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Microsoft Sees Linux As Bigger Competitor Than Apple

Facetious writes "It seems Microsoft doesn't believe the data from Net Applications regarding Linux any more than Slashdot readers do. In a recent presentation, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer showed a slide showing, from Microsoft's internal analysis, that Linux client use is clearly ahead of Apple's."

596 comments

  1. Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Apple is dieing..

    1. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's because they use BSD.

    2. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by stewbacca · · Score: 2, Funny

      Apple is dieing..

      Really? Are they making toy metal cars in their die cast process?

    3. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by mcgrew · · Score: 3, Funny

      Apple is dieing its hair.

    4. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Because gentlemen prefer blondes, and so do queers.

    5. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You know, if you hadn't used the 'n' word (and if your post wasn't completely off-topic) you'd actually have a cogent, valid argument there.

      Buuuut, instead, you're just Flamebait. (And I should've ignored you, but I had to chime in -- albeit as an AC.)

    6. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Silver,..
      As in old man silver.

    7. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Narnie · · Score: 1

      I first read the post as "Apple is dieting..."

      --
      greed@All_Evils:~#
    8. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Toy metal car analogies, maybe...

      /P

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    9. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Hordeking · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      You know, if you hadn't used the 'n' word (and if your post wasn't completely off-topic) you'd actually have a cogent, valid argument there. Buuuut, instead, you're just Flamebait. (And I should've ignored you, but I had to chime in -- albeit as an AC.)

      While off-topic, he has a valid point. The word "nigger" still doesn't invalidate his argument any more than any other label. It just colors your perception of it. It also triggers your societal programming to lynch that person.

      --
      Disclaimer: The opinions and actions of the US Gov't are in no way representative of those held by this author or its ci
    10. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Faylone · · Score: 3, Funny

      Perhaps, but isn't this kinda a bad context to bring up lynching?

    11. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also triggers your societal programming to lynch that person.

      ...The AC or the nigger?

    12. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Aphoxema · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Apple just isn't a threat. They fill a niche, and because of the strong OS-centrism the users who go with Apple there's just no wrestling them away, but they're also a selective breed. Anyone can use a Mac, but not just anyone wants to. It's still a centralized ideal in proprietary software.

      F/OSS changes the game completely and if it were to succeed Microsoft just couldn't fight back, there's no way they'd survive selling mice, consoles and 'Office Productivity Software'. It would be the death of the software giant.

      Proprietary software is restrictive, Free software is, well, free! It's so easy to spin proprietary software as evil and free software as good, but if free software were already the accepted norm, how could you possibly break it claiming proprietary software was good?

      Microsoft and Apple compete with each other. GNU/Linux just slowly assimilates as necessary or as remotely useful. If anything, Microsoft should be supporting Apple's ass to keep afloat the competition they can pull the same rope with.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    13. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      Apple's cash on hand is getting kinda' bloated.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    14. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by bonch · · Score: 1

      Yeah. The iPhone and iPod are totally not a threat. It's just a niche.

      "F/OSS" is totally going to take over the world! In fact, this will be the year of Linux on the desktop!

    15. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because they use BSD.

      You mean BSoD

    16. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by eechuah · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's clear to me now! Microsoft is Terran, Apple are the Protoss and Linux is the Zerg...

    17. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also triggers your societal programming to lynch that person.

      ...The AC or the nigger?

      Hooray for english. I love ambiguities.

    18. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Aphoxema · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, the iPhone and iPod are niches. The Zune is another product, but it failed to fill a niche largely because of the iPod but mostly because it's a piece of shit. The iPhone is indeed popular, but Windows Mobile plays a different role and provides significant competitive options. It also fills a niche.

      The "YoTLD" is nonsense, Free Software doesn't have a turning point that can be suggested. Governments are mandating open source, countless consumer devices pick free pieces of software all the time, even if they don't always comply by the license they are released under, Microsoft not only acknowledges the existence of the idea of F/OSS but the actively combat it.

      Free Software doesn't have to 'sell better', it doesn't have to be more popular to continue to exist. It just does, and it continues to improve and be used the world around. Free Software products will inevitably prevail over proprietary options because it is the moral and intelligent decision.

      F/OSS won't take over the world, the world will take over it. The reason it can't be fought is because it doesn't exist, it's entirely abstract and supported cognitively. What Microsoft has pushes is their software as a physical item, the boundaries of which separated by licensing and legal agreements.

      Consider how Microsoft is splitting hairs over virtualization, how they desperately try to redefine where the software starts and where it ends. Microsoft's power isn't in programming, it's in litigation, and their arguments are becoming less significant as people stop caring.

      It's not just cost free, it's not just morally free, it's not just legally free, it's not just free to redistribute and free to modify, it's not just freedom... Free Software accepts the fact that ideas are impossible to solely possess, and dare I resort to anthropomorphism; Free Software has a free life all of its own.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    19. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by styrotech · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Apple just isn't a threat.

      That is especially so in the context of what Ballmer was talking about. His point in the talk seemed to be that pirated Windows was (by far) their largest competitor, and the one they want to focus most on beating.

      When looking at where else all those unlicensed users would go if they didn't become legal Windows users, Apple doesn't really come into it much. People with illegal copies of Windows would typically either be cheapskates or live in a developing country - neither of which are really Apples typical customer base. Linux on the other hand is better placed to pick them up if MS gets too heavy on them.

    20. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      ...neither of which are really Apples typical customer base. Linux on the other hand is better placed to pick them up if MS gets too heavy on them.

      Excellent thinking, I hadn't thought of that.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    21. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by indi0144 · · Score: 1

      hehehe yeah.. a greener [TM] die cast car.

    22. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by indi0144 · · Score: 1

      People with illegal copies of Windows would typically either be cheapskates or live in a developing country.

      I'm a cheapskate living in a developing country you insensitive clod... but more on topic, I may be a cheapskate but IF Windows can give me a decent piece of OS I'd be more motivated to actually pay for it.

      And you're wrong about MAC not being targeted for developing countries, actually here you see more marketing stuff for Apple than MS and Apple has by FAR more good perception than MS (iPod/iPhone have helped there)If you're a design shop and you tell you customers that you run Apple you can bill them more that the other that run Windows, so buying an Apple PC is actually an investment rather than the pandora's box of TOC that is Windows.

      Sure, design and CAD shops are a niche but a very large niche and also normal people are aware that a Mac "do not get virus". Only showstopper for a MAC here: MacBookPro 17" == USD$3235.996 .. you can actually start up a second shop with that money. I'd jump the shark but I have faith in the year of Linux on the Design Workstation :)

    23. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      F/OSS was around before Windows or even DOS, and yet Microsoft managed to make its mark by convincing IBM that they would benefit from buying licenses of their software on a per-copy basis. From that has come a thriving, worldwide software industry. Proprietary software changed the game by giving developers a way to make a living as a programmer at home rather than on a corporate mainframe in a cubicle.

      With the perpetual popular image of "if you don't like it, fix it yourself" and lack of centralized accountability, F/OSS has as much chance of beating Microsoft as communism did of beating capitalism. Money talks, and people instinctively believe that something that costs money has more inherent quality than something that they can get for free. If F/OSS is going to win, it's most probably going to be from reactionary elements from outside the United States who for financial or political reasons don't want to be beholden to the Microsoft behemoth.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    24. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by cyborch · · Score: 1

      Did netcraft confirm it?

    25. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      F/OSS changes the game completely and if it were to succeed Microsoft just couldn't fight back, there's no way they'd survive selling mice, consoles and 'Office Productivity Software'. It would be the death of the software giant.

      My Fedora and Ubuntu household has nothing but Microsoft mice (three) and Microsoft keyboards (two). Those are the few products that MS markets that are really, really good. What else does MS market that I would love to pay for and but? MS Office. I am sorry, but OOo just does not compete. I would happily pay $100 for MS Office if it supported ODF (for no vendor lockin) and ran on Ubuntu.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    26. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      When looking at where else all those unlicensed users would go if they didn't become legal Windows users, Apple doesn't really come into it much. People with illegal copies of Windows would typically either be cheapskates or live in a developing country - neither of which are really Apples typical customer base. Linux on the other hand is better placed to pick them up if MS gets too heavy on them.

      I live in a developed country where nobody uses a licensed version of Windows. Even at my university, where we can get licensed copies of Windows for _free_, everyone uses pirated software and the faculty student helpers give out pirated discs. Why? My guess is that no one _respects_ software licenses existence at all. The other reason might have to do with a one-click install vs. a headache install and a difficult to enter license number.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    27. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Yetihehe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      F/OSS won't take over the world, the world will take over it. The reason it can't be fought is because it doesn't exist, it's entirely abstract and supported cognitively. What Microsoft has pushes is their software as a physical item, the boundaries of which separated by licensing and legal agreements.

      So fighting FOSS is like fighting terrorism. FOSS is an idea, it's almost impossible to fight ideas. Microsoft probably sees FOSS on the same level as terrorism.

      --
      Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
    28. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      MS is supporting Apple. They own a massive proportion of the "competition".

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    29. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Yfrwlf · · Score: 1

      Or quite simply, because software is just an idea. Computers can be programmed to perform anything their physical outputs and inputs are capable of, as well mix and matching and changing and comparing etc data internally. Trying to control ideas is as retarded as trying to control math. Programming is simply the work to get from idea A to software B, think of it as labor like digging a ditch. You pay laborers to do work that you need to have done, but you don't patent and copyright and license and control the idea, that's stupid and wrong.

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
    30. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by wisty · · Score: 1

      It's a good point - a lot of Windows copies are stolen, and Linux is one of the obvious replacements.

      Still, as a computer enthusiast, I see Apple and Linux as competitors. Windows is a thing we use at work, alongside the legacy database systems and mainframes.

      Casual users just want a machine that runs fast, doesn't break down, and has a copy of Firefox. The last thing they want to do is install an operating system. OEMs are moving to Linux, in a big way. Netbooks. Soon the 12 inch laptops will run Linux. From there it will all snowball.

      Do we really thing Vista SP 3 (a.k.a. Windows 7) will run like a dream on an Atom?

    31. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by wisty · · Score: 1

      This whole thread was predestined to be flamebait. It has the words "Microsoft", "Apple", "Linux", "CEO", "Steve", and "Ballmer" in the summary, any one of which can set off a flame war.

    32. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Siener · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When looking at where else all those unlicensed users would go if they didn't become legal Windows users, Apple doesn't really come into it much.

      Well put. This actually happened to me recently.

      My home PC had a volume licensed version of XP on it that I got from the company I worked for a few years back. Suddenly, about a month ago, my Windows Genuine Advantage started failing and my PC started nagging me about it the whole time.

      I have used Linux a lot in the past but I've never had it installed as the main OS on my primary PC.

      This incident was the last bit of motivation that I needed to switch to Linux. I have now been running Kubuntu 8.10 for two weeks and I love it. I can't think of any reason to switch back.

    33. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To Aphoxema about Apple's proprietary software.

      See http://www.apple.com/opensource

      It lists about 135 open-source components of OS X, including the kernel.

      The page begins with this text:

      As the first major computer company to make Open Source development a key part of its ongoing software strategy, Apple remains committed to the Open Source development model. Major components of Mac OS X, including the UNIX core, are made available under Appleâ(TM)s Open Source license, allowing developers and students to view source code, learn from it and submit suggestions and modifications. In addition, Apple uses software created by the Open Source community, such as the HTML rendering engine for Safari, and returns its enhancements to the community.

      Apple believes that using Open Source methodology makes Mac OS X a more robust, secure operating system, as its core components have been subjected to the crucible of peer review for decades. Any problems found with this software can be immediately identified and fixed by Apple and the Open Source community.

      If youâ(TM)re a developer, we invite you to inspect Mac OS X under the hood, free of charge, by joining the Darwin development process or just see a sampling of the Open Source projects used and created by Apple.

    34. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by morgauo · · Score: 1

      What, Again?!

      It's not like trendy, expensive, proprietary computers haven't made a comeback before.

    35. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Yes, the iPod is a niche product. And I'll go a step further and say it's a shrinking niche. As mp3 players have hit the mainstream ("mainstream" being defined here as "common $15 stocking stuffer commodity"), more and more people are coming to realize that you don't need some jacked up proprietary interface to talk to them.

      True story: I was sitting right here putting music on my Cowon X5, my roommate walked in and saw me drag a bunch of files into the folder, unmount it and unplug it, and said "wow, what kind of iPod is that?" No shit, this happened last month. Guess who's not buying another iPod ever again?

      When iPod owners are jealous because I can just plug my mp3 player in and put files in the folder and go and they can't, Apple's in deep shit.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    36. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      F/OSS was around before Windows or even DOS, and yet Microsoft managed to make its mark by convincing IBM that they would benefit from buying licenses of their software on a per-copy basis. From that has come a thriving, worldwide software industry. Proprietary software changed the game by giving developers a way to make a living as a programmer at home rather than on a corporate mainframe in a cubicle.

      It may be of some significance to point out only a few people, like Richard Stallman, had any real hard lessons with the problems of proprietary licensing by this time. It is also perfectly fair to assume that proprietary software made the computer revolution what it was through competition.

      That competition is over, and now that computers are common place, hardware is cheap and enough people are technically minded to work with computers personally, there is more than enough room for F/OSS to wedge itself in.

      With the perpetual popular image of "if you don't like it, fix it yourself" and lack of centralized accountability, F/OSS has as much chance of beating Microsoft as communism did of beating capitalism. Money talks, and people instinctively believe that something that costs money has more inherent quality than something that they can get for free. If F/OSS is going to win, it's most probably going to be from reactionary elements from outside the United States who for financial or political reasons don't want to be beholden to the Microsoft behemoth.

      That overused analogy it terrible; Capitalism was never at war with Communism, Russia was at a standoff with the United States because both countries had an incredible amount of destructive power and both sides with aggressively intent on preemptively defending themselves.

      'Communism' and 'Capitalism' were the mid-20th century buzzwords the nations used to rally their populace into fighting (speaking for either term) "this dangerous force that seeks to take away freedom and make slaves of us all".

      F/OSS isn't going to "win", it already exists and will continue to exist. It will become a more popular concept in software, while Microsoft and Apple will inevitably be destroyed. Proprietary software, however, will far outlive either company, but it will certainly not be in some epic conflict with F/OSS.

      Browsers don't go to war, argumentative people go to 'war'. It's irrelevant if IE of Firefox or Safari or Chrome is better, none will ever destroy the rest because a Hell of a lot of people just like to go with whatever perceived side is weaker and make it better.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    37. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      This Microsoft wireless mouse I've been using has impressed me. It's accurate, never loses signal, has a resolution I'm quite pleased with, and I've been using the same AA batteries in it for damned near a year now.

      I'm sure Office would still sell, but I'm doubtful it would make enough money to keep anything more than a townhouse called "Microsoft HQ" alive.

      Of course, being in the fight-or-flight position might actually make Microsoft feel the need to innovate instead of argue over what improvement is.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    38. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      So fighting FOSS is like fighting terrorism. FOSS is an idea, it's almost impossible to fight ideas. Microsoft probably sees FOSS on the same level as terrorism.

      You'll need to invert some concepts to apply more generally. Terrorism is an idea held by the victims, as in "We have had acts of terrorism put against us innocent people", but to the terrorists themselves, they more likely believe that they are the innocent ones who must destroy the guilty heretics. Who is right and wrong is very difficult to reason dialectically.

      Microsoft may actually feel this is the case, and I'm sure some F/OSS advocates do as well. In the better scheme, that of the public, neither side is a victim or a perpetrator. The public does depend on at least one of them to succeed, and it is even better if both are improving their 'products' for the while.

      I would hope it's difficult to fight an idea, but unfortunately Microsoft has done well to suppress F/OSS or divert developers away from it. I am confident (as in, it is one of the few faiths I hold) that F/OSS will become the sort of licensing that people will respect.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    39. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Yetihehe · · Score: 1

      Terrorism is an idea held by the victims, as in "We have had acts of terrorism put against us innocent people", but to the terrorists themselves, they more likely believe that they are the innocent ones who must destroy the guilty heretics.

      Matches linux and microsoft perfectly. I think you are right with this "Who is right and wrong is very difficult to reason dialectically." and it looks like linux and windows camps each just want to destroy the other.

      --
      Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
    40. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by gsmraxe · · Score: 1

      Wow, that had to be the best reply to any story I've ever read on Slashdot. Cheers!

    41. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      Thank you, it was driven by anger, inspiration, psychology class, and a million phone calls coming in at the same time complaining about email not working because no one got the email that the email server was going to be down.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    42. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Starker_Kull · · Score: 1

      Free Software products will inevitably prevail over proprietary options because it is the moral and intelligent decision.

      Man, pass me a glass of whatever YOU are drinking...

      I agree with the sentiment of what you wrote, but I work for the airlines. Intelligence and morality in decision-making here is as common as snowstorms in Aruba. I suspect it's not that common in the rest of the world either, judging from the available evidence....

      I'd really like for you to be right, but... just because an idea or concept is the right and intelligent thing has very little bearing on its ultimate success. It also heavily depends on the tenacity and charisma of its proponents, the weakness and misteps of its opponents, and a healtly dose of luck. And whenever I hear someone declare with great confidence that an idea will win because of its inherent rightness... well, good luck with that.

    43. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      No, no, no...
      You are getting it all wrong. F/OSS is communism.

    44. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by KermitJunior · · Score: 1

      A million phone calls coming in about email not working, and what are you doing? Posting on Slashdot. You, sir, are my hero. "Ssshhhh... guys, tell 'em to hold on... I'm previewing to check my URLs..."

      --
      There is a Universal Life Value Check it
    45. Re:Microsoft confirms it! by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      I really do do that, too.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
  2. Apple OS != Linux? by kheldan · · Score: 1

    I'm not an Apple user, but isn't the current incarnation of Apple's OS based on a flavor of Linux or Unix? If so, funny that they wouldn't count it..

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    1. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by rbanffy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No, it's not.

      AFAIK it's a Unix-like environment running on top of the Mach microkernel with a BSD-ish userland. The unix-like varnish over the microkernel is very modern, but I find the BSD userland rather primitive.

      The GUI is good. Most Mac users never leave it.

    2. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GNU's not Unix

    3. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by elashish14 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Of course not. Apple has a different model (Linux is GPL and Apple is closed source). Apple is still proprietary and paid-for while Linux can be shared freely. Just because they have similar origins from a software standpoint doesn't mean anything when you consider their market viability. They're completely different beasts in that respect.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    4. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by corsec67 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, OSX is certified Unix.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
    5. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The short answer is yes, OSX is UNIX with a sexed up GUI on top. However, UNIX != Linux. Both are POSIX systems with a shared heritage and some common tools (bash, X11, etc.) but they are not the same.

    6. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Hatta · · Score: 2, Funny

      Whereas Linux is just certifiable.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    7. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by rbanffy · · Score: 1

      Agree, but it's still no Linux.

    8. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't Darwin, their "operating system" open source? Isn't it based off of Unix? Can't you run Darwin (Mac's OS) with X? Doesn't Apple provide instructions to do that?

      As far as I know the whole Apple model is "open source" operating system with a sweet closed source (quartz or something like that?) windowing system on top of it.

    9. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by davester666 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Apple's Mac OS X is not entirely closed source. The GUI layer is, and some of the kernel drivers are closed source, but Apple has made the bulk of the kernel, pretty much all of the command line tools, and a whole much of their non-GUI frameworks available as open source (under either the sources original license or Apple's APSL).

      In particular, the CoreFoundation framework is useful for cross platform networking and unicode string handling code.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    10. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by nine-times · · Score: 1

      AFAIK it's a Unix-like environment running on top of the Mach microkernel with a BSD-ish userland.

      Not to argue too much, but that might be understating it a slightly. According to everything I've ever read on the subject, it's certified Unix running on the Mach microkernel, with everything but the kernel derived largely from FreeBSD or NetBSD.

      Sorry if I'm being too pedantic.

    11. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by causality · · Score: 1

      No, it's not.

      AFAIK it's a Unix-like environment running on top of the Mach microkernel with a BSD-ish userland. The unix-like varnish over the microkernel is very modern, but I find the BSD userland rather primitive.

      The GUI is good. Most Mac users never leave it.

      I really don't know much about OSX, not as much as I'd like to.

      Do you know whether it's POSIX-compliant? Is it proper to refer to it as a "Unix" or is it a "Unix clone" or "Unix-like system" like Linux? I'd also be interested in anything explaining why they went with a Mach microkernel and whether that has any non-negligible impact on performance (i.e. message-passing overhead, switching from kernel to userspace, etc). I'd appreciate anything you are able to explain since I'm honestly rather ignorant about OSX.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    12. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Correction: When I say "everything but the kernel", I should have also excluded the GUI and stuff. That stuff is developed by Apple. I was only thinking of the Unix userland tools and stuff.

    13. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by dadragon · · Score: 5, Informative

      Do you know whether it's POSIX-compliant?
      Yes.

      Is it proper to refer to it as a "Unix" or is it a "Unix clone" or "Unix-like system" like Linux?
      OS X is a certified UNIX.

      I'd also be interested in anything explaining why they went with a Mach microkernel and whether that has any non-negligible impact on performance (i.e. message-passing overhead, switching from kernel to userspace, etc). I'd appreciate anything you are able to explain since I'm honestly rather ignorant about OSX.

      The message passing overhead is fairly high compared to other systems like Linux or other BSDs. Unlike monolithic kernels, the Mach based one that Darwin (The UNIX part of OS X) uses actually has to do a full context switch when one makes a system call. That can be slow, especially with TLB flushes and such.

      Wikipedia and Apple have some pretty good docs on how it works.

      --
      God save our Queen, and Heaven bless The Maple Leaf Forever!
    14. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      I find the BSD userland rather primitive.

      Concur.
      I changed /etc/sshd_config on OSX one day while remote, tried to figure out how to do a service reload (the startup service only understands start/stop), eventually sent a HUP to the daemon with kill. Still got kicked for my trouble, but at least I was able to ssh in again.

    15. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To this discussion that has absolutely no relevance: linux is dangerous because attacking a single vendor is useless and because no single vendor needs to become 'huge' for linux to grow... and this is all a result of being free software

    16. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by makomk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A lot of the more traditional real UNIXes were crap too, from what I've read. Being certified as Unix probably isn't all that useful.

    17. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As is AIX. That's not something to be PROUD of.

    18. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Do you know whether it's POSIX-compliant

      POSIX is a subset of the Single UNIX Specification. Any system that is UNIX(tm) is also POSIX, but not every POSIX system is UNIX.

      I'd also be interested in anything explaining why they went with a Mach microkernel and whether that has any non-negligible impact on performance

      Because, in 1988, when they designed the system, Mach was the state of the art. NeXT used it and so did OSF/1 and a few other systems. Everything since then has been incremental improvements. There is almost no message-passing overhead in OS X because Mach is just used as a hardware abstraction layer, and most of the stuff runs in the BSD single server.

      If you want to know more about how OS X works at a system level, Amit Singh has written an excellent book about it.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    19. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the GUI and stuff"? Are you deliberately trying to make Mac users look like morons?

    20. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by gzipped_tar · · Score: 1

      The Mac OS X kernel is based on the Mach microkernel (so does GNU HURD). Many basic system tools (ps, kill, ls, top, etc...) are inherited from BSD Unix and some are from GNU (such as BASH). Of course Apple has made a lot of their own contributions e.g. most of the GUI.

      --
      Colorless green Cthulhu waits dreaming furiously.
    21. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by gangien · · Score: 1

      z/OS unix system services is certified as unix i believe. and z/OS isn't even unix (znu?)

    22. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by jcr · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ok, in a nutshell:

      OS X uses Mach's CPU scheduling and memory management. The rest of the code in the kernel (the process model, the network stack, etc) is a combination of *BSD code, code developed in-house (like the IOKIt), and vendor-supplied code (like the video drivers from NVIDIA and ATI). Below the GUI, there's code from many, many projects, such as the shells, Python, Ruby, sendmail, and so on. The 3D graphics library is OpenGL, with in-house additions. The 2D graphics library is all Apple-developed code, except for some licensed implementations of pieces like the JPEG2000 decoder.

      If you have the developer tools installed, have a look at /Developer/Documentation/Acknowledgements.rtf for a full list of the organizations from whom Apple has licensed code that they include in OS X.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    23. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      That requires trying?

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    24. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Tom · · Score: 3, Interesting

      To a home user, no.

      To a developer, consultant or corporate decision maker, it says that certain standards can be relied on and many assumptions can be seen as a given, which removes a lot of headaches and initial barriers to adoption.

      Essentially, it doesn't make the sale, but it does get you on the shortlist.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    25. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its got a FreeBSD microkernel.

      Boy that turns me on!

    26. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      PureDarwin has apparently run into non-trivial issues with regards to getting Darwin to boot at all, and OpenDarwin died from developer ennui and Apple making some things unnecessarily annoying when they switched to intel essentially, making the current release of opendarwin a rough equivalent to, iirc, Tiger.

    27. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by smoker2 · · Score: 1

      Do you know whether it's POSIX-compliant?
      Yes.

      Can we have a link or citation please.

    28. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by eggnet · · Score: 3, Informative
    29. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Jezza · · Score: 1

      All depends what you think Unix is. Mac OS X is certified "Unix", but it's a very different thing from a technical stand point.

      I'd guess as the original post asked "a flavor of Linux or Unix?" then Mac OS X is Unix in that context.

      I'd also add that Most Mac users don't even know there is anything much under the GUI. I'd also suggest that's high praise indeed.

    30. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by diqmay · · Score: 1

      Mac OS X Leopard is a fully POSIX-compliant 64-bit operating system.

      http://developer.apple.com/leopard/overview/osfoundations.html

    31. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by westlake · · Score: 1

      linux is dangerous because attacking a single vendor is useless and because no single vendor needs to become 'huge' for linux to grow...

      The home and SOHO market is looking for a off-the-shelf solution that "just works -" and strong vendor support when it doesn't.

      That is a perfectly intelligible decision even when you are working on a much larger scale. It's why you chose Red Hat and Dell:

      Dell and Red Hat Alliance

    32. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Minozake · · Score: 1

      Meh. The GUI sucks to me. I find I struggle with it a lot.

      Maybe it's the one-button mouse that comes with almost every Mac I touch. Oh well.

      --
      http://sourcemage.org/ - Have fun :)
    33. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by knapper_tech · · Score: 1

      POSIX is a subset of the Single UNIX Specification. Any system that is UNIX(tm) is also POSIX, but not every POSIX system is UNIX.

      Forgive me for pedantry, but which relationship was intended? If POSIX is a subset of UNIX, I'd expect every POSIX is UNIX.

      --
      "There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell them." ~ Louis Armstrong
    34. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The home and SOHO market is looking for a off-the-shelf solution that "just works -" and strong vendor support when it doesn't.

