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New Numbers on Linux Market Share Soon

prostoalex writes "New numbers on Linux market share are due this week. As far as global PC market is concerned, Gartner claims 5% of all PCs shipped this year ran Linux OS, although by the time the PCs were actually on the user's desk, only 2% of them run Linux. In the server world IDC estimates that Linux-powered servers comprise 28.3% of all server sales in 2004."

470 of 611 comments (clear)

  1. hello by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Linux market share? thank god they didn't say BSD.

    1. Re:hello by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      Isn't Mac OS X now on a BSD core?

      [cue Mac/BSD/Linux/Elvis is dead/dying/on life support/in a 7-eleven in Texas]

    2. Re:hello by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

      The kernel is called XNU and is based on BSD and Mach (yes it is a microkernel); most of the subsystems are based on BSD (primarily FreeBSD).

      --
      English is easier said than done.
  2. Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate... by Entropius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd think that the percentage of computers that actually run Linux would be higher, not lower, than the % that ship with it... my family has three, one (soon to be two) exclusively Linux.

  3. The other way around? by BladeMelbourne · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Gartner claims 5% of all PCs shipped this year ran Linux OS, although by the time the PCs were actually on the user's desk, only 2% of them run Linux.

    And how many people buy PCs with Windows on them, and immediately format the disk(s) and install Linux?

    1. Re:The other way around? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Exactly, that seems absurd. Who buys a Linux installed machine and then formats and installs Windows?

      And what about the huge quantities barebones systems VIA EPIA and motherboards?
      What are people putting on those besides OpenBSD ?

      And what about all the old PCs that used to have Windows and have been converted to something else?

    2. Re:The other way around? by nmoog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I dont know about that. My computer was assembled by me and contained no OS when I bought it. Probably a good chunk of linux users are in the same boat.

      And if you consider the stats from Google's zietgeist, it really can't be too many.

    3. Re:The other way around? by McAddress · · Score: 1
      And how many people buy PCs with Windows on them, and immediately format the disk(s) and install Linux?

      probably very few. from my experience, people who choose to install linux (as hobbyists) tend to also build their own machines, because they choose not to pay the premium that goes along with buying a computer from any major brand. (the exception to this is laptops)

    4. Re:The other way around? by afidel · · Score: 1

      That's truely scarry, 20% of net connected computers are running a Win9x varient. No wonder spam is such a problem, people won't even get off of an old vastly inferior OS, why would they bother to run patches?

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    5. Re:The other way around? by JanneM · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is not true for laptops, however, and that segment is growing very quickly and is almost as large as the desktop market today. It is very difficult (though not impossible) to find a laptop Windows; any Linux user having a name-brand laptop has paid for a copy of Windows as well.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    6. Re:The other way around? by Zebbers · · Score: 1

      no one? the types that load linux custom build.

    7. Re:The other way around? by Magila · · Score: 2, Informative

      Of course, home builts arn't counted in these numbers either so you've still got new systems running linux that weren't accounted for.

    8. Re:The other way around? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      no one? the types that load linux custom build.

      Not ones who want a manufacturer's warranty on the system.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    9. Re:The other way around? by name773 · · Score: 1

      i'm that way now... but i started with an emachines 667ir (windows me preloaded)... then i learned a bit about computers and went to linux

      i just built a computer based of the athlon 64 :)

    10. Re:The other way around? by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      That's truely scarry, 20% of net connected computers are running a Win9x varient. No wonder spam is such a problem, people won't even get off of an old vastly inferior OS, why would they bother to run patches?

      Actually most of the recent worms that have been used to mass mail have been NT/XP only.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    11. Re:The other way around? by NanoGator · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "And how many people buy PCs with Windows on them, and immediately format the disk(s) and install Linux?"

      How many people that buy PC's even know that Linux is something that could replace Windows? Don't dismiss the number of Linux users out there that buy components instead of assembled PCs.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    12. Re:The other way around? by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Informative

      People who buy from Dell and don't want to pay for Windows. You can't buy the machine with no OS, so you choose Linux (which is cheaper than Windows) and then just install your warezed copy of XP over the top.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    13. Re:The other way around? by jmv · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's especially true for laptops -- try to find a laptop that ships with Linux. There are some, but there are so few they're not likely to have the config you want.

    14. Re:The other way around? by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

      i wanted to run openbsd on mine - even bought a boxed set (which shipped late and also had a broken jewel case) - but the via network driver in the 3.5 branch is screwed. you can't use both ethernet ports on those boards. my firewall is now running smoothwall .

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    15. Re:The other way around? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Exactly, that seems absurd. Who buys a Linux installed machine and then formats and installs Windows?

      In Thailand the government is promoting a low-cost PC program, the cheapest version has Linux (MS recently introduced a cheap version of XP to compete). It's common practice to take the Linux machine home and just install a pirated XP over the Linux install. Some stick to Linux though.

    16. Re:The other way around? by killjoe · · Score: 1

      I am a little leary of the google numbers.

      first of all you have to figure that people browse on the web mostly during work hours. I for example am on the net pretty much full time for 8 hours at work while I only spend a couple of hours of my off time browsing or googling.

      Secondly I am very curious about the 5% other figure. Since google breaks linux down to 1% they seem to be saying there are a whole shitload of "other" operating systems each with less then 1% of the hits and yet they all add up to 5%. Just doesn't make sense to me.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    17. Re:The other way around? by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      You can't buy the machine with no OS, so you choose Linux (which is cheaper than Windows) and then just install your warezed copy of XP over the top.

      I would have, but I couldn't. I just bought an Inspiron 600m. My choices were: XP Home, XP Professional, and no laptop.

      So, I set it up with Fedora Core 1 as a dual-boot. It spends probably 98% of its life running Linux, KDE in dual-head mode. (Nice. Very, very nice!)

      If I could have purchased the system w/o Windows to save a few bux, I would have - in a heartbeat - but that option just wasn't available to me.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    18. Re:The other way around? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "And what about the huge quantities barebones systems...?"

      You really don't understand the PC market, do you? Barebones account for a fraction of a percent of the PC market. How many schools, corporations and home users actually buy bare bones systems? I can assure you it's less than 1%.

    19. Re:The other way around? by hdparm · · Score: 1

      I get manufacturer's warranty on all PC components. 3y on HDD for small ($10-15) additional premium. MB and CPU come with 3 y warranty as a standard and I make sure RAM is one of those 'Lifetime warranty' ones.

    20. Re:The other way around? by mdamaged · · Score: 1

      Those e-machines are pretty nifty for a hobby-level cluster, they work nicely in my cluster. Had no problems recognizing all the hw too.

      --
      Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
    21. Re:The other way around? by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Really? Go to the dell web site and see if you can buy a PC with linux on it.

      "People" can't do it at all you have to be a business.

      You can't get linux pre-installed on any dell business desktop. You can order one without an operating system but you can't get one with linux.

      You can only get servers with linux installed on them. That's it.

      Sorry to burst your bubble with facts.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    22. Re:The other way around? by bluekanoodle · · Score: 1

      There are also alot of people who build systems that put Windows on it. Just pure conjecture, but Most of the gamers I know build their own system and they sure as hell are not putting linux on it.

    23. Re:The other way around? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      And you need to keep recipts for all of them. Some people prefer to not have that much information to track. One recipt from IBM, Dell or Gateway and you're covered.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    24. Re:The other way around? by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      How about people who can get it from the MS store for really cheap.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    25. Re:The other way around? by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 1

      Better, a Lindows^H^H^H^Hspire PC, which is really, really cheap. Put up the Linux sales figures and rip off MS at the same time. What a piece of Linspirational thinking. Not that *I* would actually condone such behaviour, mind ;-)

      --
      When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
    26. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pirated copies of windows amount to a pretty much insignificant amount of the desktop.

      The reasons are simple, most users aren't capable of installing and OS period. Most of the "computer savy" kids aren't able to install an OS either, they are considered savy because they can download and install Kazaa, download some music and burn it to a cd. This convinces their parents and family they are a computer whiz.

      The other reason is that windows typically comes on a new computer. When you couple this with number one, you quickly realize that the knowledge required to find the data and transfer it from all the various applications one might run is far more complicated than installing the OS alone.

      Remember, those who do have knowledge to do these things are typically techs and admins. At work they won't be pirating windows. Outside of work THEY might pirate windows for themselves, friends and family, and might mostly associate with techs, their friends, and family. This means that your typical tech/admin will see lots of pirated windows copies floating around.

      Remember also that all the techs, all their friends, and their families probably add up to less than 1% of the total desktop market.

    27. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Google's zietgeist"

      That's a pretty poor metric, it goes by the user agent string. I can't say I know any linux user (or any nonIE user for that matter) who doesn't change their user agent string to be IE 6sp1 on windows. They do this for a simple reason, 99% of the pages that don't load in alternative browsers, magically do load if the browser claims it's IE.

    28. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "because they choose not to pay the premium that goes along with buying a computer from any major brand"

      Thats really not the only reason, or even the main one. They don't want the low quality components and poor performance (not to mention integrated hardware) that comes with buying from a Major brand.

      Most component built systems yield higher performance and actually cost MORE than major brand systems. Better value for the dollar, but few are reducing their overall number of dollars spent, or have any intention of doing so.

      Actually a good number of white box pc's are coming from small computer stores. MOST businesses want to support local business, and also prefer a company who can be onsite in 15min if they call. If these companies sell linux systems, they are usually the support provider and install download editions. At least we always did.

    29. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      The difficulty of keeping recipts doesn't go up with the number? If you have to put away and remember where one is, you can just as easily stick two there. Actually in the smallest of places you could manage to squeeze one in you could just as easily put 50.

      Personally I just chuck all important ones in a shoebox, for computer or anything else.

    30. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      There are alot of things that aren't being considered in the numbers in the summary.

      They would have been better off not throwing in a comment to demean the linux share of oem presales and just sticking with the numbers.

      Whether people are reinstalling the OS that came with the computer with something else impacts the overall desktop marketshare. NOT the OEM preinstall numbers (which is what the estimated 5% was).

    31. Re:The other way around? by Juanvaldes · · Score: 1

      I've always figured the "other" category breaks down mostly like the rest of the OS's. Since this is mostly people who are trying to protect their privacy (any other good reasons?). So I figure 90+% of those 5% are windows users, 3-5 are mac and so on. Anyone got a better theory?

    32. Re:The other way around? by trashme · · Score: 1

      When is the last time you met someone who built their own laptop? Every linux laptop user I know bought a laptop (usually a Thinkpad) with Windows on it, then formatted and installed Linux.

    33. Re:The other way around? by RdsArts · · Score: 1

      And even if you do, it's still a Windows sale as they usually are just "pre-wiped" for you.

    34. Re:The other way around? by hdparm · · Score: 1
      I reckon that little extra effort would be worthwhile for people. I buy from couple of wholesalers who supply decent hardware for good price, so it's not an issue for me.

      Price wise - margins are minimal these days and it only makes a difference if you buy lot of stuff over time, not for one or two machines - meaning that people who can't buy wholesale don't really pay much more.

    35. Re:The other way around? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      While I use the default string, a number of installs that I have done, I had to convert. No choice.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    36. Re:The other way around? by westlake · · Score: 1

      "Twice nothing is still nothing." The Car Wash Linux outlet in Toronto manages a hanful of walk-in Linux system sales a week.

    37. Re:The other way around? by Phleg · · Score: 1

      That's a pretty poor metric, it goes by the user agent string. I can't say I know any linux user (or any nonIE user for that matter) who doesn't change their user agent string to be IE 6sp1 on windows.

      I don't.

      --
      No comment.
    38. Re:The other way around? by lavaface · · Score: 1
      Most of the "computer savy" kids aren't able to install an OS either

      Are you kidding? Installing Windows is a walk in the park (relative to most Linux distros.) And don't forget, these Windows folks are experts at installing OSes--they've pratically got to do it every other week to get their computer to work!
      : )

    39. Re:The other way around? by jmv · · Score: 1

      I work for a computer company in sales. No one has ever requested Linux instead of Windows.

      I have, several times. Also, the problem with mass purchase is that everyone will want a different configuration and that Windows licenses are "per model", so there wouldn't be enough Linux demand for one particular model. I think the solution is that MS be forbidden to make deals where companies pay for each laptop of a certain model they produce, whether or not it ships with Windows (or any OS at all, I'm fine buying an OS-less laptop).

    40. Re:The other way around? by theCat · · Score: 1

      I have removed many copies of Windows from PCs (other than the few PCs I've built) but these were all USED PCs from others in my office who get upgrades. THEY get a nice upgrade laptop/desktop once a year and I grab their old one, wipe it, maybe drop in some RAM, and install a Linux disty.

      This is actually most excellent, because it takes a year or two for some hardware to get Linux drivers (esp in laptops). So by the time the "old" machine hits the IT room as surplus usually there is everything I need to get it running Linux already on a Linux distro CD.

      We all know that Linux is a great way to get more miles out of used computers (especially lightly used ones) and all I need do is overwrite Windows. Which I do. We don't have ANY surplus machines as a result (well except for some lame Celeron crap I don't give a fig about).

      --
      =^..^= all your rodent are belong to us
    41. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      What makes you say that?

      It's more important to change the reality and show people how well the browser works.

      Changing the real numbers is far more important than changing the market statistics.

    42. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Well gee golly, IT Managers don't make up a very significant portion of the marketshare.

    43. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      MOST users can't manage to install an application without an autorun, this is reality whether you like it or not.

      At least half the users out there dont know how to find and run an application if there isn't a shortcut on the desktop.

      "Seriously. Would Microsoft or Apple be raking in the GNP of a good portion of Europe if these things weren't so damned easy to use?"

      Yes that is what techs and computer vendors and grandchildren are for.

      "Have you ever seen the Windows XP Install?"

      I've done literally hundreds. And I'm not the guy who builds the computers and installs the OS initially for our company. I'm the service tech who goes and fixes problems for those who don't know how to fix them themselves.

      Lets go over a typical setup. First you go the old computer. copy the data out of the appropriate hidden folders for their email, addressbook, favorites. Their my documents folder of course. If they have quickbooks you probably want to grab at least the company file, but it's easier to grab the whole quickbooks folder and drop it overtop after installing quickbooks on the new machine.

      You have to set the bios to boot from cd, since a smart vendor disables this as it confuses users when cd's boot. This step alone is far far beyond what a normal user can handle.

      Possibly then hitting the key and loading the driver disk for your ide raid. Also beyond what users can handle.

      NTFS or Fat, I'll lose all data??? dear god why!!!

      Some users could handle the next questions asked computer name, activation, etc since they have that info from their ISP. Although computer name will baffle most, since they don't know if it's something they make up or something they should know.

      And then the XP install is finished, BUT your not finished installing the OS yet, not by a long shot.

      Now you have to find drivers for pretty much every piece of hardware in your system. Starting with the board chipset. Then video, sound, all usb devices. Because while xp detects these things faithfully, it doesn't have drivers for most hardware. Of course even if it did, you don't want Microsoft's drivers unless you have no choice.

      After finding them, you have to install them, sometimes they'll be on a cd with an autorun, sometimes not. Sometimes they'll be a downloaded zip file and you'll have to install them inf style, going into the device manager, selecting the hardware and going into update the driver. Of course you have to recognize the right piece from the generic string, because XP helpfully, after identifying what the hardware was changes it to a generic name in the DM if you don't have the driver handy.

      Of course then you have to run off power management on the system.

      Now you have to go back to the other system and find and download the patches for blaster, etc.

      You open the case (way beyond most users) pull the drive, and stick it into the new system, jumpering appropriately and so forth. Make sure the drive detects in the bios, and again detects in windows.

      You can then copy my documents into the profile. Now you setup internet, today this is usually done by going into the network control panel, right clicking on the correct nic and inputting the settings. Unless you did the get connected to the internet thing (which you shouldn't have done) during setup. If so your already blastered.

      Regardless once you have a net connection you have to install the blaster and other network worm patches and then run a scan to remove those you've already caught (there will be at least one).

      Now you do the windows updates.

      ok, now we can continue, you install av software of choice or download it, update said software.

      Now you find the correct profile and drop the IE favorites in place. You then open outlook express, setup your email account with the correct settings. Then go into the addressbook and file import the wab file you got from the old system, importing their favorites. Then clo

    44. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Installing Windows is a walk in the park (relative to most Linux distros.)"

      Who said anything about relative to most linux distros? I just said installing OS is beyond what most windows users can handle. ANY OS. A larger number could probably handle MacOS, since you got a pretty graphical interface from the get... but I'd say more than 50% couldn't handle it.

      "they've pratically got to do it every other week to get their computer to work!"

      This is why they buy computers with restore cd's, because they don't know how to reinstall the OS.

    45. Re:The other way around? by cavetroll · · Score: 1

      Sure, I figure a lot of them are /not/ windows users, or at least not directly, but an awful lot of things like webspiders, toolbars, and other add-ons that are not identifable as browsers and probably don't send a proper OS string.

    46. Re:The other way around? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Install the security software and configure the nic before you attach it to the cable."

      Better yet, just do the install behind a firewalled router.

      "USB drives are very handy for toting around the net install updates (including virus protection and AdAware/SpyBot/etc. updates) to prevent worms."

      Handy for moving the data off the old system to if it's from anything not too terribly ancient.

      "You also forgot removing all of the AOL/MSN/Compuserve complimentary crap."

      Yup there is that, also you'll want to disable at least the services you know they aren't going to want. There are a couple registry hacks you'll want to perform to make IE perform multiple simultaneous connections. You'll want to uninstall windows messenger completely with a handy third party util.

      There are alot of things I could have added to that, and alot of tricks you can do to save time in the process. I was really just trying to make the point that your average user couldn't handle it.

      Even without data transfer at all, the average user would be stumped at step one, setting the cd correctly in the boot order to start the setup.

      Most users I think could struggle through the actual installer itself, but that isn't even half of installing windows.

  4. Point people seem to be ignoring by McAddress · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The article claims that there will be 1 billion windows users by the year 2010. IMO, this is the most important number in the whole article.

    The best hope for linux is in getting new users from the pool of non-users instead of from the pool of windiws users. Once people use windows, they believe for some reason that they will be unable to switch.

    1. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by cspaz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't think Linux will ever be able to touch Windows on the desktop, people have a hard enough time running Windows, much less a sometimes finicky Linux flavor. Linux will, however, pick up steam in the server rooms, especially if Microsoft continues to try and roll out a new server product every 4 years, as planned. No one will want to upgrade their server every 4 years, just as Microsoft has finally released enough service packs to get their current server install working properly!

    2. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by McAddress · · Score: 1
      No one will want to upgrade their server every 4 years, just as Microsoft has finally released enough service packs to get their current server install working properly!

      It would seem that four years is not a particularly short period of time to roll out a new server OS. There will be very few servers that will last for more than 8 years.(2 products) Therefore, if microsoft continues the current support schedule, most of the servers will never be out of the support/ patch period.

    3. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      "Once people use windows, they believe for some reason that they will be unable to switch."

      I would say most Linux users these days once used Windows as their primary OS but were then able to switch. Sure, the less technically inclinded portion of the population will not be able to do that, but I wouldn't recommend that they start out on Linux in the first place.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    4. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by cspaz · · Score: 2, Informative

      I work for a network installation/support company, and trust me...there are plenty of people that will be running server installs longer than 4 years. We just recently had to drag a customer (kicking and screaming at that) through an upgrade from Novell 5.5! I know for a fact that we have three customers currently running NT 4.0 (one's still running 3.5!) and probably won't upgrade even in Microsoft discontinues support. There are plenty of Windows 2000 servers around here running like tops, and I don't see any trouble with them lasting for a good 3 or 4 more years, barring any catastrophic hardware failure.

    5. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by PabloJones · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is very true. People simply know how to use Windows, regardless of its GUI design, or lack thereof. I personally don't see why the average Joe would have an incentive to use something they've either never heard of, or have only read about in passing, and basically know nothing about. I used to use Gnome back in the 1.x days (I went back to using a Mac once I bought a PowerBook a couple years ago), and I personally felt that it had a more intuitive, albeit very similar, user interface than Windows. Granted, I don't use Windows a whole lot, and while I know how to use it, it feels awkward and clunky (especially after using OS X since it debuted). But Windows is a refined clunkyness , whereas Linux desktops seem to be not only clunky, but rather inconsistent as well. Almost anyone can sit down at a Windows machine and figure out how to get around the thing for the simple fact that it's familiar to them. Does a "regular dude" know the difference between KDE and Gnome, does he even know what those things are? Once he fires up the computer for the first time, it's going to be slightly familiar, with a start-menu-like thing and taskbar and whatnot, but he's going to notice the dissimilarities right away, and think to himself "this sucks, I'm gonna get my computer friend to install Windows for me."

      Linux, in the desktop setting, is currently still for the enthusiasts who are proactive and want to learn Linux.

      In the server market, things are much more in Linux's favor. The people running the stuff already know a whole lot about computing in general, and they can by and large run everything without GUI, and if they want to use one, they'll have no problem choosing one, installing it, and figuring it out. Also, since Linux is a lot like the BSDs and other UNIX flavors, it can be picked up relatively quickly by the admins and such... plus the lack of license fees is icing on the cake.

      Right now, Linux is much more viable in the server market, than the desktop one, just as the rest of UNIX is, barring OS X.

      For Linux to make it in the desktop market, it needs a set of GUI standards such as the one Apple made for the Macintosh. If people can't sit down at the computer and have it operate as they expect it to (and that does not necessarily mean copying Windows or OS X), then they aren't going to use it.

      One may even argue against making it like Windows, since the dissimilarities would probably end up causing the user more grief than if they had to learn an entirely new system. Also, if they came up with some genuinely innovative GUI features, it might start to turn people's heads.

    6. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by name773 · · Score: 1

      Sure, the less technically inclinded portion of the population will not be able to do that

      the majority of them are able to perhaps they don't hear about it or see no reason to install and learn a new os

      although i like it much better... if only for windowmaker and konqueror :)

    7. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      I hate to be the one to tell you this, but Linux is not currently an operating system for inexperienced computer users. It generally requires some knowledge as to how computers work. If you have that knowledge, sure it is easy to use. But most people in the world do not have that knowledge.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    8. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't Linux toss out a new kernel more frequently than every 4 years? Isn't that a new NOS of sorts?

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    9. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by cspaz · · Score: 1

      Exactly the point I'm trying to make. There are users out there that can get by in Windows, even if they can't find Word installed on their machine if there isn't a shortcut on their desktop. How in the world is a user like that ever going to get a Linux machine to work the way they want?

    10. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by name773 · · Score: 1

      but most people could learn it...
      and if it isn't easy to obtain that knowledge already (they have the internet or someone they know knows), it should be.
      all you have to teach them is how to learn to use it (practice, docs, and irc/forums)

      heck, when i first booted mandrake, i didn't know what to do with a tarball or how to use the command line. less than a year later i was running my own webserver and programming in php.

      of course, motivation is key...

    11. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by name773 · · Score: 1

      there are preschoolers that can't read... how ever are they going to pass second grade??

    12. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by cspaz · · Score: 1

      That's easy, send them to a public school in south Georgia.

    13. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by name773 · · Score: 1

      yeah, of sorts.
      you don't have to reformat to go from 2.4 to 2.6

    14. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Biogenesis · · Score: 1

      There seems to be a growing list of non-reversible, heavy brain damage inducing, computing phenomena:

      BASIC
      COBOL
      Windows
      ...

    15. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by name773 · · Score: 1

      funny :), but you FAIL IT

      the point was this: these people would do amazingly well if they simply wanted to learn linux. and some of them probably do but haven't heard about it or don't see its advantages.

    16. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by dekeji · · Score: 1

      As with most things, people don't change their minds about their ideas, it's the people that die and are replaced by new people with new ideas.

      Windows became popular in the 1980's/1990's, for various reasons. Now, it's just a big brand name owned by a big corporation, and it's ripe for being replaced by something else with the next generation.

    17. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      " but most people could learn it..."

      No, its not because they are lazy or unmotivated or because just don't try. Linux is not an easy operating system for an inexperienced user to use.

      "heck, when i first booted mandrake, i didn't know what to do with a tarball or how to use the command line."

      Please. Equating not knowing what a tarball is with being a computer newbie is just being a jackass. Most intermediate users don't know what a tarball is and have never used a command line. That doesn't make them idiots. If you are running your own webserver, you are not part of the population we are talking about and thus your experience is irrelevant to the conversation.

      My mom (who has been using computers for some time so she is more experienced that those we are talking about) still gets confused and wonders what happened to the Internet if she clicks on the IE icon and gets a page other than www.msn.com. She would be utterly confused on a system like Linux.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    18. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

      I've heard this argument a lot, and I disagree.

      Although it would be *nice* if there were a standardized set of GUI design guidelines for Linux, it's not nessisary.

      The differences between a KDE app and a GNOME app are insignificant from the perspective of an inexperianced user, and even something like lyx (which uses XForms) is not really different enough to mess any user up for more than a second or two.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
    19. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For a truely inexperianced computer user, an already installed Linux setup is no more difficult to use than a Windows box, and realistically only slightly more difficult than a Mac.

      The point where Linux is "harder" is when you have a somewhat experianced computer user who is already used to another system trying to use it for the first time. Such a user is not experianced enough to immediately see and deal with the differences, and yet experianced that he knows *exactly* how he would do what he wants on the system he's used to, and the fact that Linux is different frustrates him.

      At this point there are only three reasons why Windows is considered easier than Linux:
      * A lot of people are used to it.
      * It comes pre-installed on most new systems.
      * Since more people are used to Windows, more people are immediately available to help a new Windows user.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
    20. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Interesting

      people have a hard enough time running Windows, much less a sometimes finicky Linux flavor.

      Finicky? My Suse Linux 9.0 installed far faster than Windows 2000, autodetected all of my hardware, and set up my broadband connection without any intervention on my part - without needing a reboot once. In addition, I got a boatload of apps I'd otherwise have to pay for; and no matter what the Microsofties say for most people (text editing, spreadsheet, browsing, email) these apps are more than up to the job.

      Linux hasn't been 'finicky' in some time. This is nothing more than a myth propagated by people who don't have the first damned clue what they're talking about - or, perhaps, own some MS stock.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    21. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      I hate to be the one to tell you this, but Linux is not currently an operating system for inexperienced computer users.

