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Jamie Zawinski Switches to Mac OS X

iskander writes "After a disappointing experience with sound, Jamie Zawinski has finally given up on desktop Linux and switched to Mac OS X. The future of apps like xscreensaver and Gronk is now ``highly ambiguous''. He has already ditched a free/open platform before, but he seems a lot angrier this time. Indeed, twisted by the Dark Side of the Source, young Zawinski has become."

72 of 1,074 comments (clear)

  1. Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    and why should i care what OS he is running ?

    maybe i should submit a story about what OS my neighbour runs, or perhaps his brother and wife

    1. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by prodangle · · Score: 5, Informative
      http://www.jwz.org/hacks/

      "Back before you had heard of Netscape, I was responsible for the Unix versions of Netscape Navigator through release 1.1."

      "Before Netscape, I was primarily to blame for Lucid Emacs"

      "...I was one of the folks who created and ran the Mozilla Organization during the first year of its life"

      "But now I've taken my leave of that whole sick, navel-gazing mess we called the software industry. Now I'm in a more honest line of work: now I sell beer."

    2. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by PsychicX · · Score: 4, Funny

      According to the link on his name, he's a contributor to XEmacs and Moz.

      An XEmacs contributor switches to a more useful system. I love the irony.

    3. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I like how he is(was) a developer of a application that used sound on linux (http://www.jwz.org/gronk/) and yet was so stupid as to a) buy a soundcard that wasn't fully supported and b) use a distro that doesn't set it up automagically.

      I mean, come on.

      And yes, linux is harder than having dedicated hardware and OS intergration - it's also cheaper. But more importantly, that's the price of freedom.

      I am sick to the guts of all these whinging losers who expect linux to be "finished now". Go check out apple's and Microsofts budget next to that of redhats, go check out how many hardware driver writers are opening their source up.... go check it out!

      For me, this is a battle against corporate control of the internet, a battle for the future of ideas and democracy (yes DRM is that dangerous, just look at what they do with the DMCA). So sooooorry if you can't have your games and your music this instant because you are such a petulant little troll that you can't be bothered putting some effort into the fight.

      MORAL OF THE STORY FOR THE REST OF US:

      ALWAYS, always, always, check your hardware for linux compatibility, even if you are running windows (just so you have the option to swap in the future). This means sometimes you have to avoid the very bleeding edge, but it's more about investing a few google searches into hardware before you buy.

      In fact, here is the plan to swapping to linux that stops 90% of the whinging (the other 10% whinge no matter what).

      1. On windows when you buy new hardware make sure it is linux compatible, start today.

      2. Use firefox and open office and cygwin and other OSS on your windows install.

      3. Use a ubuntu, knoppix or other live CD to check things out, get an account to Putty into from your windows box.

      4. Install mandrake, fedora or maybe ubuntu with a second harddrive (or a careful partition) and dual boot. I say those because they have the best hardware detection, noob support and compatibility with games/random software.

      Once you have a polished distro on your box that you *slowly* transitioned to which has 100% hardware support you should be FINE and all your possible whinging from jumping in with an ATI graphics card, an unsupported drive controller, a no-name brand proprietary USB TV tuner and a soundcard you bought without thinking should be not present.

      I hope Zawinski loves his new hardware choice of a PPC Apple and the future of it's compatibility in a few years time.

    4. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by shish · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Does anyone want a list of OS I'm running?

      Are you the core (sole?) developer of a base app included in every desktop distro?

      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
    5. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Slashdot used to be a OS advocacy site for Linux. Now, Slashdot is an OS advocacy site for Apple. Of course you should care.

    6. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by matt+me · · Score: 5, Funny

      Zawikski's just this guy, you know?

    7. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by isny · · Score: 4, Funny

      From free software to selling beer? What happened to the 'free beer' step?

    8. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by ZorinLynx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just because this guy wrote UNIX N1.1 doesn't make him some sort of God or anything. He seems to complain more than he makes an effort to help fix the problem, and I think we should just disregard his ranting and raving.

      Yes, there's still issues with Linux audio. But whining and running off to another OS isn't going to fix them.

      He complained endlessly about Mozilla too. It seems he does nothing but whine.

      -Z

    9. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by MPHellwig · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "But whining and running off to another OS isn't going to fix them."

      Well the problem is fixed for him isn't?

    10. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by Have+Blue · · Score: 4, Funny

      And if he releases the formula he uses under the GPL, is that free as in speech or beer?

    11. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by Electrum · · Score: 4, Informative

      If he has indeed been messing around with Linux for long enough to be prominent in development/maintenance of xscreensaver (I haven't checked this) or XEmacs

      jwz wrote xscreensaver, Lucid Emacs, Netscape Mail and News 2.0 to 3.0 and the original UNIX versions of Netscape Navigator.

    12. Re:Who the hell is Jamie Zawinski by rho · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Well, he'd probably still be with SGI, except they silently imploded 4-5 years ago, which is why he went to Linux. Also, he was a big proponent of the whole "open source" thing through his work with Mozilla, and chose to eat his own dog food.