      Yes, but Red Hat, Novell, Canonical, Xandros, etc. can each provide that while sharing a lot of the effort. Additionally, if one of them goes out of business, Microsoft still has all of the other Linux companies to compete with.

    35. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Raffaello · · Score: 1

      that's because

      Linux
      Is
      Not
      U
      n
      i
      X

      and Mac OS X is UNIX

    36. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Homer1946 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Every Mac that includes a mouse includes a two-button mouse (functionally) that is configured by default to act as a one-button mouse. That has been true now for quite some time.

      Just change the mouse preference to have it recognize both the right and left button.

    37. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by bonch · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Scientists have invented a new technology called a "search engine." One of the best ones is Google.com. Check it out today!

    38. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by bonch · · Score: 1

      Darwin is open source. All these years later, and people still ignore that fact in Slashdot discussions.

    39. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Raffaello · · Score: 2, Informative

      Your confusing subset with subclass. POSIX is a subset of UNIX features, so it is possible for an OS to implement that POSIX subset and still not implement all the other features that would make it a UNIX.

      POSIX is *not* a subclass of UNIX, so all POSIX oses are not thereby UNIX oses.

      By analogy, flight is a subset of the capabilities of birds, so it is possible for an animal to have flight capabilities and still not be a bird (bats, flying insects). "Animal with flight" is *not* a subset of "birds."

    40. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by DiLLeMaN · · Score: 1

      If POSIX is a subset of UNIX, I'd expect every POSIX is UNIX.

      That's like saying "if a rear view mirror is a car part, I'd expect every rear view mirror to be a car"

      (See how I nicely worked a car analogy into that one? I'll be here all week!)

      More seriously, though: subset means exactly that. POSIX means that the system does part of the UNIX spec, but not the complete thing. Therefore, every fully spec'd UNIX system is also POSIX, but not the other way around. It's not "subset" as in "POSIX systems are a part of the UNIX landscape", which I assume you think the sentence meant.

      --
      /var/run/twitter.sock is a twitter socket puppet.
    41. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      max osX is based on a variant of BSD, darwin. i'm not sure if darwin itself is/was an actual "bsd" or if it is apples own modification that started with an acutal "bsd".

      bsd is kind of like linux in that it was a similar idea (make a unix-like system that's free) but it was developed at the US university Berkeley, and it has adhered to a slightly (vastly?) different design philosophy.

    42. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Guy+Harris · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Unlike monolithic kernels, the Mach based one that Darwin (The UNIX part of OS X) uses actually has to do a full context switch when one makes a system call.

      If by "a full context switch" you mean "a context switch to a separate process", that's not the case. It's just a standard trap into the kernel, with the system call code executed on the kernel stack for the same thread that made the call; no address space switch is done.

      I.e., it's not a "microkernel" of the sort where most if not all system services are performed in userland server processes - or even kernel-mode server processes. It would not look unfamiliar to people used to monolithic UN*X kernels.

    43. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by zn0k · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually your changes would have taken effect immediately in new sessions. launchd runs a new sshd process for every login, so the configuration would be parsed from scratch. Think of it as running sshd through inetd. Since you cannot change parameters to your current session as it already exists, there's simply no need for a mechanism to re-read the configuration.

    44. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

      However, UNIX != Linux. Both are POSIX systems with a shared heritage and some common tools (bash, X11, etc.) but they are not the same.

      "UNIX" is a term used to refer to several different things:

      1. an operating system developed at Bell Laboratories;
      2. an operating system developed at Bell Laboratories, along with various operating systems derived from that code;
      3. a trademark issued by The Open Group for operating systems that meet an API-and-command-line specification based on behaviors implemented by various systems of type 2 as well as systems implementing derivatives of those interfaces.

      Linux wasn't developed at Bell Labs, so it's not of type 1. It doesn't have code derived from that code, so it's not of type 2, and no Linux distribution I know of has passed the test to get that trademark, so a Linux distribution can't be called a "UNIX(R) system".

      However, Linux distributions generally are "systems implementing derivatives of those interfaces", so it's what's often called a "UNIX-like system" or a "UN*X".

      Earlier versions of BSD were systems of type 2; there might be enough AT&T code left (legally) in *BSD to have the *BSD systems count as systems of type 2, but I'm not sure that, at this point, they have enough AT&T code to render them interestingly different from Linux in that regard.

      No *BSD has passed the tests to use the UNIX trademark. Mac OS X is a cousin of BSD, with a lot of kernel and userland code taken from various of the *BSDs; Mac OS X 10.5 on Intel has passed the tests to let Apple use the UNIX trademark.

      And, given that even the commercial UNIXes have diverged significantly from whatever AT&T code bases they were originally based on, I'm not sure any meaning of "UNIX" other than the third one is really interesting these days.

    45. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by FreeFull · · Score: 1

      Not scientists, university students.

      --
      No ascii art.
    46. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by FreeFull · · Score: 1

      Another analogy, squares are a subset of rectangles, but not every rectangle is a square.

      --
      No ascii art.
    47. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Darwin is only a kernel. Apple releases some recompiles of FreeBSD userspace and the Unix kernel API layer, but that's about it. The Carbon/Cocoa API bypasses the Unix layer altogether and interacts directly with the kernel. So Darwin is pretty fucking useless, thanks Apple!

    48. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by bstamour · · Score: 1

      I believe you're mixing up Linux with GNU, which stands for Gnu's Not Unix. Linux, as far as I know, doesn't stand for anything.

    49. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by ibbie · · Score: 1

      I find the BSD userland rather primitive.

      Concur. I changed /etc/sshd_config on OSX one day while remote, tried to figure out how to do a service reload (the startup service only understands start/stop), eventually sent a HUP to the daemon with kill. Still got kicked for my trouble, but at least I was able to ssh in again.

      Just as a side note, getting kicked doesn't really matter if you run screen. It's saved my bacon (and prevented headaches) so many times now, I don't know if I could work without it.

      --
      The wise follow a damned path, for to know is to be forsaken.
    50. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by itzdandy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Linus + Unix = linux
      no acronism involved.

      I am a unix (tru64, HPUX, sco, freebsd) admin as well as a linux admin (rhel5/centos5, debian/ubuntu) and prefer linux 10:1 to most unix though freebsd is very nice and a close second to debian for me.

      linux != unix, linux > unix

      though

      freebsd = unix, freebsd > unix

      OSX is a unix by heritage but it is a Desktop OS. Apple might try to present it as some sleek server unix but it is a Desktop OS sitting on unix, which is a different creature all together.

      now Microsoft knows that big money is in the server market. a single server installation with SQL server is more profit than 15 desktop sales, and there is less rampant piracy in the server market.

      Microsoft vs Apple is a battle on a single front. Apple doesnt have a strong flanking maneuver in its OSX server product.

      Microsoft vs Linux is a battle on the server front that Microsoft is not winning and Linux is improving on the desktop front with improvements happening far faster than Microsoft could have anticipated or even keep pace with. They have never been able to deliver an updated desktop OS on a schedule anywhere near Apple or Linux.

      Since OSX came out there have been 5 full releases and twice as many dot releases, each with some noticable and desirable improvement in function AND performance. Linux is such a multifaceted movement that every 6 months there is a dot release of the main components and hundreds of fixes and tweaks. Microsoft is 2 full releases and 3 service packs in that same timeframe.

      I also admin a few Windows Servers (2 2k8 and 1 2k3) and they are reliable systems but the heavy lifting in our datacenter is done by linux and the rock solid legacy systems are unix. I have unix systems that are sitting on decade old hardware and have unlimited uptime only interupted by schedule maintenance.

      Microsoft is right to fear the triple threat (remember the mobile market) from linux. Apple is such a niche player and seems satisfied with that.

    51. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by itzdandy · · Score: 1

      darwin is truly a unix as much as *bsd is a unix. lay that to rest.

      yes, some unixes were half baked but those that survived really were rock solid if not user friendly, stubborn, and difficult at every opportunity (sco).

    52. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by itzdandy · · Score: 1

      though not all university students are scientists, some are.

    53. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Minozake · · Score: 1

      Nobody ever has it configured, and our computers at school have been there for more than quite some time.

      The only two- or three-button functionality I have seen was on Macbooks with their multitouch functionality pads. They're quite nice, I must admit.

      And I do know about option click, but I can't look at porn that way!

      --
      http://sourcemage.org/ - Have fun :)
    54. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by grocer · · Score: 1

      There's something to be said for a standard set of behaviors across many systems, even for home users. Certainly, I don't use Unix everyday but after having an iBook for 3 years then replacing it with an XP laptop (for work), I ended installing Cygwin so I would have Unix like functionality at the command line so that I would have a standard set of interfaces...boot into bash and go...

    55. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      To a system level programmer (IE someone messing with hardware, protocols), I can understand a UNIX certification being important. Maybe - maybe - a consultant, if they're just playing cards and catering to the - you guessed it - corporate decision maker. OR maybe they think it'd look good on their resume.

      But for anyone who actually has to work with the systems, at a mid-low to high level, as an administrator, UNIX cert means jack shit. It means nothing about the system's configuration, and how easy it is maintain. It says nothing about infuriating quirk "features that act as bugs" that continually make things messy. It says nothing about an intelligent package management system (or lack thereof). Those are as equally important, if not moreso.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    56. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Informative
      POSIX is a set of portable operating system standards. It defines a number of C interfaces to operating system functionality and a few other things (e.g. an executable named sh which interprets commands in a certain way). In recent versions POSIX and the SUS have been unified so that the SUS requires everything that POSIX requires, and also some things that only make sense for UNIX-like systems. This includes a larger set of basic commands, and a much richer set of operating system functions (e.g. various IPC primitives that only make sense for systems following the UNIX process model).

      The first system to fully conform to POSIX was OpenVMS (the Open- prefix indicated POSIX compliance; previous versions were just called VMS), a system that was very different from UNIX. Windows NT was also POSIX compliant, but didn't implement any of the optional parts of POSIX which, it turns out, includes most of the specification (a large number of calls are required to exist but may return ENOTIMPLEMENTED in all cases). Neither of these are UNIX, although it may be possible to persuade Windows with SFU or Cygwin installed to come close to passing the SUS tests.

      One of the nice things about the SUS is that, unlike POSIX, it is free to access. Copies of POSIX still cost money, but you can infer what they say by reading the SUS and checking the bits at the bottom of each page which highlight the SUS extensions to POSIX (and, often, to the C standard, which is also not freely available).

      It's also worth noting that you are only allowed to call a system UNIX if it has been certified by the Open Group (who own the UNIX trademark) as conforming to the SUS. The conformance test is for a specific version of an OS on specific hardware. OS X 10.5 on x86 is UNIX, but OS X 10.5 on PowerPC is not. Solaris 10 on SPARC is UNIX, but Solaris 10 on x86 is not. Both OS X on PowerPC and Solaris on x86 will run the same set of programs as their certified counterparts, but Sun and Apple chose not to pay for certification for their system on both platforms. I think the rules were changed recently, but it used to also be the case that the version requirements were very strict, so OS X 10.5 on x86 can be UNIX, but OS X 10.5.1 would have required recertifying.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    57. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Darwin is open source.

      Darwin is not OS X. It's just a few pieces of OS X that isn't of much use at all to anyone like other pieces in OS X would be.

      All these years later, and people still ignore that fact in Slashdot discussions.

      They aren't ignoring it, it's just irrelevant.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    58. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Mac OS X Leopard is a fully POSIX-compliant 64-bit operating system.

      To put it simply, it isn't.

      Signalling is still fucked.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    59. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by SkeezerDoodle · · Score: 1

      Actually, most of the heavy lifting is done by the admins to put those huge systems that run MS server software into the racks.

    60. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Hum, Gnu is Not Unix!

      I doubt that GNU/Linux is certifiable. There are lots of places where GNU people just like being different. Anyway, we live in the time of "Linux compatible" systems, when nobody cares about POSIX anymore.

    61. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      How stupid.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    62. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by wolfemi1 · · Score: 1

      Linux = Linus' MINIX. See the Torvalds/Tenenbaum conversations for some background.

    63. Re:Apple OS != Linux? by xSquaredAdmin · · Score: 1

      Whoosh.

      Definitions of certifiable on the Web:

              * fit to be certified as insane (and treated accordingly)
              * capable of being guaranteed or certified; "a certifiable fact"
                  wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

              * That can, or that must be certified; Mentally ill to such an extent that involuntary institutionalization is appropriate; crazy
                  en.wiktionary.org/wiki/certifiable

      --
      Crushing dreams at the speed of sarcasm
  3. 2009 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Will 2009 be the year of linux on the desktop?

    1. Re:2009 by michaewlewis · · Score: 0

      no

    2. Re:2009 by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      It will be the year - for everyone using a Linux desktop.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    3. Re:2009 by Jezza · · Score: 1

      Isn't it? Bugger, that makes system I just built really unfashionable.

      Mind you, I used a Cosmos S case for it, so I guess as long as 2009 is the year of Linux UNDER the desktop I'll be OK ;-)

    4. Re:2009 by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Nope, that was '06.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
  4. Makes sense... by i.r.id10t · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Makes sense... a PC user can switch to Linux by downloading a LiveCD (or whatever) and installing or just running from the disk. A PC user has to buy new hardware to switch to Apple.

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    1. Re:Makes sense... by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 2, Informative

      After using Linux for 2 years, can still count all the other Linux users I have met face-to-face on one hand (OK, OK: in binary. But that's only because I might have met 6). Finding Apple users is much easier.

    2. Re:Makes sense... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Is there a version of Linux available for Apple Macintoshes?
      How about Commodore Amigas? (just curious)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    3. Re:Makes sense... by DriedClexler · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah, but unless you REALLY know what you're doing, you risk locking yourself out of your computer and/or losing access to files.

      For my part, I switched recently, and despite buying new hardware (I had to upgrade anyway), it's been an easy, smooth transition. The used computer I bought had Vista on it, and I installed Ubuntu 8.10 over it. I was surprised at how easy it was to install the OS and change settings. For wi-fi, all I had to do was plug in a USB adapter I had up and running on my previous computer and entire the password.

      They've come a long way since three years ago when I ... didn't get it to work out. Of course, I haven't yet tried to move over my previous computer's hard drives or critical files like email.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    4. Re:Makes sense... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      The first Linux user I encountered (other than myself) ran Linux on his Atari Falcon.

      So yeah... there is an Amiga version. Has been for a REALLY long time.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    5. Re:Makes sense... by Panzor · · Score: 1

      Judging from the ability to use a mac keyboard as a setting when installing Ubuntu and having a "Mac" section on the ubuntu forums, I would say that at least Ubuntu can be run on a Mac. I've never done it, though.

    6. Re:Makes sense... by jaavaaguru · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu did releases for PPC architecture machines (old Macs). New Macs are just PCs with some extra BIOS-y kind of stuff added.

    7. Re:Makes sense... by ApproachingLinux · · Score: 1

      Yellow Dog Linux (http://us.fixstars.com/products/ydl/) runs on the older PPC G4/G5 Macs.

    8. Re:Makes sense... by gohmifune · · Score: 1

      Several. To my knowledge, most distributions will work with modern Mackintoshes as they are fundamentally the standard PCs you get when you by any other computer. The old PowerPC based Macs can run Debian, YellowDog, and a few others I believe. Great if you need to repurpose an old computer. And I think Debian runs on the Amiga, but I think Debian runs on anything that plugs into a wall so...

    9. Re:Makes sense... by Mr.+DOS · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu can be installed on pretty much any Intel Mac and many PPC Macs with varying degrees of success, as can many (most?) other modern distros. In fact, Yellow Dog Linux was created for use on PPC-based systems, and its first release targeted Macs specifically (mind you, there weren't many other consumer PPC-based systems around at the time).

            --- Mr. DOS

    10. Re:Makes sense... by louden+obscure · · Score: 1

      i've been playing around with the iPC hacked OS X 10.5.6 on my store bought bone stock gateway gt5654. there are a few issues with the nvidia 6150se video chip and i still can't get my ps/2 keyboard & trackball to work, but it's usable with a usb keyboard & mouse.

      that being said, i still prefer to use debian and compiz-fusion.

      --
      Serenity now, insanity later.
    11. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that the problem (for Microsoft) is that there is an Apple Inc that they can draw a bead on. There isn't a Linux Inc.

      Microsoft can try to influence Apple by using Office as a bargaining chip or by leveraging their patent portfolio or even by advertising. How do they do that with Linux? Who do they even talk to?

      Linux doesn't advertise. It doesn't get product placement in sit-coms. That makes it hard to counter.

    12. Re:Makes sense... by digitalunity · · Score: 1

      Finding apple users is easy, just go to school and look across the lunchroom.

      For many of us who have to actually pay for our computers, the linux on cheap hardware value proposition is too good to pass up.

      --
      You can't legislate goodness. Let each to his own destiny, by will of his freely made choices.
    13. Re:Makes sense... by Fleeced · · Score: 1

      Also, I know more than one Mac user who uses dual-boot with Windows...

    14. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After using Linux for 2 years, can still count all the other Linux users I have met face-to-face on one hand (OK, OK: in binary. But that's only because I might have met 6). Finding Apple users is much easier.

      No. not the number you have met but the number you have talked with AND who happened to let on that they use Linux.

      Or do you ask everyone you walk by if they use Linux? If so you must live a pretty hectic life and receive plenty of mildly disturbed looks ^_^

      P.S. I use Linux and I only expect a handful of people to "vaguely" know.

      P.P.S. and if I were to walk around with a t-shirt saying "I use Linux" people would be worried it might be something bad and dangerous...

    15. Re:Makes sense... by warrigal · · Score: 2, Informative

      In fact, Apple authorised Terra Soft to sell Macs with Yellow Dog Linux installed. Not that YDL was the only Linux for the PPC Mac. There were a bunch of M68000 Linuxes for the Mac as well and Apple ran a Linux on Mac site for some years.

    16. Re:Makes sense... by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 2, Funny

      Or do you ask everyone you walk by if they use Linux?

      Walk? That's when you use your feet to drag you and your chair across the floor rather than pushing off against a wall or furniture, right?

    17. Re:Makes sense... by brackishboy · · Score: 1
      Debian will run on Intel Macs, PowerPC Macs and even some 68k Macs.

      For a long time I was running it on an Indigo iBook (366mHz PPC, 192mb RAM).

    18. Re:Makes sense... by ubergeek2009 · · Score: 1

      Really, I have met only two other people besides myself that run Linux. One of them switched OS's every other day of the week and the other just used it for attempting to hack someone else's computer. (I'm no computer expert, I just use Ubuntu because it looks nice, runs nice, and is a hell of a lot better and more stable than Vista)

    19. Re:Makes sense... by slyn · · Score: 2, Funny

      Also, I know more than one Mac user who uses dual-boot with Windows...

      MY GOODNESS...

      This shocking revelation surely means that OS X is definitely not ready for the desktop yet. What will Apple do?

    20. Re:Makes sense... by Lennie · · Score: 1

      The last support for this hardware in Debian was in Sarge. My still working Sparcstation 4 is also not supported anymore. It aint all that fast ofcourse, especially with SSH2 and stuff it really start to show.

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
    21. Re:Makes sense... by Lennie · · Score: 1
      --
      New things are always on the horizon
    22. Re:Makes sense... by mdarksbane · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The real core of the threat is emerging markets, and this is where their "piracy is number 1, linux is number 2" thinking comes from.

      There are hundreds of millions of people in India and China who will be getting enough income to purchase a computer or computer time in the next decade. Windows at $100 a pop is a much bigger deal to them than it is in the US, when that could be a full month's salary.

      Almost all of the massive piracy statistics you here are coming from those areas. You can buy pirated copies of windows at normal shops for a dollar or two.

      In fact, one could easily argue that pirated copies of windows are one of the largest barriers to Linux adoption as well.

      These areas of the world hold the largest potential in this sort of field, where there is already large amounts of market saturation in western countries. And that's why they don't consider Apple a threat - it is very likely you will never see copies of mac os x being sold in shanghai for a buck each.

    23. Re:Makes sense... by Jezza · · Score: 1

      How the heck could you tell? (I know the Mac users were impeccably dressed, witty and charming, but the Linux users look just like Windows users...)

      OK, I'm going to go change now - I'm going to check if my other computer has finished downloading MySQL. (I would run OpenSolaris if I knew what to wear)

    24. Re:Makes sense... by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Linux (anymore) but I do have a Mac Classic (1 MB RAM) that can run Minix.

      And a Mac IIci running NetBSD as a NAT box.

      I did set up a Mac file server (Mac Workgroup Server 6160) with Linux, once the previous Mac tech was... disposed of. Part of her daily routine was rebooting the server every day as a way of reducing crashes. Once I set it up with Linux, it just ran in a closet, gathering dust. Was some form of Linux targeted just for Macs. Had some HFS stuff for mounting drives and such. Was back in '97.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    25. Re:Makes sense... by PenguSven · · Score: 3, Insightful

      For many of us who have to actually pay for our computers, the linux on cheap hardware value proposition is too good to pass up.

      Conversely, for those of us who have jobs and use our computers to get paid, the cost of Apple hardware/software is not an issue.

      --
      What is...?
    26. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an American, right?

      For me (German), this includes:
      My whole workgroup (ca. 10 people, theoretical physics, SuSe)
      Most of my fellow students in physics (CIP-Pool was on DEC Alphas/HP-UX which is not Linux but close enough^^)
      My Brother-in-law (Electrical Engineer, Ubuntu)
      A friend of the family (Signals engineer, Gentoo)
      My Gymnasium (High-school/early college) class (SuSe) - the "free access" CIP-Pool was running on Linux - the Windows-Pool was locked down, you had to get a key, a teacher had to supervise you, ...

      Oh, yes, obviously me too (Ubuntu, Puppy, Mandriva, Debian).

      Should be about 100 people or so in total which used Linux at least for basic multimedia and internet surfing.

      The U.S. is just a rather backwards country ;)

    27. Re:Makes sense... by KasperMeerts · · Score: 1

      Well here it's just around. I know 3 Macbook users but I'll have to think a while to count all the Linux users I know.
      Mind you, I live in Europe, I think Apple never caught on as much here.

      --
      As long as there are slaughterhouses, there will be battlefields.
    28. Re:Makes sense... by Fleeced · · Score: 1

      MY GOODNESS...

      This shocking revelation surely means that OS X is definitely not ready for the desktop yet. What will Apple do?

      Wow... you Mac fanbois are certainly over-defensive, aren't you?

      I said nothing negative about the OS X - I was simply making the point that the Windows usage would be higher than Mac penetration of the market might seem to indicate.

    29. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he was making fun of all those posts claiming that Linux wasn't ready for the desktop just because many users dual boot with Windows in order to run certain windows only software.

    30. Re:Makes sense... by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

      I recently started taking CS classes again. There are quite a few Linux users (probably around 10-15%). But that is amongst nerds. Honestly, I rarely look at what most people are running when they are sitting in a cafe on their laptop.

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
    31. Re:Makes sense... by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      You can run just about any flavor of Linux on an Intel mac. I tripple boot Mac, Ubuntu, and XP on mine. It's very easy to do with ReFIT, and Bootcamp.

    32. Re:Makes sense... by Lockblade · · Score: 1

      Whoooooooosh!

    33. Re:Makes sense... by bonch · · Score: 1

      Why would you want a Linux for Macs? You already get a UNIX operating system with OS X, complete with X11, a ports system, etc.

    34. Re:Makes sense... by Fleeced · · Score: 1

      I think he was making fun of all those posts claiming that Linux wasn't ready for the desktop just because many users dual boot with Windows in order to run certain windows only software.

      Ah... in that case, it was I who was being over-defensive.

      Irony can be embarrassing, can't it?

    35. Re:Makes sense... by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      I'm running Ubuntu as a hobby project (just getting a feel for what it can do, but it's not my main machine) on a 15" G4 powerbook, and it works very well.

      There are specific PPC builds of Ubuntu that aren't immediately apparent from the main page, but you can get to them easily enough.

      The Intel build for Mac is barely different from the regular x86 version.

    36. Re:Makes sense... by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      The question is really "why wouldn't you?".

      I installed a PPC build of Ubuntu onto my 15" Powerbook rather than upgrading it to 10.5.

      No sense throwing out old hardware if you can repurpose it.

    37. Re:Makes sense... by slyn · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the mere existence of WINE.

    38. Re:Makes sense... by el+americano · · Score: 2, Interesting

      MS could certainly bash Linux in commercials if they thought is was worth their money, but at this point it would just provide name recognition and credibility to mention Linux as competition in a commercial. I think they've only taken on Apple, because the PC vs. Mac commercials were making them look bad (They still don't attack Apple, lest more people realize they have a choice.) They'd much rather spend money on locking in their current customers and reducing unlicensed copies. Business as usual still pays pretty well.

      --
      Those are my principles. If you don't like them I have others. -Groucho Marx
    39. Re:Makes sense... by jackspenn · · Score: 1

      A PC user has to buy new hardware to switch to Apple.

      True. But as the owner of a thinkpad I am able to run OS X without switching hardware.

      --
      Respect the Constitution
    40. Re:Makes sense... by Erikderzweite · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I wouldn't even consider the software piracy as a threat to Microsoft. The corporation benefits hugely from high level of piracy in emerging markets. Only because of pirates it is able to hold absolute monopoly in many countries without spending a penny for it.
      They get full regions of the earth which are dependant on Windows and have built Windows-only software ecosystems for free!
      They don't want to fight piracy -- people will still be able to buy XP or Vista for 1$. And pirated DVDs which are sold now are more like Linux distributions -- they have all the software you might need: MSO, Photoshop firewalls antiviruses etc. Very convenient and Linux is very hard pressed to top that offer. That way Microsofts monopoly will remain for years to come.

      What the company really want is to milk those markets, to go after government institutions, companies and OEM's -- big targets which can be forced to pay (especially the governments).

    41. Re:Makes sense... by Clarious · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't even consider the software piracy as a threat to Microsoft. The corporation benefits hugely from high level of piracy in emerging markets. Only because of pirates it is able to hold absolute monopoly in many countries without spending a penny for it.

      And you expect Ballmer to say that piracy is MS best friend?

    42. Re:Makes sense... by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Huh? Do you know about IRC? irc.freenode.net, /join #ubuntu, /join #fedora, /join #suse, /join #debian.. the list goes on. You can meet literally hundreds of users right now. Join several forums and/or mailing lists and you can meed thousands, although that will take a day or two.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    43. Re:Makes sense... by yareckon · · Score: 1

      Debian has more free software than is available for osX and supports old hardware better. For instance, Leopard runs like crap on my mac mini G4 1.25ghz. Debian lenny ppc with Gnome runs well enough for it to be my main desktop / home server. It's not blazing fast, but it works and uses 10-17 watts rather than 75 for a traditional desktop. A great combination of hardware and software.