      That would be what we call 'bullshit'. Two points to refute you:

      - Suse 9.0 installs easier and cleaner than Win2000 or WinXP; anyone who can install Windows can install Suse Linux.

      - I taught a bunch of 11-year-old kids how to install and use Linux two years running, despite the fact that they didn't know what a 'Linux' was when they started and were thorough Windows junkies up until that point. Not the nice Suse 9.0 version of Linux, mind you, but a much older version which required tweaking config files to get things working properly. They had absolutely no problem at all adapting to Linux, and the vast majority of them preferred it to Windows once they figured out how things worked.

      Linux is perfectly acceptable for inexperienced computer users, and I have several hundred former students that I can point to as proof. What is isn't suitable for is people who're set in their ways and whine, bitch and moan whenever they think they might have to learn something new. For these folks Windows will always be the OS of choice - not for ease of use, but simply because they refuse to try anything different.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    22. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by name773 · · Score: 1

      Equating not knowing what a tarball is with being a computer newbie is just being a jackass.

      sorry, that's just the thing i remembered being the most frustrating... not having a clue how to install a new app, then looking it up on google, then attempting to use tar... then trying to find a manual page... of course i saw the info, but it's so hard (for me) to put it together without examples... then giving up and asking someone at church who uses freebsd at his work

      My mom (who has been using computers for some time so she is more experienced that those we are talking about) still gets confused and wonders what happened to the Internet if she clicks on the IE icon and gets a page other than www.msn.com.

      did you explain it to her?
      i hear many complaints of users' ignorance, but how will they know unless they are told?
      things in computing don't typically have simple parallels to everyday things (other than computers :) ).

    23. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by lofi-rev · · Score: 1

      Does that billion include pirated copies?

    24. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Decaff · · Score: 1

      I don't think Linux will ever be able to touch Windows on the desktop, people have a hard enough time running Windows, much less a sometimes finicky Linux flavor.

      I think that Linux will severely impact Windows on the corporate desktop. In this situation you usually want a very stable platform that provides a standard, but relatively small, number of services. At a company I support, we have moved all but two desktops to Linux. One is a Mac, for DTP and the other is Windows to run an accounts package.

      Linux makes sense - there are no forced upgrades; few if any virus problems; its easy to manage remotely without down-time for users, and its free.

    25. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Whereas my copy of XP installed no problems, while SuSe, Mandrake, and Gentoo have all failed to install at all.

      Your experience is not representative; Linux is better, but has a LONG way to go still.

      Oh, and on Windows? I have all those same apps. OO.o, PuTTY, Firefox, and I'm set. I'm sure there's a decent free email client out there, but I still like pine.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    26. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by shamus · · Score: 1

      I think we can safely say that for an off the shelf PC there isn't much to chose from between installing the latest linux or the latest Windows.

      So, lets look at after that.

      Desktop
      Windows - just the one
      Linux - do I go KDE or Gnome? (or even something else)

      Apps
      Windows - none
      Linux - ooh, a bunch of free apps ... that I don't even need

      Available Apps
      Windows - yup, you guess it, Office
      Linux - erm, a bunch of best effort attempts to compete with MS Office

      On every box I've had, Office type applications feel about twice as fast on Windows to their Linux equivalent.

      Really, I love linux (well, unix in general actually), but there's too much to chose from and even the best doesn't feel as fast/good as the MS offering. With the single exception of web browsing and email (although linux certainly lags behind in compatibility with flash/real/etc.) everything I want to do as a user (i.e. not a sysadmin/developer) is better on Windows - word processing, spreadsheets, gaming.

      --

      What's worse, ignorance or apathy? Who knows, and who cares.

    27. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by chthon · · Score: 1

      I agree on the Basic and Windows part, but not on the COBOL.

      I presume that many COBOL programs still run because they are too complex for analysis and hence too expensive to port to newer languages.

      Btw, if you remove COBOL, does it not seem strange that the remaining parts are heavily MS centric ?

    28. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

      Linux is more robust and reliable than Windows typically.

      Yes it can be a pain getting it setup and configured, but once it is then it just works. Things don't seem to break quite to often and you don't get some spyware junk taking over your browser.

      All Linux distributions really need is damn good installation and configuration tools.

    29. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      Install XP on a recent PC and 99% certain it won't have the drivers for your hardware anyway (XP is *old* now). So you get them somehow... a bit difficult if it's your network driver that's fubar (I keep a USB floppy drive for this purpose). Then there's the 100MB+ of 'security fixes' to download (getting larger by the day - sucks if you're on a slow connection... I've had to leave it overnight beforen now).

      *then* you can start on the essential apps...

      In the worst case you install XP SP2 and find the drivers aren't compatible (been there, done that) and have to reformat and start from step (1) again because it just trashed your machine [OK I know anyone sensible would stick with SP1, so it doesn't really count]

      OTOH get a recent Linux, boots, installs, nothing to download, done.

    30. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      "did you explain it to her? i hear many complaints of users' ignorance, but how will they know unless they are told?"

      I tried, yes, but it didn't stick. And I can't spend my entire life sitting by my mom's side teaching her how to use a computer. I don't even live in the same town anymore.

      "things in computing don't typically have simple parallels to everyday things (other than computers :) )."

      But see thats the thing. Windows makes an attempt to have real world examples of everything it does. Its designed to be easy to use.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    31. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      " Suse 9.0 installs easier and cleaner than Win2000 or WinXP; anyone who can install Windows can install Suse Linux."

      Inexperienced users had better not have to install an operating system period. It should be already set up for them.

      "I taught a bunch of 11-year-old kids how to install and use Linux two years running, despite the fact that they didn't know what a 'Linux' was when they started and were thorough Windows junkies up until that point."

      They were "Windows junkies"? In other words, they were familiar with computers before you showed them Linux? But yet they were able to switch to a new OS? Hmm, I think you just proved my point.

      Out of curiosity, where did you find these kids? Off the street, or were they interested in learning more about computers? And what do you mean by "taught a bunch of 11-year olds"? Did you stop by and give them a pointer or two for their brave new world in Linux? Or did they recieve a formal computer class? If it was the latter, most non-geeks in this world do not have time to take formal classes for every new technology they use. They need to be able to just use it out of the box.

      "For these folks Windows will always be the OS of choice - not for ease of use, but simply because they refuse to try anything different."

      What version are they using? Windows 3.1? If they refused change as much as you claim they do, they would never upgrade.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    32. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      Listening to a bunch of /.ers claim that Linux is just as easy to use as Windows is almost as bad as listening to multi-millionaire politicians like Kerry and Edwards talk about how they know what its like to be in lower-class America.

      "At this point there are only three reasons why Windows is considered easier than Linux:"

      Oh, I can think of a lot more than 3.

      • Case sensitivity. Sounds small, but for most people the word myfiles is the same as MyFiles.
      • Being told they don't have permissions to change something that they need to change and that they have use a command called 'su' in order to do it. In Windows an Administrator can do pretty much whatever he wants.
      • File names. Which is easier to understand, "C:\Program Files" or "/usr/local/bin".
      • Which is easier, running InstallShield to install a program, or making and compiling a program from a tarball (and don't give me any crap about RPMs making this simple, if you use Linux much at all sooner or later you will have to compile something yourself.
      I could go on and on if I had an inexperienced user by me. I haven't even touched difficulties using applications (Word vs OOo, paint vs gimp, etc). Your claim that the only reason Windows is easier for inexperienced users is because people are used to it is just laughable.
      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    33. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Your experience is not representative

      And you claim yours is based on what evidence?

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    34. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Really, I love linux (well, unix in general actually), but there's too much to chose from

      Linux isn't for people who want others to decide things for them. I suggest you stick with Windows, along with anyone else who has a problem making a choice for themselves.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    35. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Inexperienced users had better not have to install an operating system period. It should be already set up for them

      This has never been true of Windows. While Windows has come installed on machines since 95, any long-time user is quite familiar with reinstalling the OS. This was a practical necessity for Win95/98 on most machines every six months or so.

      They were "Windows junkies"?

      Most kids nowadays know how to use computers long before they hit middle school. In case you haven't been paying attention.

      Out of curiosity, where did you find these kids?

      In a public middle school. I do think I mentioned that I taught middle school students; I guess you missed 'reading comprehension' while you were cruising through the educational system.

      If it was the latter, most non-geeks in this world do not have time to take formal classes for every new technology they use

      Oh, poor babies! Woe is them! Okay, since you apparently have more than enough time to go to inane work-sponsored 'conferences' and 'workshops' (not to mention endless rounds of 'sensitivity training'), as well as to spend endless hours watching mindless 'reality TV' while you drool on yourself - but you have no time whatsoever to learn Linux *even though you'll certainly make the time to learn whatever new version of Windows MS pimps to you* - let's just teach Linux to the kids. Make it part of the computer curriculum for all the high schools and middle schools, if they have any, and make every computer in the labs a Linux machine.

      Funny, I bet the desktop usage of Linux would go through the roof once these kids graduated. They still might be using Windows at work, but they wouldn't be using it at home.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    36. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Aadain2001 · · Score: 1

      Well, let's be fair about the whole "nothing to download" part. Anyone who installs a new Linux system and doesn't run the patching program (yum, apt, etc) is just a fool. Even on the lastest and greatest distros there will always be patches that came out after the distro was packaged up and put on install CDs (or DVD) and will need to be patches for a) performance reasons, b) drivers, c) and security. I recently installed Linux on my new laptop and it had to download close to 100MB of stuff, mainly because there was a new kernel and I always grab the kernel source for any new kernels. But all those patches never required a reboot (but I did anyway because of the newer/better kernel). My point? Both Windows and Linux need to be patches right out of the box, but Windows makes it harder on you (needing to reboot multiple times because the first X number of patches can only be installed by themselves) while Linux makes it pretty easy these days (if you use a distro with a good package/update manager such as Debian, Gentoo, and RH/FC).

      --
      Space for rent, inquire within
    37. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      "This has never been true of Windows. While Windows has come installed on machines since 95, any long-time user is quite familiar with reinstalling the OS. This was a practical necessity for Win95/98 on most machines every six months or so."

      No they don't. Most inexperienced users don't reinstall their OS each time it crashes. Maybe they should and as a result they have a computer that never works right, but they don't.

      "Most kids nowadays know how to use computers long before they hit middle school. In case you haven't been paying attention."

      Yes, I know. That was my point. Those kids were not the inexperienced users we were talking about.

      "In a public middle school."

      Where in the middle did you find them? Did you walk in to an English class while the teacher wasn't looking? Was it a computer class? Or some sort of after school program?

      "I do think I mentioned that I taught middle school students; I guess you missed 'reading comprehension' while you were cruising through the educational system."

      Fuck you. Go back and read your post. You made no mention whatsoever of a middle school. You just said "11 year old kids", which would put them in either 5th or 6th grade. In most districts that is elementary school. And just because they were school age does not mean they were in school, there are other things kids do you know.

      "Oh, poor babies! Woe is them! Okay, since you apparently have more than enough time to go to inane work-sponsored 'conferences' and 'workshops' (not to mention endless rounds of 'sensitivity training'), as well as to spend endless hours watching mindless 'reality TV' while you drool on yourself - but you have no time whatsoever to learn Linux"

      See, this is the high and mighty pompous attitude we need to purge from the Linux community if we ever want Linux to be adopted by the mainstream public. As it is now, arrogant jackasses like you just turn them off (kind of like that tech support guy from those old SNL skits).

      Like it or not, people in the real world have things to do other than play with a computer. Play outside, read a book, play sports, hang out with friends, let alone the fact that most people have work specific to their own profession that they have to concentrate on. What if a chef made fun of someone who makes prepared dinners instead of dinners from scratch? Or a gym trainer making fun of someone who doesn't work out for 4 hours each day? Or an English professor laughing at someone who never finished Anna Karenina? Would you fall in any of those categories?

      "even though you'll certainly make the time to learn whatever new version of Windows MS pimps to you"

      No, generally speaking most people don't take time to learn everything about Windows either. But since Windows is aimed at inexperienced users, they are still able to make basic usage of it.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    38. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Of course, if you do a slipstreamed install of XP, the number of patches and reboots is pretty minimal anyway. Really, if you installed a 2 year old Linux distro, how long would it take you/how many reboots to bring it up to a secure level?

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    39. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Aadain2001 · · Score: 1

      Time: the time it takes to download and apply all the patches/new packages (which is done for you one you tell the system to update). Reboots: One (since you will DEFINATLY have a new kernal if the distro is two years old). :-D

      --
      Space for rent, inquire within
    40. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Many, many installs of Windows (3.11 through XP) on various hardware between running a small business doing computer repair, working as a lab/computer tech at a large university, and generally being a big nerd.

      I don't feel my Linux experience is representative at all; it remains, however, my experience.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    41. Re:Point people seem to be ignoring by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

      Case Sensitivity: This really doesn't matter that much. For a normal user, the main use of the file system is saving and loading documents. To save a document, you need to type a filename. To load it, you select the filename from the list.

      User permissions: The only time lack of permissions should come up in normal usage is installing packages - So a dialog pops and asks you for the root password.

      File names: Which is easier "C:\Documents and Settings\Nat Tuck\My Documents" or "/home/nat"? It doesn't really matter. At this point, randomly browsing the filesystem from the root directory looks pretty weird in both systems, and the desktop environment simplfies it for you by throwing a link to your home directory on the desktop.

      Software Installation: With a modern distro, you use packages to install your software. I'm as hardcore a linux user as you can get without having a kernel patch accepted, and all the user software on my machine was installed through my distro's standard package system. The only stuff I've installed by hand are some software development stuff. If I don't need to install stuff from source, your average user doesn't eithor.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
  5. Prepare for lame statistics by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

    Ok, you got IBM linux, SGI linux/altix, Solaris technically has linux too. Then within linux you have a thousand distros. What about people who run windows but use linux thru vmware, does that count? And you wonder why I hated statistics class.

    1. Re:Prepare for lame statistics by fferreres · · Score: 1

      "Ok, you got IBM linux... And you wonder why I hated statistics class."

      Why? Because you kept failing? There's no such thing as IBM Linux :-)

      More seriously, statistics do not lie, people do.

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    2. Re:Prepare for lame statistics by 0racle · · Score: 1

      This is the worst round up ever. There is no IBM Linux, the SGI Altix is a hardware platform, not an OS though it does run a customized Linux, and Solaris is Unix, real Unix, and is a OS on its own not the 'Unix like' Linux.

      If this type of analysis is why you hated statistics, its not the classes fault, you must have just had absolutely no clue what was going on around you.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    3. Re:Prepare for lame statistics by notanatheist · · Score: 1

      at least it's not a Slashdot poll. Then you'd have to round up, down, and around to get the numbers you like.

    4. Re:Prepare for lame statistics by lars_boegild_thomsen · · Score: 1

      Technically Solaris has Linux? Huh - how did that happen :) Are you sure you don't mean that technically SUN has got a Linux?

      Of course Solaris is not really Open Source, so it could be based on Linux. But then SCO would have been all over SUN.

  6. Re:WindowsXP is free... by McAddress · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The whole idea behind linux is that it is not free as in beer, but in that is free as in speech. I would rather pay a nominal fee for a easy to use, secure linux distro that get windows XP for free.

  7. Gartner? by jargoone · · Score: 1

    I started a new job recently, and they seem to live and die by these fucking Gartner reports. I hadn't heard of them up until recently. Can someone tell me what the deal is?

    1. Re:Gartner? by nusratt · · Score: 1

      Made it's name during the Age Of The Mainframe.
      Think of it as Playboy for PHBs.

    2. Re:Gartner? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      I started a new job recently, and they seem to live and die by these fucking Gartner reports. I hadn't heard of them up until recently. Can someone tell me what the deal is?

      No, we can't, because the fucking Gartner link is to a PAY ONLY site: "This article/section can only be accessed by ComputerWire registered users". What was the point of that?

    3. Re:Gartner? by Ami+Ganguli · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They're a pet peeve of mine. It seems like what they do is interview CIO types about their opinions on various technologies and then turn that information into speculation about where the industry is going.

      The result is a bunch of very credible sounding propoganda that reflects all the biases prevalent among their target audience: CIOs who need backing for their opinions. The CIOs naturally buy the reports and use them to pursuade other people in the company that the CIO's favourite pet project or technology is "industry best practices".

      Gartner reports tell a lot about what people who worked in technology ten years ago (and have since moved to management) think. They consistently overlook trends that are bubbling under the surface, obvious practitioners, but not yet noticed by management.

      If you want to know what your boss thinks about the industry, read Gartner. If you want to know about what's really happening, read the Usenet group that deals with the specific technology you're interested in.

      --
      It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
    4. Re:Gartner? by Ami+Ganguli · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Wish I could edit my own posts - just as after I sent this I found an interesting article by Tim O'Reilly. He suggests using book sales to measure market trends.

      I don't know if this will turn out to be accurate, but it's at least somewhat objective. A neat idea.

      --
      It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
    5. Re:Gartner? by st1d · · Score: 1

      Think of Gartner as the equivalent of a congressional committee on the subcommitte about committees. In other words, Gartner wastes a whole lot of their client's money on telling them whatever they think they want to hear. If that opinion changes, Gartner is sure to follow that change 6 months to a year later.

      Granted, if you spend a few million on Windows computers, the last thing you want to do is read that Linux is not only more powerful, but popular and secure.

      --
      Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
    6. Re:Gartner? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I was interviewed for a job as "European Research Director" at Gartner a number of years back.

      They came into the lobby of the building, looked around then asked at reception for "John Doe". When they discovered that was me, they were a bit odd.

      Turns out they were worried because I was 30 at the time and therefore couldn't have enough IT experience to be taken seriously (I was VP at one of the world's top investment banks at the time and was part of the team that determined the bank's technology architecture).

      I had a blazing argument with ten of their so called "experts" about lack of take up of windows 2000 (basically I said the move to AD was slowing people down and a lot of enterprises saw little or no reason to move, and pay microsoft more money for little if any improvements). We also covered XML (I said it was overhyped, they said it would rule the world. One of us is a published author on the subject and it wasn't them) plus Linux, OpenBSD (not that they knew what that was) etc.. I don't think there was a single aspect of technology the people in the room had a single "expert opinion" on that I agreed with. Having said that, I had a telephone interview with one of their mainframe people two weeks earlier and he was solid. Stuff he said back then is still coming true - so maybe it's just the old "the higher up you get, the less you actually know" rule.

      Six months after failing to get the job I saw my statements coming out of a gartner report ... so they either used the interview as "research" or eventually enough people beat them over a head with a clue-stick.

      Bottom line, I have absolutely no time or respect for the Gartner group and nobody with any grasp of technology that I know does either. The average "manager" on the other hand ...

      And the only reason I (or any of my friends) use Gartner is when their publication backs up whatever we actually want to do - and which point they are useful for beating your boss over the head with. "But Gartner says that and they're experts!"

    7. Re:Gartner? by andr0meda · · Score: 1


      They seem eager to report things that are just plain wrong. For instance:

      "
      Forrester Research on its main site currently leaves the question open of whether Linux is more secure than Windows. According to Forrester's count, Microsoft Windows had 128 flaws, Red Hat Linux - 229 flaws, Debian - 286, Mandrake Linux - 199, SUSE - 176. 100% of Microsoft flaws were fixed, while the number of fixes is 99,6% for Red Hat, 96,2% for Debian, 99% for Mandrake and 97,7% for SUSE.
      "

      , the oldest post on the page, of april 20. Not trying to sound like a zealot, I think there is indeed a string of flaws and bugs to be fixed in *every* OS, but I sure as hell don't think that A) the majority of those flaws has been fixed in windows, B) windows has less unfixed flaws than Linux distro's, and C) that you can actually derive a notion of 'security' from those figures. If most of the faws are fixed half a year after the flaw is exploited, your security is pretty much non existant.

      If that's the kind of reports they want me to believe are true they can better close shop cuz I ain't buyin.

      --
      With great power comes great electricity bills.
    8. Re:Gartner? by clintoneast · · Score: 1

      I'm 100% behind what's being said on this thread; the question has troubled me, as I'm sure it's troubled others, for a while.

      Everytime I read something by one of the Gartner's of the world, I typically hear at best poor or obvious speculation about what might happen.

      Now, taking a step back for a minute I have to ask myself about this incongruence; bad data with good authority; it seems like I must be faulty in (at least) one of my ideas.

      First, is Gartner's data faulty? What else should I take it to mean when other people consider Gartner's research as outdated and superficial? Fairly well debunked and answered. Perhaps you shared my amusement when I saw this . Now while I accept Gartner's point as being clearly true (an iPod, could indeed be a security risk, true), I think that on my reading I thought of it in the much the same way as a pencil becoming a stabbing weapon; that is, plausible, but much better and more dangerous tools exist. It sounds like hyperbole. (Although I'm probably overly cynical).

      As far as authority goes, Gartner gets significant press attention, and I suppose you could be forgiven for thinking that this makes them correct.

      So, where's the gap? Is it an important gap, or is it just a group of slashdotters getting their geek hurt by a group that approaches things from a business perspective?

      -cje-

      DISCLAIMER: I'm young and naive.

    9. Re:Gartner? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Because as we all know, XML is currently the most important technology in existence. :-)

    10. Re:Gartner? by Ami+Ganguli · · Score: 1
      Now, taking a step back for a minute I have to ask myself about this incongruence; bad data with good authority; it seems like I must be faulty in (at least) one of my ideas.

      "Authoritative" news sources are full of bad data. If you've ever seen any issue that you're close to reported, you get a clear sense of this.

      The media buys into Gartner because 1) they give lots of "data", 2) they act like they know what they're talking about, 3) their positions are fairly mainstream.

      --
      It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
    11. Re:Gartner? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily a good way to judge "market trends." I have bought at least ten books on Linux and Open Source technologies. I have only bought one for Windows (C# in a Nutshell) and none at all for the Mac OS.

      I have only two machines running Linux and no desire to get any more. I have four macs and twenty five PCs. The reason for the discrepancy in book sales? I can figure out what I want to do in Windows very easily with no books. If I forget a command, I'll probably find it just by clicking on menus. And the Mac -- including the Objective C language and the Core Framework -- is so well documented by Apple themselves, most of the books I've seen are a step down in terms of accuracy and cogency. O'reilly's Carbon books are a good example.

      I buy Linux books because I learned long ago that trying to deal with the hodge podge quick fix documentation of the majority of UNIX and Linux software packages is a time killer. If I have the option of buying a $35 book or spending three hours figuring out how to get Samba authentication from our AD server to work under PAM, guess which one I take?

      If anything, book sales should measure usability trends, not market trends. If a program I write ever has a "Missing Manual" or "Inna Nutshell" published for it, I will consider this the biggest insult ever.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    12. Re:Gartner? by baggins2002 · · Score: 1

      Wish I could edit my own posts - just as after I sent this I found an interesting article by Tim O'Reilly. He suggests using book sales to measure market trends. I don't believe this would work. You would be ignoring the large number of illiterate Windows users.

  8. Wasn't this the opposite argument we were making? by vondo · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Isn't this the opposite of the argument that Linux users have always made. That because it is so hard to get a PC (as opposed to parts) without Windows, that the number of linux installs running was higher than the shipments?

    I mean, really, what evidence do they have that hordes of people are buying machines with Linux pre-installed just to go through the pain of installing XP in order to save, what, $40?

    Granted, a lot of machines shipped with Linux aren't running the version of Linux they shipped with, but I find their statement hard to believe.

  9. NX support? That is soooo *LAST* month! by Asprin · · Score: 3, Informative


    Gammage also stated that until Linux is shown to support the NX (No eXecute) security technology supported in Microsoft Corp's forthcoming Windows XP Service Pack 2, it will be seen as potentially deficient to Windows. However, Red Hat released a patch for the Linux kernel to support NX in June that has the full blessing of Linux creator Linus Torvalds.

    Yeah, right. Read 'em and weep.

    --
    "Lawyers are for sucks."
    - Doug McKenzie
    1. Re:NX support? That is soooo *LAST* month! by Pieroxy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Given that less than 5% of the current CPUs sold support that feature, what difference will this make?

    2. Re:NX support? That is soooo *LAST* month! by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      So by this logic, the 286 never should have been released, because before that the entire x86 world was 8-bit, and of course the market was less than 5% saturated with 16-bit CPUs before the 286 was released, and for awhile after as well. Ergo, no new products should ever be introduced simply because it hasn't passed the "early adopter" stage and you're too impatient to allow the S-curve to bring greater functionatility for less price to the consumer.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    3. Re:NX support? That is soooo *LAST* month! by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      Given that less than 5% of the current CPUs sold support that feature, what difference will this make?

      If I were building a internet-connected server I'd be seriously thinking of shoving an Athlon 64 in it now.

      It's a shame that there are no lower spec processors with the NX flag though - seems a bit like overkill to run a webserver off an Ath-64

    4. Re:NX support? That is soooo *LAST* month! by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      You misunderstood me. I meant: "What difference does it make" if the patch is only released in June or August? It's not like there is a serious emergency today

      My bad.

  10. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pieroxy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And here goes the danger of thinking that your family if somewhat representative. Or the slashdot community for that matter.

  11. NX Bit?!?? by Teancom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What the hell? As long as Linux doesn't support NX, which *will be* supported in the *upcoming* SP2, it will be seen as deficient in comparision? Okay, ignore the fact that they themselves state there are already patches for Redhat, while SP2 hasn't actually shipped. I'm just wondering what the fascination with NX is. I mean, it's a nifty idea, but I can't imagine anyone getting down the wire of choosing between XP or Linux as the right tool for a job, and deciding on XP because of NX. I mean, come-on. This is just idiocy. Not that I had any respect for Gartner to lose, but if I did, there it went... There are plenty of differences, strengths and weaknessess on both sides, to differentiate between XP and Linux. Supporting the NX bit is not one of them at this time.

    1. Re:NX Bit?!?? by Teancom · · Score: 1

      Your reading skills are flawed. Re-read my post. Take especial care when you get to a sentence that starts with "Okay, ignore the fact".

    2. Re:NX Bit?!?? by bigberk · · Score: 1
      I can't imagine anyone getting down the wire of choosing between XP or Linux as the right tool for a job, and deciding on XP because of NX.
      Anyone with any knowledge of OS security will know that Windows automatically loses in the competition, because various OS components (Internet Explorer/ActiveX) allow bypassing of normal privilege isolation. Windows tends to fall apart on its own under security stressors, while UNIX holds its permission isolations -- assuming both are kept patched up to date, even.
    3. Re:NX Bit?!?? by khuber · · Score: 1

      Well, some guy named root is running 39 processes on my Mandrake system and I heard he likes exploits.