      Honestly, he should get credit for sticking with it for this long. He's a guy who has work he needs to have done, and Linux wasn't cutting it. More importantly, it wasn't cutting it and the "linux community" refused to accept that it had any failures at all. Well, maybe some token words of acknowledgement, before going off and reinventing the desktop or package manager again.

      I like Linux just fine as a server. I wouldn't bother with the desktop at all, and haven't for more than 6 years.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
  2. From TFA by byolinux · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dear Slashdot: please don't post about this. Screw you guys.

    D'oh!

    1. Re:From TFA by RonnyJ · · Score: 3, Funny

      See, reverse-psychology does work!

    2. Re:From TFA by Rahga · · Score: 3, Funny

      Nah, it's just more proof that even /. editors don't read the articles.

      And people wonder why there are so many reposts....

    3. Re:From TFA by RonnyJ · · Score: 4, Informative
      It's pretty evident that the editor actually managed to read at least some of this article, as the following line shows:

      from the don't-worry-jamie-we-won't-post-it dept.

    4. Re:From TFA by BigGerman · · Score: 3, Funny

      no reverse-psychology never works. I am telling you never.

    5. Re:From TFA by bahamat · · Score: 3, Funny
      Even better:
      from the don't-worry-jamie-we-won't-post-it dept.
  3. new flash... by rednip · · Score: 4, Insightful
    JWZ disallusioned, posts comment in blog... news at 11.

    I hate to be a jerk, I loved all his negitive comments about Netscape/ Mozilla, and whatever else he works on, but it got old like 6 years ago.

    --
    The force that blew the Big Bang continues to accelerate.
    1. Re:new flash... by chrish · · Score: 4, Funny

      The best part is how the Linux community is banding together to investigate why someone (anyone; I know a lot of Linux folks moving to Mac OS X) would dump their OS in favour of a BSD variant. And how they're totally not burning bridges to lure folks back!

      --
      - chrish
  4. What is this article doing on Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    So someone is switching to OS-X? So what?? And this made the frontpage news? May I ask why? Is it happening so rarely that when one person makes the switch to OS-X it is a front page news?

  5. Congratulations, Jamie. by croddy · · Score: 4, Funny

    You got your LiveJournal linked on the front page of Slashdot. Now get your butt upstairs, Mom needs help with the dishes!

  6. The reason he switched.. by wfberg · · Score: 3, Funny

    .. it DIDN'T go "beep beep beep".

    --
    SCO employee? Check out the bounty
  7. Sounds familiar by October_30th · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I gave up and went to Mac. I still have a Linux desktop, but I am sick, sick, sick to death of having to tweak every last little friggin' thing.

    I also gave up and went for a Mac for exactly the same reason. It's unacceptable that in 2005 a Linux distribution (FC3, in my case) doesn't recognize a three-button+wheel USB mouse out-of-box or that setting up a TV card requires you to edit some config-files by hand.

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
    1. Re:Sounds familiar by generic-man · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If I buy a TV tuner card, I don't want to examine the model numbers of all the chips on it just so I can use it to watch TV. I want to insert it into my computer, toss in a CD, reboot, and then watch American Idol until my brain falls out.

      --
      For more information, click here.
    2. Re:Sounds familiar by October_30th · · Score: 5, Insightful
      My logitech usb mouse has a windows driver

      I don't quite understand why you're using Windows as a reference, when I was clearly talking about Mac. I plugged the mouse in and it just worked.

      Oh, I know, it needs you to know what you're doing, and that usually needs some brainwork.

      Ah yes, the tired old "If Linux is not good enough for you, it's because you're not good enough for Linux" argument. Ten years ago I used to spout that elitist bullshit, too.

      I've lost the count of how many Linux computers I've built. I've set up and maintained Sun and DEC Alpha boxes (running both DEC Unix and Linux) and, quite frankly, I feel like I've done my share of tweaking. Now, all I want is a desktop computer that works for me -- not vice versa -- and Linux just doesn't cut it.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    3. Re:Sounds familiar by October_30th · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Why don't you write the code to do this yourself, it's all GPL.

      Uh. Why should I want to waste my time writing and testing such code when I can get a system that works out-of-box?

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    4. Re:Sounds familiar by kubrick · · Score: 4, Funny

      and then watch American Idol until my brain falls out

      Sounds like a precondition, not a postcondition.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    5. Re:Sounds familiar by Dalroth · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Just because it works for you doesn't mean it works for everybody and that is exactly the problem. Linux developers get things working just well enough, that if you have the right hardware, and the right amount of tinkering things will work for you. Hell, you may even be one of the lucky few who have the exact same setup as the original devs and don't have to tinker at all.

      Unforutnately, for the rest of us, I have better things to do with my time that mess around with asoundrc files. All I want is for every freakin program to properly output over my SPDIF channel. Is that really too much to ask for? Apparently it is, and I've almost switched back to windows on numerous occasions because of this.

