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There Is No 'Microsoft of Linux'?

SDenmark writes "Linux Format has an interview with Greg Mancusi-Ungaro, the director of Linux and OSS marketing at Novell. Asked if any company can become the 'Microsoft of Linux', Greg responds "Well, if we ever woke up one day and said 'Wow, Novell is the Microsoft of Linux' or 'Red Hat is the Microsoft of Linux', then the Linux movement would be over." Is he right -- is the open source world free from such possibilities? Greg also discusses the internal Novell migration to Linux."

53 of 252 comments (clear)

  1. not until.... by xirtam_work · · Score: 3, Funny

    There won't be a Microsoft of Linux until Microsoft decide to release a Linux distribution of their own, which is extremely unlikely to happen. Ever.

    1. Re:not until.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Right... and Apple was never going to switch to Intel...

    2. Re:not until.... by eklitzke · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Perhaps not... but once upon a time, Microsoft did sell its own variant of Unix.

      --
      #include ".signature"
    3. Re:not until.... by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Microsoft will probably never release a Linux-based OS as they exist now, but the market presence for Linux servers will only increase. Eventually, forced by market pressure, kicking and screaming, MS will develop an AD client for Linux systems.

      And then old Bill will stand up. He'll look at all the Linux distributions spread out before him, he'll take out his wallet, and he'll say "Say, who would like be an exclusive parter with Microsoft?". And Linspire's hand will shoot up, waving back and forth wildly.

      Linspire will still be a separate company -- well, a wholly owned subsidiary of MS. That will be the case just to keep that nasty GPL and FOSS legal stuff sandboxed away from all the proprietary code MS will still develop. MS will release the Linspire AD connector, and you won't see any code for that, I tell you what. Next we'll see Linspire Server. Then we'll see MS Office for Linspire (not Linux, just Linspire). And there'll be DRM and Trusted Computing added to Linspire in just the right places and just the right ways to make it illegal to reverse engineer (or even look at).

      Windows is dead. Long live Windows!

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    4. Re:not until.... by jedidiah · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This BS again.

      "touching up" the desktop side of things isn't the point. Never really was.

      This is the "Caldera Fallacy". The main problem that Linux faces against Windows is that it doesn't have all of the 3rd parties that support Windows doing the same for Linux. A prettier wifi configurator isn't going to help so long as the wifi drivers aren't there to begin with.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    5. Re:not until.... by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why would they use the Linux kernel when the BSD kernel has a much better license from their perspective?

      --
      Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
      The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
  2. on a related note... by jonastullus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    what exactly is Microsoft(TM) the microsoft of?

    1. Re:on a related note... by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Informative

      DOS.
      Back in the day there were multible companies that made DOS and for the most part they were compatible with each other. Microsoft always had dominace but there were alternitives. PC DOS, DR DOS... Then when Windows Was released it was designed to run on MS DOS only (And had code that blocked other DOS varents causing some lawsuites in that case). So after time more and more programs used Microsoft Windows extentions to their application where there was more Windows then DOS. So the Microsoft of Linux would be like say Novel or Red Hat who has such a dominance on the Linux market that they feel free to add their own custom kernel and developers develop on it and Apps only work on Their Version. With no chance that it will work for other Distros with a more "pure" kernel. Of course this probably wont happen with Linux because of the open nature. But that is the Microsoft of Linux means. Getting so much control in the process and influence in developers that other products are forced to become toys.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  3. What has happened to slashdot? by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's like slashdot's turned into some sort of linux site.

    No Apple stories in three days

    This is a tragedy!1!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    --
    There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    1. Re:What has happened to slashdot? by slashflood · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's why there is digg.

    2. Re:What has happened to slashdot? by plantman-the-womb-st · · Score: 2, Funny

      Perhaps because nothing is happening of note with Apple?

      --
      Say bad words about my book, in cold oatmeal, or I shall sue!
  4. Is he right? by DragonWriter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well, it depends what you mean by "Microsoft of Linux".

    Essentially, the problem with this is its an analogy with too many unspecified terms

    foo:Linux :: Microsoft:bar

    There is no way to know what "the Microsoft of Linux" is supposed to mean.

  5. "microsoft of..." by poor_boi · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What exactly does "the Microsoft of ..." mean? Does it mean you own IP rights to all of your major product lines? Does it mean you are the driving force behind the look and feel of your products? Does it mean you are the only one who decides what features go into your product? Or does it simply mean you have the biggest share of your particular product?

