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."
Forget "Outlook Killer". Just get rid of the damn clippy guy!
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.
Of course this just bounces to a non-existent Yahoo group, so...
Are you sure you didn't find the spell check helpful?
Forget the whales - save the babies.
I find the image of feet and the letter "G" offensive, that's why I use KDE.
In Soviet America the banks rob you!
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.
Nothing new. I've had Linux on my desktop for years.
One of these days maybe I'll open the box and install it.
"no, no matter what anyone says Mozilla doesn't perform anything close to how IE does..."
And that's a bad thing?
Gartner claims: .net would dominate the net by 2003
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
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.