      In fact, the ONLY thing keeping me on Linux right now is MythTV. If it wasn't for MythTV, all my servers would probably be OSX by now and my Media box would be Windows.

      Bryan

    6. Re:Sounds familiar by Guy+Harris · · Score: 4, Insightful
      my tv card also works great with the bttv and I only need to seelect the tuner type in a config file

      Can a driver determine the tuner type by querying the card?

      If so, then requiring the user to select the tuner type in a config file is completely stupid; the user shouldn't have to tell the computer something about a peripheral if the computer can determine that information itself without the user having to get involved.

  8. telling by bwy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think it is pretty telling that someone who has a lot of technical expertise has the same problems that a lot of us have had with desktop Linux. The problem is real, folks.

    If Linux on the desktop is to survive, I really think there needs to be a major coordinated effort to get lots of things in line. Maybe some type of consortium that would facilitate dialog between different groups and/or state a common direction. It is really hard to build a solid desktop OS when you've got thousands of developers operating independently or in small groups. You might get a few good solid apps, but the OS itself is going to be a patchworked hodge-podge.

    1. Re:telling by bgfay · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "If Linux on the desktop is to survive..."

      This is my favorite thing to hear about Linux. Linux will survive on the desktop, on servers, on refrigerators for as long as one person wants to run it there. I have a Linux machine that I use for most things, Windows on my laptop, and an iMac in the bedroom for playing music, movies, and using the web. Everyone wants to get worked up about Linux's survival. It's not survival that matters, it will survive a good long time, it's the advancement of it.

      Sheesh.

      --
      Yeah, I'm as old as my UID would suggest.
    2. Re:telling by torokun · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You want to know the real issue?

      People in high school, college, grad school, or academia have enough time to futz around with this stuff.

      People who work on open source code or work in linux day-to-day are paid to futz around or buy a preconfigured system.

      But people who are not in the above categories do not generally have the TIME to deal with crap like this. Heck, I put together my own machine a few years ago, and still haven't had time to back it all up and reinstall it, even though I've needed to, for over 3 years. These people would much rather pay for something to work than spend their time trying to make it work. This is the issue. TIME.

  9. Obnoxious screensaver by art6217 · · Score: 4, Funny
    Perhaps it is because the Mac OS X screensaver does not have the obnoxious features like:

    1. Short timeout for writing passwords, what may make it difficult for some people to unlock the screen at all.

    2. Stupid, delaying messages after entering the wrong password, as if the security delay by the authorization system was not enough.

    3. Ugly, ugly, *ugly* logo.

    4. Small, non-antialiased fonts in the password dialog, as if the screen space was so scarce when all other windows are hidden anyway.

    ;)

  10. From the blog of George W Bush by p3d0 · · Score: 5, Funny
    I have decided I'm going to go ahead and invade Cyria.

    Dear CNN: please don't report this. Screw you guys.

    --
    Patrick Doyle
    I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
  11. Bullshit by bobbis.u · · Score: 5, Informative
    Maybe he just got tired of fucking around with Linux. He got bored of having to trawl through "help" documents, fiddlying with config files and generally wasting time to achieve a second best result. He probably decided his time was worth the cost of buying a professional operating system that works. OK, so maybe he can't now reconfigure the colour of the drop shadow on the mouse pointer, but he clearly doesn't care about that.

    Also, he doesn't really care what the Linux crowd thinks, which is why he posted the remark about Slashdot.

    1. Re:Bullshit by daviddennis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      He actually followed a pretty similar path to me.

      Both of us have a significant amount of experience with SGI workstations. SGI, like Apple today, was a Unix that "just works". It had pretty fonts and a very nice designer look and feel. It was also elegant and a snap to administrate.

      I, like JWZ, also used Linux workstations. But they were clunky compared to SGI and I always came back to the better design and more attractive display SGI had.

      I also had a MacOS computer, which I used for video editing and running commercial software such as Photoshop. I liked it a lot, but was wedded to emacs for text editing and SGI or Linux for web serving. So as a result I needed to have two computers on my desk, a Mac for graphics and a SGI for Unix stuff.

      Then MacOS X came out. It was a lot like SGI - it was like a designer Unix, with even more slickness. As a result, I gradually switched away from SGI, especially when it became clear that SGI was not updating their GUI to be competitive with what Apple has. I shed a tear for SGI, because their stuff was the best at the time. I wish they'd been able to make a more elegant transition to the world of cheaper computers.

      For me, MacOS X truly combines the best of the open source and proprietary worlds. I can use a slick and stable GUI, running all the slickest proprietary applications such as Final Cut Pro and Photoshop. On the same machine I can also run all the open source web software I could ever want. And I can even copy that software and have it run fine on a Linux server without missing a beat.

      So I know exactly where JWZ's coming from, and it's interesting that we followed such a similar path. I joined Apple before he did probably mainly due to my need for proprietary software like Final Cut and Photoshop.

      I can say from my own experience that I've never been happier with my computing environment than I am now. We'll see how the more cynical JWZ does. No doubt he'll find much to hate and much to love.