  6. Open Source != Linux by guitaristx · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Asked if any company can become the 'Microsoft of Linux', Greg responds "Well, if we ever woke up one day and said 'Wow, Novell is the Microsoft of Linux' or 'Red Hat is the Microsoft of Linux', then the Linux movement would be over." Is he right -- is the open source world free from such possibilities?

    Linux is only a subset of what open source has to offer. There's much more to open-source than Linux. A pedantic note, maybe, but I'm tired of the "open source = linux" thinking that pervades the business realm and even leaks over into the IT realm.

    --
    I pity the foo that isn't metasyntactic
  7. It Depends by saberworks · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It depends on what part of Microsoft you are comparing it to. If you are talking about their monopoly, probably not. However, if you are talking about their operating system loaded with a bunch of crap, ultra-slow, difficult to use, full of bugs, prone to viruses, then yes, there can definitely be a Microsoft of Linux. I think there already are a couple, but I'll leave the naming of names to others.

    1. Re:It Depends by gallwapa · · Score: 2, Informative

      It does depend, because I don't know what planet you're from, but my windows file browser (security aside) browses, opens, draws and refreshes faster than any flavor of Linux I've ever seen, in either GNOME or KDE.

      To call it "ultra slow" is akin to the same Linux zealots who in my mind sour many people's perception of GNU/Linux and other open source applications.

    2. Re:It Depends by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 3, Informative
      I'm sorry, but X11 is slower than GDI/USER. That's just a fact.
      No, its not. X11 is wicked fast. The problem isn't that X11 isn't fast; it's that your system isn't, by default, double buffered. X11 is a lean, mean, pixel pushing machine; it carries little overhead, and is very very extensible. Make no mistake, X11 is super-duper fast; that's one of the reason it's ran on a variety of systems far, far before Windows was a gleam in Bill Gate's eye.
      The developers themselves have admitted that the X protocol is inefficient (especially as used by the toolkits),
      Huh?
      that Xlib is not suitable for modern applications (and it's now finally being replaced)
      Huh? Partially true; but it works, and in enterprise, too.
      and that the acceleration architecture is simply not suitable for desktop usage.
      Double huh? XAA, maybe. EXA? No way.
      Note that EXA is supported on a number of X servers, and that both the Nvidia and ATI proprietary servers provide high performance X render acceleration.

      Not to mention the new AIGLX and XGL hacks/intermediate steps towards a new X architecture. These two are ridiculously slick, and I use both on a regular basis. Every system in my household, my parents household, and my office run Linux (except for the OS X boxes). Every one of these runs either XGL or some kind of composite window manager, and they "feel" faster in Linux than on XP.

      Furthermore, exactly what GUI server do you think they use for video editing, or any of the other high-end workstation uses that Linux has?

      Please take a look here; Xorg's performance is something that has undergone careful consideration.
      I have used Windows and Linux side by side on the same machine and the Windows GUI is always faster. On my T43, for example, dragging windows on Linux will sometimes leave trails, no matter what WM/DE I'm using.
      Only if you aren't using a composite manager.

      I quote:
      Most X drivers do not synchronize their drawing to the vertical retrace signal from the monitor. (To be fair, very few windowing systems do this consistently, even MacOS X.) This leads to a tearing appearance on some drawing operations, which looks slow. If the vertical retrace signal could be exposed through the SYNC extension, applications could defer their rendering slightly and reduce or eliminate tearing. This requires extending each driver to support this, as well as adding a little support code to the server itself.
      The un-Composited model of X operation requires many round trip operations to redraw areas when they are exposed (window move, etc.). It is important that X be able to make Composited operation fast in the future.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  8. As big, but not as controlling by truthsearch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A linux company can certainly become huge, like Microsoft. But they'll never get the same level of control. One vendor can remain far ahead of the rest on features and support, but a competitor can easily appear with a completely compatible product.

    The only issue would be for proprietary software sold on top of Linux. That would hinder competition. But there will probably never be a proprietary killer app only distributed by one linux vendor on their own distro. And even if there was competitors today will be quick to create a similar application. Today it's not like the environment Microsoft grew up in.

  9. Backwards by Golias · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If any company starts making enough money by selling Linux distributions, that's not an indication that the movement is "over." It's an indication that the movement is "complete."