    4. Re:NX Bit?!?? by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1
      because various OS components (Internet Explorer/ActiveX) allow bypassing of normal privilege isolation.

      Ever heard of Firefox? You named one component. ActiveX is a subset of the IE component. Other than IE, do you have any other insecure components to mention?

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    5. Re:NX Bit?!?? by bigberk · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You named one component. ActiveX is a subset of the IE component. Other than IE, do you have any other insecure components to mention?
      Yes, I can name other insecure components. How about USER32/GDI32 and its messaging design that allows privilege escalation/leaking, demonstrated by the very real Shatter Attack. This demonstrates fundamental flaws in the Win32 messaging design, which can not be fixed without radical changes to Windows.

      Note that I'm not arguing by talking about insecure/vulnerable libraries, like MS crypto or RPC which has led to dozens of major exploits. Equivalent vulnerabilities in portmapper or OpenSSL would lead to similar problems on UNIX. Rather I'm talking about fundamental design flaws that allow privilege leakage -- (1) IE integration (a huge one), (2) Win32 API messaging, ... any more?
    6. Re:NX Bit?!?? by Reteo+Varala · · Score: 1

      NX's main advantage is that it helps prevent any overflowing data from executing.

      This, simply put, would eliminate the vast number of buffer-overflow exploits out there, because if overflowed data cannot execute, it cannot perform any viral activities.

      Can you say security? I knew you could. ;)

    7. Re:NX Bit?!?? by Sweetshark · · Score: 1
      If this is on a server, most of your chrooted processes leave a process behind that basically does interact with nobody and is thus hard to exploit (apache2, postfix, mysql for example). Then there are Agettys and Init, ksoftirqd and friends. On my server, there are:
      • 6 agettys
      • 12 kernel procs (init, ksoftirqd, pdflush ...)
      • 3 chroot "zombies"(postfix,apache2, mysql)
      • 3 system demons (cron, metalog)
      • 2 sshd, 10 courier-imap procs
      Assuming your system looks about the same, the only thing to really keep an eye on is sshd and courier-imap, because they interface with the outside world. While SSH is already watching its security very closly, you wont have to care for more the security of two software packages ...
    8. Re:NX Bit?!?? by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link. Had no idea the Windows GUI components had such a huge and gaping window messaging authentication flaw in them. Although wouldn't the window already have to be open to allow a malicious program to attack? Ie, would Regedit have to be opened by the user before the program could start editing settings? Or is the desktop itself, Start menu and all, a "window?" This article only mentions Windows 2000, so I assume NT is also vulnerable, but what about XP or Server 2003? Any word on Longhorn? Also, as I am getting a laptop that runs the OS X BSD variant, does the Apple GUI(s) use a system similiar to Windows window messaging non-authentication? I believe it has 4 in total, Aqua, Carbon, Classic (is this Cocoa?) and of course X11. I could be wrong about the exact names, though. However, as there are 4 GUIs instead of one involved, it seems to me that the possibility for a flaw is greater, if not the actual probability.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  12. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Entropius · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, yeah. I know that. But I'd think the number of people adding linux would be greater than the number who buy linux boxes and format them, just because there are so few linux boxes sold.

  13. No it's not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I hate to break bad news to you, but what you're doing is called "stealing".

    1. Re:No it's not by cspaz · · Score: 1

      And this is why Windows costs us $9999999999 to install on one machine.

    2. Re:No it's not by fferreres · · Score: 1

      It's not. It's illegal but not stealing. Windows will NOT cost less if everyone paid for it, and even if it did, it's not stealing. You still have you copy, and Microsoft has theirs, and everyone else as well.

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    3. Re:No it's not by Xabraxas · · Score: 2, Insightful
      No, it isn't at all. No matter if Windows gets pirated a billion times or none at all, MS doesn't need to raise the price, in fact the rate of pirating probably only increases with increases in price. It's market forces at work.

      With material goods, theft can be a factor in price because a raise in price is needed to offset the theft of goods, which is not only a lost sale, which means little, but a loss of raw material that was paid for by the producer. There are no raw materials to ethereal 0s and 1s.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    4. Re:No it's not by cspaz · · Score: 1

      I can see your line of reasoning, but we're not limited to ethereal 1s and 0s here. There's the actual CD itself, the packaging thereof, it's shipping and placement on retail shelving, the people behind the scenes coming up with the ideas, implementing them, testing them, refining them...all of these have to be counted as a cost. Every copy that gets ripped off takes money away from Microsoft, and thus makes them look for that money elsewhere...in legitimate sales to honest buyers. Lord knows Mr. Gates could afford to give away Windows and still keep Microsoft running out of his personal bank account for the next umpteen years, but that's not going to happen. Mr. Gates will get his one way or another, and if it means raising the prices for the honest to make up the losses from the dishonest thief, then it will happen. Sure does suck for the everyman though.

    5. Re:No it's not by Xabraxas · · Score: 1

      The point you are missing is that MS isn't taking a hit for stolen material goods. They are only losing a sale and they are losing it for a good reason, the price. You should see people squirm when you tell them the cost of a Windows operating system. The risk for people pirating Windows is much lower than the perceived benefit.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    6. Re:No it's not by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      what you're doing is called "stealing".

      If you're an RIAA lobbyist. To the rest of us, it's called "copyright infringement".

  14. Re:WindowsXP is free... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The price of the licensing isn't important, the TCO is. It's about how much you value your time. Linux makes you much more efficient.

  15. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Kenja · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yea, because no one is going to buy a low cost Linux computer at Walmart and slap a pirate version of Windows on it. Nope. Never gona happen.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
  16. Re:Excuse me by vondo · · Score: 4, Informative
    My experience is the opposite. Linux (Mandrake) installs perfectly, it auto-configures the printer and the scanner. You reboot, get all the updates, reboot again, and keep on sailing. XP takes two reboots for the install, then about 3 more for the updates (and several of those have to be installed seperately). Granted, that's a lot better than Win 98 where I lost count after 8 or 9 reboots to get all the drivers installed and updated on a machine I built.

    Now of course, there are some machines where a linux install is a REAL pain, but most on "desktop" hardware sail right along.

  17. Re:WindowsXP is free... by bluekanoodle · · Score: 1

    I love linux as much as the next guy, but please cite your proof that linux makes one more efficient.

  18. yeah, but don't forget about . . . by nusratt · · Score: 1
  19. Re:WindowsXP is free... by nwbvt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Legal issues aside, most of us do not use Linux because it is cheaper, we use it because it is a superior operating system. Hell I already have the Windows OS that came with my PC (so it might as well be free for me as well). The fallacy that people only use Linux because they are cheap unemployed hackers is just that, a fallacy.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  20. 3.5% by 2008 by droleary · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Bah! Gartner's fabricated estimate is totally unnecessary for this. Actual usage measurements, like the Google Zeitgeist are more telling. Linux has never broken 1% and as a desktop system I really wouldn't count on it passing the Mac any year soon.

    1. Re:3.5% by 2008 by sien · · Score: 2
      Exactly. Have the slashdot editors revealed the percentage of OS's that hit this site?


      When Gartner makes up anti-Linux stats the slashdot crowd screams to high heaven, now that they have made up some pro-Linux stats everyone is celebrating.

    2. Re:3.5% by 2008 by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      1% linux sounds pretty small to me. What are there on those remaining 5% systems?

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    3. Re:3.5% by 2008 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I fake my headers to say "IE/Windows". It's amazing how many sites suddenly start working when you do. Don't most other Linux users do this too?

    4. Re:3.5% by 2008 by killjoe · · Score: 1

      People do most of their browsing at work. Until corporations start adopting a linux desktop that number will stay about where it is.

      Having said that I predict it will pass the Mac in the next two years as corporations continue to adopt a linux desktop. I predict a 5% desktop share by the end of 2007 and 20% by the end of 2009. I think those numbers are pretty conservative.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    5. Re:3.5% by 2008 by Seclusion · · Score: 1

      Google is a poor indication of os domination. Many Linux installations never connect to google. On top of that, Google has never had a connection from more than 1 of my pcs thanks to ssh. I also have a dual boot win98 pc that's only used for games. I'm sure others fall into that group as well.

    6. Re:3.5% by 2008 by Reteo+Varala · · Score: 2, Informative

      When on Google, my debian system with Konqueror defaults to stating it's Windows XP with Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0

      I can change it, but how many other browsers falsely identify themselves for the sake of extra security against the internet?

    7. Re:3.5% by 2008 by trashme · · Score: 1

      Do you reguarly visit sites that redirect your browser if you are not using IE? If not, you really shouldn't be spoofing your user-agent string. As you've just admitted, it can skew browser and OS statistics.

    8. Re:3.5% by 2008 by Ambassador+Kosh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It would really help if people don't do this. No matter how often it is said to customers that people do this just based on the statistics we get told by customers to make the sites primarily IE compatible. If more browsers would report their true user agent it would make life a lot simpler.

      It is pretty easy to make a site completely standards compliant and send it identical html. However to make it work well IE needs to get a different stylesheet from the standards compliant browsers which is basically everything else used. So if you have your browser lie as IE which it is not then the pages tend to render wrong since you where given CSS for a broken box model instead of a correct one.

      Also if more browsers started showing higher percentages of usage it would be a lot easier to convince clients of the importance of paying to have more work done for other browsers.

      One thing I would note is that when I look at statistics for usage I usually see around 90% for IE without cleaning however when I have checked carefully in the logs IE seems to have some strange flaw where it will sometimes request a page 3-5 times within a few ms I have even tested that locally and watched it with ethereal. I have no idea why and it is not from clicking the link more then once but it does screw the statistics up badly. When that is cleaned out I often see IE in the 60-80% range. Other browsers are being used out there by a large number of people but the log analyzers are broken pretty much and the other browsers have correct behavior.

      --
      Computer modeling for biotech drug manufacturing is HARD! :)
    9. Re:3.5% by 2008 by Reteo+Varala · · Score: 1

      You forget the security element, however. By spoofing one's site to seem like something else, what one does is prevent a potential web-attacker from knowing what exploits are likely to be at your system.

      It's not practical for marketing, true. But security is far more important than marketing, due to the fact that marketing using security as an element is always a bit more beneficial than the "everybody else is doing it" argument... despite appearances.

    10. Re:3.5% by 2008 by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Do you mistrust Google so much, or Konqueror's security so little? I think you're being overly paranoid, but at any rate, why spoof as IE in that case? Just make something up, like "Mozilla Watersheep" (hey! a practical use for Firesomething!)

    11. Re:3.5% by 2008 by spitzak · · Score: 1

      The problem is not that it "renders wrong" but that the page does not come up at all unless the browser identifies itself as IE.

      I'm not sure how much this is skewing the results. About 3 years ago I was forced to change the browser ID to IE to get sites to work and I would estimate about 50% of the Mozilla users did. However nowadays I don't bother, and I have really not had any trouble (I'm using Konqueror). Since it is a pain to change, and does not seem as necessary, I suspect the claims that this is skewing down the Linux results is exaggerated. Also the newer browsers make "identify as IE only to this site" possible which would fix Google's statistics.

      Maybe some kind of accurate estimate of system usage can be made by somehow comparing Firefox usage on Windows to Linux and to IE usage on Windows, but this is definately complex statistical math. Certainly though I am a Linux user, I use IE whenever I have to use a Windows machine, not Firefox.

    12. Re:3.5% by 2008 by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Only for sites I absolutely must use, and even then I only do so for that particular site. Simply running around the Internet pretending to be a different browser and/or OS just going to hurt in the long run, and depending on the site, will get you invalid markup/css for your browser.

    13. Re:3.5% by 2008 by Reteo+Varala · · Score: 1

      I didn't set it; it was set by default by the Debian Project. Just because I was aware enough to shut it off doesn't mean jack if someone who isn't doesn't know to turn it off.

    14. Re:3.5% by 2008 by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Are you saying the default user agent string for Konq under Debian is 'MSIE/Windows'? That's quite extraordinary!

    15. Re:3.5% by 2008 by Reteo+Varala · · Score: 1

      ...not the default... the setting for google.com in the "site-specific identification" section by default.

  21. Re:WindowsXP is free... by Nasarius · · Score: 1

    Not from an individual workstation's perspective, no. But administering a bunch of Linux boxes is a lot easier than with Windows. That's where TCO comes into play.

    --
    LOAD "SIG",8,1
  22. I don't get it by flopsy+mopsalon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Linux users need to decide what their operating system is all about. Is it about freedom and doing it your way, or is it all about sales and making money?

    I'm sorry, but the two are not compatible. Once your focus becomes "market share" (shouldn't that be "market selfish"?) then you start in with the competition and copyrighting and everything that goes with it.

    It would be a shame to see the creativity and individualism that spurred the Linux revolution denatured and dilluted, like so many other initally promising social trends, by the invisible hand of the "almighty greenback".

    1. Re:I don't get it by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      It is about doing it your way. For some corporations and people, their way is sales aand making money. The two can stand side by side.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    2. Re:I don't get it by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

      Linux users don't have to do anything buddy. "Our" work is not a product so it *can* be different things to different people. Some like it free, some like it embedded, some like it just like Windows, some don't like it at all.

      Personally, my focus is not market share - the only people talking about market share are Gartner, and the wording itself makes me wonder if they even considered the plethora of free downloads and copies going on in the Linux scene.

      As others have pointed out, the NX thing is a red herring (patch is available already, we also have GRSecurity, PaX, etc, and *XP* SP2 hasn't even shipped yet), the statistics are questionable ("shipping" Linux represents usage???), and it doesn't come close to reflecting the diversity and source sharing (under open source license, if I need to specify that) of the Linux and general open source scene.

      I have to wonder, who sponsored this report?

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    3. Re:I don't get it by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Linux users need to decide what their operating system is all about. Is it about freedom and doing it your way, or is it all about sales and making money?

      Not *only* do Linux users not need to decide that, but it's perfectly fine to have a variety of attitudes among kernel developers, and even among distribution providers.

    4. Re:I don't get it by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      Linux users need... Stop!

      Every 'need' (or must, have to, etc) has an 'or else' clause. Usually it is clear from context what it is, so we skip it. ('I need to breathe' has the, usually unstated, 'or else I will die!' clause. If dying is not a problem, do I need to breathe?)

      However, in this case I am not sure what the 'or else' is here. Could you clarify? What happens if they don't?

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    5. Re:I don't get it by QuantumJedi · · Score: 1
      I completely agree with you on this one. I originally switched to Linux because for what I want to do with a computer it works best.

      Since making the switch several years ago I have discovered lots of other benefits:

      the great community Linux has - This is the REAL strength of linux in my opinion

      There are loads of new virii that are currently wreaking havoc at my univeristy. Many people are talking about how it is disrupting their work but the Linux users are just getting on with it.

      So much choice. My fiancee has been forced to switch to Linux because now none of our computers have windows on them. She needs a word-processor. I use Latex so thats no help. I let her play with Abi-word, Kword and open office to see which one she liked best. Same with choice of desktop, web browser etc etc

      I could not care less what the market share of Linux is. As long as there are enough enthusiasts to carry the torch then thats great.

      I LIKE being different. I LOVE being part of this community. I tell other people how great Linux is but I don't try and force their hand - after all how often do people convert religions after being preached to by a Jehovas Witness?

      Live your life - be free.

    6. Re:I don't get it by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Linux users need to decide what their operating system is all about. Is it about freedom and doing it your way, or is it all about sales and making money?

      It's about whatever the hell I say it is. My computer, my operating system (for real!), my decision.

      On your computer, it's whatever the hell *you* say it is.

      Linux isn't some nebulous force that binds it's users into borg-like geekdom, nor is it a company composed of private individuals who all need to 'vote' to see what everyone 'should' do. Linux users, each and every one of them, make their own decisions, and fuck what anyone else has to say about the matter.

      That's one of the beauties of Linux. No one can tell me what to do with it, and nobody has any business even trying.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    7. Re:I don't get it by leoxx · · Score: 1
      Linux users need to decide what their operating system is all about. Is it about freedom and doing it your way, or is it all about sales and making money?


      No we don't. The beauty of open source is that it can be about anything anyone wants it to. Some distros can concentrate on marketshare and some distros can focus on being Free and some can worry about being "the latest and greatest" and some can try to be wickedly fast, and some can concern themselves with being very similar to Unix, etc etc etc. Choice is a beautiful thing. Embrace it.

    8. Re:I don't get it by QuantumJedi · · Score: 1
      So much for freedom of choice and treating your life-partner as a responsible adult. Does the girl get to make any of the decisions in your household?

      She can always buy her own computer and install whatever the hell she likes on it - like I have.

  23. Re:WindowsXP is free... by kasperd · · Score: 1

    I would rather pay a nominal fee for a easy to use, secure linux distro that get windows XP for free.

    I agree with that. I didn't start using Linux because of the price, but because it was the OS that could satisify my needs. Windows just would have been incompatible with all the systems I had to work with. Actually when I recently bought a laptop, Windows XP was preinstalled. Of course the first thing I did was to wipe the harddisk and install Linux.

    --

    Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
  24. Re:WindowsXP is free... by mm0mm · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Though this is apparent flamebait...
    So long as I can download Windows XP and get a valid serial number generator, I have no reason to install Linux.
    And that makes you spend more maintenance costs and troubleshooting time than using Linux. Pirating and using a poorly designed OS will cost you in the form of time, money and personal data even if you feel that you're saving money. Even if obtaining a copy of XP is free, using it may not be free after all.
  25. Re:Excuse me by Nasarius · · Score: 1

    Nah, on XP I have to dig up my Dell network drivers from somewhere to get the onboard Ethernet working. On Linux, it just works with e100.
    Aren't anecdotes fun?

    --
    LOAD "SIG",8,1
  26. Re:WindowsXP is free... by Arngautr · · Score: 2, Funny
    cite your proof that linux makes one more efficient.

    That's simple, solitaire isn't included in many linux distros.

  27. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by yobbo · · Score: 1

    I'd think the 98% of people who don't know what linux is would boot the computer, say "wtf is that" - then get little Timmy around with his windows XP cd to "fix" it.

  28. Add to it... by Taos · · Score: 1

    the 150 desktops we bought and immediately wiped because D^H"they" wouldn't sell us anything without windows.

  29. Re:Excuse me by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

    Why not just reboot once when you update?


    Why not just use Autopatcher?

    --
    Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
  30. Re:What's the rate of increase? by nusratt · · Score: 1

    "does anyone know the rate of increase of Linux machines compared to, let's say, 1/2/5 years ago?"

    well, 1/2/5 = 0.5/5 = 0.1, x 365 = 36.5 days ago, so I imagine it hasn't changed much.

  31. Re:WindowsXP is free... by cspaz · · Score: 1

    And that, friends, is probably the most intelligent post I've ever read. Props to Arngautr!

  32. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Xabraxas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...and no one is ever going to buy a windows computer and slap linux on it...nope, never going to happen.

    --
    Time makes more converts than reason
  33. Re:WindowsXP is free... by nwbvt · · Score: 1

    For starters, how many times have Windows users had to restart their computers in order to install a critical security patch in the last year?

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  34. Re:WindowsXP is free... by next1 · · Score: 1

    the proof is that you don't have to click "ok/cancel" and close "clippy" (or whatever that moronic mascot is called) all day for no apparent reason!!

  35. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by UserChrisCanter4 · · Score: 5, Informative

    If I'm not mistaken, Dell offered business users a choice of some random flavor of Linux or FreeDOS preinstalled on their computers.

    The logic was thusly: Licensing agreements force them to ship the computer with SOME OS on it, but a lot of businesses already have a Windows site license. Because the price of the non-windows Dells was slightly lower than effectively purchasing the license a second time, the companies order these computers with one of those two OSes preinstalled, then wipe the drive and install WinXP/2000.

    So while there are a small number of users purchasing their computers with Windows pre-installed and migrating to Linux, that number is effectively buried by businesses doing just the opposite.

  36. Re:WindowsXP is free... by AuMatar · · Score: 1

    Windows doesn't have a command line. I'm not able to string commands together with pipes. Running all the commands I do on a daily basis manually instead of that way would make me very inefficient. Besides which, if you know the commands, youu can type FAR, FAR faster than you can ever click a mouse.

    --
    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
  37. Re:Excuse me by AuMatar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Funny. Last time I installed Windows, it was 3 hours of putzing with driver, and the onboard ethernet STILL didn't work. Mandrake worked ou of the box.

    --
    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
  38. Re:WindowsXP is free... by next1 · · Score: 1

    the point is that windows sucks, not how much it is.

    j/k.

    (it's true though).

  39. My own "statistics" says other by Maljin+Jolt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In past 10 years, I bought a total of just a dozen PCs. Every one of them is now running Linux, completely eliminating all brands of Windowses bought with them.

    That's 100% of current userbase over past 10 years now. And 6 of the 12 are actually desktops. That's 100% of my desktops running Linux.

    Well, within above I do not count Linux replaced a toy WinCE in iPaq PDA, gaining a desktop capability in my pocket too.

    --
    There you are, staring at me again.
  40. Problem with Google Zeitgeist by THotze · · Score: 1

    I know a lot of people who swear by Google Zeitgeist but really, as a statistical tool, it can be limited. I'm not saying Gartner's numbers are perfect, but at the same time, consider the following:

    Google only uses cookies, as far as I know, to store my preferences. While that's good for security and privacy reasons, its bad for Zeitgeist.

    Its not unreasonable to think that 'power' web surfers probably use Google more than most computer users, on the whole. Who are power users? Are they Mac users? Linux users? Windows XP? I'm not sure, but I'll bet that 'power users' tend to use some platforms above others.

    Mac users may, for example, be inflated because of all the kids using Macs at school for school projects (as a random example).

    Computers running Windows 95 are probably less likely to connect to the Internet through a fast connection, therefore, users are less likely to google 50 sites a day and instead probably just stick to say, email and their bank's website.

    I think Linux is hampered on Zeitgeist because many Linux desktops are probably ONLY on corporate LANs or the like, where they don't have direct internet access. Which is why Garnter can be useful, it will count those of Zeitgeist never will.

    So while Zeitgeist is by far the best tool to use when deciding what to design a popular, general purpose website for (as it shows whose likely to get to it, esp. through Google), it doesn't necessarily show you what EVERYONE is using EVERYWHERE, even in the dekstop world.

  41. Find Other Benchmarks by buckhead_buddy · · Score: 1

    While the released numbers could be a good thing for Linux, it's more likely to be representative of "size of capital market for Gartner services" than to truly represent a completely impartial measure.

    Like seeing a positive reference to OS/2 in a Windows magazine or reading how there are many qualities Microsoft should copy from Mac OS X in PC err eWeek, it really isn't a major or even minor coup when a firm that has completely been lodged in the cleft of Windowlingus for years starts including references to things people on the fringe may recognize or relate to. From the sound of the "interpretations", it seems that Linux still will be painted as diminishing and losing ground even with measureable sales.

    Gartner's numbers benefit Gartner's paying clients, and its doubtful that the funds will be enough to get them to a 12 step program and off their capital addiction. Don't let these "facts", "statistics", and "analyses" get you too up or down. They know which side their bread is buttered on.

  42. Viruses and Crap... by cspaz · · Score: 1

    These will never go away as long as there are people using PCs. Until they start making people take moron tests before issuing them a PC, there will be some idiot who insists on opening this attachment from someone they don't know, just becuase the subject of the email says "Open this now!!"

  43. Re:Gartner? -- here's the text by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    OK, so I went to Google and dug up a link
    Gartner Encourages Realistic Desktop Linux Expectations

    Excitement might be growing about the prospects for Linux on the desktop following several high-profile government contracts, but research firm Gartner Inc is injecting a dose of realism by playing down the potential for desktop Linux.

    High-profile contracts with government organizations such as City of Munich in Germany have raised excitement about Linux on the desktop, with Gartner's prediction that 220 million PCs will be replaced in 2004 and 2005 adding fuel to the fire.

    However, Gartner research VP, Brian Gammage, has cast doubt on how significant a percentage of those replacement PCs will be running the open source operating system. "I think it will be significant for the Linux vendors that's for sure, but we don't see them picking up any more than 5%," he said.

    In the coming weeks, Gartner will officially announce figures that show Linux has shipped on 5% of all PCs worldwide this year. It expects that figure to grow to 7.5% by 2008, but is quick to point out that this is not necessarily a representative figure of the number of Linux PCs being used.

    The company estimates that perhaps 2% of all PCs shipped worldwide this year will actually be used with Linux, with that figure growing to 3.5% by 2008. "Not every PC that ships with a version of Linux continues to run with that," noted Gammage.

    Nevertheless, there will be many more PCs deployed with Linux than there are today, although Gammage maintained that excitement over government contracts might be focusing attention in the wrong areas.

    "All the politically motivated news from the last year did not help," he said. "The noise regarding government contracts is actually self-defeating." Gammage added that the government contracts are primarily serving a large number of users with wide application requirements, which is not necessarily a good thing for proving return on investment to cash-strapped CIOs.

    "Where you have a closed domain of users and a fixed application set the ROI will be quicker," he said. "There is a sustainable opportunity for Linux in certain sectors and fixed devices."

    "They [desktop Linux vendors] are doing some business but it's still niche," he said. "We're seeing slow, organic growth, which is good because it means it won't be short-lived."

    Gammage also stated that until Linux is shown to support the NX (No eXecute) security technology supported in Microsoft Corp's forthcoming Windows XP Service Pack 2, it will be seen as potentially deficient to Windows. However, Red Hat released a patch for the Linux kernel to support NX in June that has the full blessing of Linux creator Linus Torvalds.