      D

    2. Re:Bullshit by cahiha · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So what's unreliable? A lot of USB stuff doesn't have Mac drivers because it's not needed -- the Mac has built-in support for much of it.

      Same in Linux.

      As for third-party USB hardware, I've not had a problem. My Macs have lots of USB accessories:

      All of that hardware works with Windows and Linux as well.

      Open source UNIX-alikes will never gain much market-share

      Open source UNIX-alikes already have a larger market share than Macintosh.

      True, Macs work best with Apple hardware... which makes sense, since that means they've been validated to work together from day one.

      And the same is true for Linux and Windows: buy hardware that is supported by, and tested with, the OS, and you are going to be fine on any OS. Macintosh is no better than Linux in this regard.

  12. Dark Side by Ed+Almos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, he has NOT been twisted by the dark side, he has just been pissed off for the last time by Linux software which does not do the job.

    We have a printer system that was developed for line printers and never matured.

    We have a sound system that works most (but not all) of the time if you are lucky.

    We have power management issues on laptops which Microsoft fixed in 1995.

    And finally

    I have a laptop running Red Hat 9 because Fedora 1, Fedora 2, Fedora 3 and SuSE 9.x all have so many major problems with their basic installation that the machine is unusable. My next laptop will be an Apple machine.

    Instead of adding more features I for one would be grateful if the Linux software developers fixed existing software. Bug hunting is not sexy but it might avoid more incidents like this.

    Ed Almos
    Budapest, Hungary

    --
    The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws. - Tacitus, 56-120 A.D.
  13. Re:Motivation? by cowbutt · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Who is this fellow anyway? I've never heard about him before, so why should I care what some random blogger is writing?

    jwz is responsible for many significant *NIX applications.

  14. Re:I Find Jamie's Lack of Faith Disturbing by Al+Dimond · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Certainly that's the case for a modern desktop operating system.

    To be honest, I'm still waiting for a feature from BeOS to hit the "modern desktop operating system" scene: volume bars in the mixer for each different program that's using sound. So if I want to listen to music and play a game with obnoxious sound that can't be disabled (this happens with Java and Flash games mostly), I don't have to listen to the obnoxious sound.

    I could probably create a user account, not put it in the "sound" group, and run all such games under that user, and it wouldn't have permission to access the sound device...

  15. Funny thing... by ATMosby · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some of the same reasons that I'm switching away from Linux to OSX. Don't have the time to fight those battles anymore. *Don't* want to fight those battles anymore

  16. Sound by ultrabot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The posts so for have missed the main point. That is, sound in Linux sucks. It just needs to be fixed.

    - arts must die, and it will w/ KDE4

    - esd must die

    - every program should start using gstreamer

    - ALSA must learn to do proper software mixing out of the box.

    Imagine my "pleasure" when I inadvertly caused a "beep" to emerge from my terminal window, and as a result had to wait a while (20 seconds? can't remember) before I could start playing a video with sound. Or how I had to do "killall -9 artsd" to start playing video in totem after listening to music on Amarok (which is superior to rhythmbox in most ways).

    --
    Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    1. Re:Sound by dozer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Because it adds significant latency. It's pretty much impossible to sync audio and video when the audio is going through artsd. Thank goodness the KDE guys are finally ditching this afwul program. Saves me the trouble of turning it (and esd) off on every new Linux install.

  17. That's it, I'm switching too! by bgfay · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've had it with these complicated operating systems. I've never gotten my printer to work correctly on Linux, my Mac is just a total pain in the ass and slug, and I spend hours upon hours trying to do the easiest things on Windows.

    The hell with all of you. I just installed DOS on my box and all is well.

    Slashdot, please don't post this. You guys are jerks and I'm going to tell my mommy about you.

    --
    Yeah, I'm as old as my UID would suggest.
  18. Re:Sounds like a hardware problem to me... by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 4, Informative
    Hard to hear you say that (I heard this on Slashdot, alas). I heard you had problems with sound cards in Linux. However, I do belive you may have the same problems with MacOS X -- you can't play two sounds at once

    I don't know where you got that notion, but it is wrong. Right now, for example, my OS X system is playing music in iTunes, environmental sounds from World of Warcraft, and my terminal can beep, as can my email program when I receive a mail.

  19. Re:Fix Setup! by JahToasted · · Score: 3, Insightful
    There is a huge gap between the developers and users and that is the problem. The developers are "too important" to listen to the concerns of users. They have too much pride. They have their idea of how things should be done and are insulted if anyone suggests a different way. How long has the GIMP had a crappy user interface? Why does GNOME have this spatial paradigm as opposed to the more popular navigation paradigm? Why so I have to totally reformat my hard drive to install debian or ubuntu? Why are dialogs to big to fit on a 800x600 screen?

    These things are very obvious problems, at least to the users. But the developers have convinced themselves that these aren't problems so they just move on to adding new features and forget about these small issues. But its the details that are important to the users. I don't care if gnome supports SVG graphics or whatever, but I do want to be able to get my photos off my digital camera easily. I want to scan in something and print a copy. Why is that so hard?