      I highly recommend linux for macs, it's usually quite an upgrade.

    44. Re:Makes sense... by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Every job I've had in which I use a computer to get paid has provided the computer. It's always been a windows PC/laptop, they've always worked fine for me and I've been happy with them. Personally I wouldn't buy a mac. I like trying new things out and the mac world is just too small for me. Incidentally, the trying things out part is the main reason I get jobs using computers in the first place.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    45. Re:Makes sense... by Draek · · Score: 1

      For you in the US, I presume. For me, living in Chile, South America, I've only met 3 Apple users face-to-face in my oh-so-many years of using computers, whereas for Linux the number is easily five to ten times that amount. And no, no LUGs or people I've personally introduced to it, just people at my university, my dad's coworkers and such.

      Probably something to do with the fact that Apple doesn't spend millions in advertisement here, unlike the US.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    46. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      unless you order the machine without Windows, MS already made their money from the OEM license.

    47. Re:Makes sense... by drachenstern · · Score: 1

      I do consider myself a computer expert, and I do run Linux as well as Windows. I've known probably 50s of people who run linux, all the way from non-comittally to only choice of OS is the one they compiled and installed themselves from a kernel bootdisk and a precompiled nic driver...

      And I tend to use Ubuntu on my laptop because it's the one most people are going to see in public, so the one most likely to have a counter-point to the alternative-os-unenlightened. But I'm a debian guy at heart.

      --
      2^3 * 31 * 647
    48. Re:Makes sense... by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      IRC != IRL

    49. Re:Makes sense... by darkfire5252 · · Score: 1

      They've come a long way since three years ago when I ... didn't get it to work out. Of course, I haven't yet tried to move over my previous computer's hard drives or critical files like email.

      The thing that floored me (and was an iconic example of Ubuntu being willing to 'play nice' when Windows doesn't) is that if you install Ubuntu onto a computer with a pre-existing Windows install then Ubuntu will offer to move your personal files over to the Ubuntu install. Compare that to the fact that even booting from the Windows install CD will cause a Linux system to fail to boot (it wipes out the MBR and kills Grub) and it's a testament to the Linux mindset...

    50. Re:Makes sense... by cyborch · · Score: 1

      Well here it's just around. I know 3 Macbook users but I'll have to think a while to count all the Linux users I know. Mind you, I live in Europe, I think Apple never caught on as much here.

      I live in Europe as well. All the Linux users I know have switched to Macs now.

    51. Re:Makes sense... by cyborch · · Score: 1

      There goes my ability to say that I have a social life...

    52. Re:Makes sense... by badpazzword · · Score: 1

      In university, I've met so far four between professors and students using Apple laptops. Half of them had Linux installed on it.

      --
      When ideas fail, words become very handy.
    53. Re:Makes sense... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      That is a PowerPC, right? Or, PPC? You might start a search here: http://www.tuaw.com/2007/04/22/ubuntu-yellow-dog-linux-for-ppc/ Actually, this looks even better: http://penguinppc.org/about/distributions.php I've never owned a PPC, so I can't give you any more guidance than that.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    54. Re:Makes sense... by idlemachine · · Score: 1

      Is there a version of Linux available for Apple Macintoshes? How about Commodore Amigas? (just curious)

      The answer to both of those questions is the same: http://www.linux-m68k.org/

      (I was tempted to do this through letmegooglethatforyou.com but I've used up my asshole points for today...)

    55. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You already get a UNIX operating system with OS X, complete with X11, a ports system, etc.

      All Unixes and clones are not the same. Can you even run OS X with just an X server or do you have to run Apples GUI too (Seems like unnecessary battery draining bloat to me). AFAIK the prefs utilites in Gnome or KDE doesn't even work on OS X. Like network-manager which you pretty much need on a Gnome laptop.

      If you prefer Gnome or KDE (or whatever GUI you like) over Apples GUI Linux IS a better option than OS X. Not to mention you may like the GNU tools more than the BSD tools.

      And you can't beat the price of Linux, an Apple upgrade will cost you like 100$ while Linux is free.

    56. Re:Makes sense... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      The same thing that skewers statistics in Linux's favor makes Linux users more socially reticent. Simply put, Apple users are more likely to be seen outside, whereas Linux users are more likely to be on their computer during every waking hour.

      Sure, it's funny. But it's also likely true.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    57. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have Microsoft to thank for the dirt cheap x86 hardware. Without them you would have hundred different unices running on 10 different hardware platforms each costing a bomb.

      "But someone else would have made a popular OS used by 700 million people too !!!"

      Yeah, I bet someone else would have won Olympic gold medals if Michael Phelps wasn't born. Who cares? It is what it is.

    58. Re:Makes sense... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>he ran Linux on his Atari Falcon. So yeah... there is an Amiga version.

      The second half of your statement does not follow from the first. Ataris and Commodore Amigas are not the same. Lots of things run on Ataris, but not Amigas, and vice-versa.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    59. Re:Makes sense... by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      Amigas and older Macs use a processor type which doesn't do protected mode. In other words, the kernel can't prevent a program from overwriting the memory of other programs, or even itself (at least not without a lot of hassle).

      There is a Linux variant which can work on non-MMU chips, ucLinux I never tried it, but would guess it would be pretty crippled.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    60. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You probably can include Brazil in your list.

      Pirated ruindows versions are not sold in "normal shops" here, but they are available in thousands of ilegal street vedors everywhere.

      IMHO, it would be a good strategic move for the open source/free software/floss/etc cause to join forces and fight software piracy.

      Cogito ergo doleo

    61. Re:Makes sense... by nikolag · · Score: 1

      A PC user has to buy new hardware to switch to Windows7, also.

      Instead of bitching about Linux and piracy, they should take care of their product(s).

      --
      Doing a good job is like spilling coffee on a dark suit, you feel warm all over, but nobody notices.
    62. Re:Makes sense... by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      I hate to break it to you, but if you sit around with people IRL and talk about Windows OR mac OR Linux, you don't have much of a social life anyway. The point I was trying to get across is that there IS a community out there for assistance and discussion and we don't need to meet these people face to face. In fact I get the willies just thinking about it.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    63. Re:Makes sense... by nicodoggie · · Score: 1

      That's because the usual Apple users are the type of people who go "Look at me! I have a Mac. and an iPod, and live under a cotton candy tree on Lollipop Lane." It's almost impossible not to notice these guys.

      Seriously, though, Apple users are usually the front man of every company (maybe except Microsoft). These guys are in Sales and marketing, talking to clients, to business partners.

      It's hard to find Linux users because they are the guys who spend hours in the data center, working like slaves, messing with configuration files. These guys are making code, silently making things run, so the Apple users can just keep going.

      A lot of them are also, apparently, locked up in their parents' basement.

    64. Re:Makes sense... by nicodoggie · · Score: 1

      I can attest to this. I live in the Philippines where almost no software is obtained legally.

      People here pay 50 pesos (roughly $1) for a Windows CD (65 pesos for a DVD copy of Vista). Most of the guys here don't give a damn whether or not the software is free as in speech at all.

      When you say, use Linux, people say what for? They don't want to have to go through hoops just to get their pirated copy of Warcraft 3 running, they can just pay a measly amount and go through a couple of mouse clicks.

      Now when these people go to work, all they want to use is Windows and MS Office, because that's what they use at home. Companies want to put the same software because they don't have to train staff to use it.

      This is how MS gets the big bucks. Businesses, especially the bigger ones, can't risk using pirated software because the Business-Software Alliance is pretty active in this front. They inspect companies, etc. So they buy MS products in bulk. Ka-Ching.

    65. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people just want to see those familiar icons... start menu... IE, Messenger and Word Excel. They don`t really know what the OS is, or why is it important. In Brazil we sell Linux discs on newspaper stands and nobody touches it. Most people don`t even buy the pirated MS Win... they call a teenager in the family or some guy from the office IT and ask for a reinstall. There`s even those who make a living out of it. They get screwed boxes and reinstall windows pirated. Actually... there are stores where the clerk will ask if you want original or pirated windows. 0$ against 200$. Guess what people take.

    66. Re:Makes sense... by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Wow, not me. At all. I definitely know more Linux users than Mac users. And non-geeks at that. I do a lot of work with various activist groups, and in the last three years or so, Linux has exploded there. A lot of meetings I go to have more people taking notes on their Linux laptop than Apple and Windows put together. These are non-techie social activist groups.

      Now I'm obviously not saying this is a representative sample of "society at large," but I am saying that here is a non-geek market where Linux is not only present, but dominant. Make of this what you will.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    67. Re:Makes sense... by ubergeek2009 · · Score: 1

      I only have one computer (a laptop cause I'm in high school and we have a desktop in the house.) I bought one of the bargain basement one's from toshiba a couple years back. Anyway it should not have had Vista on it. I was thinking about getting xp when I was talking to one of my friends (that runs linux, I think he was using dream linux at the time) told me about Linux. After I installed Ubuntu it took me a day to get my speakers to mute when I plugged in some headphones, but beyond that no problems. It supported my screen resolution, wifi card, whole 9 yards. It really amazed me. Since then I've only used Ubuntu on my machine and have learned a lot about computers. Enough to make me appreciate electronics and give me an understanding on how to make the machine work when it doesn't, but after learning some stuff it made me not want to get a degree in computer science, ever. Being computer literate is nescesarry to be productive on a computer if you are doing anything but writing a word document.

    68. Re:Makes sense... by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Yep... MAc users are extremely vocal. And in any case, you know you are talking to a Mac user if you are talking to a designer. That is a niche for ya.

  5. Servers? by sean_nestor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think thats sort of a "duh" statement when you consider server usage as well as desktop usage.

    Mac servers can't be much of the server market.

    1. Re:Servers? by Dolda2000 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      If you read the summary, it does say "client usage", though.

    2. Re:Servers? by vh22 · · Score: 1

      Yes but I beleive the parent is saying it is especially obvious why if you also take the server market into consideration.

  6. Embedded Difference? by eldavojohn · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Could Microsoft be accounting for embedded distributions of Windows CE versus embedded Linux compiled into his numbers? I think that might give it an edge over Apple's. Ballmer's presentation is just citing "use." Which could be pretty accurate while Net Applications analysis is also accurate for desktop/notebook/server situations. Don't see a lot of explanation past the charts on either of these links.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Embedded Difference? by moteyalpha · · Score: 1

      If you look at productivity, the whole equation changes. Windows is a time sucking vampire. Since I started using *nix systems my productivity has risen exponentially. The open community breeds productivity. So if you consider how much useful work is done the *nix wins by a landslide.

    2. Re:Embedded Difference? by cuz+teahan · · Score: 1

      Either that or the data was fudged to undermine/discredit OsX

    3. Re:Embedded Difference? by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      As you say, Ballmer is talking about use. His chart is probably based on the sort of expensive survey research that companies don't normally share with anyone and shows what people are actually using regardless of what they bought. Net Applications, on the other hand, is most likely telling us about sales by Linux vendors, either in units or dollar volume.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    4. Re:Embedded Difference? by lordtoran · · Score: 3, Informative

      Nope. I just think they estimated WORLDWIDE market share. Outside of the US, Apple doesn't sell. I live in a large city in Germany and there are exactly zero places selling Macs. In fact, I have never seen a Mac for real. People using Linux on their laptops can be sighted occasionally, however.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    5. Re:Embedded Difference? by particleman86 · · Score: 1

      Actually, Net Applications measures market share using data about browser hits on partner websites. I wouldn't expect dollars spent on Linux (or pirated Windows) to even hit the radar.

    6. Re:Embedded Difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Net Applications measures web hits. Sales don't figure into their numbers.

    7. Re:Embedded Difference? by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      Then it is even less useful.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    8. Re:Embedded Difference? by mi11house · · Score: 1

      Outside of the US, Apple doesn't sell.

      The hundreds of people I've just seen inside the Apple Store on Regent Street in London would beg to differ.

      If you look around a typical coffee shop in Central London, you will see just as many Apple machines as PCs, if not more. This is probably a function of necessity (lots of visual/graphic design people), appreciation of the Macbook hardware design, general affluence and a very effective localised "I'm a Mac" ad campaign. I would estimate at least 95% of the laptop PCs you see inside a Starbucks are running Windows.

      I don't think you can linearly-extrapolate your German experience - In *my* experience, Germany is very pro-open-source. But I'm not going to make a blanket statement about the rest of Europe ;-)

    9. Re:Embedded Difference? by theolein · · Score: 1

      Speak for yourself. Here in Switzerland, and I know this to be a fact in Scandinavia as well, the rate of Mac adoption was higher than it is in the US for a long and was only overtaken in the US in the las year or so. I am a sysadmin for a design company here in Switzerland supporting some 45 Macs and 10 PCs all on Apple OSX Servers.

      A third of our company employees are German. Like you many of them have little or no idea about using Macs and usually bitch and complain about it until I, the Mac sysadmin, has to delice their (very often equally expensive Thinkpad) PC from the usual assortment of Trojans, Spyware and general windows cruft. Then, after half a year on the Mac having had none of the crap that they had on their PCs,they often start thinking about buying their own Macs.

      I bought one of their Thinkpads off them and now run Ubuntu 8.10 off it as my private machine at work.

  7. Of course! by Techmeology · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course they're worried! If Linux (and the rest of the open source projects) become even slightly common, Microsoft have lost. They can't buy Linux, they can't do deals with it. They don't seem to be able to out perform it either. Short of zapping every magnetic and (some how) optical media on the planet, Microsoft cannot kill an open source project of a large magnitude; there'll always be community members willing to take over where one was "bought" by Microsoft.

    --
    Excuse for why is your room always messy?
    1. Re:Of course! by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      They can't buy Linux, they can't do deals with it.

      What if they offered Linus Torvalds a billion dollars for the trademark and the copyright to his code?

    2. Re:Of course! by Chabo · · Score: 3, Informative

      If MS got a hold of the trademark for "Linux", then someone would rename the kernel "Lunix", or "Orange", or something, and we'd continue where we left off.

      As for GPL'd code, it cannot be made proprietary.

      --
      Convert FLACs to a portable format with FlacSquisher
    3. Re:Of course! by Pembers · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Linus owns the trademark, but only some of the copyrights - the code he wrote himself. Copyright in the rest of Linux (probably most of it nowadays) belongs to whoever wrote it. (Unless they assigned it to someone else.) So unless MS wants to buy out all the other contributors too, that billion dollars wouldn't get them very far.

    4. Re:Of course! by flnca · · Score: 4, Informative

      What if they offered Linus Torvalds a billion dollars for the trademark and the copyright to his code?

      The Linux kernel is only a part of a GNU/Linux system. Almost everything, including the kernel, has been published under the GNU General Public License (cf. GNU).

      Linus Torvalds is still the figurehead of Linux kernel development, but even if Microsoft would manage to purchase all rights to the Linux kernel, that would have little impact, because the Linux kernel has already been published under the GPL, which makes it legal to modify it and keep it under the GPL forever, no matter if there also would be a proprietary version.

      The GNU project (which contains all free Linux software including the Linux kernel) also develops their own Mach-based kernel, called "Hurd" (the OS would be called GNU/Hurd then).

      Even if Microsoft would manage to purchase Richard Stallman, the head of GNU, it would have little impact on free software development, since all code that already exists can be forked away before any proprietary branches would emerge.

    5. Re:Of course! by RMingin · · Score: 1

      (Microsoft) purchase Richard Stallman. That line made me literally LOL. I don't think there's enough material wealth in the universe to buy out Stallman's ideals, and that's both a good and bad thing (see 'idealist' and contrast 'zealot').

      (Previously posted to wrong parent)

      --
      The preceding comment is my own, and in no way construes an opinon of the Emperor of Mankind.
    6. Re:Of course! by Jason+Earl · · Score: 1

      I'd still have *my* copy of Linux that was licensed to me under the terms of the GPLv2. In other words, the copyright cat is already out of the bag. Trademark, of course, is a different beast altogether. So the folks working on Linux would have to change the name. Perhaps Richard Stallman could finally get his wish and we'd simply call it LiGNUx (although that's probably too close to Linux).

      I would bet, however, that if Microsoft tried to throw its weight around over the "Linux" trademark that it would find that it has been seriously diluted.

      In short, Microsoft's best use for that $1 billion would probably be to use it to improve Windows (or at least market it a little better).

    7. Re:Of course! by pizzach · · Score: 1

      Extremely improbable, but it's not impossible right? I mean, no one thought that Apple could buy CUPS either. Regardless, they did manage to do all of the footwork before the GPL3 hit though.

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    8. Re:Of course! by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1

      I love and use linux, so please don't take this as a criticism of it or trolling of any kind. (For full disclosure I also use Windows; I'm really not a zealot on either side.)

      That said, linux is currently a bigger competitor than OS X because it's the only choice in the same ballpark. People just about anywhere could choose to use linux over Windows, and if they don't already have an OEM copy they could actually save money doing so. OS X isn't a competitor in that same vein; the option is to buy a cheapy few-hundred-dollar computer with Windows or Linux on it, or pay $1000+ for a Mac with OS X. For a lot of people, that's really not a choice--particularly with the tough economy.

      If OS X were made available on non-Mac, cheaper machines it would instantly be a bigger competitor than linux, and chances are it would take a big bite out of Windows' market share. Tying it to expensive hardware is an artificial limitation on its market, and thus on its level of competition for the entrenched giant. Yes, it's hard to compete with free, but people are used to paying something for their operating system already, either directly or tied to their computer purchase, so I don't think that's as huge of a selling point as many other people do. If it were, linux's market share would be much higher and Windows' much lower. Open up OS X to everybody and I think Microsoft's view of its biggest competition does a 180 by the next morning. And perhaps most disheartening, a large portion of OS X's new success may come from leeching linux client installations.

    9. Re:Of course! by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      They could buy the trademark, but since even Linux itself is made up of a huge amount of work from many contributors, and licensed under GPL2, the best that Microsoft could hypothetically do is buy the trademark for Linux and then fork the kernel. It would certainly screw with a lot of guys as far as naming their products, but as to actual effect on the operating system, it would negligible.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    10. Re:Of course! by Seth+Kriticos · · Score: 1
      I layman's terms: Linus and the other contributors, that published code can not revoke the license after it is out.

      In lawyer's terms:

      (anonymous lawyer): That sounds like a legal opinion by a non-lawyer who has heard that there is a requirement of "consideration" to form a contract. First of all, the grant of a license is not in itself a contract, anyway. I could grant you a license as a gift; that would not mean that I could revoke it at will anymore than I can require you to give back any other gift I've given you. Second, the requirement of consideration is something that is bound to be misunderstood by someone who has little knowledge of the law.

      A person who publishes code (or a book or anything else) under the GPL has no right to revoke it. It becomes in the wild, as they say. This happened, for example, to Borland, which made its Interbase database available under the GPL and then changed its mind. Borland could prevent future versions of Interbase from being open sourced, but the version it made open source was in the wild and became the basis of what is now the Firebird open source database. (See http://www.firebirdsql.org/ ) (Firebird was not gpl'd, but same thing would have happend under gpl.)

      Likewise, MySQL cannot revoke rights of anyone to use any version of MySQL that has been published under the GPL. If MySQL decided not to publish future versions under GPL license, anyone else would be free to form a project to continue open source development of a gpl'd version. This new project would not have same rights as MySQL, which is original creator of MySQL and has right to license under any license it wants. But anyone can fork MySQL and grant gpl licenses to others.

    11. Re:Of course! by pizzach · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes, there are a magnitude many more contributors for the Linux kernel than there are for CUPS. My point was that Apple did the footwork to get the permission from the individual CUPS contributors. No one thought it would have been possible. Theoretically, Microsoft could do the same thing with the Linux kernel. But even then, it's not like a fork wouldn't be made at that point.

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    12. Re:Of course! by vadim_t · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The kernel is too big.

      It might work with smaller projects. But the kernel has had thousands of contributors, some of which won't sell for any price, some that can't be found anymore and some that are now dead. Just figuring out who holds the copyright over which parts of files patched by 50 different people over its existence would be a nightmare.

      Then there are tricky questions. Such as, who owns the copyright for a line where the first contributor did the general concept, the second patched the off by one error, and the third added a check for the return value? How much must a block of code change to determine that the original author's code is now gone if it retains the functionality?

    13. Re:Of course! by sjames · · Score: 1

      Even buying them all out wouldn't help. That code was distributed under GPL v2 to a great many people, all of whom have an unlimited right to distribute it further. Even if every contributor to the kernel (credited and not) fully agreed, they could not retract license on the already distributed source nor prevent others from continuing the work.

      Even retracting the trademark would be difficult. Linux has clearly stated on many occasions that it may be used in connection with the OS and it;s derivatives. He would likely be estopped from preventing that use now.

      All of this, of course, assumes that Linus wouldn't just let out a hearty laugh at such an offer.

    14. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't have to buy Linux, they only need to buy the companies that contribute most of the code (Red Hat, Novel, IBM, Sun, Canonical and the likes), or at least part of them, so the linux development will simply stagnate without their developers; and while buying IBM may be excesive even for Microsoft, Red Hat or Canonical would be pocket change for Ballmer. (the reason they haven't done it yet is because the EU Commision would sanction them to oblivion)

      The idea that there's an almost unlimited number of communty members eager to work for free, may be true for some small projects, but most of the boring but indispensable programs are made payed coders.

    15. Re:Of course! by Jurily · · Score: 1

      So unless MS wants to buy out all the other contributors too, that billion dollars wouldn't get them very far.

      Wouldn't get them very far, indeed. GPL is fun: once it's released, it stays that way. All you can do with it is to stop distributing and stop releasing new versions. Also, you can fork it, and there's nothing the owner can do about it.

      Wanna guess how many people will pick up the project once word gets out there's good money in it?

    16. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if they offered Linus Torvalds a billion dollars for the trademark and the copyright to his code?

      Linus Torvalds owns the trademark (to the Linux kernel) ... but the copyright (to the Linux kernel) is shared (literally) amongst many thousands of contributors. There is no one owner. All of the contributors to the Linux kernel codebase have contributed to it on the basis that their code always remains open.

      Microsoft has no hope of buying it out. None whatsoever.

      As for the majority of the OS that goes into GNU/Linux distributions, which is the GNU software ... the copyright to that is held by the Free Software Foundation. Google for a document called the "GNU maifesto", read it, and then see how much hope Microsoft have of buying them out.

      Then there is GNU/Linux "application software". Debian.org has about 26,000 packages worth of this in its open source repositories. The copyright to that stuff is owned by the approximately 1.5 million open source contributors worldwide who wrote it.

      Gee, I can't see Microsoft buying them out either. In fact, I can't see Microsoft even being able to find them all.

    17. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if they offered Linus Torvalds a billion dollars for the trademark and the copyright to his code?

      My guess is that they'd be slapped with a shareholder lawsuit for buying a trademark they can't enforce, and a fraction of a percent of the Linux kernel, which has already been released under the GPL.

    18. Re:Of course! by cstdenis · · Score: 1

      Linux is just a Kernel, there is always Hurd.....Sure it doesn't really work, but if all the Linux developers moved over to it, it would get fixed pretty fast.

      --
      1984 was not supposed to be an instruction manual.
    19. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing.

      In addition to what many others have said already, I'll also point out that Linus himself has time and again insisted that his tree isn't actually special - it's what everyone happens to use, but if he died tomorrow, another tree would become "mainline" instead.

      And he's right: from a technical perspective, there isn't anything special about his tree.

    20. Re:Of course! by pxc · · Score: 1

      Maybe. They could develop their proprietary additions to the Linux kernel over a period of years without distributing them to anyone, keeping them up-to-date and merging FOSS updates. Then they could purchase the Linux kernel, and release their heavily modified proprietary version.

      Of course, buying the copyrights to the entire Linux kernel would be basically impossible, since it's got so many persons' work in it.

    21. Re:Of course! by dbIII · · Score: 1
      LiGnuX rides again as more advertising for gnu via the efforts of others.

      We should be content with our heroes as heroes and not build up some enormous pile of myth to render them as Greek Gods with phalluses that require two locomotives to move.

      Gnu was an impressive project but there is not a single gnu linux distribution (not even Debian) and there are some distributions with no gnu software at all (not even gnu "ls" since busybox does a better job at the low end). The gnu tools are an important part of nearly every linux distribution but are dwarfed by Xorg, openoffice, gnome, kde, latex etc etc.

      While they are an admirable group to evangelise I still do not think it's best to give them the credit for projects that are run by other people. As I said above, there is not a single linux distribution that has been put together by gnu so it really was an attempt to get praise from the efforts of others.

    22. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he didnt write code for a long while, and he still write very little code. He instead wrote git and is a political head.

    23. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't GNU's OS just be called GNU? It's their own kernel, so they shouldn't care if it's omitted in the name. This GNU/Linux stuff only happened because they used Linus' kernel.

    24. Re:Of course! by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      Nope. Most of the Linux dev's call it "Linux" not "GNU/Linux" and rms probably won't let them contribute code unless they agree to his preferred naming system. So a fork of Hurd is more likely.

      --
      $ make available
    25. Re:Of course! by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      I think buying Linus out would have potential as a disruptive strategy. Microsoft could market one of their own products (say WindowsCE) as Linux.

      The Linux name now has a lot of recognition among the general public and PHBs. This recognition may not transfer to a new name, particularly if it is clear somebody is playing funny buggers.

      Just thinking about the way the BSD Lawsuit held BSD back and gave Linux a head start.

      But I agree with most people who replied to my post that the GPL provides a lot of protection to Linux as a product.

    26. Re:Of course! by flnca · · Score: 0

      Everything under a GPL license is part of the GNU project. That includes Xorg, GNOME, etc. Have a look at the GNU Packages page. GNOME is called the "GNU Desktop".

    27. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which is even a better reason for companies to use FOSS, since there will always be someone who forks software that was licenced under GPL, while MS could go out of business ending support for all those expensive proprietary tools they bought.

    28. Re:Of course! by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      And I cannot fathom Torvalds actually selling the Linux trademark to Microsoft. I can't even imagine the value of that trademark at this point, and beyond that, who can foresee how the EU and other watchdogs would view such a move.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    29. Re:Of course! by quickOnTheUptake · · Score: 1

      Even if Microsoft would manage to purchase Richard Stallman

      This just hurts my head.

      --
      Mod points: Guaranteed to remove your sense of humor.
      Side effects may include gullibility and temporary retardation
    30. Re:Of course! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Everything under a GPL license is part of the GNU project.

      Now that is an extremely stange thing to write.

      I think you will find instead that everything produced by gnu is a gnu project.

      I suggest you read the GPL before bothering us with such odd statements which would normally result in people questioning your honesty. Here's a clue - those that run their projects are the ones that run their projects - and if gnu isn't running it then it is not theirs. So tell me since I must have missed it, when did RMS or another member of the gnu team take over running Xorg? They didn't? So how then is it a gnu project if gnu people are not doing it?