    © ComputerWireTM 2004 Article Date: 22 Jul 2004

    As usual, Gartner does its best to downplay any positive figures for Linux.
  44. Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 1
    grep sed awk cut tail head vi bash less make iptables ssh sudo sendmail httpd php perl tar gzip chown chgrp chroot crontab host wget whois
    Do I really need to go on? :-)
    --
    bash: rtfm: command not found
    1. Re:Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

      Let's make this a little more objective (yes Linux still wins out)

      grep => the find command in windows.
      sed => available as a free download for Windows
      tail, head => I can live without 'em, but ok you win on those two
      vi => You must be kidding me right. You can say what you want about windows, but there's no shortage of good text editors. If you haven't found any, you really are living in a parallel universe
      bash => cmd? I can live without bash
      less => ok you win this one too
      make => lol. You're going to talk about the disgusting make file syntax as some advantage over windows? You have make in windows too.
      iptables => not informed enough to know what this is. (Yes, I DON'T use Linux/Unix
      ssh => HyperTerminal, and ssh utilities are available. At least something using Kerberos is
      sudo => Available in Win 2K, Win XP onwards. You can change the setting of each executable separately and allow it run under a separate user if you want.
      sendmail => No arguments. Sendmail rules
      httpd => Not even going to justify this with a response
      php => and this has what to do with Operating systems?
      perl => ummm, runs in windows too....
      tar, gzip => WinZip, or Win XP's own compression
      ch-anything => lots of gui equivalents
      crontab => Conceding this one
      host => This is probably not a big deal
      wget, whois => really no big deal.

    2. Re:Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

      My bad. grep, awk, tail, head, less, whois and ssh are all available as free tools for Windows. There's even a frikkin' emacs version. Sheesh. I'm not bother with pasting the links. Just google "ssh for windows" or whatever.

    3. Re:Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by mvdw · · Score: 1

      Yes, they are all available, but they all run MUCH MUCH slower under windows than under linux, at least, the cygwin versions do on my machine.

      Give me a bash shell and the unix utilities over any gui any day of the week for running any repetitive task. I love scripts - they make my life easier, and I hate windows without cygwin.

    4. Re:Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      I have all of those programs NATIVELY for Windows... It's available if you look up Unix Utils for Windows or smth on Google. Wget is good every now and then.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    5. Re:Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 1

      reow! i was trying to be funny. w/e. tough crowd.

      --
      bash: rtfm: command not found
    6. Re:Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

      Heh, must be the caffei....snore....plonk! Er... what was that you just said?

    7. Re:Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

      I never said it was as 'good' as bash. I simply said you've got your cmd line interface + shell in windows too, and if you actually bother to figure it out (like you did with Linux) you'd find it has quite a bit of power too.

    8. Re:Proof that Linux makes one more effecient: by mvdw · · Score: 1

      Yes, I agree that native versions are much better, but I need the rest of what cygwin provides as well for some other things, and I don't see the point in running more than one version of the utils.

  45. Is Linux PPC and YellowDog for Macs Included? by adzoox · · Score: 1

    However insignificant the numbers might be do these figures include any boxes that or addons that are PowerPC based (other than IBM) - meaning a Mac or other custom box like a Yellow Dog Briq? (Or any of the Macs they sell that ship with Yellow Dog Linux PreInstalled?)

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
  46. Re:WindowsXP is free... by cspaz · · Score: 1

    You know you can disable that damn paper clip, don't you?

  47. Re:WindowsXP is free... by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 1
    I *love* piping together commands. In fact, during work today I was writing a shell script and I needed a list of all ip addresses bound to the machine, save 127.0.0.1.
    [root@localhost root]# ifconfig|grep inet|grep -v 127.0.0.1|cut -d : -f 2|cut -d \ -f 1
    192.168.0.114
    192.168.1.32
    192.168.13.64
    Try THAT with Windows
    --
    bash: rtfm: command not found
  48. Re:WindowsXP is free... by Taladar · · Score: 1

    +1000 Insightful

    If you know how to use the commandline Linux (or any other Unix for that matter) is far more efficient that Windows will ever be.

  49. Re:Excuse me by cha0saddddddd · · Score: 1

    heh..Same here...you mean e1000 though i think. got the wife a dell and had to boot up a knoppix cd to download the xp net drivers. lol

  50. Re:WindowsXP is free... by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

    Well if you have Windows XP, maybe once, at the most twice. If you have Windows ME, never, but that's because you've probably reformatted your hard drive and switched over to Linux after using the Sturdy and Stable ME version.... As for Windows 95/98, I'll let somebody else talk about them.

  51. Re:WindowsXP is free... by oddbudman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    FYI windows does have a command line. Start-> Run -> cmd.exe on windows xp boxes. To my knowledge it does support pipes to some degree. It also has tab completion. To be honest I think it is a great improvement over command.com. Bash still ownz tho.

    Have you ever installed cygwin on an XP box? It has a nice little shell.

    I don't believe that terminal is always faster either. I generally find a GUI file manager a much easier way to select, group and move specific mp3s around my hdd. Each to his own I guess.

  52. 10 years... by cspaz · · Score: 1

    The fact that the oldest one is still running is a testament to Linux stability. I'm sure a Windows machine would have keeled over five times in that timeframe.

    1. Re:10 years... by TrancePhreak · · Score: 2, Funny

      I have a Windows 3.1 machine that still runs. I have a DOS 2.0 computer that still works.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    2. Re:10 years... by st1d · · Score: 1

      Don't kid yourself. I've got a TI994/A that still works. (The Attax game is still addictive!) PC's were more durable back then, but they should have been, because $2500 would buy you a barebones, monitor and CPU. No soundcard, no CD, 5 1/4 drive, a few megs of memory, and a couple gross megs of HD space.

      I can still boot these computers, but that's practically all they're good for. At least the Linux ones can usually do something practical.

      --
      Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
    3. Re:10 years... by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      My DOS 2.0 machine can run old games at the correct speed with no hassle. The Windows 3.1 machine can play the less-older DOS games flawlessly with it's Sound Blaster 16 and such. The DOS 2.0 machine can also perform cad calculations with its upgraded math co-processor. ;)

      They may not seem usefull to you, but they are more than usefull to me.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
  53. Re:Excuse me by xutopia · · Score: 1

    is that another one of those cool IE bars?

  54. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by squall14716 · · Score: 1

    And the 95% of that 98% probably also don't know what Windows is, think it's something new, and go about typing their letter to grandma.

  55. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by ebyrob · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And no one is ever going to buy a linux computer and slap their old version of Windows on it. No, never going to happen.

  56. Linux on Corporate LAN... by cspaz · · Score: 1

    I think Linux is hampered on Zeitgeist because many Linux desktops are probably ONLY on corporate LANs or the like, where they don't have direct internet access.

    I would tend to think the opposite, that the Linux boxes are the ones that the hobbyists have in the spare bedroom at home, and the majority of XP machine sitting behind corporate firewalls and routers don't cound in the numbers.

  57. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by dj245 · · Score: 1
    I mean, really, what evidence do they have that hordes of people are buying machines with Linux pre-installed just to go through the pain of installing XP in order to save, what, $40?

    Perhaps the vast quatities of boxen that Wal Mart is shipping has something to do with it. I still don't believe for a second that these numbers are fair and unbiased, and I think their polling methods may be in error, but Wal-mart does ship a lot of computers to people who are very familiar with Windows, not Linux.

    --
    Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
  58. Give up the drugs by poptones · · Score: 1
    Linux is already past windows in terms of sophistication, reliability, and utter wow factor. Have you seen screenshots of any really nice kde or gnome desktops?

    I know... You can do a lot of that stuff with windows, too. I know this because I too am a (closeted) windows user. I am sitting at a (presently) windows2000 machine that has bore this same skin (my own version of "Beacon") for years now ala windowblinds. Yes, it makes it a bit slower but goddamn windows is ass-ugly without it!

    My system is my TV set, my vcr, my video player (I rarely watch dvds - I rip them and then watch the 1-3gb avis at my leisure). I can drive the vs6 system I was given by a college buddy but I am most definitely not a programmer of the c variety. In linux I can hang the ./configure and make install but rarely can figure out what to fix when things don't go properly (one of the best parts of linux is that I can still create nice applications using the multitude of scripting tools that hook so well into the windows manager). Thanks heaven for google, as tech support is now 24/7 and I usually find the answers I need.

    So... let's compare.

    My windows install has been pretty much stable the last couple of years. Many apps I rely on for my "shell" don't require install or are very quick to do so (dscaler, winrar, irfanview, photoshop, etc). I don't use IE and my entire profile - all my bookmarks, emails - evrything - are in an encrypted 650MB pgp disk which I migrate from install to install. The biggest nuisance of setting up windows is just getting the codecs to all work together smoothly in zoomplayer. That is, except for the vs6 setup, which is a goddamn twitchy nightmare of os patches, swapping cds, rebooting and holding my breath a lot. But I can get a basic install working (ie I can surf the net and watch TV) in about an hour and a half - the rest of it is at least a half a day. Last time I had to do it all it took most of my weekend (thanks to a vs6 install that simply would not... and my weekends are three days!).

    Contrast this to linux: I can install mdk10 in about an hour. Spend another hour tweaking settings to make it all look nice and installing a couple of bug patches, and I'm nearly done.

    End result: my windows2000 system does what I expect but it takes fucking hours to reload, it's creaky and kinda ugly, and very definitely showing its age - and, it being windows, one does need to reload from time to time. The zoomplayer feels very slick and looks nice as does dscaler (just so long as I don't accidentally launch an mdi app like photoshop, which will force dscaler to throw a bsod every time).

    Compare this to mdk10, which in less than one hour installs the entire dev environment, the media engines, gorgeous desktop tools with enough "themes" to provide a nice looking desktop with no downloads required. Spend a few more minutes installing codeweaver's crossover office so I can run photoshop, click to the llf to download decss so I can rip (er, watch) those dvds when I want, and I'm done.

    Ironically, the media stuff in mandrake ALL works better than windows (and my files are all avi, a "windows format"). Playback is smoother in totem than in windows, the interface just as nice (albeit slightly different), and the picture and sound quality is better than in windows.

    Of course, that part could also be because linux has better drivers for my sis7xx chipset based system than windows, thus offering me the option (in linux) of running 1400x1050 resolution at 75hz with my compaq 19" monitor (as opposed to windows which forces me into using either a flickering 1600x1200x60hz or the gigantic 1024x768 at a decent scan rate, with no proper aspect ratio choice in between). Oh, and that's true with XP as well, although you won't get me near that shit again unless you pay me (which someone does).

    Nothing is perfect. Suse9 looks much nicer ootb than mandrake10 (although it takes about three times longer to install even from the DVD) and its cryp

    1. Re:Give up the drugs by cspaz · · Score: 1

      I don't doubt that you can install many a Linux distro faster than Windows. What I'm getting at is the ordinary desktop user. The variety that probably has never heard of Linux and if you said "Suse" around them, they'd probably say "Bless You." These are the kinds of people that Linux needs to win over if they're going to compete with Windows, and these are the kinds of people who could never get a Linux install working like they wanted to, mostly because command line is way beyond them.

    2. Re:Give up the drugs by name773 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      why on earth do you people want to take over windows??
      simply build the best os you can

      anyway, the command line doesn't have to be way beyond the ordinary desktop user... i'm sure they'd have little trouble (if any) learning it

    3. Re:Give up the drugs by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

      I know people who have done self installs of Linux without touching the command line, and then used that installation for a while.

      I can *assure* you that if anyone did a good job of building pre-installed Linux desktops, the only people who run Windows now and would have trouble migrating are the power users and gamers.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
    4. Re:Give up the drugs by tehdaemon · · Score: 1

      The 'ordinary desktop user' doesn't install OSes either. The only 'winning over' that you need for these people is when they go to the store(or wherever) to buy a computer, is for them to consider buying the linux preinstalled one instead of the windows one. The $ factor should help there, but first there needs to be the option. Get them that option, and you are more than halfway there.

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    5. Re:Give up the drugs by Drakon · · Score: 1

      The idea is that we break the monopoly to open space for OS competition. A heterogenious market is less prone to attack-
      if 5% of the world was using linux, 5% using openBSD, 5% using beOS, 5% using plan9, 5% using macOS ...
      a new exploit would affect SOME things, but we would never again see things such as slammer taking down the net

  59. Re:WindowsXP is free... by Ptraci · · Score: 1

    Not to mention the preference some of us have for operating systems that don't give us cause to swear at them when they make decisions for us, or make it difficult to do anything connected to the internet with any feeling of security or privacy.

  60. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    The evidence is called a "ms windows site license."

    In order to avoid paying for windows twice, corporations that already own a ms windows site license choose to buy their new PCs with linux pre-installed. They choose linux over no os at all because MS has this silly little contractual requirement with all vendors licensed to ship ms-windows, the requirement is all machines must ship with *an* OS. The requirement used to be to explciitly ship with ms-windows, but that requirement was axed as one of the few punishements that MS actually received for being found of abuse of monopoly power during the last couple of suits against them.

    These corps would end up doing a ghost-install to bring the system into line with their standard corporate configuration anyway, so they gain absolutely nothing by having the machine come with ms-windows installed and a license to go with it.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  61. Re:WindowsXP is free... by squall14716 · · Score: 1

    Pure command line sucks, I agree. But pure GUI sucks as well.

    Especially with my half working mouse.

  62. Think "prostitution". by khasim · · Score: 4, Informative

    Gartner is in the business of selling "reports" and "studies".

    Most of the "reports" and "studies" you'll see from Gartner are linked from vendor's websites. Vendors who paid for the report. So the vendors use those "reports" and "studies" as marketing materials.

    I've only seen Gartner stuff used to justify a decision that has already been made. And, IMO, that's all they're good for.

    1. Re:Think "prostitution". by cerberusss · · Score: 1
      Most of the "reports" and "studies" you'll see from Gartner are linked from vendor's websites. Vendors who paid for the report.

      Note that this does not necessarily mean that they don't have integrity. Sometimes, reports are paid for but since the payer doesn't like the outcome, it disappears in a drawer.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    2. Re:Think "prostitution". by aggles · · Score: 1

      Gartner does not do puff pieces for money. Its one of the few that don't. If a vendor likes a report, they can link to it or buy reprints. Gartner is a conservative organization. It was late getting on the Internet boom, but had a refresh of its analysts in the late 90's. Many of the reports are very forward thinking. But, its an opinion, and you still have to be responsible for yours. Some analysts read /. as a research source, so hopefully its not all 10 year old information. -ag

    3. Re:Think "prostitution". by salesgeek · · Score: 1

      Gartner is in the business of selling "reports" and "studies".

      Actually, that is only one bit of their business. Their role is almost like that of an outsourced CTO... they try to be the thought leader in the IT world. Their reports and such are very influential because they are delivered to the CEOs, CFOs and CIOs of large corporations. Gartner is very conservative, recommends only technologies precieved to be leading the marketplace and tends to not understand trends until they are obvious.

      They do offer consulting services, and they are very pricey.

      --
      -- $G
    4. Re:Think "prostitution". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      >>Gartner is in the business of selling "reports" and "studies".

      Yes, true.

      >>Most of the "reports" and "studies" you'll see from Gartner are linked from vendor's websites. Vendors who paid for the report. So the vendors use those "reports" and "studies" as marketing materials.

      Not even close to true. You obviously have never actually used Gartner's services. Gartner does a tiny amount of company-sponsored research like that and I agree that stuff is a sham.

      Still, this has nothing at all to do with their core business which is selling research services. If your organization subscribes to Gartner you pay a crapload of money so that you have access to not just their research but their researchers. For instance, they have people who specialize in every niche of the industry and know a ton about it. If you need some info about a particular niche, you can set up a conference call with that person and even have them do original research for you. I've used the service and it can be incredibly helpful. You might think "I can Google for that info too" as I did but they provide what you can't get from Google -years of experience. There are times when talking to someone who has been following an industry very closely for 20 years is really helpful.

      >>I've only seen Gartner stuff used to justify a decision that has already been made. And, IMO, that's all they're good for.

      Given that you don't even understand the business Gartner is in, the usefulness of your opinion is questionable at best.

  63. posting at its best by 00zero · · Score: 1
    Another preemptive quasi-dupe! Good show!
    There will be Hawking news
    Hawking news

    good political satire

  64. Re:WindowsXP is free... by Spoons · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That may be true for the average Joe Desktop linux user, but it is certainly not true for business. Much of the inroads linux has made in the business world (both desktop and server) has been based on pure cost. Businesses want a solution that 1) Gets the job done 2) Costs the least amount of money. The CIOs and CFOs of the world don't care about which operating system is the "best", they care about the bottom line. In most cases when Linux beats Windows in the business world it is because it is "free" not because it is "Free".

  65. Unsupervised Linux Servers Browsing the Web? by HopeOS · · Score: 2, Funny

    Naturally, with all those spare cycles available, what is a Linux box to do, but look up stuff on the internet. Must be all that server pr0n. Remind me to uninstall Mozilla from all the company servers over the weekend.

    -Hope

  66. It's marketing. by khasim · · Score: 1

    It isn't someone looking at all the requirements of the system and evaluating them against the capabilities of the SHIPPING products.....

    It's someone who's already made a decision to go with a particular platform and looking for anything that can be used to justify not going with a different platform.

    "Look! Linux doesn't have that NX capability yet but it will be in the next XP service pack. Therefore, XP is more secure than Linux."

    This is plain rationalization and justification. There's nothing you can do to change that behaviour. Just realize what is happening when you see it.

  67. Re:WindowsXP is free... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

    blaster, sobig, melissa, nimda, codered, sasser..... need i go on

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  68. Re:WindowsXP is free... by nwbvt · · Score: 1

    Business look at a lot more than just the price tag down at BestBuy when determining how much something costs. They have to look at the entire TCO. The amount of money you spend buying the actual software is far from the only consideration they have to consider.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  69. Re:Anyone who is tech-savvy enough to install Wind by Entropius · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, that's not possible with laptops.

  70. I'm wondering about that other 5% by khasim · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've sorted their numbers a bit:

    Win95 1%
    Win98 16%
    WinME 3%
    WinNT 2%
    Win2000 18%
    WinXP 51% (that's a lot of XP)

    Mac 3%

    Linux 1%

    Other 5% (What are these OS's?)

    Really, aside from all the Windows versions listed and the "Mac" category, what other OS's are out there? There must be at least 6 of them with marketshare just below Linux's. But I don't know what they are. Any ideas?

    Not that I don't trust Google's numbers (I'm cynical) but that 51% looks awful high too. At work we have about 3% XP machines (95% Win2000 and 2% Linux). That's an awful lot of XP that's been deployed, particularly when you see the 16% of Win98.

    22% of the Windows machines are pre-Win2K
    Win2K accounts for 18% (so far I see no problem)
    WinXP is 51%?

    Are all WinXP boxes shipped with google as the default?

    1. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by etymxris · · Score: 1
      Other 5% (What are these OS's?)
      My guess is robots, most likely.
    2. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by st1d · · Score: 1

      You're inadvertantly screwing with the numbers. See, W2/3k only counts as a desktop when desktop numbers need to be higher, otherwise it's counted as servers shipped by MS. So, when you're trying to do percentages like this, you need to (psychic?) know which ratio of W2/3K the poller is using.

      We know most W2/3K boxes are used as desktops, because they're easier to secure than your typical desktop, and companies gain the "bulk" price, versus buying a couple servers, then the rest as XP desktops.

      --
      Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
    3. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      How does this take into account all of us non-IE users who spoof our browsers/operating systems in order to bypass annoying website checks that would otherwise lock us out?

      How can Google possibly detect our 'true' operating system using the tools at its disposal? Unless they're polling the computer through some Java applet (which I don't see) and sending the raw data back to the server the only info they're going to get is what the browser sends them.

      My browser is lying. I'm sure a lot of others (Opera, Mozilla, etc.) are as well. That's got to screw up the stats.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    4. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Others:

      Solaris
      HP-UX
      BSDs
      BeOS (hey, don't laugh, I think there's still like 2 users left)
      OS/2? (God, I hope there aren't too many of these)
      Robots and spiders and the like.
      Maybe even an Amiga here and there.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    5. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by jav27 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      i think you are missreading the numbers. The Google's number just tells you that 51% of the their users are with XP. It is not a measurement of market share, nor units in use or anything remotely similar. if MS released the numbers of their MSN search site, I'm sure it would be soemthing like 80% or more XP users since many windows users just use the Msn search defaults in IE.

    6. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      About the XP numbers - you're forgetting the mindless upgrade drive of your average MS user/admin. At my uni, every single computer has been 'upgraded' from Win2K to WinXP. There's no real reason to do it, they just go round imaging all the computers because it's policy. I imagine a lot of sites with site licences do the same.

      Personally, being forced to use the XP machine on my desk makes me miss the Sparcstation 5 with Ratpoison that it replaced. And I *really* hated the Sparc.

    7. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by Walkiry · · Score: 1

      Also IRIX.

      Quite a few folks I know that do protein modelling and the like are on IRIX machines and use the Internet from there too looking for biological information. Not many, for sure, but we're talking about all the small groups that make up that remaining 5%, right?

      --
      ---- Take the Space Quiz!
    8. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by hburch · · Score: 1

      Generally, the reason for these upgrades is to simplify support. If you've got Win2k, Win98, WinNT, and WinXP around, you have to know the oddities of each (and track patches, etc.). If you have WinXP everywhere, then there's only one platform to worry about. Admins can test a new program on a single machine and be fairly confident that if it works there, it'll work everywhere.

    9. Re:I'm wondering about that other 5% by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      I know there was a 'major' UNIX OS I forget.

      Also VMS and Tru systems, and there are probably still some SunOS machines out there not running Solaris.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
  71. Re:WindowsXP is free... by st1d · · Score: 1

    Hmm, probably should let this go, but it actually is included in most distros.

    Sorry.

    --
    Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
  72. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by golgotha007 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd think that the percentage of computers that actually run Linux would be higher...

    not only that, but how the heck can they possibly know how many people are running linux or not running it?

    I understand they can count the number of linux pc's going out the door, but how do they know people are installing winxp or not?

    also, how do they know how many linux desktops are out there? are they just counting how many copies of mandrake were bought at CompUSA?

  73. unbiased sample by dekeji · · Score: 1

    Gartner's estimates may be fabricated (most of their data doesn't look all that reliable to me), but Google is not an unbiased sample even of desktop users, let alone an indication of what people are actually using. For example, Linux is widely used in research settings, universities, and other applications that would qualify as "desktop usage" or "interactive usage", but that are less likely to access Google.

    I really wouldn't count on it passing the Mac any year soon.

    On Google, no. On the desktop, it may already have.

    1. Re:unbiased sample by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      Also, look at that "5% other" category. What "other" OS is there that wasn't in the list? One possible thing is that the "other" refers to systems that it was unable to determine what the OS was with certainty. When the stats have an "other" category that is five times larger than the known linux category, there's a good chance some of those "others" are really linux - and that it can only detect linux with certainty on some specific setups. Also note that this is based on the user agent string - which is spoofable, and *NEEDS* to be spoofed to be windows and IE to hit some sites that practice OS predjudice - so more Linux users probably have spoofed user agent strings than users of other OS's.

      But all that aside the most likely explanation is that the "other" sites are actually indirect access not being done by a normal web browser, and thus have strange user agent strings - for example another search engine hitting google, or a program that hits google, pulls some stas from it, and then publishes them. If this is the case, and those hits are reaching numbers of 5%, then that means the entire survey is bogus since it isn't about desktop users at all but about hits from any sort of client of any kind be it a desktop or not.

      Also keep in mind that it only measures hits to google. That means that someone who has google as the homepage is artificially upping those stats, and linux users are more likely to have some other page as their homepage than windows users are (who generally think of the web as a place to go surfing on keywords).

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  74. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by pvcf · · Score: 1

    What you are forgetting is that the 5% figure is only for the shipments this year. Overall only 2% of the world's PC run Linux, because there are all the existing PCs out there that run Windows.

    If everyone in the world replaced their PC each year then the share for Linux would only be 5%; it could not be more.

    Even so, the figure of 2% is probably a bit conservative. For example, the notebook I ordered from Dell had WinXP-Home on it (Home because it is cheaper; I knew I was going to replace the OS anyway). It now happiliy runs Mandrake 10.0. ....Paul

    --
    F U NE X N M? Son: "Dad... How do you spell 'hourly'?" Dad: "0 * * * *"
  75. Gartner flawed by dekeji · · Score: 1

    Isn't this the opposite of the argument that Linux users have always made. That because it is so hard to get a PC (as opposed to parts) without Windows, that the number of linux installs running was higher than the shipments?

    Yes. And, as usual, Gartner's report is flawed.

    Large numbers of PCs are sold without OS. Large numbers of PCs run Windows for a few years and then have Linux installed on them to give them a second lease on life. And all of that doesn't even count the PCs that ship with Windows and have Linux installed on them right away.

    Linux is widely used on the desktop. Not on the home desktop, but on the desktop: in educational settings, research, public areas, etc.

    1. Re:Gartner flawed by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      And all of that doesn't even count the PCs that ship with Windows and have Linux installed on them right away.

      And let's not forget the boxes that are bought with Windows and retain Windows for games, but have Linux installed as a dual boot for everything else.

      Most of the Linux users I know have exactly this setup. The Windows partition is for games and came with the box; Linux is for everything else (including work) and was installed after the box was purchased.

      Then there are folks like me who build our own systems, yet still purchase a copy of Windows - again for games.

      I'm willing to bet that if the hottest games all came out with a Linux version at the same time a Windows version was released (gamers being an impatient bunch) a good many machines would lose their Windows partitions altogether.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:Gartner flawed by papik · · Score: 1

      I'm not his friend but have the same exact setup.

  76. Market share of desktop can hardly be changed by jsse · · Score: 1

    It's due to bulk license agreement between Microsoft and PC manufacturers. Since the licenses fee has already been paid, the marginal cost of pre-installed XP on each desktop produced is zero. Therefore, in economic sense, the incensive of installing other free alternatives, be it Linux, FREEDOS or *bsd is low. Microsoft doesn't even need to excerise their monopoly power to maintain the market share there.

    However, there's no similar license arrangement in servers manufacturing. In most of the cases servers boxes and OS are purchased seperately. Thus the users can choose whichever OS yields the best cost/performance.

    If Microsoft does not improve their server product line, we can foresee a continuous trend of them losing server market.

  77. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by hughk · · Score: 1
    It is still quite difficult to get a barebones PC from a major supplier, especially if it is leased. Microsoft get a little anxious as to whether a PC being sold on is sold with a license or is truely barebones. This doesn't affect the individual or small businesses, but they can do monitor larger resellers.

    For example, I have an HP sitting beneath my desk where I work at my client's place. It bears an XP Pro License sticker, it even runs XP Pro (not my choice), of course it is running a corporate license instead of the one that it came with.

    We also have PCs running Linux. Same deal, they still have their XP license sticker. When the PCs are disposed off, someone will just ghost in XP again and sell it with operating system.