    By calling somebody "the Microsoft of Linux", perhaps they mean that one vendor is dominant enough to dictate industry standard practices, such as it once seemed would be the case with the Red Hat package manager. While it would certainly be possible for somebody to come along and push things in a certain direction, standards-breaking usually works against your best interests.

    Besides, the Linux desktop revolution is pretty much over anyway, isn't it? The vast majority of those who want a *nixy desktop can just buy a Mac these days. There will still be a large cult of die-hards runing Gentoo as their day-in and day-out personal workstation OS, just as there were those in the late 90's who would cling for dear life to their OS/2 and Amiga boxen, but it seems like it's been a couple years since there has been any real appearance of growing momentum behind putting Linux on everybody's desk.

    Linux these days is an incredibly well-respected enterprise OS... to the point that it has driven several "real" POSIX-compliant Unices out of existance. But as a desktop solution, it never really advanced beyond the playgrounds of serious geeks, and it doesn't really look to me like it ever will.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    1. Re:Backwards by Golias · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Okay, let me be crystal clear here, because I'm not trying to start some "My Favorite OS Has The Biggest Dick" flame-war.

      I'm not saying that Linux desktop solutions are not good. Some of them are darn good. For certain users, it's a terrific choice.

      I'm saying that there isn't the rising tide of interest in it that their once was.

      Let's look at some of the forces behind people wanting a Linux desktop back around 1998 or so, and what has happened since then:

      1. An affordable alternative to Microsoft.

      Since Steve Jobs returned to Apple, the Mac has become more affordable while improving is several other important ways. Microsoft haters can pick up a $600 mini from their local store that does pretty much everything they want to do.

      2. Better security

      Okay, Microsoft still kind of sucks at security, but if you run an external firewall and keep your patches up to date, you're not nearly as vulnerable on a networked Windows box as you were eight years ago.

      3. "Free as in Speech"

      The fact that Darwin, the BSD Layer of OS X, is open source is enough for most people. It means that Apple is wisely subjecting the underpinnings of their OS to peer review and gaining most of the wins of using open source. A few hard-core Stallmansits probably feel very differently about it, but Free Software bigotry is not really enough to drive a popular movement.

      4. *nix at home

      OS X and various flavors of BSD provide plenty of opportunity for that, and even Windows has emulation tools. A would-be BOFH in training could learn an awful lot of what they need to know about *nix simply by monkeying on a Windows PC.

      5. New life to old hardware.

      "Old" hardware these days is pretty darn beefy stuff. When you can buy an XP-capable used PC or an OS X-capable used Mac for under $100, there really isn't a compelling reason to squeeze a little more life out of that old 386 in the garage.

      The value of the box that can't run one a modern commercial OS at this point is pretty much measured in the price and quantity of the metals used to build it, minus the cost of disposing of any hazzardous materials. (A number which is not always higher than zero.) Plus, when parts burn out, it's almost never worth the time and trouble to repair them.

      So my point is, while Linux has made some great strides to become more user-friendly than it was back in the day, the emergence of OS X and the improvements of Windows have taken away most of the reasons for people to switch.

      There is one home use for Linux which doesn't seem to be going away soon: Media Room computers!

      Every Windows solution I've seen costs a fortune and works like ass.

      I have a Mac driving my HDTV, and love it, but it's still a more expensive solution than a MythTV set-up would have been.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    2. Re:Backwards by mardukvmbc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I just switched my home PC from XP to Linux recently. It's not just used by me, but my wife and sometimes by my 3 year old son. Here's my reasons for switching, in order of importance:
      1. Vista. I don't want to be forced into "upgrading" to Vista the way I was forced into upgrading to XP just so the new versions of software run. Why don't I want Vista? The ridiculous hardware requirements and the wacky Microsoft licencing issues.
      2. Security. I'm sick and tired of cleaning my system out of spyware and adware.
      3. Control. I have far more control over what is happening on the machine in Linux than I did under XP.
      4. I was running 90% open source software anyway. Once you've switched to Firefox and OpenOffice, what difference does the OS make? I don't play video games on my PC (that's what the PS2 and big screen are for).

      I'm no OS religious nut. I spend half of my time writing .NET code at work. At home, I just want something nice, stable, fast, and reliable. I could've bought a mac, but the hardware I had was fine for the job.