    This is the major flaw with open source software. Most of the developers are volunteering their time so they care about what interests them. Thats fine, no one should tell them what they should be spending their own time doing. But until Open Source "grows up" and starts listening to its users it will never be popular and shouldn't expect to be.

  20. Torvalds next OS X user? by yerdaddie · · Score: 3, Funny

    With Linus using a Powermac for his development, you can't help but wonder if he secretly uses OS X now and then ... you know to run Photoshop and stuff. Now that jwz and all the cool kids are making the switch, it could only be a matter of time...

    1. Re:Torvalds next OS X user? by zr-rifle · · Score: 4, Funny

      So who is this Linus guy and why should i care what OS he is running ?

      maybe i should submit a story about what OS my neighbour runs, or perhaps his brother and wife

      --
      Hack your mind out of its sandbox.
  21. Time for linux to change its focus. by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If Linux is going to succeed on in gaining Desktop Market share. You should really listen to the rants of people who tried the platform and then ditched it. So except for calling the ditcher Dumb or a quitter. Look at the complaints. He wanted to get the sound card to work, or 2 sound cards to work and went threw the processes of RTFM and Asking for Help with no avail. So guess what they switched. And on the Mac it just worked. I think a lot of Linux Zealots and/or developers should use Macs for a while to get use to "Just works" and what it really means. I mean if this was 1990 sound cards were considered a speciality item on a PC like adding TV Tuner Card today. But every modern computer has a sound card. And for God sake Linux should support sound. Sound it no longer just for cutisy dings and for games. It is used for practical application such as VoIP and Watching DVD, Sound is now an integral component to the system and Linux should support it and support it well.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  22. Multiple issues with that ... by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If some individuals would spend the time they do hunting down negative comments about Linux, to actually fix Linux...

    Hunting down articles doesn't require to you learn any programming language. Anyone can hunt down articles, very few people can program. So the two groups aren't coincident.
    ...you wouldn't have to worry about people exposing how difficult Linux is for the average user.

    What "worry"? Linux is very easy to install and run ... except for sound, wireless, 3D graphics and certain laptop chipsets.

    Now, if your "average user" does not use those features, then Linux is easier than Windows and on par with a Mac.

    The "problem" is that most of the HOME user market DOES want those features. But the CORPORATE/GOVERNMENT desktop will NOT focus on those features.

    So it all depends upon how you segment the market on whether this is an "issue" or a "critical problem".
    I'm all for bringing Linux to the mainstream and replacing Windows as the dominant OS, ...

    Eh, whatever. It's a tool. You use whatever works best in each situation. The key point with Linux is that it CAN be modified to suit your requirements.
    ...but that just won't happen until the average person can install their video games without calling tech support.

    The home desktop market will be the LAST market segment that will fall to Linux.

    First will be the servers - we're already seeing this happen.

    Second will be the corporate/government desktops - this is just beginning.

    Last will be the home market - there are just too many limited-run, proprietary hardware pieces out there that work "good enough" right now. In time I believe they will migrate to Linux. But focusing on the LAST segment and claiming that there's a problem when the OTHER segments are starting to migrate is just silly.
  23. Sigh... by ledow · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How this qualifies as an important piece of news, I don't know. I'm assuming it's a "comedy" piece because he said "Dear Slashdot: please don't post about this. Screw you guys." on one of the linked pages.

    However, I myself have had problems with sound in linux, yes, but considering that (as someone who had only ever played about with TCP/IP in Linux and had never touched X or the Linux desktop until a few months ago) I have now switched from Windows to a Linux desktop and got sound working in all apps installed within a few days of switching. That was about four months ago and I still don't use Windows.

    I had worked out everything he had worked out in less than two days of having a linux desktop. There are things that should be simpler (cups, sound, etc.) but none of them hindered me for very long and, once properly set up, work much better than my previous OS's incarnations. Yes, it's a pain having to "set things up", but it's hardly worth such a strop.

    We all know arts, esd, etc. are a pain in the ass and, yes, we are all waiting for ALSA to "just work". Now that it's in the kernel, we finally have a standardised, working, maintained sound system that supports mixing on EVERY LINUX MACHINE. This should be the turning point.

    If a program that plays sound doesn't have an ALSA-compatible option by now, it's not being maintained properly. If it does, it will just work with ALSA and any plugins you might use, e.g. dmix.

    As soon as 2.6 distros become the standard, we can work on getting EVERY app to use the same damn sound systems.

    I saw his entry on wikipedia and if he's such a great programmer who has made contributions to such important projects as, gosh, XScreensaver, it makes me wonder why the hell he:

    a) didn't know this already (not a single XScreensaver that uses sound?).

    b) can't work it out for himself.

    c) throws a major strop because it's not point-and-click.

    It occurs that he's just missed the point. You don't have a Linux desktop to say "I've got a Linux desktop". You don't have one to beat every other desktop into the ground with your technical superiority (real or percieved). You don't have one to complain that it's not like Windows. You don't have one to play iTunes (as he seems to value this as an important feature).