    In other words, a fairly big overcount of XP licenses. Dell's program still isn't that widely known and people are concerned about their ability to resell PCs.

    --
    See my journal, I write things there
  78. Re:Excuse me by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

    It's all the current patches, up until the time the thing was put together. They install all in one go, and it gives you options to install some powertoys, too.

    One reboot once windows is installed for all the patches.

    --
    Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
  79. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by killjoe · · Score: 1

    "but a lot of businesses already have a Windows site license."

    There is no such thing as a windows site license. There are volume discounts but you still have to pay for each copy of windows you have. Depending on how you arranged your contract with Dell and MS the copy of windows that came with the Dell will count towards your select account. In other words dell will install windows for you for the same price you are paying under your volume discount.

    There are companies that pay for windows twice (mainly because their CIO was a dumbass who didn't know how to say linux enough times to get a bargain from MS). I don't think any of theose companies would by dells with linux on them to save a few bucks though because the last I checked a Dell with linux actually cost more then a dell with windows. Besides I think you can get dells with DOS for less.

    --
    evil is as evil does
  80. Human nature ... by orangeguru · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How cares if Linux has a few percent more market share?

    Most people won't switch, because they have been using Win, Office and IE at home and in the office for five or more years. People are simply USED to this set of applications and are not keen to learn something new - no matter how geeky, secure and cool it is.

    99% of people hate change that inferes with their daily work. The human animal hardly changes its habits - unless forced to.

    Joe and Jane average expect their PC thingy to behave and look like what they have used the last few years. If it ain't the same they consider it weird or broken and won't use it ...

  81. Why learn the CL? by NewNole2001 · · Score: 1

    yeah, but if I as joe user have a choice between point and click, or typing stuff at a line that is as unintuitive as hell, what do you think I'm going to want to do? There is a reason that the PC market didn't truly explode until windows came out.
    which is easer to figure out?
    click "Make a new folder" and type the name of the folder. or...

    ~joeuser>make a new folder
    make: Fatal error: Don't know how to make target `a'
    ~joeuser>help
    Enter the message number or SCCS command name: make a new folder
    ERROR: Key 'make a new folder' not found (he1)
    ~joeuser>make me a f*ing folder dammit
    make: no match
    joeuser>Screw You, I'm calling that kid down the street to install windows for me.
    unmatched '.'
    Joe user gets up and gets his phone.

    What you think? Think in terms of an AOL user, not a /. user.

    1. Re:Why learn the CL? by name773 · · Score: 1

      yeah, good point
      but if they ever did want to go to something faster/more secure/less bug ridden/more free, and if they took the time to learn it, they could do it. i suppose motivation is the key.

    2. Re:Why learn the CL? by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      An AOL user wouldn't have a damn clue what a 'folder' is anyway. They'd have all their files on their desktop.

      Until the Windows 'cleanup wizard' helpfully deletes them - I've seen this happen - the user phoned me in a complete panic as windows had 'lost' all their documents. I had to go over there to get them back as he was too scared to touch it in case they were gone forever. I switched the wizard off to avoid another incident (IMO it should not be on by default anyway.. I'd file a bug if I thought MS would actually listen).

      The CLI is harder to learn but anyone who can pick up computer paradigms such as 'folder' isn't going to have much trouble with a crib-sheet listing 'mkdir' and 'dir'.

  82. Ok wanna sell???? by lostmagik · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Since Im an offtopic master, a misspeller and a karmawhored person, ill asume this: You wanna sell(by this I mean get people to use Linux). This is gong to be hard because regular pc users are drones and we all know that. You got to dazzle them. Most really interesting things either they take for granted or dont understand. So its gotta be simple and flashy, believeable and elegant. Just pop a copy of your favourite Knopix in their own machine, before they realize their machine just CHANGED asure them its OK and just show off for a while by stating this is actually not the best version but a cool one. Tell him he can even pick flavours. And that he doesnt have to turn his computer off and that that is good. Bla bla bla. me bored and sick of -1ing

  83. Re:WindowsXP is free... by bluekanoodle · · Score: 1
    Open command prompt. Type ipconfig

    That's it. All you bound ip address's except the loopback

    I tried to count how many keystrokes it took for your command, but my feeble mind kept losing count.

    The original poster was making a generalization that Linux makes you more efficient. Yes, for a power user it does, but not for the majority of the population. Most people could care less about piping commands, and how what IP address's are bound to their machine.

  84. Did Dell ship large amounts of Linux-PCs? by tmk · · Score: 1

    I think you are mistaken - Dell did not ship compouters with preinstalled Linux for a long time. They have just begun to test shipping Linux. Take a look at this.

    1. Re:Did Dell ship large amounts of Linux-PCs? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I think you are mistaken - Dell did not ship compouters with preinstalled Linux for a long time. They have just begun to test shipping Linux.

      You are correct on the desktop, but they have shipped servers with Linux for several years now, or with no OS. I ordered a small Dell server, 1400sc a few years ago, with no OS, and it came with kickstart files ready to install RedHat 7.2. You just had to have your own RH disks. You load their CD in, it reads, prompts for the 7,2 disks, writes with NO input from you except for changing CDs, then when it reboots Linux is fully installed. Again, only on their servers. I asked why I could not get desktops this way, they mumbled about special licensing from MS....

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  85. Re:Add Mine To The List by seb249 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Same here, have 32 i look after and i know they werent counted. Any admin worth his salt will turn off any identifying tokens on his network fringe servers, and as for the inner network - they have no idea. I know Our linux boxes/windows ratio is 3/1 (thats linux to windows) and we are rolling the windows stuff out as quickly as we can.

  86. Why do you care? by john_smith_45678 · · Score: 1

    Why does anybody here care about Linux's market share? Do you directly profit from Linux's market share? Or is it merely just like rooting for your favorite sports team?

    1. Re:Why do you care? by MalleusEBHC · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As a Mac user who gets games months or years after they are released for Windows, yes, market share for your OS is something you can directly profit from. More market share means a bigger market for developers, so you will have more applications available for your OS.

    2. Re:Why do you care? by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 1

      As a Mac user who gets games months or years after they are released for Windows, yes, market share for your OS is something you can directly profit from.

      I'm a Mac user too, and I'm as much frustrated as you by the game porting lags. However, I'm not sure if we don't win in the overall calculation, if you account really all odds. After all, we are still *untouched* by the recent virus/worm/spyware/whatever wave that harmed our dear Wintel friends. It's pointless to write a virus for a platform that has 3% market share, but it's not that obvious with - say - 30%. Market share is something that you can directly profit from, yes - but you can also get damage from it. I'd rather pay $50 for a game that a Windows user can pick for $5 from the bargain bin, and not have the virus threat on my back.

    3. Re:Why do you care? by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      Of course more linux users is good. Apart from the indirect benefit of better behaviour from MS faced with real competition, there is also the fact that a larger user community for FOSS means more support for FOSS, through increased testing, donations, patches etc. A larger, more varied user pool would be an extremely good thing for linux distros in general.
      Imagine what SuSE (for example) could do if they sold ten times as many boxed sets as they do at present.

    4. Re:Why do you care? by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      Do you directly profit from Linux's market share?

      Yes - greater market share means:

      1. More support from hardware manufacturers
      2. More support from software manufacturers
      3. More jobs for us Linux people

      The added support from hardware manufacturers also means less time pissing about trying to find some hardware that works and more time actually making money.

    5. Re:Why do you care? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      1. More support from hardware manufacturers

      The above being the biggie. It's a pain in the ass to reverse-engineer hardware, it makes Linux look bad when a piece of hardware can't be used in Linux (or can only be used with a flaky driver), it discourages people from switching with their computer loaded with WinHardware...

      The software is not such a deal -- OSS volunteer projects take a while, but they have an approximate equivalent for an awful lot of software, and I can always write the software.

      And Linux jobs are fun, but it's not like there's a huge lack of them.

    6. Re:Why do you care? by MrHanky · · Score: 1

      Ask your question again the next time you try to visit an IE only site using a different browser. Is market share important? Well, no, not really. But if the market is dominated by a single player that has otherwise non-standard technology (activex for web, direct3d for games), the rest of the market suffers. If Linux's market share grows, it will be more likely that sites are built to support web standards, and that games are written in OpenGL. This is good for other alternative OSs as well.

    7. Re:Why do you care? by The+Conductor · · Score: 1

      This is good for other alternative OSs as well.

      This is often overlooked. The tiny but tenacious Amiga community has been drafting (in the auto racing sense) off the Linux movement for years, porting software, using the same file formats and protcols, etc. For example, an Amiga Jabber client (called Jabberwocky) allows me to use my Amiga to IM with my mother who uses MSN. A Trillian-like client that reverse-engineers the shifting IM protocols would be much harder for such a small group.

  87. Re:WindowsXP is free... by hdparm · · Score: 1

    I'd rather do that (well, I do) than get paid to run Windows (which I don't).

  88. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by offpath3 · · Score: 1
    If everyone in the world replaced their PC each year then the share for Linux would only be 5%; it could not be more.

    Not to be pedantic, but let's say that machines with windows break after 1 year, but machines with linux break after 5 years. Even though only 5% of computers purchased are running linux, it still would have greater than 5% marketshare.

  89. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by killjoe · · Score: 1

    " The evidence is called a "ms windows site license.""

    There is no such thing. MS does not sell "site licenses".

    "MS has this silly little contractual requirement with all vendors licensed to ship ms-windows, the requirement is all machines must ship with *an* OS."

    Dell sells PCs with no OS on them to businesses. Go to their web site and see for yourself before.

    Honestly where do you get off sprouting off such bullshit? Do you really think none of us work for a business that buy MS licenses and PCs from dell?

    --
    evil is as evil does
  90. Re:WindowsXP is free... by st1d · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, not to disparage the idea, but I started using Linux exactly because it was free. That, for me, meant nothing to lose if I didn't like it. That was almost 8 years ago, and I've found that I like it enough to financially support as many OSS communities, projects, and good distros as I can.

    With Linux, it's not the amount, it's how you feel about the amount. When I donate to a project, community or distro, I know what I'm getting, because I'm already using it. When I used to plunk down for Windows and other peices of software, half of what I spent was a disappointment, at best.

    My TCO is technically higher with Linux (supporting MSs marketing in a strangely perverted way), but only because I wouldn't have explored many of the things that Linux/OSS community has allowed me to become a part of.

    --
    Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
  91. That would rock. by khasim · · Score: 1

    Not only the OS, but also the browser, or whatever the browser claims to be :)

    A nice pie chart for them, too.

    And a daily/weekly/monthly/yearly chart showing the trend over time.

    But how to count without letting cheaters script up the stats?

    1. Re:That would rock. by sien · · Score: 1

      Only run the stat gathering for short times at randomly spaced intervals. With the hits slashdot gets you should still be able to get a reasonable sample.

  92. Re:WindowsXP is free... by seb249 · · Score: 1

    For us its the stability!
    and having the source. Pure and simple

    The actualy licensing cost of MS software is pretty flexible when you have a bit of buying power.

    But even though they may reduce the cost they dont come close on stability.

  93. Re:WindowsXP is free... by krayfx · · Score: 1

    dead right. i was one of the first guys to get infected by the darn blaster, while i was online. i dint know what hit me until 3 days later, when it was reported as such a thing as the blasted blaster. well, luckily for me, i had linux to save my arse (i have dual boot). i've had this happen to me a few times in my office (where my pc has access to dumb guys downloading attachments, siwtching AV off, and other mindless doings), and linux saved me all the while - its the magic button that helps me recover my pc. well, i have my own difficulties not to let go of windows - but linux has surely had me insured against windows and its vagaries! methinks the least any knowledgeable developer or comp user should have a dual boot if not have linux exclusively. its one way to increase the user base, so that the manufacturers are forced to release drivers and its good to have variety in the market, as opposed to windows only with all the advantage of support from the vendors. i really wish this would happen soon. i remember the first time i used/installed linux 5-6 yrs back, and how different things were then, i will not complain abt it - i enjoyed the way linux has been evolving!

  94. Re:WindowsXP is free... by mdamaged · · Score: 1

    ..rudolph, blitzen and prancer...sneezy dopey and bashful...oh... sorry..

    --
    Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
  95. Yeah well.. by SlashDread · · Score: 1

    of the four machines in my home, three came with windows, just one has it left.. the rest runs linux excusively.

    And the one that is left is a dualboot, strictly for gaming... And I might replace that with an xbox.. or a ps2.

    "/Dread"
    Collegues do not let collegues use Internet Explorer

  96. market share=more hardware/software by Numinous83 · · Score: 1

    A greater market share means:
    More companies & people will look at Linux for:
    Writing software
    Creating hardware/drivers
    Writing software
    Using Linux
    Writing software : )

    So... market share matters to me, because then, I will have more hardware and software compatible with my favorite OS!

  97. What about Walmart? by tmk · · Score: 1

    I read Walmart is selling cheap computers with Linux preinstalled to customers. This could be an explanation for this.

  98. Re:WindowsXP is free... by st1d · · Score: 1

    Three things: Reinstall, reinstall, and reinstall.

    My XP friends do it without even considering there might be an alternative. I can't tell you how many system's I've "saved" simply by spending a minute looking at the actual problem. The worst are the sysadmins, who've been conditioned to do it "because it's easier and quicker than anything else".

    There's usually stunned amazement when you fix a glitch without wiping the entire system. How reinstalling can be faster (once you reinstall software, drivers, do a handful of reboots, and configure security) is beyond me. I can understand it for viruses, intrusions and spyware, but 90% of the time, it's just because they are so clueless about Windows/computers that they don't know any better solution. They often joke about being too lazy, but the killer clue is that they do it on their own systems, even when it means losing information.

    As a side note, most of these folks now use Linux. Knoppix has become a vital tool in most Linux-aware sysadmin's toolboxes. It might not be their preferred system, or a "real" system, but I don't think that should count for nothing, either.

    --
    Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
  99. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Idealius · · Score: 1

    Uh, this shouldn't be redundant, a moderator screwed up. Ebyrob said '..and slap their OLD version of Windows' which is much different than '..and slap their PIRATED version of Windows'. You missed his point.

  100. Re:WindowsXP is free... by st1d · · Score: 1

    A good example of a similar situation popped up on my radar a few years ago. Seems you could order a few things from Mexico/Canada, and get DirecTV for free. Of course, by the time you purchased the dish, bought the card writers and cards (at a hefty price), software, and did all that great stuff you had to do to get it to work (I beleive one of the items was to stand on your head and juggle), the monthly payment was cheaper. To add insult to injury, every few months something would change, which meant you needed a new card writer, cards, and software.

    One of my coworkers did this for almost a year, risking all the BS and trouble, before finally realizing that he'd spent close to three times what he would have paid for the channels he was actually using.

    Go ahead, use your little XP scam. Sooner or later, it won't work anymore, and you'll have a choice. Use Linux, or pay for XP. Why not skip the middleman, and spend some of that relatively wasted time (downloading generators and learning cracks) learning more about Linux?

    My guess is part of the appeal of stealing windows is feeling that you're doing something special. In reality, you're just yanking your chain, ignoring the fact that you could truly contribute to your own needs by expending some of that energy helping make Linux better.

    Then again, I'm not sure pirating script kiddies are what we need. MS can have those.

    --
    Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
  101. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Lussarn · · Score: 2, Informative

    Still, I know nobody who bought a computer with Linux. Altough I know quite a few Linux users.

  102. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

    Here's how I understand it:

    + Newer MS volume licenses are basically "Upgrades" and tied to a specific machine. If you order a machine with XP, you don't pay MS any more money until you upgrade that machine. Nobody pays twice.

    + Older customers may have "floating" licences that apply to any machine. These people already bought Windows 2000 and therefore would be "paying twice" if they bought a new machine with W2K preloaded. So, if they're smart, they buy a machine with DOS or Linux preloaded. Here's where you get your marketshare disparity.

    + If you're big enough, Dell will let you deal with the licencing and will install any image you request (Linux, Windows 98, OS/2, etc).

    --
    Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  103. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by Lestat_79 · · Score: 1

    buying machines with Linux pre-installed just to go through the pain of installing XP

    Come one, even my grandmother can install windows XP. Try and stay a little fair, will you...

  104. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by shaitand · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "So while there are a small number of users purchasing their computers with Windows pre-installed and migrating to Linux, that number is effectively buried by businesses doing just the opposite."

    MOST users running linux don't purchase a computer with it preinstalled. Since linux requires far less in terms of hardware to get the same or better performance usually they put a little memory in the computer they have and install linux on it. That includes businesses.

    But what dwarfs the linux factors one way or another is the windows site licenses. For every desktop that an alternative OS was purchased on there are hundreds in which it was not, where they simply paid the MS tax despite their site license (like they've always done before).

    Of course the difference in the numbers should be obvious, this could well constitute a pretty big chunk of the market, significantly reducing what is believed to the size of the market. This means x number of sales is really a larger percentage of the market than it is portrayed to be.

    When it comes down to it, compared to legitimate copies, there really aren't that many pirated copies of windows... there just aren't. While they are common among techs, giving us the impression they are rampant, in reality I'd be surprised if techs and their families amount to even 1% of the market.

    The kid/teenager of the house isn't an OS installer anymore than his parents or grandparents. He is wise in that he can successfully work the mouse and install most programs... a far cry from a pirated OS installation.

    With linux on the other hand, there is a strong prevalance of technically literate users (the reasons for this are debatable and not the issue here). Almost every linux user can install the OS. Couple this with the fact that companies normally act as if linux is a "cheap and inferior" solution. Normally the pc's that come with linux preinstalled are in the $200-300 range and worth more like $150, they are usually crap a literate user wouldn't touch.

    Aside from the price on the pc's, I fully admit I'm educated guessing the numbers. But from what I've seen... well I've never actually seen a system with linux preinstalled on it. I've seen lots of linux systems mind, many I've setup and have lots of friends using linux. Most of their computers are homebuilt (but not all). All in all, among desktop users I'd guesstimate about 200 linux pc's. Not a single one of them would be counted in these numbers.

    In the businessworld it's much the same. Support contracts are an issue for obscure software only in small businessland. Corporations want accountability, small business wants it to work and wants someone to call to fix it when it's broke, they don't care about fingerpointing.

    On the business side I've setup countless workstations and several hundred linux servers. Out of all of them only one was even a purchased license, all the rest were download editions of the software. A support contract would be pointless, if they have a support contract it's still us they call if they have a problem, we are local and can fix the problem before they finish holding.

    You also don't need to buy a boxed version for updates. Really using the vendor update mechnism is probably the last thing I'd recommend to a customer. With redhat distros in particular, redhat drops support too fast and is slow on the updates in comparison with well known and trusted 3rd parties (*cough*freshrpms*cough*) who still provide updates for redhat version 6.2 last I checked.

    5% of the desktop market, I doubt it's that low. 5% of oem preinstalls, perhaps. As for whether it had that OS on it when it hit the desktop, if you consider that, you have to consider all the rest I've mentioned above and more and the result is the desktop market, not the OEM preinstall numbers gartner is claiming.

  105. Re:WindowsXP is free... by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 1

    You're missing the point. A shell script (which I clearly stated I was writing) needs to parse the output of ip/ifconfig to know what ip addresses it has to work with. How are you going to tell cmd.exe what ip addresses are bound to the machine?

    --
    bash: rtfm: command not found
  106. Re:WindowsXP is free... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

    So long as copyright law exists, you are a pirate because you choose to steal

    And apparently you have no grasp of the term 'steal'. Copyright violation IS NOT THEFT. How many times does this have to be pounded into the heads of the ignorant before they get a clue?

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  107. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by killjoe · · Score: 1

    They are not upgrades. YOu buy a select license. This license gives you co many "points" where each point could be spent on a variety of MS products. The cost of the product determines how many points you spend.

    When you buy a select license you are buying the right to use that software for a fixed amount of time (measured in years). If MS upgrades their product you get to install the upgrade. Once your time is up you get to pay MS again.

    --
    evil is as evil does
  108. Like nailing jello to the wall by st1d · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I still sometimes get a little pissy about articles/reports/surveys like this. Then after I spout my peace, I can't help but laugh. Linux has an advantage that most commercial desktops can't even approach. See, if I sell Windows, Solaris, Mac, or any of the other commercial operating systems, I know exactly how I'm doing.

    We all "know" MS has 90-95% of the market. The numbers shipped, the dollar amounts, all point to this "fact". Same with the others.

    Linux doesn't come close. From a dollar perspective, most distros pale compared to the others. From a "shipped" point of view, well, who counts little Linux shops in their numbers? This is about Dell and the big folks. And there is the dualboot/wipe issue.

    So, why do I laugh? Because, using these statistics, nobody will realize how many people actually use Linux until it's right in their faces. In other words, theoretically, MS could still ship 90-95% of the market, only to turn around one day, and find out that only 10-20% of users actually use Windows (with a few more using it occasionally).

    So, realisically, the better way of measuring this would be to measure the "other" sales related to Windows. Antivirus software wouldn't count, neither would Office software, or games. (These are necessities for dual booters, or things that might only be available for one OS.)

    My pick would be the "cheapy" software that people tend to buy for their computers. The productivity stuff, or "make your computer easier to use" kind of stuff. Better yet, if you want a long term guage, try the "educational" aisle.

    In other words, to guage an OS's success, compare it's market. Find something unusual about that OS, something that no other can share, and use that as a guage. Exact numbers don't matter, but trends can point out a lot.

    If money/users seem to be disappearing from these markets, yet the hardware folks are actually doing pretty well, you might want to bump up your Linux/OSS numbers a little.

    --
    Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
    1. Re:Like nailing jello to the wall by Jungle+guy · · Score: 1

      To look at real OS use on desktop, a good method is to look on the statistics of your webserver. Most people I have talked to say about 95% of their visitors use Windows. The numbers of Google Zeitgeist are similar to these, giving Mac, Linux and "Other" operating systems 9% of their audience.

    2. Re:Like nailing jello to the wall by westlake · · Score: 1
      So, why do I laugh? Because, using these statistics, nobody will realize how many people actually use Linux until it's right in their faces.

      The problem is, this remains true even if the numbers migrating to Linux is negligible.

      In other words, to guage an OS's success, compare it's market. Find something unusual about that OS, something that no other can share, and use that as a guage. Exact numbers don't matter, but trends can point out a lot.

      XP can handle DRM'd media gracefully, out of the box.

      I've lost patience with P2P and moved to subscription radio, let me draw on all the backlist titles of the major labels and effortlessly feed these CD streams to a quality sound system or a portable player and I won't be looking back.

      Microsoft has built strategic alliances with all the major content providers and consumer electronic manufacturers and the next generation of consumer hardware will be very Windows friendly.

  109. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by arvindn · · Score: 3, Informative
    U.S != World.

    In India about 5-10% (probably closer to the latter figure by now) PCs are sold with linux pre-installed. Obviously, not all stick with linux. My guess is 2-3%.

    Its the same situation in most of Asia. Linux PCs are reportedly selling like hotcakes in Malaysia. In China, it is even more extreme than in India because the number of people actually using linux is negligibly small.

    The reason for this is that most home PC users in these countries use pirated software whereas OEMs still have to pay for Windows if they want to install it. The amount of wipe-out-linux-and-install-windows going on in Asia totally dwarfs the number of geeks in the world installing linux on their machines after paying the windows tax.

    Slashdotters are living in the 1990s. The new reality is vastly different from what it used to be. The vast majority of linux users are non-geeks. There is no problem at all in getting linux PCs. The number of Linux PCs sold significantly overestimates atual usage.

    The reason that linux usage continues to hover around 2% is no longer due to Microsofy bullying, but because Linux is still quite hard for non-geeks to use.

  110. Doesn't matter if a few people spoof by xswl0931 · · Score: 1

    If you think about the millions of users using Google compared to the perhaps thousands of users spoofing their browser, then you'll understand that it won't significantly affect the percentages.

  111. Re:WindowsXP is free... by gowen · · Score: 1
    Copyright violation IS NOT THEFT.
    And, furthermore, theft IS NOT PIRACY. Piracy can *only* occur as an act of robbery, for private ends, committed on the high seas, or in the air above them.
    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  112. Re:WindowsXP is free... by meringuoid · · Score: 3, Insightful
    So long as I can download Windows XP and get a valid serial number generator, I have no reason to install Linux.

    And that makes you spend more maintenance costs and troubleshooting time than using Linux.

    I'm so delighted to be able to say this:

    Windows XP is only free if your time is worth nothing.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  113. Re:Excuse me by FireFury03 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Granted, that's a lot better than Win 98 where I lost count after 8 or 9 reboots to get all the drivers installed and updated on a machine I built.

    Only 8 or 9? I think when I used to run Win98 it was something like:

    1. Install Win98
    2. reboot
    3. install driver
    4. repeat steps 2 and 3 about 10 times
    5. windows spectacularly crashes after installing a particular driver, totally refuses to boot even after removing that driver again
    6. Wipe and reinstall Win98
    7. reboot
    8. install drivers in a different order
    9. repeat steps 7 and 8 about 10 times
    10. A different driver spectacularly breaks windows
    11. Open computer and rip out all the PCI and ISA cards
    12. Wipe and reinstall windows again
    13. reboot
    14. install drivers for all the onboard stuff, rebooting between each
    15. shutdown
    16. plug in 1 PCI or ISA card
    17. boot up again
    18. install driver for hardware you just plugged in
    19. repeat steps 15 - 18 until all your hardware is back in the box

    After this you've just about got a working machine until you have to reinstall it 6 months later. Admittedly I did have all the PCI and ISA slots absolutely full, but its been my experience that if you've got a moderate number of cards in your machine win98's installer really stuggles to install a working machine.

  114. Great, so 3% of them replace Linux with Windows by SteamyMobile · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know that I have bought quite a few PCs over the years, and they all have Windows pre-installed, and the first time I power them up, I put in a Linux CD/DVD and install. Windows never even gets a chance to say hello to me. There's no way to estimate how much of that is happening, other than to guess by looking at how much Suse is selling. Also, a lot of computers with Linux installed have both Linux and Windows and maybe even some others. The sum total of market share of installed OSes is MORE than 100%. Computers might have 95% Windows, 6% Linux, and 2% something else.

  115. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

    Yes, but if you buy a computer with XP preinstalled, you don't need to expend any "points" on that computer in order to run XP. So therefore, at least on the OS level, it's basically for upgrades only. At least in my limited understanding.