      Unless this is some redefinition of language again - in which case you can say anything you like and have it true in your own mind even if it is somewhat of an impediment to communication with those of us stuck with what the dictionary says.

      I suggest looking up LiGnuX on google so you know how this "ownership" for advertising purposes started.

    31. Re:Of course! by mcrbids · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As for GPL'd code, it cannot be made proprietary.

      Sure it can! All that has to happen is for the GPL code copyright holders to be contacted and given a reasonable opportunity to object to the change. Things like this are accomplished by posting a legal statement of intent in a newspaper of record applicable to the scope in question.

      After a reasonable opportunity to object to the license change, the license to the code can then be changed to the new license. If a copyright holder objects to the change, his/her code must be removed from the codebase with the changed license.

      It's fairly simple, and license changes like this happen all the time. It's how the Linux kernel will be moved from GPL2 to GPL3 if/when that ever happens.

      Now, a specific *copy* of the GPL-licensed code cannot be made proprietary. For example, if you have a legally obtained copy of some GPL software, and you live up to the terms of the GPL in your use of the code, the rights you get from the license for your copy of the code cannot be taken from you without your agreeing to the newer terms. And even if you accept the newer terms, the original, unmodified copy can still be considered to be usable under the original GPL terms by anybody ELSE who didn't agree to the newer terms.

      But to be strictly truthful, GPL code *CAN* be (and often is!) made proprietary. I myself have found code snippets, libraries, and widgets, licensed under the GPL or similar licenses, that I wanted to use, and asked for permission from the original author to use the code under a less free license. Usually, the author has no objections to such requests. (I remember just 1 refusal)

      Take a look at the original SSH vs OpenSSH for another example of open code becoming proprietary. Commercial SSH was originally a commercial software package with a "free" license, that was then later closed. Since the copyright holders behind the commercial SSH had no objection, this change was legal. OpenSSH today is a derivative work of the "free" licensed code before it was closed.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    32. Re:Of course! by tibman · · Score: 1

      Linus would probably take the $Billion and fork the ex-Linux code and rename it into something else. Then he'd have enough Capital to PAY the contributers to the Kernel.. or even build a secret underground lair for hackers to live in and work on the Kernel.

      --
      http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
    33. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if Microsoft would manage to purchase Richard Stallman, the head of GNU...

      Blasphemy!!

    34. Re:Of course! by flnca · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not a lawyer, but the GPL affiliates anyone who uses it with the FSF and the GNU project. But that's only my opinion, and as a developer using that license, I don't care about it.

    35. Re:Of course! by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      And I cannot fathom Torvalds actually selling the Linux trademark to Microsoft.

      Everybody has their price. What if he gets run over by a bus or killed in a freak accident with a flying chair. Are you sure his estate wouldn't want to cash in?

    36. Re:Of course! by flnca · · Score: 1

      In addition to my other reply, one can regard every application running on GNU as part of the GNU infrastructure, as every application running on Windows is part of the Windows infrastructure. Insofar is it possible to consider GNU as the operating system and Linux as the kernel of the operating system. Furthermore, most GPL-ed applications use the GNU build process (and build tools), the GNU libraries and the GNU compilers. Even on systems like BSD (where GNU is sometimes considered as encumbering), GNU tools and applications using GNU are everywhere. If you want to be GNU-free, you have to create your own C/C++ compiler, linker, shells, shell tools, runtime libraries in addition to the kernel. Also, if you wish not to be associated with the FSF, perhaps you shouldn't use a license with a FSF copyright in it. But that's just my opinion right, who am I to talk to you wisecrack.

    37. Re:Of course! by dbIII · · Score: 1
      But it's not really running on gnu unless you take this incredibly weird and/or highly partisan definition, in which case IMHO we are talking in completely different languages. If you apply the argument to other things it is the same as saying that AutoCAD or Firefox is a Microsoft product.

      I'm not opposed to the FSF, I'm just opposed to bullshit and find the "with us or against us" attitude you are using here is just an annoying distraction away from the point. I can't see how anything can TRUTHFULLY be a gnu project without gnu people working on it. Also claiming other buggers efforts is counterproductive and gets nothing more than temporary glory. Hence - not GNU/Xorg, not GNU/Opensolaris not GNU/Microsoft Development kit that came with gcc a few years back etc etc.

    38. Re:Of course! by flnca · · Score: 1

      Well, any project is free to choose its licenses, its build tools and so on. As long as GNU is involved, its part of the GNU "project". The purpose of GNU is not "ownership", it is to provide a unified UNIX-like platform for applications to run on. In a sense it is like Java, except GNU has that convoluted build process that requires compiling. And GNU does not protect one from platform dependencies (like when an application is using Linux/BSD/Hurd system calls directly). At least, all "GNU" applications (those that use the GPL, the build process, etc.), share one common thing: They're free open-source software. Thus, the scope of GNU is far bigger than just a handful of people working directly for GNU. It encompasses all developers contributing to the GNU infrastructure. It's huge, it's swift, and it will kill Windows.

    39. Re:Of course! by ciggieposeur · · Score: 1

      Sure it can! All that has to happen is for the GPL code copyright holders to be contacted and given a reasonable opportunity to object to the change.

      No. When you contact a copyright holder, it isn't "I will change the license unless you say no," it's "Can I please change the license?" If the copyright holder says no, you're done.

      In the case of the Linux kernel, some of the copyright holders are dead, at least one is in prison (ahem), and huge chunks of critical code is copyrighted by corporations that have zero incentive to give Microsoft such a huge advantage.

      A huge multi-year effort to push the kernel to GPLv3 (or even GPL v2 or later) might feasibly result in enough of a critical mass of code to change; after a few years of replacing the components that are still GPLv2 only the new codebase might become the de facto standard. But there is absolutely no chance in hell of enough code in the kernel moving to a non-GPL'ish license to make a proprietary fork.

    40. Re:Of course! by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      This conversation is beginning to resemble "who would win in a fight, Batman or Wolverine?" It's pointless. Linus isn't going to sell the trademark, I doubt any regulators would even let Microsoft buy it, even if he wanted to.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    41. Re:Of course! by Chabo · · Score: 1

      I suggest you read the GPL license in full.

      Technically, if you use GPL code in a closed-source project, you're violating the license. If you ask the license-holder for permission, then all that means is that they're telling you they won't go after you for violating that license.

      Beyond that, you're violating the spirit of the GPL by including GPL-licensed code in a closed-source project. If the author wanted the work to be usable in that way, then they would've licensed it under one that gives more freedom to redistribute, like the BSD or Apache licenses. I chose Apache for my Sourceforge projects, cause I didn't feel redistribution restrictions were important for those. Since the projects you borrowed from were licensed under the GPL, you're obligated to follow their guidelines.

      I'm not an expert on the GPL, but if you used the code in a company-internal project, then I don't think you're obligated to publicly release the source code. However, if it's an externally-distributed project, you're going to have a hellstorm if people find out.

      --
      Convert FLACs to a portable format with FlacSquisher
    42. Re:Of course! by dvs01 · · Score: 1

      Why not just give in and sell out? Sell Linux to Microsoft for a billion dollars. Then, fork it and use the money to continue development. If they want to pay for something that's free, they can go ahead :)

    43. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention, unless the contributors to any of these projects surrendered their copyright to one leader or group, in order to buy it and close down, you need to find every one of those people and find their price. I'm not sure if Microsoft has enough money to buy RMS.

    44. Re:Of course! by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Gnu is not involved at all.

      The FSF is involved by providing the GPL, and although some people were in both groups they have seperate purposes and activities.

      I suggest you go to the FSF home page and take a look.

      What you are advocating is not only incorrect, it is also an echo of the "infectious licence giving away control" bullshit that was used by someone in the infamous "Halloween" document from Microsoft as a scare campaign. You do NOT cede ownership of a project to gnu or the FSF by using this licence - it stays your project unless somebody else puts enough work in to make it theirs.

      Things do not automaticly become gnu projects by magic.

    45. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Xorg is not even under the GPL, it uses the MIT License (sometimes refered to as the X11 License).

    46. Re:Of course! by flnca · · Score: 1

      it is also an echo of the "infectious licence giving away control" bullshit

      No. To me, GNU is one community, and not many unrelated splinter groups. Of course, every group within the community has their own identity, goals, etc., but ultimately, they're contributing to one big goal. It's just a, say, unifying approach.

    47. Re:Of course! by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately communication requires that some consensus be reached between people as to the meaning of things. I think you will find that even the people that wrote the original gnu tools do not agree with your meaning. Please check out their website and that of the FSF before telling people that your own personally derived view is correct and that others are wrong. Please check out the old gnu newsletters - also this may help:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU/Linux_naming_controversy

      I think this quote from Linus sums it up best:

      Well, I think it's justified, but it's justified if you actually make a GNU distribution of Linux ... the same way that I think that "Red Hat Linux" is fine, or "SuSE Linux" or "Debian Linux", because if you actually make your own distribution of Linux, you get to name the thing, but calling Linux in general "GNU Linux" I think is just ridiculous.

    48. Re:Of course! by flnca · · Score: 1

      Well, I must admit RMS personally influenced me on this. He told me in a 1995 e-mail to say "GNU/Linux", not "Linux". I'll read up on the controversy, thanks for the link.

    49. Re:Of course! by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      FYI.
      License is a permission to use.
      The code is always proprietary. Since proprietary means: "... one having exclusive rights".
      Under copyright laws, a copyright holder has exclusive rights, unless the copyright holder gives away or looses those rights.
      Now, GPL does not cancel copyright, nor is it an agreement to give away those rights. Contributing code to a OSS project, at maximum can be interpreted as a sharing of copyright, aka joint copyright.(Compare OpenOffice Contributor Agreement for explicit defintion vs Apache CLA of just licensing)
      I am an IP consultant in EU, but not a formal lawyer.

    50. Re:Of course! by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      You might want to find out what a "Newspaper of Record is, and also what a legal notice is.

      We're not talking about licenses, we're talking about how the legal process works in areas ranging from copyrights, easements, and zoning ordinances, to the treatment of abandoned property.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  8. as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be ca by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 0

    as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be carping there pants.

  9. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by thermian · · Score: 1

    as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be carping there pants.

    Not really. Microsoft Office is the dominant word processing package on the Mac.

    --
    A learning experience is one of those things that say, 'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.' - D. Adams
  10. They aren't in the same business by Mononoke · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Microsoft sells software.

    Apple sells hardware.

    While there is certainly a small amount of overlap in their product lines, they aren't really in direct competition.

    --
    NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
    1. Re:They aren't in the same business by stewbacca · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Apple sells hardware and software. You may have heard of Final Cut Pro, or Aperture, just to state a few high end products of theirs.

      Microsoft sells software and hardware. You may have heard of the Xbox360 or the Zune.

      The generalization that Apple sells computers and Microsoft sells software is a gross one, to say the least.

    2. Re:They aren't in the same business by rbanffy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are Apple products that compete directly with Microsoft ones. Both Apple and Microsoft make keyboards and mice. I regard Microsoft keyboards and mice as the nicest products they sell.

    3. Re:They aren't in the same business by rbanffy · · Score: 4, Funny

      SQL Server comes as a distant third, BTW.

    4. Re:They aren't in the same business by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Nicely done - adding the punchline that gives away (even to Germans) that you're being ironic in a reply to your own post.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    5. Re:They aren't in the same business by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1

      I even saw a Zune once.
      I think what the OP meant was Apple makes money on hardware. MS makes money on software.

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    6. Re:They aren't in the same business by inerlogic · · Score: 2

      right, MS is the default everywhere due to market penetration.

      Apple has brainwashed users ready to buy anything they're selling....

      no direct competition

    7. Re:They aren't in the same business by nine-times · · Score: 1

      This is what I came in here to say. Microsoft is primarily a software company, so really the biggest threat to them isn't going to be another competing software company, but rather the commodification of software in general. Whenever your product becomes a commodity, your profit margin is going to shrink. So though Apple offering a better operating system for a couple hundred less would be a big worry for Microsoft, it's much scarier to think that anyone can download Linux for free and not have to pay anyone anything for it.

      And in that sense, Linux isn't as big of a threat to Apple as it is to Microsoft, since Apple is primarily a hardware company. Their software and services are, to some degree, value-added. Even if operating systems in general become a commodity, Apple can continue to sell hardware and can even continue to offer value-added features to sell their hardware.

      However, none of this is to say that Apple hasn't done damage to Microsoft. Apple has helped raise awareness of the idea that you can use something other than Windows, and I would maintain that iTunes and the iPod have severely damaged Microsoft's long-term media plans-- but I won't go into too much detail here.

    8. Re:They aren't in the same business by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      That's still a gross oversimplification. Apple also makes money on software and MS also makes money with hardware.

    9. Re:They aren't in the same business by RoccamOccam · · Score: 1

      I wonder if, in the far distant future, Microsoft will have to reinvent themselves as Apple to compete with Linux. In other words, Windows won't be selling to OEMs anymore, so Microsoft will have to develop a premium hardware/software brand of their own.

    10. Re:They aren't in the same business by Mr.+DOS · · Score: 1

      Which is funny, because Apple's keyboards are probably the lowest-quality product they sell. I challenge you to find five decent typists who like typing on Mac keyboards.

            --- Mr. DOS

    11. Re:They aren't in the same business by gohmifune · · Score: 1

      But Final Cut and Aperture require a Mac, thus selling Hardware. Their entire business structure is based on the selling of Hardware, making the software justify the hardware. The initiative to make Hardware is because of gaps in the market for Microsoft. Had the DC lived on, there'd be no 360, if the world used Zens, D2s, or Karmas more, there would probably be no Zune, and MS would not be significantly worse or better.

    12. Re:They aren't in the same business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody has called you out on this yet so I will.

      Yes, they really are in direct competition. One more MacBook purchase is one fewer consumer Windows purchase, and vice versa (modulo smaller effects like virtualization and Linux).

      They have different strategies toward making money, that's true, but make no mistake: they are very much competing with each other for marketshare.

    13. Re:They aren't in the same business by smoker2 · · Score: 1

      No sorry, Apple RE-sells hardware, and Microsoft RE-sells Hardware. Neither of them are involved in manufacturing. All they want is control over where their software gets sold.

      And that will be their undoing.

    14. Re:They aren't in the same business by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I don't know... maybe. But I think either way they're going to have to start embracing open standards and compete based on features and quality rather than vendor lock-in.

    15. Re:They aren't in the same business by yodamitsu · · Score: 0

      At first glance, spot on! Although something that everyone seems to have missed in these posts is that Apple have always played in more a professional market,eg: Photography, Publishing, videography, motion graphics etc.. It has taken its time, however thanks to some clever Apple marketing and consumer toys (iPod) Apple have spilled over into Msofts consumer playing field and are dominating it! Yes its true Msft dominates the small business/admin side of things, but creative professional or "NowÂthe creative hobbyist, not even close.

    16. Re:They aren't in the same business by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Apple sells hardware and software.

      What software does Apple sell that doesn't require a dongle^H^H^H^H^H^HMacintosh ?

      (I'm sure there is some, but I must admit I couldn't think of any off the top of my head.)

      Microsoft sells software and hardware. You may have heard of the Xbox360 or the Zune.

      Microsoft's hardware interests are relatively small (although they're certainly larger than Apple's software interests).

      The generalization that Apple sells computers and Microsoft sells software is a gross one, to say the least.

      Actually it's a pretty good one, because it quickly and easily identifies the basic structure of the basic business models behind each company.

      The bulk of Apple's business is built around selling hardware. The bulk of Microsoft's business is built around selling software. That's just the way it is.

    17. Re:They aren't in the same business by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      The bulk of Apple's business is built around selling hardware. The bulk of Microsoft's business is built around selling software. That's just the way it is.

      True statement, but you can't dismiss either company as JUST a software company or JUST a hardware company, when they both obviously do pretty well in both.

      For some perspective, my company makes ONE piece of software for the Department of Defense. We are a multi-million dollar company with state-of-the-art facilities and top quality engineers. We have over 300 employees on site. We provide good salaries for hundreds of people for ONE piece of software. So even if Apple only makes Final Cut Pro for Macs, they still sell a crap load more licenses than my company could only dream to (at about $500 per license more, to boot). Diminishing the importance of Apple Final Cut Pro and Aperture (to a lesser degree) by saying they only make that stuff to sell Macs is an over-simplification.

    18. Re:They aren't in the same business by archshade · · Score: 1

      you seem to be forgetting about the webcams.

      M$ webcams are study, well made and worked right out the box for me (both Susie 11.0/11.1 and fedora 10)

      --
      Most Damage is done by people who are AWAKE
    19. Re:They aren't in the same business by ignavus · · Score: 2, Funny

      I regard Microsoft keyboards and mice as the nicest products they sell.

      And I had a Microsoft Vacuum Cleaner. It didn't suck either.

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    20. Re:They aren't in the same business by bonch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're wrong, Apple is in the business to sell hardware. Apple's software exists to sell hardware. Final Cut Pro? That is sold to get studios to replace their high-end Avid editing stations with Macs. It all goes back to their hardware. Their latest release of Logic Pro even removed the dongle copy protection requirement, which tells you how little they care about software piracy as long as you're using Macs. iWork '09 requires little more than a serial number which you can enter into the downloadable trial version to unlock the full program.

      If Apple was a hardware AND software company, their software would be available for Windows. iTunes doesn't count because it's free and exists to sell iPods. Are you sensing a theme yet?

    21. Re:They aren't in the same business by bonch · · Score: 1

      It's not a diminishment to point out that they sell software to sell their hardware. It's merely describing a smart company that supports its hardware platform with software, giving it value to customers.

    22. Re:They aren't in the same business by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Say what you will about the Redmond giant, but I'm using a Microsoft mouse on my iMac as we speak and it was a deliberate purchase, not a hand-me-down second hand mouse from another machine.

    23. Re:They aren't in the same business by DiLLeMaN · · Score: 1

      Here's one.

      --
      /var/run/twitter.sock is a twitter socket puppet.
    24. Re:They aren't in the same business by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      I don't know if I'm a decent typist, but I love the new tiny bluetooth KB. I only replaced my old white keyboard because I wanted something smaller for my desk, but I liked that one too. No doubt that both are totally different to PC keyboard and require serious adjustment by the user.

      I look at keyboards and mice like your car - they're the direct physical connection between you and your computer in the same way the steering wheel, pedals, stick and seat are in your car. Switching between different brands can be off-putting until you get used to them.

    25. Re:They aren't in the same business by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      Much as anthropomorphizing (i.e. saying things like "the program gets confused when you do X") is a gross oversimplification. But it's a useful one.

      Microsoft makes MOST of its money on software

      Apple makes MOST of its money on hardware

      --
      $ make available
    26. Re:They aren't in the same business by Mr.+DOS · · Score: 1

      So what do you like about it? I always find my hands/fingers hurt after typing on them too long, mostly because the keys are too sticky to use properly (and they don't seem to loosen up over time).

            --- Mr. DOS

    27. Re:They aren't in the same business by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      Apple sells hardware and software.

      What software does Apple sell that doesn't require a dongle^H^H^H^H^H^HMacintosh ?

      Isn't there a Quicktime Pro version or something?

      --
      $ make available
    28. Re:They aren't in the same business by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      I think M$ would rather do what the GP said than what the parent said.

      --
      $ make available
    29. Re:They aren't in the same business by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      So what, exactly, does Safari sell?

    30. Re:They aren't in the same business by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      No, Apple are definitely involved in the design and construction of their hardware. They outsource the manufacturing, but that's not the only step in the process. There's R&D, testing, prototyping and a lot of other work that goes on before the final specs and designs are delivered to the manufacturer for production.

      Hell, go and watch the video Apple hosts on the new processes they designed for tooling the MacBook case and the new battery design. Nothing ground-breaking, but it shows they're definitely doing everything short of the large-scale manufacturing process.

      I won't comment on Microsoft, because I don't know anything about their hardware sources.

    31. Re:They aren't in the same business by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      You may have heard of ... the Zune.

      Nope; can't say I have.

    32. Re:They aren't in the same business by chrisxcr1 · · Score: 1

      Back when the iPhone only supported web apps Safari enabled windows users to write them, so I guess it was there to tell Windows people it was ok to buy an iPhone.

    33. Re:They aren't in the same business by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but MS don't make a single computer that runs their main OS. I think the generalization fits.

    34. Re:They aren't in the same business by Talar · · Score: 1

      I regard Microsoft keyboards and mice as the nicest products they sell.

      Then it is almost a little sad that they are rebranded products made by other manufacturers like Logitech or Dell.

    35. Re:They aren't in the same business by Oooskar · · Score: 1

      iPhones

    36. Re:They aren't in the same business by DiLLeMaN · · Score: 1

      Mind you, I have the newer alu keyboard, that really flat one. It's more like a laptop keyboard, so no stickyness there. The previous version (the white/translucent one) is not that bad, but it doesn't come close to the alu one. The cup of coffee I fed mine once probably doesn't help either =]

      --
      /var/run/twitter.sock is a twitter socket puppet.
    37. Re:They aren't in the same business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your soul. To the Devil.

    38. Re:They aren't in the same business by nicodoggie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's an effort make sure that web developers of such tools like Online Banking try coding to open standards instead of locking themselves and their customers to use IE only.

      It would be bad for the Mac if the bosses can't do their transactions on it. Sure Linux will be able to handle it, but consider how hard it is to convince a PHB to use Linux instead of Windows or a Mac.

    39. Re:They aren't in the same business by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      You're wrong, Apple is in the business to sell hardware. Apple's software exists to sell hardware.

      No, I'm not wrong--I merely take offense to the oversimplification and cynicism that Apple half-asses some software just to sell hardware.

      You can twist your logic however you like, such as, Apple's hardware exists to sell it's OS. It's whatever perspective you want to take--unless you are in on business development meetings, you simply can't say.

      I've owned Macs long before FCP and Aperture came out. There was no need to go out and buy a Mac to run those programs, because I already owned one anyways.

      You can be as anti-capitalist and cynical as you like, but I tend to see it a different way. Apple created FCP and Aperture to support the existing Mac user and creative industry base. The fact that FCP and Aperture *might* draw in new customers (not very likely, since high end video production is niche, and Photo editors are a dime a dozen), where's the harm in that strategy?

    40. Re:They aren't in the same business by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      AFAIK, Apple still manufactures at their Cork plant in Ireland, so there.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    41. Re:They aren't in the same business by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Apple sells hardware and software.

      What software does Apple sell that doesn't require a dongle^H^H^H^H^H^HMacintosh ?

      Not counting iPhone/iPod software? Quicktime Pro for Windows.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  11. Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by olddotter · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Perhaps after the success of the switch adds Apple inched ahead of Linux on the desk top. But if you look over the last 15 years, I believe that there has been more Linux on the desktop than Apple OS's.

    It hasn't been in anyone's interest to say that. I think that is even true of the Linux companies. For a long time they wanted to be under the radar under dogs. Perhaps because they didn't want a fight to the death with Microsoft.

    1. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by blueZ3 · · Score: 1

      How do you get radar to fit under dogs, and how can a Linux company fit under the radar that's under the dog? :-)

      --
      Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
    2. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by David+Jao · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Perhaps after the success of the switch adds Apple inched ahead of Linux on the desk top. But if you look over the last 15 years, I believe that there has been more Linux on the desktop than Apple OS's.

      It hasn't been in anyone's interest to say that. I think that is even true of the Linux companies. For a long time they wanted to be under the radar under dogs. Perhaps because they didn't want a fight to the death with Microsoft.

      This is an excellent observation and it lies at the heart of Linux's success. Anyone who fails to grasp this point is not even in the right ballgame.

      In terms of economics, the most important difference between free and proprietary platforms is that free platforms do not require a large userbase in order to thrive. The number of skilled developers willing to work on Linux for free would remain very high even if Linux's userbase were to drastically shrink. (This is incidentally the main reason why Microsoft cannot win against Linux, at least not by any means available in the marketplace.)

      By contrast, a proprietary platform requires a large userbase in order to even survive, since the only way for a proprietary platform to get developers is to pay them a salary, and salaries require money, which requires users. There are no volunteer developers who are even able, let alone willing, to contribute code to Microsoft Windows for free, because of the locked-in nature of the platform.

      That's why proprietary vendors routinely inflate their usage numbers. Larger numbers are necessary in order to convince new users that the platform is worthy of adoption. If a proprietary platform does not have a lot of users, then it has no future, and rational users would not risk selecting that platform. That's why OS/2 died, and that's why Solaris (despite being made free recently) is about to die.

      We thus have a situation where every vendor, other than the Linux vendors, has a huge economic incentive to inflate the reported size of their userbase. I don't necessarily mean illegal activity here; there are well known legal methods by which usage numbers can be inflated. For example, Microsoft counts every Vista OEM license as a Vista sale even if the user exercises downgrade rights to XP, and so on. In any case, it doesn't surprise me at all that the actual market share of Linux is far higher than what is being reported.

    3. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by bonch · · Score: 1

      Inched ahead of Linux on the desktop? Linux on the desktop barely even registers. It's not even a blip on the radar in comparison.

      Your justification is bizarre--that nobody knows the "truth" because Linux companies want to be underdogs? Give me a break.

    4. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by bonch · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but this is just really, really stupid. The crux of your post is that Linux is doing better than it is, but nobody knows because Linux companies are so goshdarn humble. Do you actually believe that? And you wrote it on a site that proclaims every year to be the year of Linux on the desktop?

    5. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by David+Jao · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sorry, but this is just really, really stupid. The crux of your post is that Linux is doing better than it is, but nobody knows because Linux companies are so goshdarn humble. Do you actually believe that? And you wrote it on a site that proclaims every year to be the year of Linux on the desktop?

      The crux of my post is that "doing better" does not mean the same thing for Linux as it does for Windows or Apple.

      You speak of the mythical Linux on the desktop. I honestly don't think Linux will ever achieve success in the desktop market. I'm not saying this out of elitism -- as far as I can tell, it is cold objective fact. Most Linux developers are not traditional desktop users. By this I mean that even though Linux developers do use the desktop, they are not representative of the average desktop user. The Linux desktop will always be optimized for the average Linux developer rather than the average desktop user. Obviously, the ideal desktop for an average Linux developer is very different from the ideal desktop for an average user. That's why Linux will have a hard time in the desktop market -- because it's written by, and targeted to, developers, not traditional desktop users.

      At the same time, Linux does not need to succeed on the desktop in order to be relevant. The vast majority of Linux developers will continue to contribute to Linux even if it fails in the wider desktop market. (Note that this is where Linux differs significantly from Windows -- if Windows fails in the consumer desktop market, it's game over.) The fact that you continue to use desktop penetration as your measure of success shows that you are still trying to judge Linux using Windows's standards. Such reasoning is faulty, and even more so now that large segments of the computing market (i.e. netbooks) are breaking away from the traditional desktop paradigm.