      --
      "You disturb me to the point of insanity. There. I am insane now." - The Sprockets
  10. IBM IS the Microsoft of Linux by NewWorldDan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Really, because I tend to think of IBM as the Microsoft of Linux. Or maybe the McDonalds of Linux. In any event, they've got the problem solved: There's not much money to be made in putting together a distro. On the other hand, they're raking it in on hardware and services.

    1. Re:IBM IS the Microsoft of Linux by IndigoParadox · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On the other hand, they're raking it in on hardware and services.

      Would that make IBM the Apple of Linux?

    2. Re:IBM IS the Microsoft of Linux by Firehed · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wait, so Big Macs are the PowerPC of Linux? I'm not sure I follow that logic.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    3. Re:IBM IS the Microsoft of Linux by Himring · · Score: 2, Funny

      I guess that would make Richard Stallman the IBM of Microsoft....

      Or something. My head is spinning....

      --
      "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
    4. Re:IBM IS the Microsoft of Linux by Kadin2048 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd like to believe this, but sometimes I question IBM's commitment to Linux. Before I get flamed -- yes, I know how much R&D money they've pumped into various projects. But I think that they've figured out that they can make money hand over fist selling services (particularly consulting) regardless of what OS people are using. At the end of the day, I'm not sure they really care a whole lot what OS everyone uses.

      If they really wanted to be the "Microsoft of Linux," it would be pretty trivial for them to put out an "IBM Desktop Linux." Port Lotus Notes over to it, along with the rest of the old Lotus suite (or throw money at OO.org for optimization), license the configuration tools from RedHat or SuSE (or build their own), generally make something that would be easy to roll out large deployments of. Make the desktop blue, and roll it out to all 300,000 or whatever they have internal employees.

      I don't think they could crush Windows, but they'd probably run over RedHat and SuSE/Novell's marketshare in a hurry. The internal use alone would probably make it one of the most popular distributions in existence overnight, and they'd be able to leverage their relationships with hardware vendors to get compatible peripherals and configurations. That compatibility would draw a lot of home users -- heck, I know I'd install it, if there was a free version, just to have a Linux that was backed up by a company the size of IBM.

      They would be the Microsoft of Linux. They would not, however, be the Microsoft of PC operating systems.

      Of course, it might result in them going out of business, which is why I suspect they don't do it -- as a company, IBM got pretty close to death in the 90s, and I don't think they're really up for anything that smells in the slightest like OS/2. The move of their internal workforce away from Windows and to Linux might make their consulting services less attractive to businesses who are on Windows -- "what do you mean, none of your people use Windows?" -- and selling services is their lifeblood now, apparently.

      In short, I'd love to see IBM jump into the Linux pool with both feet, just to see the splash it would make. But I'm fearful after the waves subsided, they'd end up drowning in it.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    5. Re:IBM IS the Microsoft of Linux by swillden · · Score: 2, Informative

      But I think that they've figured out that they can make money hand over fist selling services (particularly consulting) regardless of what OS people are using. At the end of the day, I'm not sure they really care a whole lot what OS everyone uses.

      I work for IBM Global Services, and in the last couple of years I've worked on Solaris, AIX, various flavors of Linux, including an embedded Linux, Windows and PocketPC.

      IBM Global Services couldn't care less what OS the clients want to use. We acquire and develop skilled people in everything and then try to do whatever makes the most sense for the client -- as long as it includes plenty of work for us ;-)

      That said, I think IBM does have a commitment to Linux, and a good reason to continue pushing it. IBM is in an odd position, as the heavyweight of heavyweights in an environment largely controlled by others. I think that after once owning the IT industry, then getting slapped down for it, IBM has decided that if you can't control the industry, the best thing to do is to make sure that no one else can, either. Both Java and Linux play into that strategy perfectly. Java would work even better if it weren't controlled by Sun, but at least Sun isn't Microsoft. IBM knows it can beat Sun ;-)

      Not only that, but from a professional services perspective, F/LOSS is extremely cool. If I'm integrating a bunch of third-party, closed-source products and trying to satisfy some client's unique set of requirements, there's every possibility that I may run into a brick wall. With open source, if a key system component won't do what I need it to, I can always fix it.

      Port Lotus Notes over to it, along with the rest of the old Lotus suite (or throw money at OO.org for optimization), license the configuration tools from RedHat or SuSE (or build their own), generally make something that would be easy to roll out large deployments of.

