by then obsoleted file formats. Office 20002 no longer natively supports the ability to read ten year old Office 4.0 documents."

    18000 years and we can't read those files? That's not just Microsoft's fault, is it?

    --
    There is a Universal Life Value Check it
  155. Sure it is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now let's say it was running any modern distro. Could I make it work? Sure. Would I have caught my plane?

    Yes you could. Have you actually used a recent Linux distribution? I can't speak for many distributions, but I know for a FACT that Red Hat 9 can do this with kudzu (Red Hat 8 could as well, to a lesser extent). I particularly liked when I slapped a WiFi PC card into my laptop that it was JUST THERE, module loaded and waiting to be used.
  156. Re:Nothing new... But Seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry dude, but I agree with laserjet. You're just lazy and ignorant. But maybe if you whine long enough and loud enough, the Linux fairy will come visit you and install the system for you and hold your hand while you learn the differences. When I first started with Linux, it was hard to install and I kept running back to mindless windows. But that was seven years ago, when it actually was hard to install and use. If you've been building and working with computers since 1978, I don't understand why you'd be scared to install Linux. Maybe you just don't enjoy a good challenge? I looked at it like, well theres millions of people that have installed and are happily using this software--whats wrong with me. So I stuck with it, and guess what? It wasn't that difficult. So buck up and get with it, and to answer your question, Mandrake 9.1.

  157. Re:Decrem Admits: "I am Butt-Ugly" by bartdecrem · · Score: 1

    Thanks for pointing that out. My confession is archived here.

  158. This is REALLY getting old by ipour · · Score: 1

    File this in the "flogged dead horse" department.

    With all the back and forth about Linux on the desktop being either dead, alive, moribund, or as this study says, "much work remains to be done," folks are forgetting that once past the reliability issue, (which Linux has convincingly established) usability with existing data and the ability to interface with other users will drive users to one OS or another.

    If the Linux desktop had these characteristics, every tiny nonprofit in the U.S. would be using this system - it is far less expensive and much more reliable. Yet I don't see hoards going to Wal-Mart and picking up the CPU Builder's model for $350. The reason (aside from the fear-of-a new-OS factor) users do not have the ability to share core word processing and speadsheet files back and forth as easily as they do with established (read Windows) software. If all your friends are on AOL, use Word, Excel or Works because it came bundled on their system, it's going to be extremely difficult to get them to be venturesome and try something else.

    Smaller government agencies, non-profits and caritiable groups would seem like the best market for Linux to move into. But a charitable or non-profit business with very few IT dollars to spend, with overworked (and likely non-technical) volunteers or staffers, will have very few "technology pioneers" willing to take the risk of a Linux desktop. All their colleagues have Word files. Although Adobe is making great strides in making the PDF a more universal document, they do not support Linux, and I have not seen third party application that creates PDFs on Linux. If your file does not EXACTLY translate to Word, or your speadsheet has complicated links that won't transfer to Excel, you won't like the application.

    What is needed is a different approach to the issue. Linux has to offer features and applications on the desktop that the other systems don't, AND be fully compatible with existing software.

    Figure that one out, and maybe we can bury this one for good!!

  159. Really? My experience was a lot different by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    I currently use Mandrake Linux. I recently added a SCSI card and disk to my system running an IDE drive. Here is what I did:

    1. Go to Fry's and buy el-cheapo SCSI card. The only one they had under $30.00 indicated Linux support on the box. All other operating systems required drivers found on the CD inside. Hmmm....

    2. Install Card. This was basically pick a slot and insert card correctly.

    3. Boot machine.

    4. Make a couple of new directories using the file manager.

    4. Run DiskDrake.

    5. Choose new drive with the nice little drive tab. Create new partition or partitions with a couple of clicks. and tell the system where to put them in the filesystem.

    This dialog is nice, it shows what parts of your disks are in use, or not. Finding your new disk and defining how you want to use it is pretty easy.

    Getting to this point required that I type nothing. Also at this point, I have a lot of interesting choices that used to be harder a couple years ago, but now are just as easy as anything else. (Journaled filesystems, win32 compatable filesystems, and the usual Linux filesystems. --All of these are point and drool.

    The defaults are sane as well. If I just want to use the disk, I can just go with the defaults and choose a target directory and be done.

    6. Since I know what I am doing, mount -a. If I were a newbie, I could always just reboot as well.

    Done.

    It is clearly possible today to run Linux with very little effort. I could have done all the steps above manually, but I did not have to.

    I also would have likely made some goofy mistake with a comma or something just like you did.

    For someone getting started, Mandrake has done a good job of putting those options they need most where they will stumble into them. --Just like microsoft does.

    The good part is all the power still exists under the hood when the time comes...

  160. Re:Decrem Admits: "I am Butt-Ugly" by webmaven · · Score: 1

    You're welcome. But could you put the desktop screen shot there too?

    --
    The real Webmaven is user ID 27463. I don't rate an imposter, because my ID is such a lame-ass high number.
  161. Re:Nothing new... But Seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use FreeBSD 5.1 now (going to configure GDM and CUPS this weekend) but I've been very pleased with Libranet. Libranet's a Debian derivative made for desktop use, and its support has been rock-solid. v2.8's out, and IIRC you can download the 2.7 CD1 ISO

  162. Poor Kapor by ubikkibu · · Score: 1

    "Outlook-killer" seems like a self-defeating product category. Not to mention that his super-smart team like to write specs, not code. We'll all be way tired of hearing about how great this is going to be well before we can actually download it--if that ever happens.

    (An aside: In his OSCON keynote, Mitch Kapor claimed to be innocently on the sidelines during the whole Lotus "look-and-feel" lawsuit days, while the rabid lawyers ran amok. That's not how I remember it...)

  163. This was damn funny ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    --Coder