    6. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by Almahtar · · Score: 1

      This is another reason it'd be smart for Microsoft to say that Linux is a bigger competitor than Apple if they fear Apple. It would be smart for them to downplay Apple as a competitor as much as they can so people will think that Apple isn't about to change the nature of the market (and thus they should not bother to consider switching to Apple or adopting a cross-platform strategy).

      Linux is held at large as being a minor player and a hacker's OS. So if they can say "Even Linux is a bigger player than Apple" then they are effectively saying "Apple is irrelevant, you may safely ignore them."

    7. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      You speak of the mythical Linux on the desktop. I honestly don't think Linux will ever achieve success in the desktop market. I'm not saying this out of elitism -- as far as I can tell, it is cold objective fact. Most Linux developers are not traditional desktop users. By this I mean that even though Linux developers do use the desktop, they are not representative of the average desktop user. The Linux desktop will always be optimized for the average Linux developer rather than the average desktop user. Obviously, the ideal desktop for an average Linux developer is very different from the ideal desktop for an average user. That's why Linux will have a hard time in the desktop market -- because it's written by, and targeted to, developers, not traditional desktop users.

      I do agree that very many develop Linux for "themselves", but I don't think geeks are more interested in struggling with network or sound or wifi or video tearing or printer drivers or webcams than other people. Nor are they particularly tolerant of buggy or inflexible software, even though they may have their own ideas of UI design. Obviously there'll always be distributions for geeks by geeks, but I have no problem imagining distributions for joe average by companies that want to sell services to the residential or business market. The gap, the changes they'd have to make aren't that big compared to everything they could reuse. If you listened to all that say that Linux shamelessly copies all the mass market software from Windows, you'd think they'd have to make no changes at all. That's not really true either, but I really don't see that there's such a big schism here.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    8. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by David+Jao · · Score: 1

      I do agree that very many develop Linux for "themselves", but I don't think geeks are more interested in struggling with network or sound or wifi or video tearing or printer drivers or webcams than other people. Nor are they particularly tolerant of buggy or inflexible software, even though they may have their own ideas of UI design.

      The difference is subtle but it definitely exists. Here's one example that comes to mind. In GNOME or KDE, it's really easy to remove the main menu from the panel - just right click the thing and select "Remove". In Windows or Mac OS, however, it is nigh-on impossible to remove the Start/Apple menu from the taskbar/menubar. You can temporarily hide it, but it can't be removed entirely unless you start writing code. Geeks much prefer the flexibility of Linux, whereas most regular users are better off not having this flexibility, since a missing main menu is not a situation they can easily recover from.

      Obviously there'll always be distributions for geeks by geeks, but I have no problem imagining distributions for joe average by companies that want to sell services to the residential or business market. The gap, the changes they'd have to make aren't that big compared to everything they could reuse.

      There is a market here, and the required changes are indeed individually very small. (For example, the behavior I mentioned above would be easy to correct.) However, the changes are also numerous, and there are all sorts of rare cases where one can easily fail to notice a needed change. In order to do a good job, you need a large team -- not as large as the Windows or Mac OS teams, but still a good sized team. And, since few geeks are interested in volunteering for such a task, you're back to the situation where you need a revenue source in order to support that team.

      It is instructive to look at the netbook market, which of course is the kind of Linux deployment that we're talking about -- selling Linux to Joe average. Netbooks may not be as profitable as laptops, but they bring in more than enough revenue to support a dedicated development team. The EeePC, for example, has a very inflexible desktop by any geek's standards: you can't even move or alter the icons, and forget about configuring the main menu, since there isn't any. In other words, it's just what grandma needs. But even this approach has its limits. One big problem is that it's hard to keep a modified platform in sync with the main trunk. Every time the upstream developers publish a security update, you have to integrate that update with the changes that you have made. This process requires continuous engineering effort far beyond the short product life of a particular piece of hardware. For a major distribution like Debian, there are ample volunteers to handle the task of integrating security patches, even for older versions of Debian. In the case of the EeePC, especially the older models, more often than not this work is not done.

      To be fair, things are not entirely bleak. Ubuntu Netbook Remix is an example of a non-geek desktop interface which is integrated into a major distribution. (I'm not sure how much of its development was funded by Canonical vs. contributed by volunteers.) I can see such projects offering hope for Linux on the desktop, but it will never be a natural fit. You'll always need some effort in order to cajole Linux developers into contributing to mass market products. Even worse, such efforts have to be continuous and ongoing in order to best take advantage of traditional Linux strengths such as security.

    9. Re:Has Linux long been ahead of Apple? by Dunkirk · · Score: 1

      But if you look over the last 15 years, I believe that there has been more Linux on the desktop than Apple OS's.

      I doubt it. I'm a die-hard believer, and there have been stints at my job where even I have run Windows over the past 14 years. Despite knowing some really technical people over this time, I'm the only one who has run Linux on my desktop. Well, except for one current coworker, and he only uses it because he develops for Linux. His home computer runs Windows, on the rare occassion it's even on. The rest who would care (that would be two) have switched to Macs. So my unscientific poll says that Mac is leading Linux on the desktop 2 to 1.

      --
      Acts 17:28, "For in Him we live, and move, and have our being."
  12. Servers by 0racle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is more money in servers then there is clients, and it's an area that MS could still grow in. In this area Linux companies and traditional UNIX are competitors to MS whereas Apple is most decidedly not.

    --
    "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    1. Re:Servers by Jason+Earl · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually there is far more money in clients than in servers. The profit margins on server software (and hardware) tend to be higher per sale, but in terms of both gross revenue and total profit clients wins hands down.

      Heck, that's why Microsoft is the 800 pound gorilla of software. Windows makes truly ridiculous amounts of money, and the fact that Microsoft controls the end user experience at a very low level gives Microsoft a great deal of leverage.

      Microsoft has a very profitable server software division, but its profits are barely a third of Microsoft's Client division, and MS Office (another piece of client software) generates nearly as much profit as Windows.

      The client rules, plain and simple.

    2. Re:Servers by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Actually there is far more money in clients than in servers

      What percentage of a Windows license does Microsoft pocket after the vendor gets done? Now, what percentage of a CAL does Microsoft pocket? Trust me, the money is in the servers, in their model.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Servers by itzdandy · · Score: 1

      The money WAS in clients. The margins are shrinking and Microsoft has to reduce prices to keep linux from becoming the obvious choice for a desktop os. How will a $100 windows license fly on a $100 computer? it wont. shrinking margins.

      The server market on the other hand has big margins and microsoft can argue manageability vs initial price. That argument can work on business types.

    4. Re:Servers by itzdandy · · Score: 1

      A Dell or HP will mark up some but they arent pulling big margins on windows licenses or CALs.

    5. Re:Servers by abhi_beckert · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's two big problems when competing with linux in the server market are:

      It's an area where "good enough" is basically the same as "perfect". So being better than linux is completely useless in any market where linux is good enough.

      Linux has a big head start on microsoft in developing it's server tools, so in many ways linux is more feature rich and stable than windows server.

      Except for a few areas where a windows server is genuinely better (such as exchange), microsoft is forced to compete on price alone, which is challenging when your competitor is open source (creating a product which needs less staff to maintain it is difficult).

    6. Re:Servers by abhi_beckert · · Score: 1

      How many servers are there in the world? How many clients are there in the world?

      Where I work, we have one server and about 17 clients. Plus almost everyone who works here has a desktop or notebook at home.

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

      not if you make them thin clients. Then the cost lies in CAL. If you make that Linux too (server) you evade those costs too. All you need is support (in house or external, mixed)

    8. Re:Servers by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Where I work, we have one server and about 17 clients. Plus almost everyone who works here has a desktop or notebook at home.

      Yes, and in order to be in compliance you need a CAL for each of those clients. You probably paid roughly jack shit to get the windows licenses for those clients, they probably came with the machines and that's SOP in the business space, you get licenses with machines and the machines are never upgraded, it's not worth it. Unless you have a VLK site license, in which case, you STILL paid next to nothing for your windows licenses (unless you're one of the companies in the middle space where you're too big for CALs but not big enough to get a good price from Microsoft.)

      On the other hand, the CALs don't get deeply discounted (again, unless you're gigantic, or high-profile and about to go to Linux) and you need one for each client.

      For your small number of clients, I'd install a Linux server. But maybe you're using some lousy Windows-only software on your server, what would I know?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  13. Another reason why by elashish14 · · Score: 1

    Let's not forget that Linux can be installed on any architecture. Apple may have a larger market share (depending on where you get your data from of course, lol), but they still have a limited compatibility range making them less viable.

    --
    I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
  14. Duh by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 5, Insightful

    OSX can only realistically come from one over priced manufactuer where as Linux is free and can be installed on any machine.

    The economy is in the dumps. Would you be worried about the over priced guy with no net book or the guy that's infiltrating the netbook space quite well when that's a fast growing sector?

    1. Re:Duh by elashish14 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let's take it one step further. Apple sells you software. Red Hat, Novell, Canonical, etc. sell you support. Software comes free - you can hire your own IT to manage it if you want to....

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    2. Re:Duh by Culture20 · · Score: 0, Troll

      no net book

      iPod Touch
      Close enough.

    3. Re:Duh by mlts · · Score: 1

      Apple sells support too (AppleCare). One of the reasons a lot of consumers buy Macs is because they can call Apple about a problem, regardless if the issue is with iWork, OS X, or the Macintosh hardware. They won't get told, "oops, that's vendor 'x' that caused that. Go bug them." This a lot less aggravating for a nontechnical user (e. g. your usual Aunt Tillie) than having to figure out if it is Dell, Microsoft, the maker of a sound or video card, or the app vendor who is at fault for some problem.

      On the business end, IBM, Sun, and HP do the same thing (though you pay a lot for this). CATIA abends on your pSeries machine? Call IBM, and be it a problem with the app, AIX, or the underlying hardware, they will fix it.

    4. Re:Duh by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      I think it depends on how you look at it, though. If I was in charge of Microsoft (and wow, I'm glad I'm not!) ... I'd look at the things I could change instead of worrying about the things I couldn't.

      Linux, being open-source and essentially "free", isn't sensible to compete with for "market share". There will always be a crowd interested in free software that allows modification of the source code that makes it up. There will always be a crowd interested in using alternatives to whatever is deemed the "mainstream", too.

      Microsoft is a business with a goal of making a profit from their code. That means they're not achieving their goal by giving stuff away free, OR by handing out the source code and letting just anybody modify or improve what they offer.

      So which "competitor" works within the same constraints they do, and has similar goals? Yep, Apple.

      Microsoft has already been able to do a lot to improve their offerings by "looking over Apple's shoulder" and copying their ideas. (Look at Windows 7 and the way they're improving their "gadget bar" by making it float over the desktop, just like Apple's widgets do in OS X, for example.)

      For that matter, which division of Microsoft is the most profitable, per employee? Their Mac division! Microsoft gets to compete directly with Apple on the OS front, yet still SELL to the people who prefer Apple's offerings!

    5. Re:Duh by IANAAC · · Score: 2, Insightful

      iPod Touch Close enough.

      Not by a long shot. Netbooks run full desktop OSes and pretty much any desktop application available. I've not seen an iPod Touch come even close to what you can run on your desktop (regardless of whether its Mac OSX, Linux or Windows).

    6. Re:Duh by jaavaaguru · · Score: 1

      OSX can only realistically come from one over priced manufactuer

      OS X is $106.99.

      Vista is $235.95.

      Redhat RHEL is $179

      Based on fully-featured offerings with cheapest support package.

      A lot of non-technical people want to be able to call their vendor when something breaks and have them fix it. This a different market from where Debian, Gentoo, at al fit in.

    7. Re:Duh by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      Microsoft fears apple much more then Linux, Linux will always be the pocket protectors OS. As further proof of this I give you M$ marketing strategy "I'm a PC and I am a cool hipster just like you". This is nothing more then the big kid on the block saying he's not afraid the new kid (I know Apple is not new).

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    8. Re:Duh by Tom · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The economy is in the dumps. Would you be worried about the over priced guy with no net book or the guy that's infiltrating the netbook space quite well when that's a fast growing sector?

      Frankly, I would be very worried about a competitor who is growing in double-digits despite being considerably more expensive than I am. Very, very worried.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    9. Re:Duh by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Yeah when I can install netbeans on it.

    10. Re:Duh by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Most people need to buy the over priced hardware, from one manufacture, to run OSX unlike Vista or Linux.

      A lot of Mac users don't care because it's about the style not the cost but I can't ever see Apple ever having a monopoly, like MS, with their current practices because most people rather not (or can't) pay extra for a Mac.

      That's not necessarily a bad thing. After all there's enough room in other markets for high-end and low-end products. Computing shouldn't be any different.

    11. Re:Duh by crazybilly · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Yeah, but did you rtfa?

      Apple might be doing swell in the United States, but on a worldwide scale, Cupertino still falls a bit to the wayside.

      That's worth thinking about (there's a link in the article to another article about this very thing. I haven't read it yet, but it's worth reading before we start swallowing the numbers Apple publishes to its stockholders whole hog.

    12. Re:Duh by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      What do you do with that, make internet burritos?

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    13. Re:Duh by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Vista is $235.95 [amazon.com].

      Vista is $109.99.

      Redhat RHEL is $179 [redhat.com]

      Redhat RHEL is $179 per year.

    14. Re:Duh by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      Nowadays you need overpriced hardware for Vista too.

      I see good fortune in the future of Linux*.

      *I am not a professional fortune teller. Please don't take my word for it. Instead, hire a professional conman^H^H^H^H fortune teller and ask him/her. <shout>By following this advice, you agree not to sue!!!</shout>

      --
      $ make available
    15. Re:Duh by jaavaaguru · · Score: 1

      But after your $179 you get to keep the software.

      Pay again after the 1st year if you want another year of support with 2 business day response times.

    16. Re:Duh by abhi_beckert · · Score: 1

      We recently moved apartments and don't have the internet hooked up... My girlfriend is doing everything she ever needs to use a computer for on my iPhone.

      I recently bought a real netbook for my nieces, everything I've ever seen them do on it they could do on an iPod touch (surf the net for homework, IM their friends, watch youtube, play games, purchase music on iTunes to copy to their iPod).

      Granted, a netbook has a bigger screen/better keyboard, which is why I didn't save myself some cash and buy them an iPod touch. But there's nothing missing really.

      Is an iPod touch/iPhone a good netbook? No. But it is pretty damn close to the same thing. Plus it's cheaper and more portable.

    17. Re:Duh by Tom · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, what's there to think about? There are literally millions of companies who are doing well in a local market and don't matter on a global scale. There are easily hundreds, if not thousands of international corporations who do 90%+ of their business in the US and Europe.

      Success and failure of a company shouldn't be measured by what some fanboys or freaks would wish for, but by the company goals. I don't think Apple has ever listed "market domination in Africa" on their list.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    18. Re:Duh by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      But after your $179 you get to keep the software.

      Just like Windows and OS X, you mean ?

      Pay again after the 1st year if you want another year of support with 2 business day response times.

      Pay again after the first year if you want to be able to patch your systems, I think you mean - you know, the thing everyone else doesn't charge for.

    19. Re:Duh by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Double digits mean nothing. Double digit market acquisition rate is something to worry about.

  15. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LINUX ON XBOX!!!

  16. Apples and Oranges (No Pun Intended) by Lumenary7204 · · Score: 1

    The Net Applications survey seems to be centered on desktops and personal-use devices only, while Microsoft's graphic conceivably includes OS deployment across all kinds of devices (desktops, servers, network appliances, etc.).

    If you take servers into account (especially web servers and certain network appliances), aggregated Linux installations could very well top aggregated Apple OS product installations.

    Also note that the Net Applications survey segregates Macs (presumably including MacOS System 9 and earlier along with OS X) and iPhones (which runs a modified Mac OS X called "iPhone OS"), whereas the Microsoft slide simply has a single "Apple" moniker.

    It's an Apples v. Oranges comparison; don't read too much into it...

    1. Re:Apples and Oranges (No Pun Intended) by ILikeRed · · Score: 1

      Lumenary7204 said:
      > The Net Applications survey seems to be centered on desktops and personal-use devices only, while Microsoft's graphic conceivably includes OS deployment across all kinds of devices (desktops, servers, network appliances, etc.).

      According to EWeek, you are wrong and Ballmer was only discussing desktops with that slide. This seems to be collaborated by this story at brighthand which shows a different Ballmer slide just for phone OS share. Which makes the original story more interesting....

      --
      I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress -J Adams
  17. Piracy a competitor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The day the manage to lock out piracy, a lot of that group will switch to Linux, not pay full prize full Windows licenses.

    I can understand why they see Linux as a bigger threat. Linux is something completely different than Windows, MacOS is "just" another proprietary closed source company controlled desktop OS. These days, more and more people see the advantages of free sofware, and Microsoft will never be able to catch up with Linux on that one.

    1. Re:Piracy a competitor? by InvisibleClergy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Thing is, a lot of more computer literate people understand the following workflow:

      1. Have a task which needs done
      2. Get a tool to do the task (Or choose one which you already have)
      3. Use the tool to do the task.

      Most people, however, are not computer-literate. They don't understand "Word Processor" but they do understand "Word" in reference to MS Word.

      They do the following:

      1. Have a task to do
      2. Use the tool they know to do the task

      The very idea that there are more word processors than MS Word still blows the mind of people like, say, my grandmother.

    2. Re:Piracy a competitor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the consumer market, piracy may be an issue. For businesses, it is not a factor. All it takes is one disgruntled employee to tip off the BSA or SIAA and they will be knocking at the business's door asking for the results of a software audit on all machines, and copies of the invoices for all the licenses. Not license keys or certificates, invoices (like from CDW). If these two don't jive, big trouble happens, and there is a high chance that business may be closing its doors or settling for a high dollar amount. Of course, if a company tells the BSA guy where to shove it, in 2-3 hours, said guy will be back asking for the same stuff, except with a motion of discovery signed by a judge and the county constable by his side.

      Game piracy won't be settled by DRM or more Draconian laws. Instead, it probably will be settled by having games have online access, downloadable content, and account keys, similar to Diablo, Diablo 2, and NeverWinter Nights where people need unique keys to play, and pirating the code from install media won't get a person much.

    3. Re:Piracy a competitor? by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      Why? Does she only think there's one TV channel, airline or car manufacturer too?

    4. Re:Piracy a competitor? by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      The very idea that it's possible to have a conversation with somebody on the other side of the globe also blows some people's minds, I bet.

      But those people are old and (no offense intended) will eventually die. Today most teenagers would probably fail to understand your attempts to explain how mindblowing a cell phone is compared to what things were like 50 years ago, as it's a completely normal thing that always was there for them.

      The number of people who think a computer is a magical and impossible to understand device is steadily shrinking, as they're replaced by people who grew up with computers and don't see anything particularly strange about them. And those people who really don't know how to use a computer aren't using Windows because it's magic in any way, it's simply because that's what other people use. If more knowledgeable people switch, so will they.

    5. Re:Piracy a competitor? by Technician · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They do the following:

      1. Have a task to do
      2. Use the tool they know to do the task

      The very idea that there are more word processors than MS Word still blows the mind of people like, say, my grandmother.

      The problem for MS is when there is another option out there in use, the chances of someone spending hundreds of dollars to switch from the tool that does the task to another high priced tool is pretty much nil. Those who switched are unlikely to switch back. Those who switched are likely to share the knowledge with friends. This erosion is one way.

      My dad has a Mac laptop, one MS box (old XP laptop) and 2 Linux boxes (SUSE and Ubuntu). MS knows that the next purchase of a MS office suite is unlikely in that mix. The younger market is much more likely to be in this camp than my dad who is a great grandfather. He is unlikely to buy Vista or Windows 7 or an office suite for it ever. The tools he already has works fine for his video editing and cameras.

      This is what scares Microsoft. They are still somewhat clueless in regards to fighting piracy. Many copies are unlikely to convert to sales as the user is opportunistic. If they have to pay, they will use an affordable alternative.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    6. Re:Piracy a competitor? by swillden · · Score: 1

      The very idea that there are more word processors than MS Word still blows the mind of people like, say, my grandmother.

      That's weird. The very idea that there is a word processor other than WordPerfect 5.1 blows the mind of my grandmother.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    7. Re:Piracy a competitor? by swillden · · Score: 1

      The number of people who think a computer is a magical and impossible to understand device is steadily shrinking

      You think? I think more and more people just take them for granted -- but also take for granted that they are impossible to understand.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    8. Re:Piracy a competitor? by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      Most of them of course lack a deep understanding, but that's not really what I'm talking about.

      The various grandmas and aunts people like to refer to, who are hopelessly confused if you move around the icons on their desktop or change the colors *are* shrinking. Those people who base their usage of a computer on memorization of steps (click here, click there) and become lost when something unexpected happens are disappearing.

      Today's teenagers are perfectly proficent at using various programs without having to follow a fixed list of steps, and can figure out how to use a new program by themselves. They might not be geniuses, but they should have enough intelligence to figure out the generic concept of "word processor" and how to adapt to one with a slightly different interface.

      It's just like people who thought moving vehicles must have been created with the help of Satan, because they couldn't conceivably understand how such a thing was possible, eventually died out to be replaced with people who don't think there's anything strange about a modern car. Most people don't understand the mechanics in deep detail, but aren't afraid of it, and don't think it runs on black magic, unlike their ancestors.

    9. Re:Piracy a competitor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I switched to linux because I was tired of pirating software. Realized I was doing them a favour learning their locked in ways.

    10. Re:Piracy a competitor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computer literacy is a continuum, not a boolean.

      There's no fundamental difference between the two, just a difference in how many tools they know, or how much fucking about they can be bothered to do in order to find another tool to do the job.

      Everything is about the whole 'cost vs benefit' ratio.
      If you've been using perl for many years and can solve the problem you need to solve with it, you'll probably not waste too much time trying to do it in Python. If you have time to play about with Python, you might have found that the problem would have been much easier to solve using it rather than perl, but that means you need the time and the inclination to do so.
      It's too easy to spend all you time fucking about with the options and achieving nothing rather than just getting on with the job with tools that you know.
      Not everyone has the opportunity to try all the options with an infinite amount of time, and no consequences of making a mistake. Therefore, making conservative choices (such as sticking with Microsoft) are favoured over achieving nothing.

    11. Re:Piracy a competitor? by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't that make you sad? Just a little bit, at least?

    12. Re:Piracy a competitor? by scientus · · Score: 1

      But the open-source products are so good, firefox is faster, more compatible etc, than the Microsoft offering. And free and designed with similar workflows, that if you these users hardly know they ever switched. Instead they will go "wow, why did my computer get so much faster?". And unlike some apple users, these people will definetely be grateful if you save the the gazillions of dollars that they might have spent on office, and this same thing is starting to happen with the desktop itsself.

      Microsoft trys to push really ahrd that their way of doing things in sohow unique and special, and that users wont be able to use anything else, but this is simply not true. The switching cost, when programs can open the same files, is miniscule compared with the switching cost for "power users".

    13. Re:Piracy a competitor? by Dionysus · · Score: 1

      The very idea that there are more word processors than MS Word still blows the mind of people like, say, my grandmother.

      Given your premise, why aren't everybody still using WordStar and Lotus 123?

      --
      Je ne parle pas francais.
    14. Re:Piracy a competitor? by VShael · · Score: 1

      The very idea that there are more word processors than MS Word still blows the mind of people like, say, my grandmother.

      Use the pencil/pen/paintbrush analogy.

      She needs to write a letter, on a piece of paper. She can choose a pen, a pencil or even a paintbrush to put her words down on the page. They all have their advantages and disadvantages.

      OS/X is like the pencil. It's easy to use, but you can't change the lead.
      Linux is like the pen. It's easy to use, and you could, if you're careful and really want to, change the ink filling in the tube.

      Windows is like slicing your arm open and dipping a paint brush into the wound. The you try to write your letter before passing out (program crashes). And you may get an infection (virus) too.

    15. Re:Piracy a competitor? by pmarini · · Score: 1

      just to add a little wisdom, I did a similar research as TFA a year ago and found that based on "their" BSA global study, the number of unlicensed software is about 50% (weighted by country, and it changes only by 1%-2% along the years), so that would mean that the 90% of so of Internet browsing done with Windows is actually only 45% paid for... that is, actual market share (see above)

      --
      Can I put a spell on those who can't spell?
      Your wheels are loose and they're losing their grip, good you're there.
    16. Re:Piracy a competitor? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      The very idea that there are more word processors than MS Word still blows the mind of people like, say, my grandmother.

      You're telling me that most people don't know about Wordpad? I mean, it's right there in the Start Menu.

    17. Re:Piracy a competitor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Manage to lock out piracy

      The likelihood of that happening became zero the second somebody decided they'd rather torrent something than buy it.

  18. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 3, Funny

    as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be carping there pants.

    Why would MS put a fish in their pants?

    --
    Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  19. Could this be... by youthoftoday · · Score: 1

    Could this finally be the year of Apple in the server room?

    --
    -1 not first post
  20. Linux is more widespread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Linux is not tied to drm-filled hardware, which means it is free to flow through technology, unlike OSX. Linux has much greater potential than OSx primarily for that reason.

  21. Installed base vs. market share by javacowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    An operating system's installed base is not the same as the market share.

    Market share is measurable because it's based on percentage of sales over a given period of time.

    Installed base is difficult or impossible to measure, because it's the percentage share an operating system has over the entire population of computers. This means the market share of Macs and Linux machines is underestimated. Macs, because they last on average 2 years longer than Windows PC's. Linux, well, because hardly anybody pays for Linux since they can legally get it for free.

    So, essentially, market share figures are highly inaccurate for estimated the installed base of any given operating system.

    --
    This space left intentionally blank.
    1. Re:Installed base vs. market share by mrcaseyj · · Score: 1

      I think people consider two kinds of market share: revenue market share and unit market share. If you give away your product for free you might dominate unit market share but have zero revenue market share.

    2. Re:Installed base vs. market share by John+Hasler · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is revenue market share and unit sales market share. Both are reported by companies such as Net Applications, but neither reflects the Linux installed base because neither includes copies of Ubuntu etc that were not sold.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    3. Re:Installed base vs. market share by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      Installed base can be measured by survey research. Good survey research is very expensive, though. The results are not the sort of thing that gets put up on a Web site as a "free sample". They are, however, the sort of thing companies like Microsoft buy.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    4. Re:Installed base vs. market share by westlake · · Score: 1

      An operating system's installed base is not the same as the market share.

      Net Applications colllects mass market web stats.