    My desktop is Linux because it works, it's fast enough, it does what I want, it doesn't restrict me in any way, it's free, it's Free, it doesn't blue-screen, crash, corrupt and die every few months/years, I can leave it running overnight and not worry about if it'll crash before it finishes it's downloads, I can access it remotely (a good thing when you're working behind restrictive child-safe proxies all the time), and I can do things without wizards, dogs and paperclips jumping up to "help me find a file".

    I can't help feeling that any decent programmer would have been able to overcome the same little roadhumps on the way without so much as a sigh. They might even have bothered to fix the troublesome programs themselves.

    1. Re:Sigh... by earthbound+kid · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes, everything you said about Linux is true. The problem is that OS X also "doesn't blue-screen, crash, corrupt and die every few months/years, I can leave it running overnight and not worry about if it'll crash before it finishes it's downloads, I can access it remotely (a good thing when you're working behind restrictive child-safe proxies all the time), and I can do things without wizards, dogs and paperclips jumping up to 'help me find a file'." Oh, and also the sound just works out of the box.

      Linux is going to have to get better if it's going to compete with OS X. Competing against Windows isn't that hard. Linux is basically at par with it in most areas. The real problem for Linux is that it has to be not just as good as Windows, but better than Windows and its other competitors. And right now, other competitor #1 is OS X, and OS X just 'stole' a Linux developer by being easier to set up sound cards.

      Is it a little thing? Yes, and that's exactly the problem: In OS X, the little things, just work!

    2. Re:Sigh... by tigerc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because maybe he has more important things to do? Because maybe he wants to do other things? Because maybe he wants something that works right out of the box. Because a lot of us don't have infinite amounts of time.

  24. Howto: Make linux work properly on the Desktop by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Get SuSE.
    Get an SB Live! Value or an SB Audigy! Value.
    Get an Nvidia Geforce(1/2/3/4) MX or not video card.
    Use an ACX110/111 802.11g wireless card.

    Done.

    Hardware audio mixing, all the drivers will auto-install. An almost Mac OS X-like experience, and certainly much easier than Windows.

    --
    WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    1. Re:Howto: Make linux work properly on the Desktop by generic-man · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Linux is only free if your hardware has no value.

      --
      For more information, click here.
  25. Wow... by JayBlalock · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'm really impressed at how the Linux geeks in this thread are responding to his criticisms about as well as Bill O'Reilly handles criticisms of our military.

    You bet your sweet bippy that was a troll. Do your worst, I've got karma to spare.

    *NOW* is the time for Linux to get its collective head out of the sand and really reach out to the common users. You know how on a weekly basis we laugh at Microsoft for announcing yet another feature that will NOT be in Longhorn? Let me just put this one in bold:

    Longhorn is going to suck. It's going to be the worst Windows since ME.

    Microsoft has no plan for it. They know they have really taken Windows about as far as it can go, and any real changes are going to require years of work. But because of market pressures, they can't really take the time that would need - and yet, due to mismanagement, they're going to spend years wastefully. This is the PERFECT opportunity for Linux to finally rise to the forefront -- but only if the geeks get off their high horses and admit that a good OS has to be usable by common man. AND, right along side that, if they can come to understand criticism is NOT necessarily an attack. Reading responses on this thread, all I can think of is O'Reilly screaming 'Shup up! SHUT UP!' at anyone speaking facts he doesn't want to face.

    I gave up on Linux for the same reasons as Zawinski. I want an OS that *works*. I don't want to tweak my sound drivers. I don't want to have my nVidia drivers FRICKING VANISH after a week of working right (after a week of work to get them running). I don't want to have to remember that completely ridiculous program names like "the GIMP" are actually usuable graphics applications and not, as the name would suggest to a normal human being, porn videos.

    (yes, I know what the name stands for. That does not change the fact that Granny Average User would never in a million years click on something called a "gimp" looking for a way to take the redeye out of her pictures.)

    The Linux community needs to get out of the 90s. There are modern solutions to every major problem with the OS, and within a year, two at max, they could make it REALLY user-friendly. The problem is that user-friendliness isn't sexy to Linux geeks. No one wants to spend time writing a new sound library that actually works when they can just look down their noses at anyone who doesn't know how to properly configure ALSA. And the only thing less sexy than THAT is not writing any actual code at all, but just going through the OS and making sure the user dialogues make some sort of sense to those who don't have PhDs and, as someone else mentioned, will actually fit on a screen resolution of less than 1024x768.

    But you know what? Someone has to do it. Because if no one does, Linux will NEVER get past being a hobbyist OS, and whatever horrible things the next Windows introduces to the computing world, we'll be stuck with dealing with them. ('Cause god knows, I just *love* having mailboxes on Linux and Mac machines shut down because Windows-borne virii have filled them with spam. That helps my sense of superiority to no end.)