      It's been done, though not exactly the way you describe. IBM has a new product called "IBM Workplace". It's a cross-platform suite of tools that includes a Notes client, instant messaging (using Lotus Sametime), a full office suite based on OOo (well, I think it's based on OOo -- it definitely uses OpenDocument), and some other collaboration and productivity tools. It runs on Linux, Windows and OS X, at least, and probably other platforms as well. I can't comment on how good it is personally, because I haven't used it. Others I've spoken with are impressed, though.

      IBM isn't making its own Linux distribution, but it is moving towards Linux as the main internal platform (not that Windows will be going away any time soon) and is also building the pieces necessary so that others can use IBM products and services on any platform. A Windows-centric world is good for Microsoft, a Solaris-centric world is good for Sun but a heterogeneous mixture is good for IBM.

      --
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  11. Different animal. by Nijika · · Score: 2, Insightful
    That doesn't happen. Any time hubris starts to take a foothold in any one distribution of Linux people tend to switch until it calms down. This doesn't often result in much user pain, if they even notice.

    Not to point a finger at RedHat... Hell, why not... Anyway I felt RedHat was moving to a point where I felt it was pulling too many proprietary stunts (the updater, the "enterprise" crap, the fragmenting with Fedora, etc) so I switched to Debian. [Disclaimer: this is not a denouncement of RedHat, this was my personal choice, RedHat is still cool, but my leanings are to Debian right now]

    I don't know when or how, but if Debian ever starts to lose the balance I like, I'll just switch to Gentoo, or something. Or my own distro, or whatever.

    It's not like we're literally going to wake up one day to find that the Kerel has been made proprietary and all the software we use will suddenly become closed source.

    Microsoft of Linux as an analogy does not work.

    --
    Luck favors the prepared, darling.
  12. not the same thing by penguin-collective · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's not going to happen. Microsoft manages to keep its position by keeping the barriers to entry high through a bunch of approaches: aggressive marketing, bundling, tying, loss leaders, proprietary formats and APIs, and monopolistic practices.

    Open source is about keeping barriers to entry low. If a Linux company had 90% of the market, it would be because 90% of the market actually chose them freely, and they'd only keep that market share as long as they did a good job because anybody can take the system, fork it, and compete.

    (I know that Microsoft advocates often argue that people chose Microsoft freely, too, but it's clear that that's not the whole truth. The great majority of their users probably doesn't have a choice, either because they don't know anything else, or because they are locked in in some way.)

  13. Re:What movement? by PsychoSid · · Score: 2, Informative

    Or is it just a kernel to which an OS has been built around ?

  14. Google is your friend by towsonu2003 · · Score: 2, Funny
  15. Re:RedHat WAS the Microsoft of Linux by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's no money on the desktop. Despite all the talk here of how onerous the "MS Tax" is, the size of their market allows them to undercut their competitors.

    RedHat (and SuSE) are both focusing on enterprise deployments in traditional Unix shops, which is smart because they can charge a lot of money and still come out as the cheap option. The companies that focus on desktop Linux end up burning through their capital and becoming one sacraficial lamb after another. (Yes this will happen to Ubuntu eventually as well.)

    --
    Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  16. What a great question by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Sorry, guys... philosopher by training so I might get abstract here.

    Microsoft is the microsoft of software, obviously. What does it mean to be the "microsoft" of something, though? I think it means to provide a very specific service: hiding complexity. I'm reminded of Neal Stephenson's analysis of what the Windows startup routine looks like to the user, as against that of Linux. If you're used to a blue screen that says "Here comes Windows! Aren't you happy?" then the screen output while Linux starts up is going to look broken.

    What would it mean to hide the complexity of Linux? Ubuntu, Linspire, et. al. sorta do this, but note:

    Hidden Linux is not Linux. It's very nature is to be transparent. Linspire and Ubuntu are still Linuces b/c it is still possible to get in there and fiddle with the code. What they hide (or rather, de-emphasize) is simply the 'invitation' to come in and fiddle.

    So if being-microsoft means "making it easy to do the lowest-common-denominator things with software" then there will be one of those for Linux.

    But if it means "achieving the above by limiting what the user can do, and what she can modify" there cannot be one.

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    1. Re:What a great question by OwlWhacker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What does it mean to be the "microsoft" of something, though? I think it means to provide a very specific service: hiding complexity.