      It collects stats on users and systems - the PC, the cell phone, the video game console --- quite literally any device that can link to sites like Amazon, Google and the BBC.

      We collect data from the browsers of site visitors to our exclusive on-demand network of live stats customers. The data is compiled from approximately 160 million visitors per month. In addition, we classify 430+ referral sources identified as search engines. Aggregate traffic referrals from these engines are summarized and reported monthly. The statistics for search engines include both organic and sponsored referrals. The websites in our population represent dozens of countries in regions including North America, South America, Western Europe, Australia / Pacific Rim and Parts of Asia. About Our Market Share Statistics

    5. Re:Installed base vs. market share by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its interesting to note however:

      # Additional estimates about the website population: 76% participate in pay per click programs to drive traffic to their sites.
      # 43% are commerce sites
      # 18% are corporate sites
      # 10% are content sites
      # 29% classify themselves as other (includes gov, org, search engine marketers etc..)

      The sites they actually track is:
      A) Not very representative of the internet as a whole
      B) Likely made up of mostly North American, European and Japanese websites (They only claim to cover parts of Asia) , and i'd suspect that North America stands for an unproportionally large share of those.

      w3counter.com has vastly different numbers for the websites they track. (2.09% for Linux and 5.16% for Mac OS X) (roughly 26% of the statistics they've gathered are from the US)

      The key thing to remember is that it matters alot what websites you track.

    6. Re:Installed base vs. market share by ignavus · · Score: 1

      Installed base is also a problem. I have 4 desktops and three laptops in regular use at my house. Some of these are dual boot (Windows and Linux or Linux and Linux [different distros]). And my desktop also has VMware player with several OSs installed.

      I also have several older laptops and desktops stacked up and not in use - but they all have OSs on them.

      So how many installations do I have? Do I count dual boot twice, or give half or some other weighting to them? Do I count the OSs installed on hardware that I no longer use - although it just *might* be called into use if a current desktop or laptop failed? What about the OSs on VMs, which may run simultaneously?

      Not straight forward.

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    7. Re:Installed base vs. market share by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As noted above, you have a misunderstanding about Net Applications. NA measures web hits, not sales (like IDC or Gartner, for example). So, in a sense, they *are* measuring the installed base of computers. However, given the limits of measuring share through web hits (whose accuracy depends on how representative their collection of sites is, and which will count people based on how active they are on the web), numbers from firms like Net Applications cannot be definitive. (For instance, NA's numbers are very US-centric, one reason Mac/Safari does so much better than in others' numbers.)

    8. Re:Installed base vs. market share by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, Hitslink numbers are very US-centric, as you can tell by what ISPs their traffic is coming from: http://marketshare.hitslink.com/report.aspx?qprid=18

      Though, W3Counter uses a really funky methodology to come up with its results.

  22. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by InvisibleClergy · · Score: 1

    Well, given the quality of their software, they're obviously not programmers. They're carpenters.

  23. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by CHJacobsen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That would require a reversal of the entire Apple strategy, as well as a huge developer-blitz to make OS X work on non-Apple hardware.

    OS X is good and stable, but it's merits owes a lot to the tight integration with Apple's hardware choices.

  24. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    M$ will be carping there pants.

    No, they'll be goldfishing here pants.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  25. Apple and orange? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when apple sells iphones with orange support?

  26. Apple makes hardware, iMacs, iPods and shit. by crovira · · Score: 1

    Apple USES software to move their hardware.

    You're comparing Apple to lemons.

    M$ sells software, (there is no branded computer called Microsoft, is there?,) and as such Linux is IN DIRECT COMPETITION, (there is no branded computer called Linux, is there?)

    Because Linux is FREE and M$ costs, look for the same idiot managers to jettison M$ for the same reason they jettisoned IBM in the '80s and for the same reason: because Linux is FREE and M$ costs.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
    1. Re:Apple makes hardware, iMacs, iPods and shit. by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      You're comparing Apple to lemons.

      Err: Parent not found (error code 0x09f9)

      --
      $ make available
  27. let's see..... by inerlogic · · Score: 1

    1 iBook running OSX
    1 machine running XP
    1 machine running vista
    1 Ubuntu box/dual boot Win7
    2 Debian boxes
    2 boxes running Mandriva

    1/8 Apple
    3/8 MS (more like 2.5 since 7 is beta)
    5/8 Linux

    YUP, linux is winning under my desk!

    1. Re:let's see..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This sounds fun, I want to count my systems aswell!

      1 machine running Debian (my server)
      1 machine running OS X, Debian and Win XP
      1 Macbook running OS X
      1 PowerMac G4 running OS X (rarely used)
      1 Laptop running Debian
      1 Phone which runs iPhone OS, which is almost OS X
      5 machines running AmigaOS
      1 machine running AmigaOS / Debian

      So let's count:

      1/14,5 Windows
      3,5/14,5 Apple (I count iPhone OS as 0,5 :D )
      4/14,5 Linux
      6/14,5 Amiga OS

      Who would have thought?

    2. Re:let's see..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't own most of the computers in my house, but the breakdown for me would go like this:

      3/3 run Linux
      2/3 run Windows XP, as well.

    3. Re:let's see..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yo' mama's winning under my desk.

  28. Its beyond just the numbers by slashdotlurker · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Linux is a more fundamental threat than Apple. Apple, fundamentally, is another commercial vendor - one that can be dealt with, cajoled, threatened, and God forbid, even bought. Plus, Apple's focus is on hardware.

    Linux cannot be dealt with in that fashion. The business model is different. Microsoft can pull a Novell or a Xandros deal, but that either 1) ends up helping those distros, or, more worryingly, 2) does nothing to fight the multiheaded hydra that Linux is. Add the fact that it cannot be bought or threatened with any serious lawsuits, its a major headache for Microsoft. All Microsoft can do, is to slow down its rate of adoption, through a combination of tactics, and that is what they have been doing for the past 10 years. This is also good for Linux, as it is giving the developers breathing time and space to improve the quality. In looks department, they are already comfortably ahead of anything Vista or Leopard throw up. The only missing pieces of the puzzle are UI workflow design (where Apple has a superior product) and apps (where Microsoft is ahead). The latter is changing, while the former, is IMO languishing a bit for Gnome, though KDE4 has made some notable improvements.

    Microsoft's overall domination of the PC is currently not under threat, but Linux's success is forcing it to slash profit margins and do other things that it would rather not have do. The reason is that unlike Apple, Microsoft's userbase is full of people who want quality for a good price and don't want to be fooled into paying for pricy stuff they really do not need.

    It is not the year of linux on the desktop yet. But its coming, and that is giving people in Redmond sleepless nights.

    1. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by SpinningCone · · Score: 5, Insightful

      actually i think your missing the real point. its not really about who you can threaten.

      Apple has a business model which literally cannot take a market majority. the day Apple hits 30% it can no longer be apple anymore. however Linux can go all out.

      but even that is an aside in these times of recession people have a vested interest in their hardware. XP is getting long in tooth and vista was a flop if 7 doesn't pony up there will be a huge body of unsatisfied people who cannot afford to go buy a mac but *can* afford to download a Linux distro.

      once Linux gets enough of a market foothold support for the platform snowballs. more drivers come out more people get linux etc etc.

    2. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One word: ACTA.

      When this passes, unless your computer is "trusted" (which means you run Windows), you won't be able to even connect to the Internet, similar to how Xbox 360s that get modded are banned off almost immediately.

      Once this treaty passes (and treaties supersede sovereign laws in the US and Europe), Linux might be a bit player in embedded systems, but won't be on desktops.

    3. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      I think I have a good example of how hard it is to fight Linux. It's a little black and would probably offend many people, though.

      If you drop a nuclear bomb on Redmond, Microsoft would be gone or damn near close.

      If you drop a nuclear bomb on Cupertino, Apple would be gone or damn near close.

      Where can you possibly drop a single nuclear bomb to destroy free software? GNU? Linus Torvalds? Novell? Red Hat? The EFF? Can you destroy any one country and eliminate it?

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    4. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The business model is different. Microsoft can pull a Novell or a Xandros deal, but that either 1) ends up helping those distros, or, more worryingly, 2) does nothing to fight the multiheaded hydra that Linux is. Add the fact that it cannot be bought or threatened with any serious lawsuits, its a major headache for Microsoft.

      It's even a bit more fundamental than that. The core of the matter is that for "foundation" software, like operating systems or office suites, open source is the inevitable endgame.

      In general, every widespread product drives gradually towards commoditization, where profit margins are driven to the lowest levels that capital sources will allow (any lower and capital flees to better ROI). But the marginal cost of software is zero; no capital is necessary to produce additional copies. For custom and niche software, there are too few people interested in the software to drive commoditization, so the software can be profit-generating. For software that is consumable content and differentiable, like games, there is opportunity for profit. But for stuff that everyone needs, and which provides few opportunities for differentiation, commoditization is the natural course.

      Without the presence of open source in the market, the commodity price level would remain above zero, even once the software was "perfected" (meaning real differentiation is no longer possible), but if open source enters the game, as long as it is sufficiently functional that it is cheaper for some individuals or organizations to fix the ways it fails to meet their needs rather than buying commercial software that does, then the open source code will continue to improve, which increases the segment of the market that finds it acceptable, or nearly so. And remember that cost isn't just dollars. Ill effects of monoculture, perceptions of vendor lock-in and even just plain dislike -- even if irrational -- are all "costs" that some people apply to commercial software.

      Over time, therefore, open source inevitably displaces commercial software in commoditized spaces. Microsoft and other software companies might kid themselves that they can continue innovating and adding value to their applications indefinitely, but in most cases they're wrong.

      Whether they fully recognize this and are just delaying the inevitable, or whether they think they may be able to find a way, someday, to stave off the growth of Linux and OpenOffice, it doesn't surprise me at all that Microsoft recognizes Linux as a greater threat than Apple, because Apple isn't threatening to commoditize Microsoft's cash cows. On the contrary, Apple wants to find ways to push the price UP. Linux and OpenOffice, however, are real, direct and apparently unstoppable threats to Microsoft's major revenue sources. Even if the Linux installed base were half of OS X's, they would still be wise to worry.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    5. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by janopdm · · Score: 1

      In looks department, they are already comfortably ahead of anything Vista or Leopard throw up.

      uhm no. Compiz is a half broken implementation with flickering and poor performance, just overlap glxgears and video to see the artifacts/sloweness. Google DRI2 for more information. OS X is also ahead on device/resolution-independent, color management, and typography.

    6. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by scientus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      not really.

      Linux progress is based on the number of developers, not the number of users.

      sure it need users, but stupid users that need the type of help some windows users need do not necessarily help the platform, although they might make it more profitable for support companies which *might* lead to some more developers. but it also could lead to stupid resistance to change that would hold the platform back.

      Having more users might make drivers a little better, and definetely put pressure on companies to have decenet drivers, and hopefully the GPL will hold and these drivers will be GPL too. (this is based on how true to open-source principals distributors, and users/developers, are)

      I dont think big market share is at all enccicary for Linux, but it is for Microsoft, so it can snowball into a disaster for Microsoft, which i think they see coming.

    7. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by DiLLeMaN · · Score: 1

      Ah, so Linux is like terrorism, then? =]

      --
      /var/run/twitter.sock is a twitter socket puppet.
    8. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      No no, it's like the GLA in C&C Generals. No, wait... yes.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    9. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Strudelkugel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's probably worthwhile to recall that Microsoft did not start out in the OS business. They were more interested in providing compilers. Gates didn't want to get into the OS business, either. But, IBM needed an OS, so Gates and Allen bought one.

      Windows makes a fortune for Microsoft today, but lets assume that Linux completely undermined the Windows franchise. Seems to me Microsoft could offer something like .Net VMs as the "OS", selling tools and apps that require it to run. I'm not saying this will happen, but something like it could happen. There's no reason why Microsoft couldn't do just fine in a Linux dominated world. <foil hat>Now we know why they wanted "Lindows"</foil hat>

      Think of it this way: My company runs Windows servers on VMware, which is Linux. So what are we running? All of the predictions of Microsoft's demise based on the increasing acceptance of Linux take a very, very narrow view of the possible outcomes.

      --
      Imagine how much harder physics would be if electrons had feelings! -Feynman, maybe
    10. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by swillden · · Score: 1

      Seems to me Microsoft could offer something like .Net VMs as the "OS", selling tools and apps that require it to run.

      Sure. Or something else. Microsoft has a huge amount of money in the bank and employs a lot of smart, talented people. They'll find some other way to make money, I have no doubt. Microsoft is far too large to disappear, at most they may get whittled down a little. But I think it's very clear that their current major revenue sources are going to dry up in a few years.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    11. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 1

      Can you explain why Apple can't take more than 30% market share and still continue to exist as Apple? I don't understand what you are saying. It just doesn't parse. What is Apple with a 40% market share? Banana? I don't get it.

      Seriously. Apple can grow to 100% market share, and still be Apple. Please explain why this statement which seems obviously true to me, is in fact false.

    12. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by SpinningCone · · Score: 1

      Apple is a niche product. its cool because its the plucky underdog not the monolithic monopoly. If apple were 30 or 50 or 90+ % the hardware manufacturers will call foul. Apple likes to control every aspect of their product, the look the hardware the software and that's just exactly what will be busted up when they get too big.

      First legislation to make apple allow OS-X to run on any hardware. then likely legislation to allow upgrading of imacs with different components. then legislation to ban Apple from bundling too much software like the Safari browser :-/

      They will have to change OS-X to be more enterprise friendly (from afaik apple doesn't really have any enterprise solutions)

      also without a significant opponent to blast in pretentious I'm a mac commercials they will loose an edge on their image and 'think different' become 'resistance is futile'.

      in the end a new underdog will replace their niche and things roll on.

    13. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Compiz is a half broken implementation with flickering and poor performance, just overlap glxgears and video to see the artifacts/sloweness.

      Works fine here.

      Although, I am using the proprietary nVidia drivers.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    14. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by janopdm · · Score: 1

      Sorry, yes, it does for the most part. But having your desktop spinning on a cube is hardly state of the art, any system is a step away from that. However, doing it right requires functionality entirely missing, eg: try the cube effect while working with video and 3d rendering. I'm not following development any more, but last year you had to choose between glx (slow) or aiglx (ugly). Quartz does that on any situation with zero penalty.

    15. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Sorry, yes, it does for the most part. But having your desktop spinning on a cube is hardly state of the art, any system is a step away from that. However, doing it right requires functionality entirely missing, eg: try the cube effect while working with video and 3d rendering.

      I generally have kaffiene and Second life running at the same time most of the time. Sometimes I start up left 4 dead too (via Wine) to do some admin related tasks on my l4d server (usually checking if someone is cheating) - this is while Second life and kaffiene are active. I also have a tendency to have vmware running too, which makes excessive use of overlays.

      I think that's a pretty good benchmark.

      To be honest, the only issue I ever see is when I log off KDE4, you see garbage and artefacts as things are tuning off. Beyond that, I never ever see it, only during log off - to my understanding, that's caused by the compositing window manager being killed before other stuff.

      I'm not following development any more, but last year you had to choose between glx (slow) or aiglx (ugly). Quartz does that on any situation with zero penalty.

      *shrugs* I only used it when it became a default setting in the Linux distros I use (Mandriva, SuSE, Kubuntu) and haven't noticed those issues.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    16. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I thought that's about what you'd say.

      But I don't buy it. At all. I'm not convinced that Apple bases any of its strategy on being a niche player. Maybe some of its fans cite its underdog status as an attractive aspect of the company, but I don't see how Apple pushes that idea. Being a niche player in the computer industry is never a good thing and Apple must know that. Ubiquity of the platform is orders of magnitude more beneficial to the product because prospective buyers don't want to buy into a system that will become obsolete, and ubiquity is a much better guarantee of a platform sticking around than being a niche product is.

      The hardware manufacturers can call foul all they want to. I see no reason whatsoever that Apple would have to change its business model if they got significantly bigger. What kind of foul would hardware manufacturers be calling that they wouldn't aready have been calling against Microsoft's virtual monopoly on desktop operating systems?

      I don't see where all this legislation you are talking about would come from. Microsoft has been the subject of some of this but they've just about shrugged all of it off and it's made almost no impact on them. Did they have to change their business model as you're suggesting Apple will? Absolutely not.

      OK, so maybe Apple will have to change OSX to be more enterprise friendly. They might do this if they have 1% market share or 100% market share. I don't see how that's relevent to Apple having to change their business model if they get too big, it seems like an entirely unrelated product strategy decision.

      I see no basis for your points about Mac commercials having to change. The fact that you've called them "pretentious" reveals your bias, and to be quite honest, since every point you've made has no logical basis or meaningful justification, I'd have to conclude that you're simply wishing that it's impossible for Apple to succeed, and trying to turn that wish into an argument. And it isn't working ...

      To address your final statement: so what if a new underdog fills Apple's previous underdog role? You said that Apple can't grow to beyond 30%. How is the fact that if Apple does grow beyond 30%, someone else could take their old 10% market share and underdog position, proof that Apple couldn't grow beyond 30%?

      As I said previously, I saw no justification for the notion that Apple can't grow beyond 30% market share. And I still see no such justification.

    17. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by janopdm · · Score: 1

      Interesting, I guess GPU power made this problem irrelevant.

    18. Re:Its beyond just the numbers by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Interesting, I guess GPU power made this problem irrelevant.

      I'm willing to bet it's more to do with the proprietary nVidia drivers (Why nVidia rocks where x.org does not).

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  29. Apple has never been a real threat to MS by Rix · · Score: 1

    And so long as they refuse to license their OS, they never will be. The vast majority of the market is uninterested in Apple hardware.

    1. Re:Apple has never been a real threat to MS by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1
      "The vast majority of the market is uninterested in Apple hardware."

      You could be wrong there. Since Vista came out, I have found many people have decided to give this Apple thing a try. I did myself after many years of being an Apple hater. I bought a MacBook. My brother who is completely nontechnical and just wants to surf the net, do email, and sync his blackberry, just bought a MacBook. A good friend who does Java development bought a MacBook. My mother is thinking about buying an iMac. About half the people I work with have bought Macs. The list goes on and on.

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    2. Re:Apple has never been a real threat to MS by Macka · · Score: 1

      You need to read up on your history. Apple tried licensing an older version of their OS to clone vendors before. It was a monumental failure and almost killed their hardware business. They won't make that mistake again.

      Apple have found a niche for themselves as a combined OS + Hardware vendor where they control the entire environment. They aren't the cheapest, and they will never dominate the industry AND THEY DON'T CARE! For one simple reason: enough people like what they produce to generate a very healthy, very profitable business. That, at the end of the day is all they want and they're succeeding at it. For now anyway.

      Microsoft is right to consider Linux as a bigger threat, because Linux hits them right where they're at their least competitive and where there is lots of money to be lost: in the business sector. Linux has grown up over the years to become a real power house on the server and deservedly so. And Linux solutions are just getting better and stronger with every year. It's relentless.

       

    3. Re:Apple has never been a real threat to MS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell that to Creative. I hear the Creative Zen is selling really well.

    4. Re:Apple has never been a real threat to MS by Silicon+Jedi · · Score: 1

      [CITATION NEEDED]

    5. Re:Apple has never been a real threat to MS by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Apple has never been a real threat to MS ...And so long as they refuse to license their OS, they never will be.

      I think you have your cart and horse bit backwards at this point. Any competent businessman or economist will tell you Apple will fail miserably just like OS/2 and BeOS is they try to license their OS and compete directly at this point. They already tried that and bled money until they bought out those they had licensed to and went back to bypassing the desktop OS market. Until the courts begin to effectively and responsively stop antitrust abuse, Apple is stuck bypassing the market. Unless MS's share drops below about 70%, licensing OS X is simply not a viable business model.

      Apple's current strategy is to stay in the game and make good money targeting niches and slowly growing, which they have been doing. They're also going after emerging, complementary markets, as with the iPhone. It is the slow, but responsible route. When you run a multibillion dollar company, betting that company's major revenue stream on directly competing with an abusive monopoly is a great way to be fired.

  30. another typical ballmer presentation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and then, to illustrate his point, Ballmer suddenly hurled the slide projector across the room into a group of subordinates wearing penguin masks, wiped his face violently with both hands while saying "Ngogn ngogn", and fell to the floor on his side, running in circles like a wounded animal, yelling "Woowoowoowoowoo"...

  31. Ballmer only considers the business sector by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I haven't seen some companies using Apple based networks...

    Which would mean that he wants more of the Linux-using network to switch to an M$ one.

  32. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    M$ will be carping there pants.

    No, they'll be goldfishing here pants.

    Where pants?

  33. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by 222 · · Score: 1

    Why?

    I can tell that *somebody* has never put a fish in their pants!

  34. Do you know what DRM means? by argent · · Score: 2, Funny

    "That word, you keep using that word, I don't think it means what you think it means..." - Inigo Montoya, "The Princess Bride".

    1. Re:Do you know what DRM means? by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Digital Rights Management: Enforce through technology what you can't through
      licensing or copyright law. In this case, prevent end users from using your
      "software" on the wrong "hardware".

      In this respect Apple DRM identical to the CSS found on DVDs.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Do you know what DRM means? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Far from it.
      OS X requires EFI rather than BIOS.

      This is why solutions like EFIX allows you to boot vanilla OS X on any "PC".
      It's not DRM; it's hardware requirements.

    3. Re:Do you know what DRM means? by argent · · Score: 1

      I was right, you don't know what DRM means.

    4. Re:Do you know what DRM means? by onefriedrice · · Score: 1

      That doesn't explain the incorrect usage of "DRM" that the GP pointed out, that of Mac OS X being "tied to *drm-filled hardware." In actuality, Apple's hardware seems to be quite generic. Whether or not Mac OS X itself employs DRM to tie itself to the hardware is a different matter.

      There is a "Don't steal Mac OS X" module included with the OS that would seem to be directed at preventing piracy, but in reality, using OS X on non-Apple hardware isn't much more difficult than finding the right drivers for your hardware, if they exist. In fact, there doesn't seem to be a lot that Apple is actually doing from really preventing OS X from being used on generic hardware, except they are obviously under no obligation to offer support when stuff doesn't work or an OS update causes problems.

      In any case, this is a far cry from "DRM" in my mind.

      * You could argue that the HDMI interface uses DRM, and that's true. However, in this case, it only exists to enable HDMI features that would otherwise not be possible, and it in no way disables or limits any functionality of the computer.

      --
      This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
    5. Re:Do you know what DRM means? by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Yup, you just proved you don't actually know what DRM means.

    6. Re:Do you know what DRM means? by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      Wrong.

      Explanation is not too bad though.

      But the meaning is of course Digital Restrictions Management. (Trying to) restrict users from what they may want to do with a product.

  35. Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by jonaskoelker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What if they offered Linus Torvalds a billion dollars for the trademark and the copyright to his code?

    And assuming Linus accepted, of course...

    Then we'd fork the latest version of the kernel (and git, and * FROM code WHERE copyright_holder = "Linus") and hack on.

    To deal with the trademark, we'd have to rename the kernel. We could always use Linus' original name, Freax, or name it after some other maintainer... Mortonix? Coxix?

    And then there'd be happy hacking all around.

    1. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by RMingin · · Score: 1

      (Microsoft) purchase Richard Stallman. That line made me literally LOL. I don't think there's enough material wealth in the universe to buy out Stallman's ideals, and that's both a good and bad thing (see 'idealist' and contrast 'zealot').

      --
      The preceding comment is my own, and in no way construes an opinon of the Emperor of Mankind.
    2. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or we'd just use NetBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, xyzBSD

      Kind of like apple did..

      Honestly, I think Linux is a superb desktop operating system but I wish people would stop using linux for server level stuff. FreeBSD (and probably others) are WAY better at that.

      Why have we forgotten there are several free unix-ish platforms, each good in their own way.. out there?

    3. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by Hucko · · Score: 1

      Or clone Plan 9 and improve it.

      --
      Semi-automatic amateur armchair Australian philosopher; conjecture ready at any moment...
    4. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by Abreu · · Score: 1

      I heard somewhere that Stallman draws his twin katanas at the sight of Microsoft Lawyers with briefcases...

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    5. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      It probably would not be necessary to rename the kernel. If you read up on the history of the trademark you'll see that it is of very doubtful validity (this is not any kind of attack or criticism: just a statement of fact).

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    6. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by John+Jamieson · · Score: 1

      If "Stallman draws his twin katanas at the sight of Microsoft Lawyers", then I'd bet Stallman has never drawn them.

      Bullies are cowards, thus, MS lawyers stay well away from R. Stallman.
      They try to undermine him in back room deals, hundereds of miles away. Fighting by proxy, because they don't have the balls to do it themselves.

    7. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We could rename it GNU! RMS would shit himself with joy.

    8. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by Abreu · · Score: 1

      google "xkcd stallman" to get the reference

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    9. Re:Trademark and copyright loss: no problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I now HAVE to compile my Coxix kernel to be able to use my GIMP on my GNU/Coxix OS!

      It doesn't get cooler than that!

  36. 'Piracy' seen as biggest threat by lbalbalba · · Score: 1

    Although it's nice to see Linux as a threat to the Microsoft marketshare, the pie chart in the linked topic shows piracy or 'unlicensed' copies of Windows as the biggest threat. I guess that people do still like or are forced to use Windows, but are just not capable or unwilling of providing the cash for the operating system.

    1. Re:'Piracy' seen as biggest threat by deragon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What is being pirated now is already lost (or never was there as a market anyhow). However, the customers of Microsoft that are paying licenses could switch to Linux like Munich did. That is a lost of existing revenues, thus the real threat.

      --
      Remember the year 2000? They promised us flying cars. They delivered the PT Cruiser...
    2. Re:'Piracy' seen as biggest threat by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      Unauthorized copies are only a threat if their share of the installed base is growing. I suspect that it is shrinking, and so constitutes an opportunity. Trouble is, it is more of an opportunity for Linux than for Microsoft.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  37. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no, no, no.... carping, as in, complaining about. "There pants", as in, pants that are fashionable, hip... they are so "there". ("OMG, Susie, those are some totally fine there pants!")

    So Microsoft will again live up to its image of doofish "PC Guy" by whining about how Apple is nothing more than style and empty fashion, while their (Microsoft's) products are frumpy but "useful".

  38. Fair enough points by rinoid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OK so Apple's share of the worldwide computer shipments is 7-10 million units.

    Funny thing is, there are other ships floating out there in them competitive waters Mr. Ballmer.
    Witness: iPod, iPhone, iTunes, and notably WebKit

    I see a much lower percentage share of IE on sites I manage and barely a blip of traffic from Chrome with Firefox and then Safari taking places 2 & 3.

    We don't need to discuss how iPod/iPhone has affected the landscape.