    So this is truly put up and shut up time. There has never been a better opportunity for Linux to really make some inroads in the home market - but only if the contributors are willing to make some compromises and give the other 90% of users some reason to switch. So all I ask is, if you contribute to OSS, and you EVER spend any time online complaining about how Linux could be great if only it could get into the mainstream - use that time to tweak Linux's usability instead. Fixing bad error messages doesn't even require much programming skill at all. Make Linux usable for common people, and it can succeed. Period.

    --
    Bush: He's Liberal in all the wrong ways.
    1. Re:Wow... by Emetophobe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I stopped using Linux a while ago after many years of tweaking everything. It's alot more then just an issue with sound support for me. I just want stuff to work "out of the box". Eight years ago, I used to enjoy tweaking stuff and playing around with linux, but I grew tired of it. I just want to play games or listen to music, I don't want to spend a day tweaking the kernel, different config files, downloading X different dependencies to get something to work.

      I think linux needs something similar to DirectX (bare with me for a minute). One subsystem for Sound (DirectSound), one subsystem for Input (DirectInput), etc.. The system as a whole would deal with the hardware, and provide a simple/standard interface so I don't have to worry what hardware the user is running. This is something I think the kernel SHOULD do, there shouldn't be a need to for all these sound systems and deamons (esd, etc.). I shouldn't have to worry about what sound card I use, the kernel should manage it for me, there is enough drivers out there now that this is possible at the kernel level, so why doesn't it happen?

      The last thing I want to do is tweak my mouse, keyboard, graphics card, cdrom, monitor and everything else to get them to work. If linux really wants to compete, we need to make hardware detection "just work" at the kernel level so the average user doesn't have to worry about the underlying wiring.

      I will say that some distributions have made great progress with hardware detection in the past 8 years from when I first started using it, but it really should be done by the kernel, not a user space program.

  26. Re:Earth to Jamie - Linux is NOT FINISHED by UtSupra · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... and it never will be.

  27. Tired of Futzing by Shannon+Love · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can relate to Zawinski's frustration and many others do as well. I notice that it seems to effect those with more experience than those newer to computing.

    When one first acquires a new tool, whether it is hardware, software or a woodworking plane, the very act of learning how use the tool itself works is highly engaging. Just futzing about figuring out how the new tool works is an end in itself.

    However, after one has spent 20+ years learning the ends and out of each season's new tools the joy fades. One becomes progressively less interested in the tools itself and more interested in product you want to use the tool to make. The time spent futzing with the tool is not engaging but frustrating and wasteful. You want to get the primary work done not spend all your time adjusting your tools.

    How many times over the years has Zawinski wrestled with a problem similar to his Linux sound issue? The thrill of solving such a problem is long gone, baby.

    The Linux community is dominated by people who enjoy the process of learning and using the tool itself. They are the kind of people who take the toaster apart to see how it works. The vast majority of desktop users, however, just want to make toast.

    People like Zawinski, who have taken apart their fair share of toasters, also now just want to make toast. At present, Linux doesn't let him do that.

  28. Years from now, people will ask each other... by whatthef*ck · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... do you remember where you were when you first heard the news?

    They'll nod solemnly, and in reverent tones, tell with precise detail where they were when they learned that Jamie Zawinski had switched to OS X.

  29. Re:Earth to Jamie - Linux is NOT FINISHED by solios · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Earth to Jamie - Linux is NOT FINISHED

    Neither is OS X or Windows. MacOS 9 is, and nobody's using it. OSsen are moving targets.

    That said, "IT'S NOT FINSIHED!!!!" is no excuse, and the FOSS community's inability to take completely valid criticism and do something about it is one of the reasons it isn't "finished".

  30. He's a Prima Donna by Colin+Smith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And is throwing his toys out of the pram because he's just not getting everything his way. Don't worry nothing is ever perfect for these guys, OS X won't be able to satisfy his demand that the world be made perfect for him either.

    Guess what all you Prima Donnas, (and yes there are a *lot* of Prima Donnas out there). You will never ever get everything you want, something will always be wrong because the problem is not with the world at large, it's with your personality.

    HTH

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:He's a Prima Donna by John+Whitley · · Score: 4, Insightful
      And is throwing his toys out of the pram because he's just not getting everything his way.

      I disagree; IMO he's got a legitimate point. From the JWZ blog regarding problems with XMMS hogging all audio output such that no other apps can play audio:
      I can't believe I even have to think about this shit. What year is it again?

      This frustration highlights a failing of the Linux-based desktop platform. Put generally, Linux systems often require the user fuss with (and be aware of!) highly technical system tweaks to satisfy some really basic end-user scenarios. The blog's thread has lots of people going on about ways to fix this particular problem, but frankly I'm on JWZ's side: it's a damn waste of time! At least it is for those whom, the computer is a tool for getting work done, instead of an end in and of itself.

      Put another way, I'm all for some degree of tweaking in my day-to-day usage. I find and install new tools, write helpful scripts/plugins/etc., and do other "meta-work" to make myself more productive. This process is kinda fun, too. But having to screw around for hours figuring out what to do just to get more than one app to play audio is insane.