      That's true, but it's a very pro-Microsoft type of thinking.

      Refferring to the "Microsoft" of something would surely be more readily described as...

      Something performing the following actions:

      * Forcing people to do what it wants them to do (i.e. the threatening of OEMs).
      * Locking people into using its solutions (i.e. proprietary file formats, APIs, protocols).
      * Attempting to kill off competition by bundling.
      * Basing a company on what you have bought/copied from other sources (i.e. DOS, most -- if not all -- of Microsoft's current schemes).
      * Embracing, extending, extinguishing.
      * Robbing from Peter to give to Paul (i.e. forced upgrades, audits, etc., and then giving free software to third world countries).

      Something posessing the following attributes:

      * Having a large sum of money.
      * Proclaiming that it wants to give most of its money away, yet does not want to aid Open Source, or Open Source Microsoft solutions.
      * Being perceived as the best in its field.
      * Able to convince people to trust it -- even though it is continually proven untrustworthy.

      And other things of that nature...

    2. Re:What a great question by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 2, Funny
      "Microsoft of Linux" simply means that in the eyes of potential customers, you are the one to go to if you want to go Linux, that's all. Right now with Windows - it's MS(obviously)

      MS is who you go to if you want to go Windows? Making microsoft the "microsoft of ..." Microsoft ? And I'm the one talking in circles?

      --
      My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    3. Re:What a great question by Greyzone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'll have to disagree with you here. Linux doesn't mean complexity nor does Linux mean complexity has to show. Have you even used Redhat or Fedora Core or SUSE (Novell) Linux distros lately? For example, the SUSE startup screen looks way cleaner and more professional than Windows does anyway.

      The only key thing about Linux is that it is open which means that if I want to change something I can. There is no requirement that I do change things, only that I have the choice. With Microsoft I have no choice at all. It's Microsoft's way or the highway. That's the difference. And with the arrival of professional level office suites like Open Office, as well as support from all the good browsers, mail programs, etc., about the only thing missing from Linux these days are games. Frankly, games are the only reason I still have a Windows partition. If game companies start delivering Linux versions, I'll completely ignore Vista and send my money to Novell or Red Hat (or some other distro maker) as well.

      Linux == open

      Linux == choice

      Microsoft == closed

      Microsoft == no choice

      It's that simple.

  17. Re:In a nutshell... by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not true at all.

    Linux is a kernel. There's absolutely nothing stopping a large company from putting a proprietary desktop on top, maybe an active directory server, some nice business friendly stuff and selling it as a specific version. Other distributions would either have to (a) ship the proprietary binaries, or (b) try to copy them (quite a difficult task - look at how long samba has been going and it still has issues).

  18. In other news... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 2, Funny

    Steve Jobs has not farted in three days. Mac zealots dismissive of investor concerns.

    --
    120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
  19. No Comparison by ruben.gutierrez · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In short, there will never be a "Microsoft of Linux" because the two ideas aren't even comparable. Microsoft is a corporation and Linux is an OS. Since Linux inherently exists in opposition to closed source software products developed by companies such as Microsoft, I don't see a comparison. Furthermore, Linux is just an OS, it's not the Open Source movement, which would only be the other possible comparison to Microsoft. That is, Microsoft is this huge international corporation with dozens of widely used closed source products. The Open Source movement is a international movement with thousands of widely used open source products. The main difference between the two is where the control of the product lies. Microsoft controls every aspect of each of their products. Open Source software control is mostly decentralized. And, if a product reaches a point where there is too much control and not enough freedom with that product, a new open product is generated. Case in point, RedHat was free, and then became commercialized. However, Fedora was the offshoot.

  20. It would be nice in a way by Toreo+asesino · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I use Ubuntu Linux on a casual basis. It's nice; 90% the apps I could want, works with 100% of my hardware; no real complaints there.

    However, I believe I could sum up my feeling on this subject by outlining a common issue I run into...

    A classic conversation could be something like (not reproduced exactly):

    Me: "How do I get my back/forward mouse buttons to work in Firefox (like it does in Windows)?"

    Friend: "Er, what distro are you running again?"

    Me: "Ubuntu...whatever the latest is"

    Friend: "Ah. I don't know that one too well...try editing the X-config files"

    Me: "Ah, that big scary file that if you screw up renders the pretty GUI bit useless?"