    I'm more interested in how WebKit plays in the equation.
    Webkit is more than just plain old eyeballs, it's increasingly driving standards with support for CSS,/HTML specs, and, offline db support that make content development less dependent on proprietary tools like ActiveX plug-ins or Flash and more dependent on a web browser (typically not one from MSFT).

    He's a cocky bastard and he just got lucky. Wonder if he'd do as well as Paul Allen outside of the MSFT play pen?

    Not to mention that fleet sales are what propped up Detroit for a long time ... now what's happening to them? I mention this because the ultra low cost and low cost devices are equivalent to fleet sales.

    1. Re:Fair enough points by pxc · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Remember that WebKit is FOSS, too. It's being remerged back into KDE4, giving it a significant presence on Linux desktops (and with Linux developers, as well).

  39. Terminator quote (paraphrased) by johnny+cashed · · Score: 5, Funny

    (to microsoft)

    Listen, and understand. That linux is out there. It can't be bargained with. It can't be reasoned with. It doesn't feel pity, or remorse, or fear. And it absolutely will not stop, ever, until you are dead.

    1. Re:Terminator quote (paraphrased) by smoker2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      This should be insightful.

    2. Re:Terminator quote (paraphrased) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, its more even impersonal than that, it's not out to kill, it's just on it's way past.

    3. Re:Terminator quote (paraphrased) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha ha ha! Bravo!

    4. Re:Terminator quote (paraphrased) by owlman17 · · Score: 1

      The same could be said, and in fact could be more true with Microsoft:

      Listen, and understand. That Microsoft is out there. It can't be bargained with. It can't be reasoned with. It doesn't feel pity, or remorse, or fear. And it absolutely will not stop, ever, until you are dead.

    5. Re:Terminator quote (paraphrased) by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Very nice, but should have been "penguin"

      Fear the penguin.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    6. Re:Terminator quote (paraphrased) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux is legion.
      Linux does not forgive, Linux does not forget.
      Expect Linux.

  40. Netbooks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Well, duh!

    Netbooks are all the rage these days. The market is growing rapidly, and it will inevitably influence trends on desktop as a whole.

    There's no OS X netbook (no, Airbook is not a netbook), nor there are any in plans so far.

    Meanwhile, Windows is in heavy competition with Linux for "the netbook OS", and it hasn't been doing so good so far. No-one wants Vista there, and XP is mostly okay but aging fast.

    It's no coincidence that "netbook-friendly" is a major talking point for all Windows 7 marketing.

    1. Re:Netbooks by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      More importantly, where margins are REALLY important in the netbook/subnotebook world, paying even a small licensing cost for the OS on each unit as opposed to paying NO licensing cost is a rather big deal. A few of the distros, in particular Ubuntu, are every bit as usable as XP, with a shitload of free software, including an office suite which can open and save the most common Office formats.

      I'm sometimes amazed XP is on these machines at all, though I'm assuming Microsoft is selling OEM licenses at deep discounts. That's hardly a path to future profitability, however.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Netbooks by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Why isn't the Macbook Air a netbook? I'm curious why you think it doesn't meet that criterion (I'm not arguing that it is, but my initial impression would be that it fills that niche).

    3. Re:Netbooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AFAIK Microsoft offers ULCPC licences for Windows XP for around $26-$32 which OEMs can install on low end hardware like netbooks.

      The exact limits used to be a 10.2" screen(no touchscreen allowed), 80GB harddrive, and some RAM limit (not sure if it was 512MiB or 1GiB),

      Microsoft has eased those restrictions slightly recently (By allowing larger harddrives and monitors, as well as touchscreens).

      The key thing to note here is that Microsoft probably never would have lowered the licence cost or even agreed to keep selling XP licences if a free alternative like Linux hadn't existed.

    4. Re:Netbooks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Why isn't the Macbook Air a netbook? I'm curious why you think it doesn't meet that criterion (I'm not arguing that it is, but my initial impression would be that it fills that niche).

      One of the defining factors of today's "netbook" is affordability.

    5. Re:Netbooks by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Is it only a price issue though? The wiki article on netbooks pretty much describes the Macbook Air as being on the larger end of the netbook scale in everything but price (and even then the description is "often significantly cheaper" rather than it being a firm requirement.

      I will be the first to admit that the Air is ludicrously expensive though, especially if you're looking for netbook functionality. If they sold it for $500, would it count? :)

    6. Re:Netbooks by British · · Score: 1

      Netbooks are small on the x and y axis. The Air is small on the z axis. Many of these netbooks are made by regular plain-jane PC makers, and are able to get the price down. Apple is not plain-jame, and the Air sells for quite a bit more.

      To me, the Air is just a laptop that happens to be the thinnest. Just not on the wallet.

  41. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by geobeck · · Score: 1

    Why would MS put a fish in their pants?

    Because they want to revitalize their advertising.

    "Apple has that young hipster, Linux has that cute penguin, but look! We've got a fat nerdy guy with a fish in his pants! Look at him dance!"

    Well, it would be more amusing than the Seinfeld commercial.

    --
    Find environmentally and socially responsible products on http://buy-right.net
  42. source of Linux market share numbers??? by bcrowell · · Score: 1

    The slashdot summary links to two different articles that show wildly different market shares for Linux. I understand why we might not trust the 0.83% from hitslink.com, since, e.g., lots of people's browsers are probably set up with user agent strings claiming to be something other than what they really are. What I totally don't get is where MS claims to have gotten the much higher figure, which looks like ~5% from the pie chart. All I can think of is standing outside the door of a supermarket and asking people to tell you what OS you use. And ~5% just seems much, much, much too high to me. I see my students use the computers in my physics lab, which are half Windows and half Linux boxes, so I can pretty much tell who's never seen Linux before. Now way is the percentage of Linux users that high.

    1. Re:source of Linux market share numbers??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But your data is just anecdotal. Just like mine. Where I go to school, I'd say at least 10% of the students are running Linux. Not just people in engineering (I'm in E.E.) and the sciences, but in English, history, psychology and other humanities subjects. That's what I've seen in my dorm, at least.

      I'm sure that your school and mine are probably not typical. For the overall usage, I can believe the ~5% figure.

    2. Re:source of Linux market share numbers??? by Insaniac99 · · Score: 1

      I see my students use the computers in my physics lab, which are half Windows and half Linux boxes, so I can pretty much tell who's never seen Linux before. Now [sic] way is the percentage of Linux users that high.

      But by looking at students you are biasing yourself. By their very nature students will be less experienced. I could go to any high-school or college and most Tech students wouldn't have heard of Linux, but if you look at those same students 10 years or so later you'll find they probably currently or used to run a Linux computer either at work or as a hobby. I would also be willing to bet that MS includes the servers in their charts and many IT departments use Linux for at least some of their servers.

    3. Re:source of Linux market share numbers??? by ubergeek2009 · · Score: 1

      Talking about market shares for browsers and stuff, have you noticed this site not displaying right in IE. I use it at school and the comments are all messed up. I use Firefox at my house and the page looks fine. Anyone else notice this?

    4. Re:source of Linux market share numbers??? by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > All I can think of is standing outside the door of a supermarket and asking people to
      > tell you what OS you use.

      Not too far off. They probably paid a survey research outfit a large lump of money to interview a carefully selected sample of the population about their computer usage.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  43. Linux IS a real threat. by miffo.swe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I revently took a course in Microsoft AD after having been a linux guy since RH 5. I couldnt in my wildest dreams think that Microsofts server products are such pile of manure that they are. The more i learn about Windows the more surprised i get that people stand for all the shortcomings, the bad usability, the lack of customer centric solutions and the costs.

    In my mind there are just some small things that needs to be pieced in for Linux to be a really dangerous threat to Windows. Most of the things already exists for a Linux solution to completely replace a Microsoft centric network.

    I have run Linux Terminal Servers, Linux Fileservers, Linux webservers, Novell, Windows various solutions and Novell Linux solutions. The only thing really needed is an easier and faster way of setting a Linux solution up. Novell and Windows is very hard and tedious to manage once setup but its really easy to get a minimal system up and running. Linux on the other hand is very hard to setup but very easy to manage on a daily basis.

    If someone packages a solution where you can get a file, print, ldap and policy handling up and running without much fuss i think Linux would explode. Windows integration is from my view overrated, its much more important of making it easier to get up to speed with a pure linux network. Right now to much work is put into following Microsofts whims around with AD and whatnot instead of building a better solution on linux. A copy can only be so good as its original.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
    1. Re:Linux IS a real threat. by jaavaaguru · · Score: 1

      Linux on the other hand is very hard to setup

      It used to be. For the last couple of years, setting up a basic Ubuntu system has been a matter of booting from the CD, double-clicking Install, and pressing OK on the dialogs that appear.

      The hardest thing you'll have to do is choose which partition to install to (if the default isn't the one you want).

      I agree 100% with you on getting the LDAP and similar stuff packaged up in a nice way. It was a bit tricky to configure last time I tried.

    2. Re:Linux IS a real threat. by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      Installing Linux is extremely easy nowadays. Getting services running is sometimes hopelessly hard without any reason really. For some server roles its mostly about letting the users start with the most common setup already configured instead of leaving it all up to the admin to figure out.

      I think many Windows admins are put off because they are used to getting atleast something running and then gradually go from there instead of doing everything from page one.

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    3. Re:Linux IS a real threat. by man_ls · · Score: 1

      I'm somewhat curious, since I don't have any Linux clients, and the only Linux servers I "manage" are vendor boxes that I only have root on because I refused to have it any other way.

      Does Linux offer any actual framework for the application of what would, in AD, be Group Policies?

      Pretty much every single setting you can access through the GUI + thousands more you can only access via policy, as well as publishing new software installations, printers, and automatically redirecting home directories can be done on Windows clients via Active Directory. It's really nice.

      Does Linux even have that framework in place?

    4. Re:Linux IS a real threat. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If someone packages a solution where you can get a file, print, ldap and policy handling up and running without much fuss i think Linux would explode

      Ebox Platform

  44. includes servers? by deander2 · · Score: 1

    this is probably just because he's including server numbers. seems reasonable that the number of linux installs on servers would outnumber the number of apple desktops.

  45. Microsoft doesn't have a chance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the release of OS X, Apple has proven that they have finally figured out how to produce an operating system that isn't worse than Windows Millenium.

    If Apple can keep up with nearly 10 year old software (Windows ME, and unix is what, 30 years old?), and charge nearly double what their competitors charge for hardware, it will only be a matter of time before they take over the operating system market.

  46. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    OSX is even somewhat limited even on Apple hardware. Don't let the silly
    ads fool you. Once you get beyond the stuff in the box you got from the
    apple store, it can be a cold cruel world out there. (IOW, not all the
    3rd party hardware works)

    MacOS falls prey to the same (everyone focuses on the market leader)
    problem that Linux does.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  47. Data is not the plural of anecdote by Rix · · Score: 1

    Please take an intro to stats class before you spout off again.

    1. Re:Data is not the plural of anecdote by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      You may want to review your own comments.

      It is demonstrably true that the vast majority of the personal computer market does not own a Mac, but that does not translate to the more nebulous concept of 'interest' in a Mac. Are they interested? Who knows? I don't, and you don't either.

      On the other hand, it is also demonstrably true that the vast majority of the market own an iPod. Are they interested in iPods and iPhones? Well, there are good indications in the media hype, but again, that's hard to pin down to this concept of 'interest.'

      So when you talk about "Apple hardware" you need to focus your point a little more.

    2. Re:Data is not the plural of anecdote by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Well, the poster may not have data, but Apple certainly does. Even a cursory glance at Apple's latest (and last) keynote will show you the section on their market data that shows Macs are flying off the shelves at accelerated rates. They are selling more macs (faster than their competitors) and their market share is increasing steadily.

      Now, this is either their current non-growing base just buying Macs at an ever-increasing rate, or more likely to be just plain old "more people buying".

      There's no hiding from the figures. They'll never be the 800 pound gorilla, but that's not the goal or the business model Apple is using.

    3. Re:Data is not the plural of anecdote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, its not hard to pin down the concept of "interest" just because you don't know how. so STFU. Nobody cares how many macs you have.

  48. Linux has survived but not prevailed by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 1

    Linux has survived, but not really prevailed. The general public still doesn't want Linux, despite the years of improvements. Keep in mind that I took a pessimistic view of Linux survival. That is, I didn't think Linux would survive. I thought that Linux and its users would be slaughtered. It has, and it has grown and improved. I am honestly astounded at the level of advancement that Linux has made

    But that being said we are still losing to OSX and Windows. A Couple reasons exist. One is Games. A few more do exist. Things generally aren't happening fast enough, and I really am having a hard time understanding why. Its as if there are not as many coders working on Linux application software while there are more coders working the Kernel. The Former is bad, the latter is good. One thing I think needs to be done is an improvement to Linux's development suite. Something to challenge Visual Studio.

    Every year Linux survives is a year of Linux. Lets hope the last year of Linux never comes.

    1. Re:Linux has survived but not prevailed by deragon · · Score: 1

      The general public does not know that Linux exists! Once some Linux corporation starts marketing Linux like Apple does it (maybe Canonical in 5 years), things might change. And because corporations are already running Linux on the server side, they already have the expertises in house to manage Linux machines. When the big wigs discover that Linux on the desktop is viable and hip, they might be seriously think to switch their desktop machines from Windows to Linux. All depends of their dependency with their current applications.

      --
      Remember the year 2000? They promised us flying cars. They delivered the PT Cruiser...
    2. Re:Linux has survived but not prevailed by smoker2 · · Score: 1

      I disagree with your first two sentences. Other than that, you're good !

      Linux HAS prevailed, it WILL prevail. The other 2 have nothing to compare. OK, so they might have their niches, but that is precisely the point of Linux, it doesn't care about niches - you can run whatever you want. All we need really is the big software companies to realise that and develop cross-platform. They will be better off in the long run if they switch now. The last call has gone out for who is for us and who's against us - we have that power. Your reputation will depend on this for decades.

      OK I've got a beard, but when mobile phones were new, I had a tiny one, no-one I knew had one and people gave me shit. 18 months later, they had a rule in the pub about mobiles ringing.

      When I was developing web-sites in 1999, and it all went south for the bursting of the bubble, my bosses colleagues were calling for abandonment of the whole idea, but I told him that it was never going to go away, and to keep his money in there. Was I wrong ?

      Open source drove this whole industry (internet) to where it is. Now it's threatening the Desktop - what would Jesus do ?

    3. Re:Linux has survived but not prevailed by David+Jao · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I didn't think Linux would survive. I thought that Linux and its users would be slaughtered. It has, and it has grown and improved. I am honestly astounded at the level of advancement that Linux has made

      Any proprietary platform with the kind of market share that Linux has would be dead by now. It happened to OS/2, it happened to the various proprietary Unices, and many others (BeOS etc.). Hell, even Apple would have died in the 90s had it not been saved by, ironically, Microsoft.

      The difference is that a free platform can advance even with a very small userbase, as long as enough skilled volunteers are willing to contribute. Linux probably represents more total man-years of work than Windows, even though its market share is much smaller. That's because Linux can easily recruit volunteer developers for free, whereas Microsoft has to pay huge salaries to attract top talent.

      It's a mistake to judge Linux by the same standards as other commercial vendors. Free software really changes the rules of the game, and that's why Microsoft is on its heels.

    4. Re:Linux has survived but not prevailed by dvice_null · · Score: 1

      > One is Games.

      Is there a game in your mind that would not work with Wine?

      > Something to challenge Visual Studio

      http://www.codeblocks.org/
      http://www.kdevelop.org/

    5. Re:Linux has survived but not prevailed by superjaded · · Score: 1

      "Losing?" For Linux, there's really no concept of losing. The only way for Linux to "lose" is if, by some "miracle," all developers stop contributing to it. Maybe Linus goes the way of Reiser, gets thrown in jail and all interest built upon Linux goes by the wayside in shame for Linus's bad deeds. I don't see that happening, though.

      Linux does have a few things going against it in terms of applications and stuff that may bring it closer to the forefront of people's minds. Of course, these disadvantages comes from probably the biggest advantage Linux has: it's free and open. But when developers only

      1. Applications are typically only a "developers toy" for the most part, unless it gains particular popularity. I mention this because many developers don't have a clue on how to create a usable and pleasing UI. I'm one of those developers. Oh, and Documentation
      2. Little support from commercial vendors in terms of drivers, games, etc. This has little to do with Linux itself and everything to do with the fact it's not windows.
      3. WINE has been a blessing and a curse. I remember reading even fairly recently of companies saying "we support our game in linux via wine." It may be awesome for companies who haven't ported x game from windows, but it also gives people an excuse not to make a native port
      4. Duplication of effort. Think of how many Window managers there are, how many desktop environments (and how big of an undertaking DEs are), how many media players there are, how many file managers, how many shells there are, how many terminal emulators for X there are.. the list goes on.
      5. Some applications could take a hint from Apple about their "just working" philosophy. While I do enjoy the customizability Linux and everything associated with it gives me.. 15 windows worth of options for an instant messenger is kinda silly.

      I still honestly believe that what keeps Linux below many people's radar is the fact that it's not Windows. While installing Linux has gotten laughably easy (Wubi is sex), when people can't even install software without having a slight mental breakdown, how do you expect them to potentially repartition their hard drive and installing an operating system without any help? Yeah, it's not happening.

      Why should we really care about Linux becoming the de-facto OS/kernel for everyone though? It's like me being an atheist and caring that the majority of the world are silly christians. But really, you say things "aren't moving quickly" enough on the linux front.. what do you mean? It's made leaps and bounds in the last few years from the desktop usability standpoint. In all areas, really.

      And as far as Visual Studio goes, I wouldn't be surprised if most developers are happy with simple syntax highlighting text editors such as SciTE and Kate. ;p

    6. Re:Linux has survived but not prevailed by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      But of course, for many people programming is a hobby. I also program for a hobby now and then - and Linux is a natural choice, it's a great hobby platform. And one of its strengths I think is a total lack of central planning, other than maybe the groups that develop and set technical standards.

      A hobbyist doesn't care whether other people use their software. I have put some stuff out there, just with the idea maybe it's useful for someone. If not, well I can use it and I had my fun building it.

      Linux is getting big, with lots of commercial support. RedHat is one of the oldest I think and there are so many more.

      And then there are so many more hobby platforms. The BSD clones, that BeOS clone that I forgot the name of, and so many obscure and sometimes unfinished OS'es out there. Built as a hobby, for fun, just like Linus started his Minix clone. He built it for fun, not to get rich. Put it out there for the world to see and to comment on, maybe to show off his skills.

      But first and foremost it is a hobby platform, and hobbyists don't worry about cost/benefits. They like to fiddle with it, break it, and fix it again. And as it's a hobby, it may cost a bit (money and/or time), and for that reason alone I think all those open source OSes and applications will simply stay and evolve.

      Open source has no central planning so it can quite literally evolve: the good stuff improves, and the bad branches die off. MS and Apple can not do that, they have central planning. It gives (at least in Apple's case) a nice coherent package, but it can not evolve. It can not really try out new technologies, radically different ways of doing a user interface for example, or just the small improvements we see in various softwares. It lacks internal competition such as KDE vs Gnome and all the other desktop ideas out there. They try to be the best, try out new things, borrow heavily from each other, and improve rapidly and ongoing.

    7. Re:Linux has survived but not prevailed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not enough application software? Then pick up a text editor and code. Be a part of the solution.

      Don't know how to code? There are plenty of languages, tutorials, and toolchains out there for free to learn!

      Otherwise you just want work for free. Programming takes time, and since programmers only have a limited amount of time, they will work on what they find interesting and fun. You can either start a project and attract developers to work in their spare time, you can pay a developer, you can take over some of the aspects of the job that sometimes fall by the wayside (documentation, support forums), or you can just be passive and unhelpful.

      Being a passive entity isn't going to fix anything.

  49. The year of Linux by greenbird · · Score: 1

    So...wait...does this mean that last year was the year of the Linux desktop?

    --
    Who is John Galt?
  50. Linux is more young geek friendly by dave562 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When I was a kid, I had an Apple IIgs and a DOS box. The Apple was a nice machine, but the DOS box felt a lot more like a computer. At the time, I had a full instruction manual for DOS. That manual included descriptions of all the COM and EXE files on the system, their switches and examples of how to use them. Apple lacks that raw computing experience. It is there in the terminal window, but you don't need to go there to use the OS. Linux on the other hand still has that natural and exposed underbelly that geek kids can get into. Some kids are curious and those kids like figuring out how things work. Those kids don't need mommy and daddy to shell out $1000 for a computer that runs OSX because they can get Linux for free and run it on a 486. Those kids are a lot more likely to go a school that will move toward open source as a cost saving measure, as opposed to a school that will come up with a lot of money to pay the Apple tax.

    If I were Microsoft and I was focused on the next generation of geeks, I'd be scared shitless of Linux.

    1. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by interval1066 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "If I were Microsoft and I was focused on the next generation of geeks, I'd be scared shitless of Linux."

      No. Neither Microsoft nor Linux make their money from geek sales. Unless you're bringing up the innovation angle. If any of the big players don't find a law suit angle (highly unlikely with the current IP environment) then possibly a new geek innovator has a shot. Otherwise, no, I don't think so.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    2. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by dave562 · · Score: 1

      The sales don't matter so much as the mind share. When I started using Linux, it was lagging behind what Windows could do. By that I mean that it lacked the application support. At this point they are almost equal. The major reason that Microsoft continues to exist is because of their application lock-in. For a lot of organizations, it is just too painful change to anything that isn't Windows. However as new companies come online, and new generations of people use computers, they will find that Linux provides the same kind of tools as Windows does, and those tools are often times a fraction of the price. A teacher doesn't care what program a student used to create a paper with. The teacher just cares that it is double spaced and turned in on time. A small business owner doesn't care if his computers run Outlook, he cares that he can email his employees.

      Microsoft gained prominence because they provided businesses with the tools that they needed. They provided those tools in a relatively easy to use format. Because they were one of the very few providers of the tools, they prospered. I think what we are going to see is that they have squandered their lead. There really aren't very many more "killer apps" to be invented. This is completely opinion, but I think SharePoint is going to be Microsoft's last hurrah. It is their last chance to get organizations tied into a single, unified respository for all of their content. SharePoint is like a Wiki on steroids, but it doesn't necessarily need to be a proprietary Microsoft technology. They have the benefit of being able to easily integrate their Office Suite with SharePoint. As a proprietary vendor, they have the benefit of being able to issue edicts to their developers and align a lot of resources toward a common goal. Accomplishing the same thing in OSS land would take a lot of coordination and would probably require an outfit like IBM or the like to develop a competing project. Anyway, I digress...

      Microsoft is smart to be worried about Linux, but not so much in the near term. "Developing markets" (read, anywhere outside of the US/EU) are all over Linux because it works with their budgets. Venture capitalists are all over Linux because it provides a foundation for them to build companies on. Linux application support is getting better every day. Just take a look at Zimbra. Now, I'm not about to scrap MY Exchange servers and migrate my users to Zimbra. But if I were a small business owner and I needed email for my company, I wouldn't even be looking at the cost of Exchange licenses.

    3. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by abacusfinch · · Score: 1

      This is amazingly put, I also agree.

      --
      wut?
    4. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by paitre · · Score: 1

      Of course, there are all sorts of 'hosted' email products where you don't even have to look at Zimbra - you can pay someone else to worry about the server side headaches - and thousands of businesses are doing exactly that - IT should be about enabling companies to focus on their 'core' business, not about hacking a configuration file in order to get mail working properly for the new guy that is insisting on using his iPhone 3g v2...

    5. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There really aren't very many more "killer apps" to be invented. This is completely opinion, but I think SharePoint is going to be Microsoft's last hurrah. It is their last chance to get organizations tied into a single, unified respository for all of their content. SharePoint is like a Wiki on steroids, but it doesn't necessarily need to be a proprietary Microsoft technology. They have the benefit of being able to easily integrate their Office Suite with SharePoint. As a proprietary vendor, they have the benefit of being able to issue edicts to their developers and align a lot of resources toward a common goal. Accomplishing the same thing in OSS land would take a lot of coordination and would probably require an outfit like IBM or the like to develop a competing project.

      Competing OSS products already abound.

      Alfresco is probably the pick of them.

      http://www.alfresco.com/

      Does everything that Sharepoint does, but does it for free, with no CALs, and so that you can run Windows, Mac or Linux as desktop clients. OpenOffice has extensions for using it with Alfresco.

      Linux application support is getting better every day. Just take a look at Zimbra. Now, I'm not about to scrap MY Exchange servers and migrate my users to Zimbra. But if I were a small business owner and I needed email for my company, I wouldn't even be looking at the cost of Exchange licenses.

      OpenChange also is on its way.

      http://www.openchange.org/

      There is also Citadel to consider.

      http://www.citadel.org/doku.php

      Samba 4 will support Active Directory and, of course, be a capable file server.

      http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/273515/active_directory_comes_linux_samba_4

      All free (no cost) and Free (freedom) as well. All of these OSS solutions will support Windows, Mac or Linux desktop clients, or any mixture of them. There is absolutely no need to pay any more for server software or server access licenses.

      Enjoy. Prosper.

    6. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by onefriedrice · · Score: 1

      Interesting idea. Unfortunately, Linux doesn't have the monopoly on "geeky" by any means. Mac OS X can be a very geeky OS. And there are a lot of geeks with rich parents, too. Compound that with the high usability of OS X, and it's no wonder that 1/3 college students seem to have a MacBook these days.

      Microsoft may fear Linux internationally and in the server room, but they would also be wise to fear Apple on the desktop.

      That said, I find it rather pointless to discuss who should be feared more by Microsoft. Apple obviously has some good offerings, and Linux definitely has its place and will not go away. Consider also the iPhone and Android platforms which are decidedly not Microsoft but also very good, and we see that Microsoft has a lot to worry about, on all fronts.

      --
      This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
    7. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      You are correct but the comment I replied to specifically mentioned sales, not philosophy. Infact, Microsoft makes most of its money from Office and Office-related offal. The number one complaint I read and hear from Microsoft adherents is what? "Not compatible with Office." This is of course quickly being dismissed by those fantastic OSS engineers, but still, Office is the perceived standard of utilty and useability in the larger non-geek user space.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    8. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      It was the geeks that started the Vista Flop. So don't underestimate the geeks.

    9. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by dave562 · · Score: 1

      A lot of software leverages office. For example, a company I did some consulting work for rolled out a document imaging solution. The solution hooks into Office and other Windows apps (mostly the financial software). For example, they can pull up a scanned check and from that check, go straight into the corresponding vendor record, AP invoice, etc. There are annoying little hooks like that written into all sorts of Windows applications. The same functionality can be reproduced in OSS (after all, code is just code), but there is a significant cost involved in reinventing the wheel and customizing OSS. Look at it from the point of view of the document imaging software developer. What platform do they target? OpenOffice? StarOffice? Some other office suite? What happens when OpenOffice gets upgraded, but StarOffice doesn't? Does the developer now support two seperate releases of their software? Do they tell the StarOffice users, "Sorry, you're assed out of all the new features we develop using the new OpenOffice functionality."?