    --
    Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  116. Re:WindowsXP is free... by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

    I don't know what your friends have on their system, but I've never had to re-install XP even once on my system. Of course it should be noted, that I did a clean install, not an upgrade from some older version of Windows. Also, I've got uptime figures of about 30 days without reboot - I haven't tested it for more, because I do have power bills to pay, and I'm not doing anything which requires 100% uptime. I hear lots of horror stories about XP, but XP definitely beats the crap out of any windows version before -I'm talking home versions here.

  117. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by shird · · Score: 1

    Not when they have the choice of buying a machine with no OS or Linux pre-installed. Why pay for a license youre not going to use? Whereas a machine with Linux on adds no extra license costs on top, so people don't care whether or not it has it on if they intend to wipe it.

    In fact, in the case where a OS is required to be on the machine, they are more likely to choose Linux because it reduces the cost of the total system.

    But then, I thought this was the point of the parent poster, and was supposed to be obvious.

    --
    I.O.U One Sig.
  118. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by FooBarWidget · · Score: 1

    Uhm yeah that's great, but it doesn't matter. All that matters is the numbers. If software companies see the Linux sale numbers, they'll *think* that more and more people use Linux, so they may port their software.

    It doesn't matter whether people actually put a pirated Windows on it. All that matters is that companies *think* the numbers are correct.

  119. Re:Add Mine To The List by MikeCapone · · Score: 1

    I'm also sure that lots of people who built their own computers from parts and install linux never get counted.

  120. The important thing by MikeCapone · · Score: 1

    As with BSD, the way I see it, the important thing is not so much the size of Linux/OSS/etc's market share, but the importance of its influence.

    Linux and OSS' influence has been growing quite fast lately, probably faster than its "official marketshare", whatever advantage that could give it.

    It's not because someone runs windows that he doesn't run OSS (mozilla, OpenOffice, etc), and that's a step in the right direction.

    1. Re:The important thing by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      Agreed. There's also the whole dual-boot phenomenum, where people who aen't ready to dump software they paid for still want what Linux has to offer.

      There's also the home pc user, who isn't included in this survey, and is likely to, in a multiple-pc environment, have at least 1 linux box.

    2. Re:The important thing by selfabuse · · Score: 1

      home pc users on slashdot with multiple machines are likely to have at least 1 linux box, but I wouldn't say that's true for most home users. I work in phone tech support for an ISP, so I talk to lots of residential customers, many of which have multiple computers, and they usually have their old windows machine for the kids, and a newer windows machine for themselves.

    3. Re:The important thing by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      True, but you're getting a self-selected group there - people who have to phone their ISP for tech support - I'm sure you have a ton of horror stories about them...

      They are the class of people who, when the mouse gets to the edge of the mouse pad, can't go any further on-screen because they don't realize they can pick it up :-)

      For them, any computer is a disaster...

  121. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by MikeCapone · · Score: 1

    Yea, because no one is going to buy a low cost Linux computer at Walmart and slap a pirate version of Windows on it. Nope. Never gona happen.

    I'm sure it happens, but I'm also fairly sure that the majority of people running Linux didn't buy a computer with Linux pre-installed; which means that in the majority of cases they were counted as a Windows license sold but aren't running it.

  122. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by MikeCapone · · Score: 1

    Which brings us to the point that it's just impossible to know how many copies of Linux are out there..

    It's like trying to know the number of people having sex tonight; you can make some pretty good guesses and take surveys, but it's a free and (mostly) private thing (well, in most cases anyway :P).

  123. Consider replacement times by akgoatley · · Score: 2, Funny

    Consider this case: the parents of a friend of mine run Windows XP on all their computers (about 4). My friend runs Slackware (like me) on his laptop. Say 3% of all new PC sales run Linux. We disregard changing the OS aftermarket, as it roughly cancels out.
    My friend's parents do not reinstall Windows when it breaks. They buy a new computer. For some reason my friend hasn't enlightened them, but....

    My point is that if new Windows PCs break 10 times more often, they are probably replaced twice as often as Linux PCs. This of course doubles their sales figures.

    -Ashton

    --
    (-(friend^2))^(1/2)
    Incoming mod-bombing for having a different viewpoint, 2 o'clock! Heads up!
    1. Re:Consider replacement times by jelle · · Score: 1

      And you have just made a case of why windows will always keep breaking.

      Which incidentally totally explains their choice of the name of the product...

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
  124. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    Linux PCs are reportedly selling like hotcakes in Malaysia.

    I believe you mean "selling like iPods".

  125. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1
    Well killer, maybe you need to check again because I've worked for two clients that did have ms-windows site licenses. They also have employee counts in the low 6 digits.

    Furthermore, neither of them bought their PCs from Dell. But, just to humour your bullshit-eating ways, I dug up this little this article for you to read that says:
    The Microsoft licensing terms, which were put in place on Aug. 1 [2002], specify that PC makers must ship PCs with an operating system.

    ...
    Many large companies pre-buy Windows through licensing programs and thus have to erase all the software that comes on factory-shipped PCs and reinstall their own. Buying a PC without an OS saves a step and prevents inadvertent dual purchasing.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  126. Re:WindowsXP is free... by st1d · · Score: 1

    Just the "usual stuff". Office, antivirus programs, a few games, mp3's from questionable sources, a handful of programs they "just decided to try". It's easy (MS does it all the time) to blame a screwy installation on some third party program, but more often than not, it only becomes a problem because the OS doesn't properly handle exceptions in the code. XP is as guilty as anything, in my experience.

    I'm not a big fan of uptime braggerts, just as I'm not interested in overclocking. Long uptimes suggest you aren't applying patches, and overclocking suggests you're careless with the built-in "safety" devices processors include.

    As far as my friend's systems, they're like many people. OSS isn't "good enough" for them, so they load their systems down with all sorts of "free" junkware. Like I said, blatent spyware is probably best handled with a clean install, but most of the time, it's the non-spyware, poorly written or outdated stuff that's a problem.

    I also think this is part of the reason many people are hesitant to try Linux. They've played around with "free" stuff on Windows, only to get screwed over in one way or another. The very thought of an entire system running "free" software is way beyond any risk level most people are willing to take after being burned a couple times.

    --
    Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
  127. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by njdj · · Score: 1
    Yea, because no one is going to buy a low cost Linux computer at Walmart and slap a pirate version of Windows on it. Nope. Never gona happen.

    I've never seen a PC with Linux preinstalled in any store. I live in Switzerland, where Walmart does not operate AFAIK. There are dozens of stores which sell computers. They all have Windows preinstalled. It is difficult to avoid paying Microsoft when you buy a computer here.
    When I buy a computer, I go to a store which will sell me the case, motherboard, disk etc separately, I assemble them, then I install Debian from an old set of CDs, then I connect to the internet and do the apt-get update/apt-get upgrade thing. Frankly, it would be more cost-effective to buy a machine with Windows preinstalled, and install Debian on that. For me, avoiding paying the Microsoft tax is a point of principle, for which I'm willing give some of my time. Most people here who want Linux will do the easiest and most cost-effective thing - pay for Windows, then throw it away.
    There are mail-order companies which will sell you a Linux PC, but mail-order is not a big slice of the market here.

  128. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by shird · · Score: 1

    Well I would imagine any Linux user worth his salt wouldnt be buying OEM machine from Dell with Windows pre-installed, most likely they would build their own. If that is the only type of machine they can manage to find, then perhaps they should stick to the Windows alreeady installed.

    If I had to choose between Linux and Windows to be pre-installed, I would certainly choose Linux everytime, even if I was putting Windows on the machine. But if I intended to put Linux on, there is no way Id be paying for a License, and would build a machine from scratch or ask for a discount for no OS etc.

    I dont think you need '24 hour access to Walmart' to buy a computer without Windows - you just need ten minutes to order one from any random computer shop and go pick it up. There cant be that many people stupid enough to pay for a license they arent going to use.

    --
    I.O.U One Sig.
  129. Re:WindowsXP is free... by Mant · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Funny, the reason I stay on Windows is exactly that, time. Yes, I have to use Windows update, or let it run in the background. Sometimes I have to wrestle with a graphics driver. As long as you keep WU and AV stuff up tp date, and avoid horrors liek IE and outlook, I find Windows XP very low maintence.

    Generally though, software and hardware work pretty well. When I look at the time people using Linux sometimes spend getting thier hardware to work, getting the Windows programs (and games) to work, if at all, that keeps me away.

    I use NIX at work, and I'm no big Windows fan, but valuing my time is exactly what keeps me off Linux.

  130. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Omni-Cognate · · Score: 1

    There are many reasons to buy a windows computer and stick linux on it. In my case it was simply that there wasn't a company that sold a computer I wanted without Windows pre-installed. Not being in America, we don't have Walmart anyway.

    Another reason is that a high proportion of desktop linux users dual boot and buying with Windows pre-installed is usually the cheapest way to get it legally. Dual boot machines still count as an increase in Linux market share, because we start off with Windows having by far the higher share.

    As for the parent post (grandparent? can't be arsed to look), it was disagreeing with the original point that the Linux market share is probably higher than the percentage of PCs that ship with it pre-installed. I'm not sure whether that's the case or not, but with factors like dual-booting, limited availability of preinstalled linux pcs for those that want them, people installing pirated windows on linux boxes and the fact that widespread availability of preinstalled linux boxes is a relatively recent thing, etc, etc, I shouldn't think there's much correlation at all between the two figures.

    --

    "The Milliard Gargantubrain? A mere abacus - mention it not."

  131. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by marcansoft · · Score: 2, Interesting

    True, plus the people who build their own computers witho no OS preinstalled, and don't tell me there are few, anyone who knows how to screw things and plug in IDE cables knows how to build one.

    I know nobody who has had linux preinstalled, OTOH, I've had quite a few friends install it beside windows (of course they still want to keep their games, but they use Linux for everyday tasks)

  132. Re:FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD by cortana · · Score: 1

    Cite?

  133. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Knuckles · · Score: 1

    However, many people buy a computer with Windows installed, and 2 years later are fed up and put Linux on it. I know it was so for me, many moons ago. OR they buy a new one for the desktop, again with Windows, but put Linux on the old one and use it as a server. Both cases are listed as "Windows license sold", but not as "actually running Linux"

    --
    "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
  134. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by westlake · · Score: 3, Insightful
    True, plus the people who build their own computers witho no OS preinstalled, and don't tell me there are few, anyone who knows how to screw things and plug in IDE cables knows how to build one.

    Something like ten million OEM Windows systems ship each month. Most people simply don't want to be drawn into a hobbyist project when they can order a customized system from Dell that is guaranteed to work out of the box.

  135. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by bezza · · Score: 1
    Who cares about the people who download a linux distro and don't pay a cent to install it on there machines? If I was a software company that would be the LAST platform I would want to port to.

    I would be happy to bet that I could count on my fingers the number of people here that have BOUGHT a piece of software that runs on linux. I can proudly say that I have (Matlab), but then again I don't use the fact that a distro is free as an advantage over windows. I think the programmers should be compensated...I don't like being dependent on them without anything in return.

    As a side note, what will happen if Linux becomes ultra popular? More programmers will be needed, all working for free? Its not going to happen!

    Market sales are the only figure that matters, and I do really think that the 5% is quite promising.

    --
    WARNING: This sig does not contain a joke
  136. Making your Linux installation known by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    So how do you get your Linux installations in the tally? Is there an online survey you can fill out? How about a small/clean application you could install that would let you define what data should be sent out. It could keep a database updated with "specs" on kernel version, CPU types, CPU count, etc etc etc.

    1. Re:Making your Linux installation known by alerante · · Score: 1

      You can register at the Linux Counter and help people get an idea of how many users there are in the world.

    2. Re:Making your Linux installation known by Davoid · · Score: 2, Informative

      Try: http://www.linuxcounter.org/
      Which has been around for about 10 years. Not sure why it isn't more popular. Would be nice if Linux distros gave a choice at install to "auto-register" or something. There is also good info there on why estimates on number of Linux systems is difficult to guage.

      Also:
      "Market Share" means number of units sold vs the total number of units sold in a particular category during some period of time (year quarter whatever). MS and even more so, Apple, have a very good idea of what their market share is. They know almost exactly how many of their units have been sold. Linux has a pretty small market share because everyone can just download it once and install many times. On the other hand comapnies like Red Hat probably have a very accurate count of what their market share is for RHEL.

      "Installed Base": Means the number of particular units installed vs the total number of units of all systems installed of all types for a particular instant in time. The installed base is certainly higher for Linux than the market share is. Installed base is probably quite different from market share for all types systems. There are all those PCs, Macs, and Sun boxes that now have Linux installed. There are all those homebuilt systems that now have a pirate copy of Windows or Linux or both installed. There are all those PCs that shipped with Windows (or Linux) that now have Linux (or Windows) installed or both. There are all those systems that can't run the latest version of Windows but are now running Linux in "edge-of-network" roles or just as plain old desktops.
      Apple probably has a very good idea what their installed base is for Mac OS X (compared to their market share) because of Softwareupdate.app grabbing the latest updates which, pretty much exclusively, come from Apples servers.
      MS may have a good idea of, at least, how many people update their systems via windowsupdate.com (or whatever it is called).
      Linux distros may not have a very good idea unless they can somehow get stats from ALL their update mirrors. But this would never include all the locally mirrored updates. I download updates from one to three mirrors once and then push those out to dozens of systems locally.

      "Mind Share": Though a popular buzzword has nothing to do with market share or installed base.

      While Linux market share, however it is measured, should give a company a solid number to work with when determining the size of their market... it says nothing about their real and potential market. The Linux market share is the lowest possible number to use for estimating the size of the potential Linux market for a company that plans to release a product for Linux systems. This is a very important thing for a company to know when planning a product release.
      So if you want to see more products for Linux... go get counted.

      -DU-...etc...

      --
      "Don't sweat the technique."
  137. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by smchris · · Score: 1


    Actually, I talked a retiree on a very limited budget into a TigerDirect Wintergreen $240 computer a couple weeks ago. Replaced Lindows with Fedora Core 1 -- so lets count the linux-to-linux installs!

    After her circa '97 Mac died, she realized a learning curve would be in order, so, yes thank you, she is adapting well. Webbing and emailing. And very unlikely to get mucked up with spyware, trojans and viruses.

    Since the article is talking "shipped", maybe 2% is fair in that context if people understand that the 5% linux figure can also be true since 3% of older machines and home built machines may be retrofitted with linux.

  138. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

    Not when they have the choice of buying a machine with no OS or Linux pre-installed. Why pay for a license youre not going to use? Whereas a machine with Linux on adds no extra license costs on top, so people don't care whether or not it has it on if they intend to wipe it.

    Actually, many vendors charge the same for Windows XP home or Linux (Dell, for example). This is because their cost for Windows is about as low as the labor to intall Linux. You are paying for labor instead of license. Their installs of Windows are more automated since 95% of what they ship IS Windows, and MS has provided the tools to make it faster to install at the OEM level. If they shipped more Linux boxes, I am sure they would mirror the drives over as well.

    Many people still build computers from parts, and while this is a small number of systems, they are probably more likely to use Linux by, by more than a few percentage points, considering the OEM pricing of XP, $80/$140, or the retail price, $250+.

    Also, like many others, I have taken older boxes with Windows 98/ME and deleted it to install Linux (500mhz-1ghz) for performance and security reasons. This also doesn't account for dual boot machines, which probably number in the hundreds of thousands, at least. There are also many older boxes slower than 500mhz that are wiped and used as file sharing boxes, routers, firewalls and home servers. Most of those started their life as Windows boxes.

    Since there is no forced registration of Linux, so many distros of Linux and no central authority for Linux distros, the numbers will always be suspect.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  139. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    ...and nobody is going to take that computer then 3 years from the date of purchase and slap linux on it then..

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  140. Absurd by abulafia · · Score: 1
    I have three machines I use as desktops. One Thinkpad, one Dell tower, and one whitebox tower. The Thinkpad came with Windows, which was wiped and replaced with Debian. The Dell came with Windows, I bought it used, replaced Win with Debian. The whitebox went straight to Debian.

    I know I'm not the only one who does stuff like this.

    --
    I forget what 8 was for.
  141. Re:WindowsXP is free... by LordSah · · Score: 1

    I think you're incorrect, as Linux doesn't save any 'time' for me or anyone I know. There are very few tasks that are simpler on a Linux machine than a Windows box, and many that take much longer.

  142. Shatter by dpilot · · Score: 1

    I just did click on the link. I'll be honest and admit that I skimmed most of it, but I did read carefully the paragraph at the bottom about X.

    >still theoretically possible for some of these attacks to work against X but in practice it's highly unlikely.

    and goes on a bit about how and why it would be much harder to mount a successful shatter attack against X. In other posts of mine, critical of the "Windows done right" concept, I maintain that Windows may well be broken at the architectural level, not just the implementation. This is a piece of such an argument. Design for features without regard for security is another.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  143. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

    Why should i spend my time buidling a machine? Will i save enough money to make it worth my time? How about support - with Dell i get a better chance that the company will be around in 2-3 years when parts start to go bad.

    First, most people do NOT build their own to save money. Building your own almost always costs more than off the shelf, if you are using all new parts. The primary reason for building is performance and/or features, since you can use better quality parts and combination of features. Most of these people (myself included) have never called tech support, since it takes less time to fix it yourself than to wait on hold.

    I don't understand your prejudice that anyone looking to NOT spend their time configuring and bargain shopping should stick to Windows and/or is stupid. Personally i have other things to do with my time. Like reading /.

    Personally, I do both. I have bought many Dell boxes over the years, and build my own as well. When I decided to buy mom a computer, I bought a Dell because I live 1300 miles from her, and wanted her to have the support if she needed it. The last home server I built (3 months ago) was built completely from parts, because I wanted very specific parts for performance reasons, and wanted special features, like several swappable drives for testing multiple OSs. Not everyone either buys off the shelf exclusively, or builds exclusively.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  144. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Epistax · · Score: 1

    Buying a computer with Linux on it then reformating and installing Windows makes me a sa-a-a-a-ad panda.

  145. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

    ...and nobody is going to take that computer then 3 years from the date of purchase and slap linux on it then..

    I hope you are joking. This is probably how the majority of Linux installs happen, take an older box and put Linux on it.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  146. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by shird · · Score: 1

    I don't understand your prejudice that anyone looking to NOT spend their time configuring and bargain shopping should stick to Windows and/or is stupid. Personally i have other things to do with my time. Like reading /.

    Or perhaps babysitting your OS? Linux requires a hell of a lot more effort to install and admin than the 10 minutes it takes to put a system together. Most people prepared to put in the effort required to run Linux would also put in the effort to build their own system. Most shops will put the parts together for you, at least mine did which gives you the ability to have your choice of parts, but still not to have to spend (a small) amount of time putting it together.

    --
    I.O.U One Sig.
  147. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by madman101 · · Score: 1

    When you buy a select license you are buying the right to use that software for a fixed amount of time (measured in years).

    This is incorrect. There is no time limit on the basic licenses. If you buy licenses with upgrades included, there is a time limit to how long Microsoft will supply the new version, but there is no time limit on how long you can use the basic product - though Microsoft has said they would like to move to this model.

  148. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    yep, i was joking. and thats how they pretty much can't even make a guess that would be anywhere near the real figure..

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  149. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by madman101 · · Score: 1

    Where I work, a number of people have bought the Linux boxes from Wal-mart. I think the longest any of them ran Linux was a month. All of them installed the Windows from their previous computers. I suspect this is not uncommon...

  150. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I thought Dells running Linux costed more than Windows, at least that was the case when I last checked several months ago.

  151. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by ceeam · · Score: 1

    Uhm. Much less likely. People who gonna "slap linux on it" would very probably buy hardware w/o MS tax, right?

  152. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by SiChemist · · Score: 1

    I think you would lose that bet (unless you have a freakishly large number of fingers).

    At my place of employ, we have purchased several products for Linux (including the excellent Matlab that you mentioned).

    At home, I have a couple of FPS games that I bought because they included a Linux client.

    P.S. What are you betting?

    P.P.S. Cue all the "I have don't have any fingers, you insensitive clod!" jokes.

  153. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 2, Interesting
    This is totally ridiculous. Computers with Linux pre-installed are really rare--and in fact, tend to be MORE expensive than computers with Windows installed--even though you don't have to pay the Microsoft tax, there are so few vendors selling Linux pre-installs that they either charge a premium or produce an inferior product. (Walmart always sells inferior products, so you might save money there, but No OS is $50 cheaper than Lindows, so your point doesn't hold true there.)

    So if your plan is to install pirated Windows, it definitely makes way more sense buy a machine with no OS installed.

    I have never encountered anyone who buys a linux pc intending to install linux on it.

  154. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pharmboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I would be happy to bet that I could count on my fingers the number of people here that have BOUGHT a piece of software that runs on linux. I can proudly say that I have (Matlab), but then again I don't use the fact that a distro is free as an advantage over windows. I think the programmers should be compensated...I don't like being dependent on them without anything in return.

    I have bought several programs that run on Linux only. Also, you can spend tens of thousands of dollars or more to run Oracle and any middleware program, SAP, or thousands of other apps. Most of the apps for pay are enterprise apps at this point, but there are many out there. This is increasing all the time.

    My attraction to Linux is NOT cost of the distro, I have PAID for RH, Mandrake, and other distros for years, happily. I like the freedom, the ease of maintaining many different systems from one desktop (via ssh and scripts) and the robustness of the OS.

    As a side note, what will happen if Linux becomes ultra popular? More programmers will be needed, all working for free? Its not going to happen!

    There is no reason you can't sell apps for Linux, the same as for Windows. This is a big misconception. If you take GPL code of someone else and build on that, then you have to release your code as GPL, but any project from scratch that doesn't use GPL libs (LGPL is ok) isn't subject to the GPL at all.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  155. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1

    For the love of God or whatever you deem to be holy NEVER ALLOW WALMART INTO YOUR BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY!!!!! Terrible store, cruel labor practices, exports all jobs to Asia, strongest force for mediocrity and conformity to arise in America since the birth of television.

  156. Re:FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD by cortana · · Score: 1

    The body of the message I replied to was as follows:

    If you think X11 is immune to "Shatter" attacks, think again, smart guy.

    I am still waiting for a citation of such a vulnerability in the X Window System, version 11.

  157. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1
    Dude, you need to see these prices. A computer with No OS is cheaper than one with Lindows installed. And you get a wider selection. Presumably because Microtel pays for their Lindows copies.

    So unless Gartner counts all No OS computers as Linux, then you're absolutely right. No one is going to buy a low cost Linux computer at Walmart and slap a pirate version of Windows on it, when they can get a cheaper computer at WalMart with No OS. This is the description of the No OS computers: "These PCs are completely assembled, but do not have an operating system or any other software loaded on the hard drive. They are a perfect solution if you want a new PC and own a full version of Windows that has never been installed, or if you have an alternative operating system, such as Linux."

  158. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1

    Since Dell only ships servers with Linux, do you really think that 3% of all purchases of computers fall into this category?

  159. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by cluckshot · · Score: 1

    The parent is obviously a Microsoft troll. Linux is a common and growing reason to build your own box.

    I work in a small company with 12 computers on a network. The network is Linux (Slackware) and all but 3 of the machines now are running Linux. To be fair at least 5 of the machines running linux are dual bool windows but nobody turns that on much any more.

    The last time one of the machines (dual booted) was turned on for Windows it was the object of a lot of fix actions for trojan and virus activity. Nine of these machines were originally purchaced with Windows installed. The last 3 boxes we bought bare of OS.

    Sorry for the Microsoft trolls out there but we are going to Linux and never coming back. I know of a lot of other offices where the same is going on. What is more, I don't see the "massive overhead" in sysops that Microsoft reports either. We had spent nearly $20,000 (one year) in Sysop overhead with Microsoft when we finally went to Linux and that has dropped to a noise level expense. Linux WORKS.

    At home I have 2 computers and both came with Windows installed. Now they run Linux! I will not buy a machine with windows ever again.

    --
    Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
  160. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1
    There is no problem at all in getting linux PCs. The number of Linux PCs sold significantly overestimates atual usage.

    Well, as you say, US != World. And in the US, Microsoft bullying is stronger than it ever was.

    Besides, if pirating Windows and installing it on linux pcs is so very common in Asia, why don't they just sell computers with no OS, like Wal Mart does? Even if Linux is license free, surely the electricity/time/labor cost of installing software starts to add up to something....

  161. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by finkployd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As a side note, what will happen if Linux becomes ultra popular? More programmers will be needed, all working for free? Its not going to happen!

    Linux has been getting increasingly more popular for the last decade, and it has been happening all the time. What leads you to believe it will suddenly stop?

    I'm sure back in the linux 1.x days people were saying the same thing, and again in the 2.0 days, 2.2, 2.4, etc.

    Finkployd

  162. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    The market research is very skewed.

    they take windows sales as gold that the os is used at home. While I know of at least 20 pc's that were sold with windows and promptly had linux installed.

    It's an extremely difficult number to accurately discover. Here at work we get suck a deal from DELL on pc's that the entire fleet of Pc's purchased last fall for the linux migration lab, it was cheaper to buy the windows-preinstalled pc's than the linux/freedos ones from dell. (go figure that one!) and your general consumer, where the largest uptake of linux is happening do not buy laptops from tuxtops or other companies that are simply reselling other laptops for a mark up... they are buying the laptops themselves and installing linux.

    As for businesses right now, many companies use vertical apps that they need to rewrite themselves or convince the company that wrote them to port them to linux or get them to run under wine reliably before a migration can begin. we migrated all of our office's in this area to StarOffice and mozilla exclusively (Yes we use Moz for email and use a web app for collabration calendar) so the switch to a linux desktop will be unnoticed by the workers as soon as we get the 5 vertical apps to run well.

    These new "numbers" are as accurate as a guy telling you an exact number of black sand grains on a lake michigan beach... it's a wild ass guess.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  163. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by MHleads · · Score: 1

    In India about 5-10% (probably closer to the latter figure by now) PCs are sold with linux pre-installed. Obviously, not all stick with linux. My guess is 2-3%.

    5-10%?!! That's untrue. I am yet to come across a person who does not code to earn bread and uses linux. In India, only geeks (mind you, hardcore fans) use linux.

    Where cost of software is equivalent to cost of media (due to rampant piracy), people tend to use windows.