    Friend: "yep."

    Me: "Well, never mind. I'll pass."

    I mean, just give me the one control-panel for crying out loud?! As much as I appreciate the freedom that comes with linux, sometimes it's just not just not worth the hassle! Maybe I'm not l337 enough when it comes to Linux, but I happen to also like standardisation when it comes to some things; system configuration being one of them.

    So there you go. Rantings of a Windows boy. Maybe one day I'll "make the switch", but not until I get my god-forsaken 5 mouse-buttons working without manually having to edit random config-files.

    Apart from that, it's all dandy! Thanks for listening.

    --
    throw new NoSignatureException();
    1. Re:It would be nice in a way by ratboy666 · · Score: 2, Informative

      "How do I get my back/forward mouse buttons to work in Firefox (like it does in Windows)?"

      The question can be reversed. Why doesn't Windows work like Firefox? Or, a different question can be posed: why don't you talk to your mouse vendor?

      All in all... you choose to NOT ask those questions. Now, F/OSS is flexible enough to provide you with an answer -- but you don't want to apply it.

      Random config files? No, but you may want to pay someone to make the modifications for you. F/OSS doesn't mean "free as in beer". After all, you PAID for the Windows 5 button driver.

      Now, let's tackle another problem: how do I get my TRAVAN-1 tape drive (Colorado) working with Windows XP? I have a LOT of backup tapes, dating back 15 years (QIC-80). Sure, works fine on Linux. Is there a "random config file" I can edit for this?

      Think on this; the Zen of F/OSS will become apparent.

      And, given that Vista will require driver signing, will your 5 button driver be signed? Yes, this is FUD.

      Ratboy

      --
      Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
  21. Re:What movement? by panthro · · Score: 4, Informative

    Or is it just a kernel that was inserted into an OS that already existed for years prior?

    --
    If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
  22. Re:In a nutshell... by Perl-Pusher · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Windows is not an Operating system. Windows is a desktop environment.

    You need to go back to school, since when does a desktop environment have a kernel? Your desktop environment is based on Microsoft Foundation Classes, but rest assured it is an operating system. If it weren't it would need one to operate. You cannot run KDE or GNOME without an underlying OS. Window's is an operating system an overview of the windows kernel architecture proves you are confused.

  23. The Microsoft of Linux? What about Microsoft? by Digital_Mercenary · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Back in the day, when Red Hat was just talkng about going public, I always wondered why Microsoft never did a port of MS office to the LINUX/UNIX Patform. They did it for MAC and figured they had enough R&D money to be present on every OS of the day. I even thought "MS Linux" was just around the corner. I figured Bill Gates would be everywhere to take advantage of innovation from wherever it would emerge.

    Sigh....
    Linux Users... Rebel Scum!
    --Fan of the Evil Empire

  24. GUI LINUX = WINDOWS by simonapro · · Score: 2, Funny

    GUI LINUX (aka SUSE) is moving towards Windows without DOS every day. No CLI. In the end the article headline is correct and Novell are doing just that. SUSE IS the WINDOWS of the LINUX World. ... that is why we use SLACKWARE or FREEBSD.

  25. Re:In a nutshell... by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It depends on who you are really.

    If you're a hardware manufacturer, the relevant part of Windows is the OS. If you are an app developer, you are likely only interested in the API's. These aren't particularly OS specific as evidenced by WABI, Merge and Wine.

    To most end users, Windows is more like Java than the Linux kernel.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  26. Re:Exactly. by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You mean like Ubuntu? Mandrake? Redhat? SLES?

    HELL, I think even Debian is up to that standard by now.

    The type of Linux you speak of has been available for a LONG time now.

    Now the Linux community has moved on to things like PVR-in-a-box or Studio-in-a-box.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  27. Taste the flavor. by Random+Luck · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Will there be a Microsoft of Linux? That depends on your point of view. Is the "MoL" the company or the distributer of software? For the prior, I can not see any company behind any Linux distribution going out to crush any other distribution just because they can or to make billions more dollars. The "distributer of software" could be split up as the "distributer of operating systems" or the "distributer of general software." The latter, there will never be a MoL as that is against open source and all it stands for. For the prior, the closest there will be to a MoL is a dominant distribution. Red Hat was there a few years ago, with as I understood it approximately 80% of the installs Red Hat. I do not know where that stands now. And that is why there can not be a MoL any more then there will be a "Microsoft of Ice Cream": No one knows what flavor the public will be hungry for next.