      And the real killer is that the solution is probably not to just roll up the ol' sleeves and write some software to "scratch the itch". This isn't a software problem, it's a real world problem of fragmented design and developer effort and a lack of a seamless out-of-box experience for Linux-based systems.

      Getting fed up with that is hardly "throwing [your] toys out of the pram" -- it's called cutting your losses.
  31. The Solution -- just mix on multiple opens by Morgaine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There are tons of solutions to the problem, but they all miss the boat because they're done at the wrong level, and hence they're not transparent. The last thing we need are more sound demons. (I use NAS and it works fine, but it's the wrong solution too.)

    All sound drivers without exception should work like they do currently on FIRST OPEN, but on second and subsequent opens they should automatically hook in a mixer and mix all inputs together.

    The code to do it already exists, but it's just not being structured sensibly as above. It's no surprise that newbies find the one-at-a-time behaviour unhelpful, because it is. This is a multi-user O/S fer crissakes, single-open in sound drivers is just dumb!

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  32. Re:From your previous post. by Gulthek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You, ah, might want to retake some critical reading courses or something. His post as a whole didn't say anything like you argue against. Even the quote you pulled to back up your argument doesn't.

    He does correctly point out that the elitist bullshit is exactly that, but he doesn't say that there is only ONE TRUE OS.

    Maybe his comments just hit too close to home?

  33. Re:Sounds like a hardware problem to me... by macwhiz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You couldn't be more wrong about OS X.

    As a Mac user, the idea of a computer being unable to play an essentially unlimited number of simultaneous sounds is just foreign to me. I don't even think about it. I expect that I can leave iTunes playing music while playing a game that makes all sorts of noises and still hear alerts from iChat when I get an IM. There's nothing to configure, it just plain works.

    The only time I've been amazed by sound on OS X was when I first played with Soundtrack. This program lets you create professional-quality music by mixing up to 99 tracks of layered audio. Not only does it mix them in realtime, but it can apply advanced audio effects in realtime as well.

    Not once in the process do you have to care about audio hardware setup. Whatever you have plugged in -- analog speakers, USB speakers, S/PDIF -- the appropriate audio comes out of it.

    Meanwhile, you need to spend an afternoon to get open-source UNIX to reliably make a sine-wave beep.

    Perhaps you might want to review Apple's overview of OS X 10.4's Core Audio functionality?

  34. Re:Whoop-De-Do by barc0001 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't know that moving the people on the 253 browser projects over to ALSA and telling them to "make sound work" would solve the sound problem

    It might, but that's not what I was pointing out. I was pointing out that part of the reason that Linux on the desktop is still sucking in many different ways is that people don't consider it interesting to go off and fix the suckiness, they instead go and start another browser project, or MySQL web interface, or whatever. This is both the strength of open source software, and it's weakness. It's like living in a town where everyone's jobs focused on what they wanted to do instead of what needs doing. Who'd pick up the garbage? Who'd dig the ditches and lay pipe in the rain? Who'd really be a plumber (literally working in other people's excrement) if there wasn't that large hourly rate? Same thing with open source. This is where M$ and others whom you pay money to do have an advantage becuase they can point to the crapwork that needs doing and tell someone working there to fix it or find another job. So it gets fixed.

    Thinking of the authors of software as interchangeable is unrealistic

    I never said that, or for that matter suggested that they switch projects. I just pointed it out as a glaring weakness in the OSS model. You said it yourself: People work on the projects that interest them.

  35. Re:I also don't get it by GlassHeart · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Both Linux and MacOSX will run fine on supported hardware but Linux supports a lot more hardware. How exactly does that make MacOSX better?

    Because of the difference in definitions of the word "supported". In MacOS, that word usually means "auto-detected, driver already present or on companion CD-ROM, plug-and-play". In Linux, it can mean exactly the same, or it can mean "look online, read config file comments, experiment, deal with lack of meaningful error messages" and more.

    In the end, whether you value time or money more is entirely your own decision, and the people who find the Mac "better" probably value their time more. You don't have to agree, but it probably helps to understand why.

  36. To the naysayers by hkb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When you've been using UNIX for 20 years, start a family, and actually find other hobbies than sitting in front of the ol' cancer machine, you'll get sick of stuff like:

    - learn yet another new config format
    - having to constantly recompile a kernel or a kmod
    - compile anything

    Just to get a camera hooked to your PC or try out some new piece of software.

    It just gets really fucking old, eventually.

    This is why I see OS X as a bigger threat to Linux than Windows. A lot of Windows users actually LIKE Windows; the way its laid out, the interface design, etc. They usually don't like OS X's interface.

    --
    /* Moderating all non-anonymous trolls up since 2004 */
  37. Re:Zealots chase away yet more developers from Lin by aristotle-dude · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Re-read my post. Slashdot has sunk to a new low. Now you people don't just not RTFA or RTFS but you don't bother reading posts you are replying to.

    I was talking about people ragging on Jamie Zawinski for his decision to switch to the mac.

    Does this decision all of a sudden make his past contributions less valuable? Ingrates, the lot of you.

    --
    Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.