  164. Re:Excuse me by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1

    Oh wow, a comparison of a 6 year old OS to a modern one on their ability to support obscure hardware. One of the reasons for a new operating system, Windows or Linux, is to add new driver support. If you install any Linux distro from 6 years ago, I guarantee that it will not detect all or even most of your hardware. In fact, when I installed RedHat in '99, it supported two of my cards. Luckily, they were the network and video cards...

    Also, 6 years ago not all cards were bus mastering. Most of them still required an interrupt. Most motherboards did not have a separate interrupt for each card...they would share interrupts, and unless both the hardware AND your drivers supported this, neither card on a shared IRQ would work.

    It was tough. But this wasn't Windows 98's fault! If anything, fault Windows for not knowing what the problem was when it was all too common.

    --
    Hey freaks: now you're ju
  165. Re:Excuse me by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

    Oh wow, a comparison of a 6 year old OS to a modern one on their ability to support obscure hardware. One of the reasons for a new operating system, Windows or Linux, is to add new driver support.

    I wasn't making a comparison, I was expressing my annoyance with Windows 98's crappy installer. Although it should also be noted that *both* Windows 98 and RedHat 5.0 fully supported all the hardware in the machine, it's just that Win98's installer seemed incapable of installing the machine properly while the hardware was in the box.

    Also, 6 years ago not all cards were bus mastering. Most of them still required an interrupt. Most motherboards did not have a separate interrupt for each card...they would share interrupts, and unless both the hardware AND your drivers supported this, neither card on a shared IRQ would work.

    I'm afraid this is wrong - not all cards are bus mastering these days, machines still don't have a separate interrupt for each card. PCI cards have always been able to share interrupts and regularly do and I've never seen a driver for a PCI card that doesn't support this (it's part of the PCI specification, not supporting it would be truely broken). ISA cards have never been able to share interrupts (ok, in very rare circumstances they can but it's not usually a good idea)

    But in any case, this has no bearing on anything I described - if the cards were all working fine and I erased the OS and reinstalled it without changing any hardware there's no reason they shouldn't still be working fine afterwards (ISA cards are jumpered onto the right IRQs and addresses, PCI cards are configured by the BIOS).

    It was tough. But this wasn't Windows 98's fault!

    I'm sorry, when the only thing on the machine has changed between it working and it not working is the software, there is nothing to blame but the software. There is no way I should have had to rip out every additional bit of hardware before reinstalling Windows. I should also point out that getting all that hardware working in RedHat 5.0 did not involve ripping the machine to pieces or rebooting 500 times.

  166. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by It'sYerMam · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That's fine if you want (like someone else said) to type your letters to Grandma. If, on the other hand, you want a middle-high end machine, you'll generally get the best value from DIY.
    Those who do this generally realise that there's often no point in having the latest and greatest graphics, processor etc, because you're paying premium, so instead of getting a machine that advertises "cheap" but is actually "crippled" or one that advertises "high-end" but is actually "exorbitant" you put your own pretty decent but reasonably priced computer.
    These days you can generally expect that a machine you put together will work, mostly first time. Sure, for the type-the-letter-to-grandma, you don't want to faff around with the bits AND risk it not working, but for many, it's half the fun.

    --
    im in ur .sig, writin ur memes.
  167. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by It'sYerMam · · Score: 2, Funny

    I don't have any arms, you insensitive clod!

    --
    im in ur .sig, writin ur memes.
  168. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by mistered · · Score: 1
    Ok, this is completely off topic, but when I clicked on Walmart's P4 system, Walmart suggested as a complementary item a 16-Piece Sirloin Steaks & Steakburgers Pack. I wonder how they decided steak is a good match to an OS-less computer?

    --
    Enjoy your job, make lots of money, work within the law. Choose any two.
  169. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Senzei · · Score: 2, Funny

    I saw a Linux PC at Fry's Electronics the other day. Lindows, actually. It had crashed :-/ Further demonstration that attempting to be too much like windows is a bad idea.

    --
    Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
  170. what command line? by poptones · · Score: 1

    An ootb mandrake install will play movies, music, browse the web, allow you to create powerpoint presentations, write and edit a book, PUBLISH a book on your desktop, create a website, check your email, play arcade games, find and connect you to any nearby linux, mac, or windows machines... all without getting NEAR a command line. It does all this stuff very very well, and does it near perfectly from the moment the installer resets the machine into your default desktop.

  171. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by imranius · · Score: 1

    Does that mean everyone's out buying a mac? :)

  172. Re:WindowsXP is free... by mangu · · Score: 1
    I think there are two issues here: one thing is making a new installation and another is keeping the system running. However, from my recent experience, Linux takes less time on both counts.


    I did a total re-install on my desktop, when I got a new 200Gb hd. Installing win98 was a pain. I had to find again all those old CD-ROM's and diskettes with the hardware drivers. One or more reboots for each driver. To install the OS itself, I couldn't find the original serial number anywhere, but fortunately I found the number for another system, an old notebook, and that number was accepted. I couldn't find the CD for my scanner anywhere, it must have been thrown away together with some of those dozens of useless CD's one gets from AOL and with magazines.


    Contrasting with that, re-installing the Linux partition was easy. Just pop in the distro CD, which was Conectiva 9, and do an apt-get to update it to version 10. Some hardware drivers aren't available for Linux, but if it's supported at all then the system itself takes care of it, no extraneous CD's are needed. And keeping the system working is just as easy: run apt-get dist-upgrade once every couple of weeks and that's all.


    With XP one gets the problem of backward compatibility. I got a notebook with it pre-installed a few months ago and still have problems in running some older software and peripherals. Even got a true BSOD when trying an old Adaptec SCSI PCMCIA card. Yes, a real blue screen, of the type that was supposed to have disappeared with windows 98, by the simple act of pulling out the SCSI connector from the scanner. The Microsoft people out there will say "non-supported hardware drivers", but how about the drivers that come in the computer? It's an HP/Compaq nx9005, with XP pre-installed at the factory. I get a message box telling me that the Synaptics touchpad driver isn't supported. So, aren't there any reliable drivers for the Synaptics touchpad in XP?


    Adding all, in these two systems, both dual-boot, I have spent far less time with maintenance and with better results with Linux than with either 98 or XP windows.

  173. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by div_2n · · Score: 1

    I had a choice and I bought this machine with Windows 2000 preinstalled. It now runs Linux. Why? Better hardware and better warranty.

    My laptop runs Windows XP and the only reason it isn't running Linux is that so far, Linux doesn't seem to handle its hardware very well. As soon as that changes, guess what OS my laptop will run?

  174. Nielsen ratings by kenlars99 · · Score: 1

    I say we get the Nielsen folks in on this. They should take a pool of people who keep diaries about which OS they boot at which time on which day. That's the only way to really know...

  175. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
    I personally run Linux on a laptop that came with XP pre-installed. I got fed up with it about 1.5 years ago, yanked the hard drive, bought a new hard drive, and installed Linux. Now if anything goes bad with the hardware I just slam the original hard drive with XP back in the machine before I take it in for service. You take an XP laptop running Linux in for service and you're not going to get far.

    "Building our own" isn't always the best idea, and isn't always possible if you're talking about laptops.

  176. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by JDevers · · Score: 1

    So when companies plan on producing a Windows product they shouldn't consider the number of people who pirate Windows as potential customers?

    I would consider users who download Linux legally to be much more likely to be customers than those who have shown they pirate at least some software.

  177. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

    > Most people simply don't want to be drawn into a hobbyist project when they can order a customized system from Dell that is guaranteed to work out of the box.

    First of all.. guaranteed to work out of the box? hehehehehehehehehehehehehehehe, sure.

    Anyway.. putting things together yourself means that:
    - you can decide on what goes in there, ie, no crappy components, and proper drivers for everything
    - you know what went in there
    - you know what to get when hardware breaks

    Alternatively, you can spend quite a bit more money on crappy hardware from the likes of Dell.

    I built my last machine for approx 2/3 of what a comparable machine would cost from Dell.. except for me havign twice the amount of memory, a better disk, a better video card, and a much better cd writer.

  178. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
    Not always. My laptop started out as an XP machine. I got sick of the fact that my new laptop, which was 3 times faster than the previous laptop from a hardware perspective, was actually running apps SLOWER. So I decided to make the leap from Microsoft to Linux.

    Now when I get a new laptop I'm not sure what I'll do. If I get another PC-based laptop (as opposed to Mac) I'll probably end up buying another Windows laptop and slapping on Linux unless there is an easy way to get a laptop with nothing on it.

  179. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
    Cause while you're waiting for your OS to install, maybe you want to have a nice BBQ out back.

  180. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

    > Why should i spend my time buidling a machine? Will i save enough money to make it worth my time?

    The savings are in money, choice of quality components, and knowing a lot better what you are using.

    > How about support - with Dell i get a better chance that the company will be around in 2-3 years when parts start to go bad.

    And with your home built machien that is completely and utterly irrelevant. Your videocard gives up? you goto the first computer shop that is willing to sell you a video card with specs that you like and a price you accept, you buy it and stick it in. You do not have anythign whatsoever to do with if the 'brand' survives, there is no 'vrand' except the brands of the seperate components, and those are easily replaced.

    When Dell goes belly up, you have no option left whatsoever when their boxes break.

  181. Re:On the other hand there are PC sold with window by Cnik70 · · Score: 1

    Good point! My laptop (Toshiba Satellite) came with XP but now runs Mepis Linux. I think I actually booted into Windows once with it.

    --
    -Cnik
  182. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by ajs · · Score: 1

    Most of the applications one buys for Linux these days are high-end, highly customized software (I work for a company which makes such software, and makes a VERY good business selling it as both product and service).

    As far as the desktop goes, that's as yet an untapped market, but as it grows, rest assured that new players and old will start to target the Linux desktop. You'll probably see games and security software first. The other thing that I think you'll see, which is kind of unique to Linux, is a set of desktop unification tools that let you do what Red Hat's switchdesk did, but on a much higher level. In other words, you'll see things like a tool that sets up all the right Gnome bits, makes sure all of the MIME types and gconf settings are right, tightens up the Mozilla security settings and makes sure that evolution is configured to open the right browser when you click on a link. That kind of thing.

    Someone could make a killing selling that tool, perhaps with some high-level layer on top of apt updating at the same time.

  183. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by ponxx · · Score: 1

    >As a side note, what will happen if Linux becomes
    > ultra popular? More programmers will be needed, all working for free?
    > Its not going to happen!

    That argument does not make any sense in the case of computers. If lots of people want to buy motorbikes, yes you need more people to build motorbikes. But if more people want to use a given system, you don't need more programmers to write it. You might need more systems administrators, people staffing helplines etc. etc. but not more programmers.

    Which is exactly the reason that i'm quite outraged that the price of windows or office hasn't come down, even though the cost of development per licence sold must have decreased significantly during the last decade.

    Microsoft's income 2003 was $ 32 Bn. The vast majority coming from sales of Window and Office. Their total development cost expenditure was $5 Bn. Even if they sold twice as many copies of their software, it would not add to their development cost.

  184. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

    [snip] because Linux is still quite hard for non-geeks to use.

    Or maybe, it's because Windows is so easy to pirate, eh?

  185. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by loophard · · Score: 1

    I'm not surprized. Just installed Fedora Core 2. As installed it is way slower than XP. Also, the sound card was not properly detected = no sound. Hey, this is a 2yr old Dell Dimension - it should be a putz setup for Linux. Sure I'll tweak it out and make it better. But, the average person can't be bothered to do this. Maybe the 2% who left it on the desktop are all slashdot type operators!?

  186. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    I don't understand how that remoptly resembles the parent remark. let me spell it out for you in simpler terms.

    He is saying that some people won't know windows enough to care that they are not using windows. This doesn't mean they are ignorant instead of being a "supercomputer geek" or "microsoft fanboy". I know several people that only get on the computer to surf a few websites, write a couple of letters, play some solitare and check email. There is nothign they need that needs to be windows so any computer or operating system would work for them. Actually i have them using mandrake without a problem and the love it. Of course they also love windows xp too.

    So you see, not everyone that doesn't use windows is stupid and not everyone that uses windows is stupid, some just don't care enough to be bohtered by it.

  187. Maybe Not by bstadil · · Score: 1
    It has been mentioned before but the Google Zeitgeist has Linux at 1% holding steady. The MAC number at 3% is about correct if you look at Apples sales numbers, so why would Linux be that much off?

    Everything being equal Google probably still has a slight Geeky slant compared to Say Ask Reeves so this would tend to over represent Linux not hurt the reported market share. Can anyone think of what the problem with Google might be if the share of linux is 5% and the Zeitgeist number is only 1%?

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
    1. Re:Maybe Not by The+Conductor · · Score: 1

      The Zeitgiest numbers do seem low to me, too; in every other way Linux seems to be roughly equal to Mac in popularity. My geuss is that the tech-savvy Linux-using set are more efficient in their search habits, and don't have to Google as much to get the same amount of "work" done.

    2. Re:Maybe Not by westlake · · Score: 1
      It has been mentioned before but the Google Zeitgeist has Linux at 1% holding steady. The MAC number at 3% is about correct if you look at Apples sales numbers, so why would Linux be that much off?

      The numbers for the Mac are never seriously questioned. it is only Linux's static 1% share that needs explanation. "We build our own systems, we spoof the browser," etc.
      But does anyone genuinely believe such advanced techno-geek hobbyists and users are so numerous as to be statistically significant when looking at a hugely successful general interest web portal like Google?

  188. pre-News News is irritating by dtjohnson · · Score: 1

    Why do we need news stories telling us that some or another particular bit of interesting information is going to be released 'this week.' Why not wait until *after* the news is available and then talk about that?

  189. Don't have any friends? by Leninix · · Score: 1

    Not sure. I have installed for relatives and knowlenge more than one hundred gnu/linux bases computer, mainly SuSe, Mandrake and (long time ago) Corel. And that's not counting that every computer where I work(as administrator/it: www.uinm.qc.ca) runs SuSe. Imagine that each tech could convince just the third of my gnu/linux installation base.That's certainly much more than 1% of the total population.

    1. Re:Don't have any friends? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Linux is a little different, almost every linux user knows how to install an OS.

      If windows users were truely tech savy they'd be running linux ;)

  190. Re:WindowsXP is free... by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Your average Joe user can set up XP. Not so with Linux.

    I don't think that's true at all. Your average Joe user can use XP, if the computer manufacturer or a local geek installed it for them.

    Present average Joe user with a computer with an unformatted hard disk, and the Windows and Linux install media, and he'll get exactly nowhere with either one.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  191. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by MoThugz · · Score: 1
    Linux PCs are reportedly selling like hotcakes in Malaysia.


    How I wish that it is true. The fact of the matter is that an extremely large majority of Malaysians don't know what the hell Linux is.

    I'll bet my life savings that out of 20 random Malaysians you pick in any shopping centre, you'll be lucky if you get even a single person who knows what Linux is...

    And yes, I'm a Malaysian.
  192. Re:WindowsXP is free... by krayfx · · Score: 1

    one of my frens'dad is really a cool chap. he has had problems with his dsl line, and his machine was heavily infected with a rich assortment of viruses. when we introduced him to linux, and asked him not to bother abt a few things in linux. he managed it pretty well, he's abt 60+ but he's taken to it remarkably well. he still has to figure a few things out and needs our help. but its ok, he needed help with windows too! k3b was equal to nero. gaim , xmms, evolution, firefox, abiword. he absolutely loves the games on it. but he had his reservations abt openoffice not quite standing upto msoffice, and the associated problems of opening the MS docs. well, cant blame him there. well, in all it wasnt all that tough. it would have costed him the amount he spent on his new PC for MS's sfware! he saved quite a lot there, he still has his old win98 on it, but again, he stays happy on linux. he doesnt get nasty - viruses, XXXtoolbars, dialers, browserjackers, trojans. and he calls us less often to fix his machine. we dont have to clean up his registry with adaware, daily virus updations, windows updates... and worse - go to his place that time of the day when we seem to be busy most.no re-installs, no cleaning up, no swearing at bill gates!!! now this does not necessarily mean that all the other people will have such a smooth transition to linux. half of them shudder to see anything other than windows! they simply have seen one thing, and they are pertified by it in the first place. now they dont want to learn another new thing which is equal to learning to drive on a busy street during the rush hours! but there are plenty of people who just do that much - chat, listen to music, play solitaire, email, surf websites, read news, and then edit a few documents. its a tough ask for all those teeming masses to tell 'em that its not all that tough shifting to linux! just need the patience of a few young kids to help them out.

  193. Just ont little thing these guys forget.... by dindi · · Score: 1

    While the typical windows user likes his crap preinstalled, most linux users order their machines without os (or actually put their servers/machines together from parts)

    -and then just download the favourite distro, or RE-use a purchased distro CD set again...

    I would never buy a linux preinstalled machine, but every laptop I bought came with windows preinstalled (even that I tried to get a discount and offered to wipe the OS in front of the sales person and hand ALL bundled windows software back to where it came from ....

    Actually in hungary there is a law, that prohibits selling a machine without an OS (they say it is to cut off piracy I say it is to make people buy their windows ) on the other hand now stores preinstall free dos (floppy in, format c: /u /s) so people can have a legal choice of "no os"

  194. Re:WindowsXP is free... by oliverthered · · Score: 1

    The average employee in the uk looses 5 days per year due to sickness, and 7 days per year due to computer faults.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  195. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Bull999999 · · Score: 1

    But many of us here on slashdot uses the downloaded version of Linux (Slackware 10.0 on my case). How is Gartner supposed to track that?

    --
    1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d
  196. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by killjoe · · Score: 1

    That's not true. The license that comes with your PC is charged against your points. If you have a contract with Dell or HP or something they may agree not to charge you for the copy that comes with the PC.

    --
    evil is as evil does
  197. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by aero6dof · · Score: 1

    Linux has been getting increasingly more popular for the last decade, and it has been happening all the time. What leads you to believe it will suddenly stop?

    I'm glad you're not my stockbroker. :)

  198. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by finkployd · · Score: 1

    Since you didn't answer the question...

    Follow-up question

    What makes you think the popularity of an open source operating system is even remotely related to the economics of a stock market.

    Finkployd

  199. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

    You'll probably see games and security software first.

    UT2003 was one of the first to run on Linux right out of the box, so I tend to agree with you on this one. Also, because of the commonality of linux users and gamers, both having a somewhat better understanding of computers and not afraid to tweak a bit.

    I am waiting for mainstream apps like a good replacement for Peachtree, etc. for 10 to 20 users, myself. apps in the $500 to $2000 range, for small (but not tiny) companies. Once you start seeing those, Linux has arrived.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  200. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by spitzak · · Score: 1

    I have to second the common opinion here that something is screwed up in these estimates. I have NEVER seen a machine with Linux pre-installed in a store.

    My last two machines were blank, built by a computer shop, and I installed Linux on them. I assumme that Microsoft did not get their tax for these, but it is really hard to tell.

    Anyway, it is vastly easier to get a no-os machine than a Linux-preinstalled machine. Anybody intending to install a pirate copy of Windows would get one of these. Yet this report seems to indicate sales of no-os machines is zero? WTF?

    The Lindows machines sold by Walmart are obviosly junk, available only by mail order, and if you look on the same web page you will see cheaper no-os machines, and I would not be suprised if they have better hardware because they don't have to worry about Linux compatability. They certainly sell much better-quality no-os machines (much faster and much larger hard disks) for only slightly more than the Lindows box.

    Linux fans might fear admitting it, but I suspect even a Linux user who buys a Lindows machine purposely to add to the sales figures will wipe it and reinstall it as a dual-boot with Windows configuration. I did, even though I don't ever use the Windows system, it is nice to know I can boot to it if I need to run something (yes it is a pirated copy, so sue me Mr Gates).

  201. Incorrect. by khasim · · Score: 1

    The last company I was with tried to use them. And yes, we were going to pay a "crapload of money" for their service.

    We were running an old version of GroupWise and we wanted an un-biased, expert opinion of the benefits of either upgrading GroupWise vs migrating to Exchange.

    We got a couple of their people in the office and they conferenced in a woman on the phone.

    They knew NOTHING about GroupWise. They kept going on about Exchange vs Lotus Notes.

    We didn't surprise them with our request. My boss had contacted them with the clear request to compare GroupWise and Exchange. Yet they couldn't even CALL someone who knew GroupWise.

    And I would think that such a request would NOT be that unusual. They SHOULD have the basics already available. They had NOTHING. That only reinforced my belief that they will sell themselves to present whatever conclusion is desired.

    "For instance, they have people who specialize in every niche of the industry and know a ton about it."

    It might SEEM that they do to someone who doesn't know much about those niches. But when you get them on FACTS, they fail.

    I read their "reports" and "studies".
    I've seen their "experts" in action.

    The best word I can think of to describe it is "prostitution".

  202. Where did the numbers come from? by Sloppy · · Score: 1
    The Gartner link just goes to some login page, so maybe the real paper somewhere actually explains this, but... how did they get their mysterious 2% figure? People are arguing about it on both sides, but all the posts I have seen so far, seem to be anecdotes and intuitive conjectures.

    I can't think of a reliable way anyone could research actual Linux usage share. Does the userbase have anything externally detectable, that distinguishes them from the rest of the population? The closest thing I can think of, is perhaps connections to distro servers for downloading updates, but updates are so widely mirrored and distributed, I'm skeptical anyone could actually gather the statistics. And then there's the people who don't keep their systems maintained. Hm.

    Unless someone explains how they get their figures, I would be inclined to suspect that they're engaging in the same kind of conjecture as Slashdot posters. And that includes Gartner.

    And on that note, I think it's irresponsible for media to summarize the paper's conclusion without mentioning how the figures were derived. Laymen will listen to one part and not consider the other part. Now, in some cases where we're talking about a reputable source (e.g. Stephen Hawking talking about black holes) maybe that's ok, but sheesh, this is Gartner.

    And then look at the number of significant figures in IDC's estimate. Yeah, right!! At least that one says something about where the number came from, though it's amusingly naive. Actually, let me restate that: their "explanation" looks a lot like an advertisement. ;-) But they say they're non-profit. Hm.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  203. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Sloppy · · Score: 1
    Well I would imagine any Linux user worth his salt wouldnt be buying OEM machine from Dell with Windows pre-installed, most likely they would build their own.
    That's what computer nerds would do. But what about Joe Sixpack's grandmother?

    Somebody is buying those Mandrake CDs. If you look at what has happened with so-called "easy to use" distros, they have put a lot of effort into dumbing down the installation process. Why? The kind of people who build their own machines, are also the kind of people who have not been asking for this. Who is creating the market force that has made companies like Red Hat and Mandrake put time and money into making Linux installation easier than, say, Gentoo's Stage 1 process? I suggest it's the same kind of people who don't build their own computers.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  204. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by ImaLamer · · Score: 1

    Shows what my schools knows: there are XP home stickers on every dell machine with serials.

    Problem is they all have windows 2000 on them.

    I'd tell you the school but then you'd laugh at me so I'll let you wonder.

  205. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by thoromyr · · Score: 1

    I've never heard of Dell doing that and I work for a Uni that does a lot of business with Dell. We are also practically a Windows only environment with a site-license from MS for *all* versions of Windows.

    But guess what? Our license is only an "upgrade" license: each system must come with a valid license for some (any) version of Windows. Even if Dell did offer that kind of computer we couldn't buy them and I suspect that the same is true for most/all MS licensees.

    But misunderstanding "site-license" is a common problem, one I have to explain in its many variations every day.

    Thoromyr

  206. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by incom · · Score: 1

    Actually, I buy lots of linux software. Like ut2k4, neverwinter nights, quake3, and doom3 when it comes out. In that same period I bought zero windows software(mainly because I don't use windows).

    --
    True genius is grasping a situation like a peice of fruit, and peircing it just right so that it drains dry.
  207. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by thoromyr · · Score: 1

    US != world, however the US is still home to a disproportionate number of computers. I like how you come up with the 2-3% guess. You don't know and have no way of knowing or even estimating so your guess is as pointless as me making one.

    Any linux usage numbers are basically worthless because:

    1. MS claims market share based on number of PCs sold with Windows pre-installed PLUS number of Windows licenses sold

    2. Number of linux kernel/ISO/whatever downloads could be more or less than number installed via that method (download once, install many; download many never install one)

    3. Number of linux distro sales is likewise meaningless for the same reason.

    These market share numbers are just meaningless. There are too many variables with no means of checking on any of their values.

    Thoromyr

  208. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by arvindn · · Score: 1

    I'm sure you're correct. But it doesn't contradict what I said. All I claimed is that Linux PCs are being bought (simply because they're cheaper because of not paying the windows tax, with the buyers not even knowing they're buying a Linux PC) and then get pirated windows installed right after being purchased. Do you have any info on whether this kind of thing is happening or not? I know its happening massively in India and China (I live in India).

  209. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but we represent fraction of percents in regard to the "global market". How are our numbers representative at all in from of n millions computers sold to other people?

  210. Ship % is probably closer to the truth... by WebCowboy · · Score: 1

    ...than anyone thinks.

    Yeah, there are a lot of people that are going to buy an ultra-cheap WalMart PC and use a bootleg copy of Windows to overwrite the Linux installation. A lot of companies will buy Linux Dells to avoid purchasing redundant Windows licenses as well. That'll push the true market share down (I'd venture to say by 50-60 percent but that's just a wild guess)

    However, the vast majority of Linux users out there did NOT buy their PCs with Linux installed. In my case I assembled my PC from components from local discount shops that will let you buy (gasp!) a "naked PC". Microsoft doesn't like this but it isn't illegal to do so--and they have no contracts with MS restricting the practice. Each and every machine either runs Linux exclusively or dual-boots with Win2k.

    Furthermore, at a student job some years ago the corporate policy was to purchase all PCs through Compaq. Although Deskpro towers were not marketed as servers, my employer purchased nearly a dozen to replace an equal number of aging AT&T UNIX servers (those old beasts sporting 80386 processors that were the size of 2-drawer filing cabinets). These came with Windows 95B pre-installed (and thus would be counted as "market share" from a sales standpoint). However the machines were never once booted into Windows--the first thing we did on power up was to boot from an install floppy that loaded a pre-configured Slakware Linux image from a JAZ drive (so from a sales standpoint they only recognise the single purchased set of InfoMagic CDs used on all machines). I'd venture to say that a countless number of home users similarly dump Windows to this day.