    --
    I'm a BBS orphan in a blogging world.
  28. Re:What movement? by jcasper · · Score: 2, Informative

    GNU.

  29. Kernel, schmernel... by mangu · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Linux is a kernel


    Spoken as a true GNU/RMS zealot. Linux is *not* a kernel. It was one in 1991, today it is a system, composed by a kernel and a huge lot of applications and drivers that were laboriously adapted to run around that kernel.


    To all the people who think Linux is just a kernel, I say, have you ever tried to migrate a large application, let's say, from HP-UX running csh to AIX running ksh? I have and I know how hard it can be. If it were easy, then why do configure files in automake routinely top one megabyte in size? Now try to migrate every one of the 17828 packages that are available in the standard Ubuntu repositories to some other kernel. Not to mention all the device drivers that have been built in the last 15 years to get hardware to run in that kernel.


    No, Linux is not a "kernel". Linux is an Operating System, composed of many different parts. One of those parts is the kernel, another is a set of device drivers, another is the user command shell, etc.


    OK, sorry about the rant, I guess I have seen too many Debian user lists... Anyhow, I do agree with you when you say that "There's absolutely nothing stopping a large company from putting a proprietary desktop on to". This fact is evident when you consider that there are several different desktops that run on Linux: Kde, Gnome, WindowMaker, etc. So, why not the Microsoft desktop, with DirectX? After all, the final "X" is already there to prove it's a Unix thing!

  30. I'll give you a different reply by freeweed · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Firstly, you could try running a version of Linux that's less than 3 years old, but as the comparison to the now 5 years old XP will be made, I'll grant you that one.

    Mostly though, you should understand that compiling programs from source is simply a stupid idea in both Linux AND Windows. No one in their right mind would try to manually compile Firefox for Windows and then try to sort out dependency issues by hand - unless they specifically wanted to spend the time you obviously don't want to spend (neither do I, for the record).

    In Windows, you'd download a binary installer, which contains what you need in order to run Firefox. Guess what? The exact same creature exists in Linux. For your RedHat system, it's called an RPM. No unzipping, no untarring. You install software in the exact same way that you would in Windows - either double clicking what you've downloaded, and letting the system handle it all, or you go through a control panel type applet (in Linux, this is your package manager).

    You can whine about the "usual replies" all you like, but the fact is, if you can't install Firefox on any recent (last few years) Linux system, you're going out of your way to do something wrong. RPM/APT/YUM/whatever work for major software. They also work for very obscure packages only 5 people on the planet use. You *might* have to play around with source/dependencies if you're trying to run Joe Bob's Personal Fun Program, but again, guess what? Software like this exists for Windows too. Source only, and here's a how-to for compiling it, and here's how you resolve DLL requirements.

    I've never seen anyone run into a "graphics lib" requirement for Firefox that hasn't been handled in the background by the package manager, unless they're a) running Gentoo, or b) trying to prove a point that "Linux is hard" by intentionally doing things the wrong way.

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
  31. Re:What movement? by freeweed · · Score: 2, Informative

    Seeing as HURD didn't exist in 1991, nor has it ever really been released (maybe I'm wrong on this; I've never even seen the most ubergeek on Slashdot claim to be running a GNU/HURD system), I'd say calling the GNU tools an OS is a bit of a stretch.

    How about "a kernel that was combined with some excellent, already existing free software tools to create an OS".

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
  32. Switzerland? by jeremy_hogan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > I think what you want to be is, in effect, like Switzerland - you want to be the people of unquestionable integrity.

    Ahh yes. The unquestionable integrity of hidden bank accounts, tax shelters, war profiteering and Nazi gold. What a jackass.

    I read every RH related comment roughly as "See what we want to do is be *exactly* like Red Hat, all the while bashing Red Hat" (e.g. "influence but not own Linux, switch to Gnome default, Burlington Coat Factory customer references" etc).

    Also, I doubt there's any such public proclamation of Red Hat aspiring to be the M$ of Linux that meant "the unstoppable soul swallowing juggernaut whore goddess". They probably meant "successful". And analysts need a metaphor of success, so they don't have to think so hard.

    These guys should worry about being the "Novell of Linux", whatever that is beyond a cautionary tale, But it will at least be *their* tale.