    So I think it nearly all washes out in the end. Linux might not run on quite 5% yet but I'd say it runs on much more than 2% share. Nobody will know for sure unless they figure out a way to count actual PCs in current use world wide (corporate, home, new, used...everything, even hacked XBoxes and TiVOs and such).

  211. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by killjoe · · Score: 1

    "Well killer, maybe you need to check again because I've worked for two clients that did have ms-windows site licenses. They also have employee counts in the low 6 digits."

    Please provide a link to such a thing.

    "The Microsoft licensing terms, which were put in place on Aug. 1 [2002], specify that PC makers must ship PCs with an operating system."

    Check the calendar, it's now 2004. Go to the dell web site and order a business PC and check the box that says "no operating system"

    --
    evil is as evil does
  212. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by marcansoft · · Score: 1

    Or you like building computers :)

    I always build my own, simply because I get to choose what goes in it. (e.g. maybe I want a top-notch processor to do [insert CPU intensive task here] plus tons of memory but I don't need any super-mega-6.1-surround soundcard or the latest ultra-geforce-7-nvidia graphics card. Or I run a Squid proxy and need large amounts of RAM and a fast HD, but any processor will do.) Plus it's cheaper, too. Plus you get no O.S. preinstalled, blank harddrive, ready to get whatever I like to put on it.

    And you get to make little adjustments/details that might actually make a difference (master/slave settings on IDE drives, adding on some decent -silver- thermoconductive grease instead of the crappy stickers to get the CPU colder, what PCI card goes where because the cables are short/they are farther apart/whatever, etc...)

    These things are why I build my own, added to the fact that I like building my won for countless other detailt (stupid, maybe, but I like my cables wrapped neatly, makes adding/removing pieces much easier), plus the fact I like building it :)

    I can keep on talking but I guess you get the idea ;)

  213. Re:oh! by PitaBred · · Score: 1

    Troll.
    What's really amusing is the retard can't even spell "loser" correctly. But school, reading and communication aren't cool. I guess that explains it.

  214. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Ray+Radlein · · Score: 1

    I would be happy to bet that I could count on my fingers the number of people here that have BOUGHT a piece of software that runs on linux.

    Railrod Tycoon II, from the late, lamented LokiGames, here. At Best Buy, even.

  215. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

    Actually there is a pretty good metric for measuring Linux users: weblogs. Many browsers, in addition to reporting the brand of browser, also report the OS the browser is running under. Most geeks hit the same sites as non-geeks, especially when it comes to news, search engines, and the like.

    --
    "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
    --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  216. Whoops. I tripped and bought a Linux PC by Psymunn · · Score: 1

    Who buys a computer with linux on it and doesn't know what linux is. I would jsut assume that most people who buy a PC without XP on would know whaqt they are doing to a certain degree (either they are going to install their own burnt copy of XP or another OS). I mean... how many people do you know who 'accidently' bought a linux box. I don't know anyone who did it deliberatly.
    However, everyoen i know who uses linux started with a windows box (or no OS) and, either dual boots or goes all linux. Given the lack of people distributing linux, i'd assume that this is the route for most linux users

    --
    The Neo-Bohemian Techno-Socialist
  217. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by LilMikey · · Score: 1

    I bought a WineX subscription... but that kinda defeats the point eh?

    --
    LilMikey.com... I'll stop doing it when you sto
  218. Re:WindowsXP is free... by mcrbids · · Score: 1

    Windows XP is only free if your time is worth nothing.

    Does that include jail time?

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  219. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

    I bought a WineX subscription... but that kinda defeats the point eh?

    I dont think so. Its like how they give alcoholics Methadone to help them get over the addiction ;) There are some Windows apps that have no Linux counterpart yet, so if WineX helps someone run Linux exclusively, while keeping productive by running their Windows apps, then I say its a great approach.

    I have had mixed results with Wine, but have used it to run a few apps, like Forte's Agent (Much prefer over any Linux USENET news reader). To me, using Wine isn't admitting defeat to Microsoft, it's helping defeat Microsoft by giving people choice of OS to run Win32 apps.

    Part of my sales pitch to get the boss to switch from Win32 to Linux *IS* Wine, so we can still use some older apps that have no Linux equivelent yet.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  220. modding on that one by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1

    I'm still trying to figure out how the moderating on that comment went. I was looking for a comment like that or else I was going to. I would think buying a new computer to install an old version of Windows you already own would be much more common than a pirated version of Windows. Most people I know wouldn't even have any idea where to find a pirated version of it.

    Anyway, the modding on that comment showed:
    50% Insightful
    30% Overrated
    20% Redundant
    for a total score of 0.
    Unless the percentages are not accurate, it looks like this had to get 10 mod points to achieve a 20, 30, and 50%.

    --
    We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
    1. Re:modding on that one by ebyrob · · Score: 1

      Also, it was scored 2 when I posted it, and is at 1 now. So, 2 - 0 = 1.

      I seem to recall some reference in an Orson Scott Card book about things better left un-researched and some guy found with his head in a toilet...

  221. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

    the problem with that is that KDE and gnome look enough like windows to be considered an "upgrade" like going from 98 to XP.

    If they dont know what they bought and they cant use a windows install disc, they probably dont care enough to warrant OS restoring.

    Not to mention the average person has at least heard of linux at this point. its been fairly unavoidable for the past few years.

    --
    "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
  222. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

    really ? Only 10 million ? I would venture a guess that there are a lot more "hobbyist's" out there than you think, how else do you explain so many computer store, parts suppliers etc ...

    I have 8 computers here, they all run linux. Most people I know use linux for something (although we tend to be younger and more technical types) those 8 for me have to count as 8 individual desktops since I am sure the 300 running windows at the local university count as 300 for windows. Point being -- I built 6 of my computers and bought two with windows installed, how the hell do they know that my 8 are running linux ? or even that I have 8 ?

    The answer is: they dont. They estimate based on shipments from major/mid-major manufacturers.
    We all knew that MS controlled the OEM market, that was a major reason for the anti-trust trial ?

    --
    "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
  223. Re:WindowsXP is free... by bluekanoodle · · Score: 1

    Apologies, missed that part. Try this. ipconfig | find "IP Address" > ip1.txt Still shorter then your command. Notice how you can conveniently pipe commands and redirect output.

  224. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by pvcf · · Score: 1

    Well, I did say "everyone".

    Unfortunately, the analogy you use is fundamentally flawed and I'd be willing to bet there has been no detailed study of the life-span of Linux-based PCs vesus their Windows counterparts. In fact, the machine I use at work (Win2k-Pro) is much older than the Linux machines I have at home.

    Are you suggesting that hard-drives and memory and optical drives and video cards wear out faster on Windows machines? Or that they become obsolete more quickly?

    Listen, I'm not trying to push Windows, but this 5-to-1 lifespan is really just wishful thinking on your part.

    Having said that though, I believe that the number of people like me that buy a machine with MS-something on it and immediately format the drive and install Linux is greater than anyone might be able to measure. It certainly seems that Gartner didn't even try to acknowledge this segment of the market; let alone estimate it. Furthermore, the unfortunate side effect of this is to over-inflate the Windows figures...

    So, to the original issue, how can 5% of machines sold this year be pre-installed with Linux and yet only 2% of the market be Linux. Because not *everyone* replaces their machine every year. The fact of the matter is that there are one h*ll of a lot of working, Win98 vintage machines out there. It will take several years of good sales to start impacting the overall installed base figures.

    But the more important questions are:

    Did Gartner gather their research with due dilligence and care? Yes

    Are these statistics correct? Yes, within the context of the large PC distributors they surveyed.

    Are the numbers they published representative of the true story? Resoundingly *NO*

    Unfortunately, many people will believe the number because it is Gartner that published them.

    --
    F U NE X N M? Son: "Dad... How do you spell 'hourly'?" Dad: "0 * * * *"
  225. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

    > I can keep on talking but I guess you get the idea ;)

    And I guess we agree ;P

  226. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

    how do you know we are only a small percentage ? Do you have hard data about that ? How about from places like china ?

    Mom and Dad might not use linux in your family, but they do in mine. So do quite a few people I know. The problem is very simple: there is no way to track usage of linux.

    this firm estimated 2.8% of computers shipped last whatever ran linux when all was said and done. What if triple that number were built and had linux installed via a download ? or were ms machines but were wiped and had linux installed ? How do you estimate this ?

    I would say worldwide linux runs 6% of desktops, mac 3%. that puts ms at about 90%, thats what I would assume. If I call it a statistic would anyone believe me ?

    --
    "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
  227. When Linux exceeds 10% by gillbates · · Score: 1

    I'll stop using it.

    What makes Linux so extraordinary is that it is NOT a commodity OS. It has a certain level of hackability and customizability that would be dangerous in the hands of Joe Sixpack.

    As the saying goes, "Make something that even a fool can use, and only a fool will use it." Linux can't be used by fools, but Windows can.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  228. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Entropius · · Score: 1

    What laptop is it?

  229. Faulty numbers by droh · · Score: 1

    I have purchased about 10 pcs for my company, all windows originally shipped, then formattted and slacked. I gotta beleive that is true in many cases

  230. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Entropius · · Score: 1

    Oddly enough, my first introduction to Linux was in Switzerland. (I'm from the USA.)

    I was on tour in Europe with my university's choir, performing in various cathedrals and stuff. We made a stop in Interlaken to take a day off from singing and see the Alps, and during that day I went into a little cybercafé to mail the people back home.

    Pay my money, sit down at a machine, and notice that--while the desktop is superficially the same, with a Start button and the like--it's not Windows.

    I knew enough about Linux, even though I'd never used it, to figure out what the box was. "Neat!"

    It's now three years later, my whole family runs Linux, and my senior project gets compiled with gcc.

  231. Re:WindowsXP is free... by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 1
    C:\>ipconfig|find "IP Address"
    IP Address : 192.168.1.10
    IP Address : 192.168.2.35

    (note that I had to remove the 12 dots from each line above, slashdot wouldn't let me post it with them intact.)
    OK, almost. But, what I needed was ONLY a list of IP addresses, and nothing more. For example:

    192.168.1.1
    192.168.1.2
    10.10.10.1

    The program I was feeding input to requires that. So I would still need to parse out only the numerical address.

    Is there a way to get that down to a list of only the address? BTW 'find 192' doesn't work because the IP address is unknown. I will be willing to concede defeat if you can easily do the above with native windows commands (commands that come with the OS, no download/install/writing custom stuff).

    ps. Sorry if I come off sounding hostile or whatever, but I truly do not know how to do that in Windows because I rarely use it, like maybe for 3 hours/month tops.
    --
    bash: rtfm: command not found
  232. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

    how do you know we are only a small percentage ?

    Well, nothing is easier that that. Number of people reading slashdot every day. Then you divide that number by the number of people owning a computer.

    I don't have these figures (And I don't care about getting them), but I would be very surprised if it is more than 1%.

    And please don't try to pretend there is more than 2 million people reading slashdot or less than 200 million computer in use worldwide.

    Your question is like asking: "How do you know there is more stars in the universe than coins in my purse?" I know it because it is so freaking obvious.

  233. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by The+Conductor · · Score: 1

    Well, you know how hot those processor chips get...

  234. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Helios1182 · · Score: 1

    I actually went ahead and paid for the OS. The reason was three fold. 1. I've been running Suse 9.1 and really like it, but it takes forever to do the FTP install. 2. It comes with excellent documentation on pretty much everything. I haven't been using Linux for very long (a couple months) so its nice to have a guide specific to the system (yes, there is the Internet, but its not the fastest. 3. If Suse doesn't make any money they won't make newer distros.

  235. Linux OS? by JessLeah · · Score: 1

    Where can I buy a copy of Linux OS?

    1. Re:Linux OS? by smchris · · Score: 1

      Where can I buy a copy of Linux OS?

      Microcenter. I have a retail store within walking distance. Red Hat Pro is on sale at $59.95 'til Monday if memory serves.

      I don't think it is that hard to buy a boxed copy if you don't want to download and burn a copy.

    2. Re:Linux OS? by JessLeah · · Score: 1

      ...Evidently, you missed my point.

      There is NO SUCH BLOODY THING as "Linux OS". There is "Debian GNU/Linux". There is "Red Hat Linux". There is "SuSE". There is "Mandrake". But there is no product/distro/whatever called "Linux OS".

  236. Re:WindowsXP is free... by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1

    Quoting you, "Windows XP is only free if your time is worth nothing."
    That's what I feel about Linux. You are forgetting the rather steep learning curve and what I would call the diverging path analogy. For those of us who know how to use Windows already, there is no learning curve to say on Windows, but there is a long and steep curve to learning Linux. That is where I feel my time is too valuable. I lead a fairly busy life with stuff going on most evenings so I don't have lots of time for a few weeks to spend learning a new way to do things.

    Here is my analogy of the diverging paths. Picture computer use as being a path in the woods that only goes a few feet before it splits in two. One path represents using Windows; the other represents using Linux. Forward progression on either path in this example represents complexity of tasks being done. Now for the examples frequently thrown out here of people who just write their emails and browse the web, that may be just a couple steps down either path. Picking one or the other path, or even switching from one path to the other is easy. It would take just a few seconds to walk across from one path to the other. The computing tasks are similar enough on either platform to easily make the switch.

    For detailed users, though, they have progressed half a mile down one of those paths. They have spent years using one OS, knowing how to set it up how they want it, learning where every option is that they want to set, using specific unusual programs that are unavailable or at least very different substitutes on a different OS. In the analogy, it would take them hours of wandering through the woods to get to the other path, and when they got there, it would be very unfamiliar, they wouldn't know the terrain or which way to go on it, etc. because they didn't get a chance to gradually work their way to this point, knowing the steps taken along the way. Back to the computer: finding the detailed options they are used to using takes a lot of time. They don't know how to use the development programs that they had become really proficient with before, so they feel less productive, having to spend so much time learning a different way of doing things.

    That's the situation of a couple of friends of mine. They've been Windows programmers for years. They looked at Knoppix, and were having some difficulty doing a few things that they could do really easily on Windows and were faced with the idea of learning a different set of development tools, so it didn't seem worth it.

    Don't try to answer this with the idea that it's worth it because they would avoid viruses. These people don't get viruses because they know how to secure their machine.

    --
    We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
  237. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Darby · · Score: 1

    I would be happy to bet that I could count on my fingers the number of people here that have BOUGHT a piece of software that runs on linux.

    I bought HOMM3 from Loki and Crossover.
    Does that count as one or two fingers?

  238. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by waveclaw · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The reason that linux usage continues to hover around 2% is no longer due to Microsofy bullying, but because Linux is still quite hard for non-geeks to use.

    Bullshit. It's because the pirates precieve that either

    or


    If you have the best Desktop in the business, it won't matter becuase of what that person preceives as important. For Everyday Joe that means either being a good sheep[1] or getting his pr0n, w4r3z, etc to work out of the box.

    If you'd every ran a Linux install-fest for a local Linux User's Group you would have learned this first hand. Those two things are number 1 and number 2 on the LUG FAQ for every Install-fest I've ran or attended.

    ------------
    1. As racist as it sounds, every Oriental-culture teacher (foreign language, historian, etc.) I have met at University mentioned that this was a very large part of Chinese and Japanese culture. Being a good cog is more important that being a good person. Frankly I think it's also B.S., but then I'm from the USA and not allowed to hold balanced or informed opinions of other cultures.
    --

    "You cannot have a General Will unless you have shared experiences. You cannot be fair to people you don't know."
  239. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by offpath3 · · Score: 1
    My argument was not that windows machines actually do wear out faster than linux machines. My argument was simply that it is possible for linux (not even likely, but simply possible) to have a greater marketshare than the percent of computers sold with it every year. I was just making a hypothetical situation which could provide a counter-example to your claim.

    It's a pedantic point, and I really didn't mean to start any argument with it.

  240. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by thoromyr · · Score: 2, Informative

    Your statement that most "geeks hit the same sites as non-geeks" is non-provable and, without a valid premise, your metric is also invalid.

    Being non-provable is sufficient, but to not just leave it to the trivial counterproof: you're metric does not take into account that most browsing is done during the day which for many is at work which means that your are getting more of a corporate browser and OS measure than anything else.

    Which in my case would count the WinXP system I use at work for my primary desktop, but miss the two OS X desktops and the RedHat desktop, not to mention the two SuSE desktops and OS X laptop at home (and, no, that's not trying to count in the two additional SuSE servers as desktops).

    I stand by my original claim: there are no metrics.

    Thoromyr

  241. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by The+Conductor · · Score: 1

    I work at a place the has a licensing agreement covering some 45,000 PC's. But it is not a site license in the tradiional sense, where you pay a flat fee and copy as much as you want. In fact, it is a contract with hundreds of pages. I'm not claiming to have a complete understanding of such a behemoth, but the direction I get is that we have license to upgrade any version of Windows, but not license to install on a PC built from parts.

    All new machines get re-imaged because that is the most efficient way to put on all the necessary network scripts and site-licensed software like anti-virus, but the OS licensing terms still require the OEM Windows.

  242. It's not one decision by delcielo · · Score: 1

    It would be a travesty to see Linux shoe-horned into one place and philosophy.

    The great thing about Linux now is that you can install a totally free community supported distro like Debian or Gentoo, a good server like RHEL or SEL, a decent desktop like Lycoris, Xandros, Linspire, etc.

    If the Linux "community" ever tried to decide that the focus was either solely freedom or market share to the exclusion of all others, I'd be horribly disappointed.

    In fact, I'd say that the ability to make your Linux motivation a good "market share" is in fact, a reflection of Linus' and Stallman's motivations for freedom.

    --
    Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
  243. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by thoromyr · · Score: 1

    argh.... I mean:

    I stand by my original claim: there are no valid metrics.

  244. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

    Oh and by the way, I read and post on slashdot. I am what a lot of people I know qualify as a 'nerd'. And no, I have no linux at home, my parent's home or anyone else. Well, I have a Knoppix that I boot every now and then, but this probably doesn't qualify.

    So even if we were that numerous, you just can't assume we're all using Linux for ourselves and our entire family.

    Basically, you can't assume that anyone is like you. The fact is that everyone is unique. And that's why proper polls are necessary to come up with any figure.

  245. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Frizzle+Fry · · Score: 1
    Its like how they give alcoholics Methadone to help them get over the addiction ;)

    They do? I thought it was only given to heroin (or maybe other opiate) addicts since methadone is itself an opiate thus helps deal with those cravings.
    --
    I'd rather be lucky than good.
  246. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by shaitand · · Score: 1

    Are they installing pirated copies of windows though? Our shop custom builds computers.

    We ask what parts you need, assemble the computer and install windows for you. But it's a valid OEM windows license and is included in the price we tell you after you tell us the parts.

  247. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by shaitand · · Score: 1

    While the memory requirements are higher, the processor requirements are lower.

    "Really? How odd. I've installed Mandrake, SUSE and Fedora, and they're all slower or barely equal to Windows XP on the same box."

    That would depend on how your gauging performance, your basing it on how fast a window appears on screen after clicking the icon you'd be right. That performance is no better than windows.

    I judge performance based on how fast tasks are completed.

  248. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

    I could be wrong, but I believe they do use Methadone for severe alcoholics, and other addictions as well since it "plugs into" similar receptors. I could google it, but it looks like we both are too lazy :D

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  249. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    Not all linux programers work for free. That is just a misconception because people think charging for software before the user can use it is the only way to make money. There is tech support, i know of several companies that won't buy software unless they can puchase some sort of tech support agreement. There is customizing the aplication to meet the job it is intended for. I know of a couple more companies that higher the original programer to make a few changes in some software so that it integrated into another aplication they were using better. This work caist about 3 times as much as the software and they justified it with increased productivity that they actually saw.

    But needless to say, free software as in free beer is atractive to me as well as paying for software when needed.

  250. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "Slashdotters are living in the 1990s." ... "linux usage continues to hover around 2% is no longer due to Microsofy bullying, but because Linux is still quite hard for non-geeks to use."

    Now who lives in the 90s? Linux quite hard for non-geeks to use. Yeah, right. So all people working for the Munich government are geeks?

    Fighting spyware and installing the service packs on windows is a lot harder than using a modern Linux distribution these days.

  251. Re:FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD by cortana · · Score: 1

    Right. Now show me the X11 messages that allow *anyone* to hijack a program connected to the server, by forcing the program to accept malicious data and then to start executing code at the address of that data.

    There is a difference between a flaw in the implementation of a system (the ficticious X11 vulnerability that the AC was talking about) and a flaw in a system's architecture (the documented, proven, reproducible and *unfixable* "shatter" attack against Windows).

  252. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by wkitchen · · Score: 1

    People buying new machines for that purpose is unlikely, but installing Linux at some point down the road is very common. I wouldn't be at all surprized if most of the Linux boxes out there started out that way. Also consider that many computers that run Linux are set up to dual boot with Windows, or run a VM. It would make much more sense to buy a machine with bundled Windows for such a set up than to buy a Linux or no-os box and buy Windows separately (assuming you care at all about having a fully legal setup).

    Granted, such machines cannot rightly be counted as Linux boxes, but neither can they rightly be counted as Windows boxes. And I suspec that the latter is exactly what most such statistics do. Not necessarily out of any kind of intentional misrepresentation, but more just from the difficulty of figuring out how many such machines there are. These don't show up in any analysis of sales data. Yet may well represent the most common case.

  253. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    How about you provide the links this time around? I already did my part. In fact, before I even posted the second time I did exactly what you suggested - went to the mediam & large business section of dell's website and checked out the optiplex, dimension and precision lines, none of them listed "no operating system" as an option and even spot-checking the customize section for 4 different models "no OS" was never an option.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  254. Re:Excuse me by westlake · · Score: 1
    I think when I used to run Win98...

    This get old. The Google Zeitgeist shows Windows 98 at a 16% share, the unloved Windows Me at 3%, with XP at 51%. The migration to XP is far along now and accelerating.

  255. Re:Wasn't this the opposite argument we were makin by westlake · · Score: 1
    Perhaps the vast quatities of boxen that Wal Mart is shipping has something to do with it.

    I see a link to a Wal-Mart web page. A Microtel Linux page with a very prominent "Upgrade to Windows XP for Only..$$$." insert. So how about some hard numbers for the "vast quantities of Linux boxen" Wal-Mart ships?

  256. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by MoThugz · · Score: 1

    It's happening all the time... In fact, most "successful" PC assembly shops do this for "free". Why have the consumer run away just because they find installing Windows to be "complicated".

    As a general rule of thumb... if a P4 pc of about 1.8GHz with 256MB RAM costs more than RM1300 (US$1 = RM3.80), it's considered "expensive".

    And that's with Windows XP (pirated, of course).

  257. Linux Market share? I am more interested in.... by motherjoe · · Score: 1

    Linux Market share? Well, I am more interested in the fact that Linux gives me market freedom. If it weren't for Linux, I never would have learned that there is a whole different life waiting for users outside of the, "Windows". :) So for me, freedom comes before cost... Just my .02 :)

    --
    "Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy - Benjamin Franklin"
  258. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by LinuxLuver · · Score: 1

    Same here. We have 9 PCs and they are al home-built systems. Seven of them run Linux. The other two run Win98SE - the last reasonably secure version of Windows.

    --
    Only boring people are ever bored.
  259. Can we mod that down to -2 or less? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Ignorant people run whatever's in front of them. And it works. I've had people spend an entire day using a Linux machine (KDE, nothing special) and react with shocked surprise when they're told as they walk out that it wasn't MS-Windows or MS-Office they were using.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  260. IMPORTANT SIDE NOTE! by danalien · · Score: 1
    Reading http://people.redhat.com/mingo/nx-patches/QuickSta rt-NX.txt, reveales that this in only for the comming 32-bit cpu's that'll support NX.... while linux had NX support for the 64-bit cpu's long ago... :

    • - make sure you have a CPU that has the NX feature. Such CPUs are: all 64-bit variants of AMD (Athlon64, Opteron), future CPUs of Intel, Transmeta and VIA.
    • (NOTE: 64-bit x86_64 kernels already make use of the 64-bit variant of the NX feature - this patch is only meant for 32-bit x86 kernels and distributions.) [emphasis added!]
    --
    I don't claim I know more than I know, and if you know you know more than I know, then by all means, let me know.
  261. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

    how the fuck does slashdot have a damn thing to do with this ? Slashdot is a website, thats it. I was using linux for 3 years before I had even heard of slashdot. Most people I know still dont know about it, and if they do there is no guarantee that they will actually come to it and read it.

    Saying that you know something because it is obvious is foolish. Also I asked very specifically for some kind of logic -- that noone can provide because there is no way to provide it. There are to many variable's. I can produce anecdotal evidence to support whatever bullshit statistics or theories I come up with.

    --
    "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
  262. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

    And basically you cant assume that anyone is like you.
    R that's why proper polls are necessary to come up with any figure.

    Yet you fail to respond to the fact that there is no fucking way to come up with accurate numbers regarding this shit. Base it on sales and it skews a large percentage of the market (not everyone who builds a computer or buys a whitebox from a friend is counted.). Base it on .... whatever it doesnt matter there is no 100% in this situation because there are to many variables.

    "We" are not the only group of people who use linux.

    --
    "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
  263. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

    Bull999999 wrote: "But many of us here on slashdot (...)?"
    I wrote: " Yeah, but we represent fraction of percents in regard to the "global market""
    You responded: "how do you know we are only a small percentage ?"
    I responded something about slashdot.

    And now you're asking me "how the fuck does slashdot have a damn thing to do with this ?"

    That was the original question dude!

  264. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

    Okay, just re-read the whole thread ....

    I wasnt making a statement about slashdot being a large or small percentage, I was reffering to Linux users as a whole being a small percentage. The mixup occured because I thought I stated that, but didnt. (must use preview ...)

    However the OP has a valid point, how does gartner track users of whitebox's or people who wipe a windows machine with a downloaded OS ? (that is the only point I was trying to make -- surveys, statistics etc are all bullshit)

    --
    "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
  265. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

    Yet you fail to respond to the fact that there is no fucking way to come up with accurate numbers regarding this shit

    Who said I was trying?

  266. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

    yeah ... well .... ummm .... My dad can kick your dads ass !!! (?)

    --
    "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
  267. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by Frizzle+Fry · · Score: 1

    Actually, for me it wasn't about being lazy; I just feel a little uncomfortable doing heavy research into methadone and the like from work.

    --
    I'd rather be lucky than good.