    10. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by Darth+Cider · · Score: 1

      Uh, but XCode is included with OS X on every Mac. Apple gives it away. It's a fully professional software development environment, and pretty amazing. You can register as a developer, which costs nothing, and get access to tons of documentation online. The iPhone SDK is downloadable for free and includes great tools, like an iPhone emulator and interface builder. Peace to you for enjoying Linux development, but Apple makes it really easy to be a software rockstar too.

    11. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      Fortunately, computer geeks are a minority. Joe User doesn't care about attrib.exe. He wants his e-mail to work and his browser to be easy to use and his Facebook to not crash. His idea of a 'computing experience' most certainly is NOT about opening a terminal window and using CP or whatever. Of course your typical /. user will love that type of post above. The average user wouldn't even know what your talking about.

      Just because someone is young doesn't make them curious about a terminal window. You have to have a bent (pun intended) for being a computer geek. It takes an odd mix of curiosity, intelligence, a smidgen of mechanical aptitude, and preserverance.

      You make it sound like the youth of today are natural hackers. Are they computer savvy? Yes. Do they know their way around a terminal window as a result? Not likely.

      If a GUI is properly designed, it should remove the need for a terminal window. It is a natural evolution to move from a command line to a GUI and a more object oriented interface. The typical human is very object/visually oriented. I think Apple has done a good job at that. The OS has a nice polish and refinement to it.

      Linux is also getting to the point where a terminal window isn't needed for most day to day work. Of course there will always be those that prefer it, but it isn't necessary to make it through the day.

      THAT and the cost is what makes Linux more attractive to the Windows crowd and it probably scares the hell out of MS. Not only it's stability, low system requirements and speed, but it's ease of use as well. 3 years ago you would have to drag a windows user kicking and screaming. They didn't consider it an alternative. The GUI's lacked polish, the apps all looked 'home made' and getting a windows app to run under linux was a pipe dream. Not so much an issue these days.

    12. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by SEE · · Score: 1

      Apple won't take over the desktop market for the simple reason that Apple won't sell business desktops. Apple is a high-margin elite-brand seller. If they started pumping out low-margin beige econoboxes for the business desktop market, first, they'd wreck their brand image. Second, they'd kill profits, because plenty of home Mac users would buy the low-margin business line OS X units instead of high-margin units. Apple can take market share from Microsoft, sure, but it can't drive Microsoft from the business desktop without abandoning its Jobs-era successful, highly-profitable business model. OS X's potential threat to Microsoft is restricted because OS X is harnessed to fulfill Apple's needs.

      Linux, on the other hand, is not owned by one business with one business's concerns. If a Red Hat abandons a market, an Ubuntu pops up. Linux accordingly competes (perhaps badly) with Windows everywhere Windows can be put, and will continue to do so no matter what decisions any individual Linux business makes.

    13. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are wrong on this one, for the student everything is free from microsoft. As a student i have everything for free from their actual web site.

      But like your points about linux.

    14. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by Strake · · Score: 1

      Bah. _Real_ geeks write their _own_ kernels.

    15. Re:Linux is more young geek friendly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, but XCode is included with OS X on every Mac

      Really? I had to download it.

      It's a fully professional software development environment, and pretty amazing.

      IT was terrible when I used it for OpenGL development. But that could of just been OS X in general having buggy opengl and buggy drivers.

  51. You seem to be repeating my point by Rix · · Score: 1

    Apple has accepted an upper cap on their market penetration. Thus they are not a threat to Microsoft, nor are their few fanatical customers much of an opportunity.

    1. Re:You seem to be repeating my point by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > Apple has accepted an upper cap on their market penetration.

      Exactly. The conspiracy minded think Apple made a deal with the devil to stay in single digits in exchange for Office remaining available. i.e. being Microsoft's official token competitor.

      I disagree and think the post you replied to was more right. Apple sees itself as a premium brand experience that would be destroyed if they ever went double digit penetration. How special would a Mercedes owner feel if the rabble started driving them. Even if they were cheaper models, just seeing the logo on non rich people's cars would drive their current customers to brands that still carried the cache of luxury goods. At least half the appeal of owning a Mac is being SEEN owning a Mac. Not taking anything away from Apple's success in creating good functional products, but that isn't exactly what they are selling, much like a Mercedes IS indeed a quality machine but that quality is only a small part of the reason a stockbroker or drug dealer wants one.

      The iPod was a dangerous but so far successful gambit. It seems to have raised awareness and desire for the Apple brand and even though lessor yuppies, nay even the common rabble these days, all sport the trademark white earbuds it doesn't seem to have diluted the luxury status of owning a Mac.

      And that's why Linux shares the crap out of Microsoft. There is still some elite (leet?) tinge to Linux but vendors are working hard on versions for the ordinary user and marketing hard to create demand among non technical users. And ordinary users are Microsoft's core demo.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    2. Re:You seem to be repeating my point by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I disagree and think the post you replied to was more right. Apple sees itself as a premium brand experience that would be destroyed if they ever went double digit penetration. How special would a Mercedes owner feel if the rabble started driving them. Even if they were cheaper models, just seeing the logo on non rich people's cars would drive their current customers to brands that still carried the cache of luxury goods.

      That's a fine opinion, but I don't see any real support for it. You're basing your premise entirely on the idea that Apple's customers continue using it because they think it is exclusive. I've personally never seen that behavior demonstrated. I know one person who used a Ma as their regular computer who stopped using it and went back to Windows. They did a lot of development for a desktop Linux distro as their hobby and found it too cumbersome to use a different OS than the one they were doing so much development for. Everyone else I personally know has stuck with the Mac because they like using OS X better than the alternatives (Windows and Linux and in a few rare cases BSDs).

      At least half the appeal of owning a Mac is being SEEN owning a Mac.

      So you have asserted, but do you know any people who stopped using Macs after they saw it becoming less exclusive? Do you have any actual evidence they would switch and what do you think they would switch to? There are certainly computers that are more exclusive, like toughbooks, but despite the serious hardware advantages, I've never heard of anyone to switching to a toughbook from a Mac because of the exclusivity instead of because they absolutely needed the hardening.

      ...much like a Mercedes IS indeed a quality machine but that quality is only a small part of the reason a stockbroker or drug dealer wants one.

      For the average person, however, the advantages of having a Mercedes that they actually use can be had from a number of other vendors. (I might mention Mercedes actually is not doing so well for reliability these days) The advantages of using a Mac for the average person, however, are hard to find from any other vendor. A Mercedes driver can buy a Lexus and have as or more reliable of a car if the Mercedes is not "exclusive" enough for them. What will people who currently use Macs buy to get the same level of polished usability?

      The iPod was a dangerous but so far successful gambit.

      The iPod was a parry that turned into a riposte. The idea was to stop MS from shutting Macs out of the digital music scene and it succeeded better than Apple anticipated and really ran off into an unexpected success. It was successful, but not a real risk to their brand because they were focused on making a premium player. It was more expensive but "better" as a business model.

      And that's why Linux shares[sic] the crap out of Microsoft.

      Linux is a direct competitor that is guaranteed to undercut MS's prices because of the licensing. The branding is not the issue, the business model is. MS has been hurting hardware vendors for years and there is a real market for an alternative and it is slipping in through a few cracks already. Apple has weakened MS's ability to leverage their monopoly and they screwed up in failing to anticipate the Netbook and not being flexible enough to shift to it quickly. MS fears losing overwhelming dominance because as soon as that happens, they have to compete on quality and that's something they have not been good at for a long time and which would require reworking all their business models.

    3. Re:You seem to be repeating my point by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      the iPod works because no matter what model you buy, within three to six months there's a new premium on the block. Be it Touch, Phone, Nano, or Classic. You always have room to improve within their little hierarchy; especially the more popular cheaper Nanos and Minis.

    4. Re:You seem to be repeating my point by Macka · · Score: 1

      Huh? I couldn't be further away from your point. You said:

      Apple has never been a real threat to MS. And so long as they refuse to license their OS, they never will be.

      I responded by pointing out that Apple tried what you suggested, and instead of boosting them to compete with MS, it nearly killed the company. In what universe is that repeating your point? Not this one!

    5. Re:You seem to be repeating my point by Macka · · Score: 1

      and they screwed up in failing to anticipate the Netbook and not being flexible enough to shift to it quickly

      I agreed with everything you said up to this point. The Netbooks are turning out not to be so great for business for those that have them in a portfolio with bigger and more profitable models. One of the reasons some vendors have seen big drops in their laptop sales recently has been the shift from traditional laptops to netbooks, and it's hurting their bottom line right at a time when they can least afford that. Apple meanwhile are still reporting strong demand for their laptops compared to the rest of the industry, and as such are feeling the pinch of the downturn less. The profit on Netbooks is so skinny that it only makes sense to sell one if you can do so in large numbers, and Apple have said repeatedly that they're not interested in the volume market, preferring instead to entice as many people as possible towards more profitable models.

  52. Apple is not coming for Linux by untorqued · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apple sells high end products. Apple's target audience is people who will pay more for aesthetics, and for a bottom liner on troubleshooting. Apple's less concerned with selling more products than selling more expensive products. A single digit market share isn't a problem with this model, because Apple's skimming the cream off the market, and leaving PC manufacturers to compete on price with very slim margins.

    1. Re:Apple is not coming for Linux by noidentity · · Score: 1

      And that's the way Apple users would like it; working well is more important than being really cheap and available anywhere (not that Apple is perfect in eliminating all problems of course).

    2. Re:Apple is not coming for Linux by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Apple's target audience is people who will pay more for aesthetics

      No it isn't. It's design. It's just that aesthetics are a natural part of good design. Apple wouldn't be so successful if their products only looked good but functioned like Windows or Linux. I know most people on this site don't have a good understanding of design, but surely enough of you guys have used an Apple product by now to realise that Apple doesn't do well because of aesthetics and marketing alone.

  53. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "a huge developer-blitz to make OS X work on non-Apple hardware"

    Like the Core2Duo Processor? Or GeForce and Radeon graphics cards? How about Barracuda HDDs?
    These are already in use in Mac Pros and Macbooks.
    They've been running on Intel since 2006.

    Their software used to run on Apple hardware, but not any more. It's already officially running on standard PC parts, and people outside of Apple have been working to get it running on other hardware.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OSx86

  54. Actually, very understandable by omibus · · Score: 1

    The key to Microsoft's fortunes are in the Business Market, not the Consumer Market. Businesses buy Office, Exchange, SharePoint, SQL Server, and Server products. Businesses pay for support agreements and the like. There just isn't as much money for them in the consumer market. So Microsoft doesn't put as much energy there.

    Apple loves the consumer market.
    Linux loves the business market.

    Therefore: Linux is their biggest competitor.

    --
    Bad User. No biscuit!
  55. media PCs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I recently build a media pc, and needed to install a microsoft os. I wanted to display 1080p MKVs thru the pc's HDMI port. It turned out that the windows approach was much easier, and allowed for a weaker cpu.

    Linux will eventually be able to easily perform the same function, but that will be in another year or two.

    Bottom line is that microsoft got a sale from me because I didn't want to wait for the linux alternative. They are making money from people like me in the present, but that revenue source could likely dry-up in the near future.

  56. Wishful thinking... by nscheffey · · Score: 1

    Did anyone actually look at the chart in TFA? I would say "clearly ahead" is a stretch...

  57. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by 1shooter · · Score: 1

    M$ will be carping there pants.

    No, they'll be goldfishing here pants.

    Dude. Goldfish _are_ carp.

    --
    6F 9E A9 1E 96 9F 74 27 ED B8 81 6D 0C 4E 1E 78
    My other Sig is a 229.
  58. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by mrsquid0 · · Score: 1

    >>as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be carping there
    >>pants.

    >Why would MS put a fish in their pants?

    Don't knock it until you try it.

    --
    Just because you are paranoid does not mean that no-one is out to get you.
  59. I don't see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, the Linux slice is bigger on the slide than the Mac slice. Linux may in fact even be the bigger threat to Mickeysoft but that doesn't mean that they see it.

    First, the pie chart is only about the current estimated market shares. They have to consider things like "which one will grow more", or "which one is taking away what would have been Mickeysoft customers as opposed to extra machines which wouldn't have existed or gone to another competitor" There is plenty of room for them to rationalize Linux out of the picture. Or they could even look at their own chart and still just see what they want to see and not be willing to accept that Linux is the bigger threat.

    I point this out because the Ballmer quotes in the article make it seem more like they are still mostly talking about Apple and Piracy with Linux still just a sidenote. Of course, there were only two quotes from what was probably a much longer speech but if Linux was a major consideration in this talk the author certainly seems to have missed it.

    Another telling thing is their Investment chart. It's displayed just as prominently on the slide and there is no Linux mention there.

  60. Equating Linux with Piracy by morgauo · · Score: 1

    No, I'm not accusing the author of equating Linux with piracy but did anyone else notice how much the two showed up side by side in the same sentence?

    I wonder if any uninformed dbs like that teacher who confiscated all his student's Linux CDs claiming they were piracy will skim over this article and leap to the wrong conclusion.

    1. Re:Equating Linux with Piracy by morgauo · · Score: 1

      please read "dbs" in the comment above as standing for "human beings". Apparently ignorant people are still people.

      http://linuxlock.blogspot.com/2008/12/character-assasinations-aint-us.html

    2. Re:Equating Linux with Piracy by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      You think a class action libel suit would work?

      IANAL. This is not formal legal advice.

      --
      $ make available
    3. Re:Equating Linux with Piracy by morgauo · · Score: 1

      I hope you're joking. No, the author didn't even make any claim that Linux is piracy. IANAL but i know there was no libel. I was only commenting that with the so much FUD and ignorance going around it would be much better if the author didn't use those two words so close together in the same sentences so much. It kind of seemed to be asking for it.

  61. What next by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

    What next? They'll tell me linux has more developers than windows. And that they work for free.

  62. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by genner · · Score: 1

    as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be carping there pants.

    Why would MS put a fish in their pants?

    I think that's obvious.

  63. You think Ballmer doesn't have an agenda? by wfolta · · Score: 3, Insightful

    SO you believe that Ballmer must be stating only the facts, no agenda here?

    What I've noticed from Ballmer over the years is a consistent pattern: what Ballmer perceives as a manageable threat, he mentions as a threat, but what he views as a huge threat he mocks and makes fun of.

    Look at Open Source, or Macs, or the iPhone. When he's really threatened, he disrespects and mocks in order to appear especially confident. A sort of Tough Guy Reverse Psychology.

    So yes, I know Linux partisans will say it's a desktop threat to MS with more potential because every Windows box is a potential Linux box, but I think Ballmer's "tell", as it were, is saying that he is scared by the Mac and in particular the fact that Apple has an obvious and coherent Mac-iPod-iPhone spectrum of products that can easily include netbooks, tablets, surfaces, or any other form-factor. And that Apple has basically managed an end run around Microsoft in the content realm (Music & Movies).

    1. Re:You think Ballmer doesn't have an agenda? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except most Mac user still end up getting Office, and some even get Windows to run in Bootcamp and VMs, so MS generally still gets their money. Microsoft isn't really competing in the other markets, so they can't lose market share in them.

    2. Re:You think Ballmer doesn't have an agenda? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Unless you are ready to pay for an Apple branded netbook same mas for 2 or 3 Asus EEEPCs, Apple has no chance in that market. Remember, that Apple is a "premium" company.

  64. Microsoft Doesn't Compete with Apple by GaryPatterson · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Apple is a hardware company, which makes an OS to sell the computers (and now iPhones). Added to the hardware business is now a media business based in iTunes, which reinforces the hardware business (through selling iPods).

    Microsoft is a software company, with a tiny smattering of peripherals (keyboards, mice).

    While Microsoft and Apple compete for attention, they're in different markets. Microsoft doesn't make PCs and Apple doesn't sell OS X for any PC.

  65. At least quote accurate prices by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Dell desktop with Windows Vista (cheapest I could find in
    Apple dekstop with OS X (cheapest I could find in
    And one more thing:

    1 year RHEL license for desktops: $80

    So, in short, you do pay more to acquire Apple products, and there is no valid reason to deny that. You can try to claim that Apple products are better and therefore should cost more, but that is an entirely different argument.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
    1. Re:At least quote accurate prices by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ahem that is:

      Dell: $394
      Apple: $599

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    2. Re:At least quote accurate prices by jaavaaguru · · Score: 1

      I stated that I was listing the details for the fully-featured offerings. The $80 RHEL is their 'Basic' option. I don't know anyone who uses that.

    3. Re:At least quote accurate prices by abhi_beckert · · Score: 1

      If you're going to start talking about the dirt-cheap end of the market you need to include second hand. You can buy a mac or PC for $1.

      What really matters is who makes the cheapest computer which *matches your individual needs*. When you're being realistic, apple's prices are very competitive.

  66. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not agreat fan, but they're OK.

  67. M/S Office by jmccue · · Score: 1

    I think another part of his thinking is M/S Office, which I believe where most of their profit comes from. when someone buys a mac my guess is they pick up M/S office, which means $ for M/S. Not and option for the other OS's. Obviously M/S is to blame for that, but right now that is the reality of their situation.

  68. BIgot anyone? by wfolta · · Score: 1

    Your nice typing loses credibility once your bigotry shows through. Apple's userbase is not full of people who are "fooled into paying for pricy stuff they really do not need". Many of us are quite sophisticated, computer-wise, and are getting exactly what we need, which works in the way we want.

    Keep believing that everyone who doesn't make your choice is stupid if you want, but...

    1. Re:BIgot anyone? by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      It's funny that you reverse the bigotry by claiming Apple fans are "sophisticated." So the rest of us are not? Hypocrite.

    2. Re:BIgot anyone? by Homer1946 · · Score: 1

      Someone saying their own choice was sophisticated is NOT the same as saying someone else's choice isn't. It is not an obligatory insult. You are employing false logic.

      Saying Mac users are "fooled into paying for pricy stuff they really do not need" is absolutely insulting. If you are going to respond to someone who you believe is calling you (or someone) unsophisticated, at least try to have a sophisticated response.

    3. Re:BIgot anyone? by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      No, you are putting words into his mouth. He didn't make the claim that you weren't sophisticated, he said specifically that many Mac users are, to refute your point that they were all conned into making a silly purchase.

      It's most definitely not the same thing, nor did he imply it was the case. There's no hypocrisy in it at all.

    4. Re:BIgot anyone? by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      False logic or not, that's what I got out of his post. You can read it any way you wish, but I took it as a shot right across to those of us who aren't as "sophisticated" as him. You can devalue my thoughts if you wish, but that's what I see from his post. Eye of the beholder, I suppose.

    5. Re:BIgot anyone? by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Quote: "your point that they were all conned into making a silly purchase." I never made that point. You must have me confused with the grandparent. But past that, you can read it any way you wish, but I took it as a shot right across to those of us who aren't as "sophisticated" as him. You can devalue my thoughts if you wish, but that's what I see from his post. Eye of the beholder, I suppose.

    6. Re:BIgot anyone? by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      You are correct, I confused you with the GP poster since I was referencing that post, my bad.

      I did not read it that way at all - the fact that he claimed that some Mac users were sophisticated is not an exclusive statement that requires any non-mac-user to be unsophisticated.

    7. Re:BIgot anyone? by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      My mistake.

    8. Re:BIgot anyone? by Homer1946 · · Score: 1

      I am not trying to start (or continue) any long discussion, but the poster was responding to having their choice to use a Mac devalued. Therefore they were pointing out that their choice did have value (and merit). You cannot understand the post without understanding it was a response. If the post had NOT been a response to provocation then perhaps you could see it as a "shot", but as it was you (of all people) should understand someone bristling at being insulted.

      They were only saying that their choice had merit, not that yours did not. Original poster please correct me if I am wrong.

  69. Cool and Free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    It's easier to contend against cool, when your option is less expensive.

    But when the competition is cool AND free, you have a serious problem.

    I've been a Mac user for over 20 years, and now that everyone and their brother has a Mac at the university, you now see the "cool kids" running around with Linux laptops (I'm guessing they boot into Windows when they need Word).

    The Mac is looking a little less like "the little guy" and more like "the man" these days.

  70. Uh oh. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    A story on Slashdot that pits Unix fans against Apple devotees.

    I'm hearing some heads exploding, I think.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  71. Its comparing Apples and Linuxes really by matrixskp · · Score: 1

    Apples OSX does not come with any crappy activation key or other pain in the a$$ copy protection system, so their actual install base could be way higher than reported. Of course you still need Mac hardware to install OSX on, but there is nothing to stop you (except the law) from buying 1 copy of OSX and updating all the Macs in your building.

    >OSX can only realistically come from one over priced manufactuer where as Linux is free and can be installed on any machine.

    Overpriced? Thanks, but my time is valuable... I'd rather pay the very reasonable price and have the OS up and running in an hour than spend days messing around with Linux trying to get some driver working. Please dont compare apples with linuxes. Its called 'choice'... use it and enjoy the results.

    I think the reason Microsoft see Linux as the competition is that Apple is in another league and as wfolta stated above 'every Windows box is a potential Linux box'.

    1. Re:Its comparing Apples and Linuxes really by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      If you're concerned about drivers, buy a computer that comes with Linux.

      --
      $ make available
    2. Re:Its comparing Apples and Linuxes really by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Apples OSX does not come with any crappy activation key or other pain in the a$$ copy protection system, so their actual install base could be way higher than reported. Of course you still need Mac hardware to install OSX on, but there is nothing to stop you (except the law) from buying 1 copy of OSX and updating all the Macs in your building.

      Please stop promoting piracy.

      You should instead be saying that there is nothing stopping you from updating all your computers to Linux, no law makes it illegal to my knowledge, unlike with OS X.

      Overpriced? Thanks, but my time is valuable...

      It took 20 minutes to complete and start using Kubuntu on my HP DV6000. It took me a several hours to do the equivalent with windows and OS X simply wouldn't install for obvious reasons.

      I'd rather pay the very reasonable price and have the OS up and running in an hour than spend days messing around with Linux trying to get some driver working.

      My personal opinion is that if your productivity in the end will be superior, then spending a few extra hours on a OS to get it working to that level you need is reasonable. That said, getting all the software and features I need to start working effectively in OS X also takes me hours while it just took 20 minutes with Kubuntu, and that's from the moment I started installing it.

      I think the reason Microsoft see Linux as the competition is that Apple is in another league and as wfolta stated above 'every Windows box is a potential Linux box'.

      I think it's because Linux has more market share than Apple does and is a threat to Microsoft's and Apple's business models.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  72. Chart in TFA misleading by xlotlu · · Score: 1

    That chart doesn't make any sense. There's no numbers, but the chart would show that Linux+Apple combined have less than 10% market share, and Linux's is slightly higher than Apple's. Are Net Applications' numbers that severely skewed? I mean, it would make sense to increase Windows' market share at the expense of Linux, but doubling Apple's makes little sense.

    If that slide is for real, then both must be messing with the numbers: NetApps throwing Linux to the bin, and Ballmer likely downplaying all their competitors (i.e. unlicensed Windows included) in order to reassure the investors/shareholders.

    All in all, Linux is by far a (the?) major thorn in Microsft's side. Apple has a well defined target market: they sell the shiny machine together with the shiny OS, and they proved over and over they don't intend to let the software get detached from the machine, which can only please Microsoft.

    On the other hand, Linux runs on all hardware where Windows runs, and then some. That's gotta hurt.

    1. Re:Chart in TFA misleading by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > That chart doesn't make any sense. There's no numbers, but the chart would show that
      > Linux+Apple combined have less than 10% market share, and Linux's is slightly higher
      > than Apple's. Are Net Applications' numbers that severely skewed?

      Net Applications's numbers are market share, either dollar volume of units sold. Ballmer's chart probably shows installed base.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    2. Re:Chart in TFA misleading by Bazman · · Score: 1

      Misleading and rubbish. Shiny, 3-d, translucent, textured pie charts with reflections. A whole load of screen real estate to show four numbers, and not in a very good way either. Is the purple bit really bigger than the blue bit? By how much? I can't tell.

      Is this the default Office 2k7 chart option? I suspect it is.

      Plus the multiple gradient backgrounds doing my head in. Even without flying chairs I reckon a Ballmer presentation is headache-inducing.

  73. Apple is just there for the ride by FyberOptic · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Why should Microsoft feel threatened by a rehashed version of NextStep, which hasn't really evolved its modern interface since the first version of OSX, and despite the dock and shiny colors, is yet still the same interface from 20 years ago? At least Microsoft and Linux try new things, and learn from mistakes and consumers.

    Macs have a niche user base of people with a lot of money to spend on pretty machines, regardless of how much they can really do. Linux users are generally considered power users, therefore making them the people having more of an impact on technology, such as in the server market. Linux is free, too, which is a huge contrast to overpriced Apple gear.

    From a strictly consumer-based standpoint, Apple is competitive. But from a technology and user base position, Linux is the threat.

    1. Re:Apple is just there for the ride by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Wow. You obviously haven't used a Mac since computers used punch cards!

      To claim that the Apple UI is the same as it was since the first implementation of OS X and hasn't changed in all that time and that Linux and MS in the same time period have done all the heavy lifting and innovation in the GUI space is just.... wilfully ignorant.

      Also, the thinly disguised comment that Macs can't really do anything and are just overpriced toys is just silly.

      So, what "new things" have MS and Linux tried on the desktop in the "20 year" gap where the OS X interface has stood still, frozen in time? Aero? Widgets? Animated windows? Context sensitive, status based icons? New shiny colours?

      If OS X since version 10.0 hasn't changed, then by that standard, neither has any other operating system.

    2. Re:Apple is just there for the ride by FyberOptic · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you've never used Windows to see how it evolved over the versions. Or the major interface shift when they went from Win3.1 to Win95. And then the major Start button redesign with Vista. And now the task bar shift with Windows 7. That's just to name the major noticable things.

      Now, look at the file menu at the top of OSX. That was created back when a Mac (and most computers at the time in general) were pretty much only capable of running one app at a time. You could switch to another one, sure, but it was very slow, because it was basically task switching, paging the other one(s) out to the disk. So a single file menu, which changed per application, was a good way to save screen real estate, because you really weren't actively using more than one thing at a time.

      Over twenty years later, OSX still has a single file menu along the top. Through ten major iterations of the operating system, and when computers can truly multitask applications, they still left a single file menu, just like version one.

      Have you ever noticed that no other operating system out there mimics that functionality? The next biggest contender, Linux, generally mimics Windows, because the Windows interface is functional. There is nothing functional nor efficient about the single file menu design.

      Now sure, when they bought NeXTStep and put the pretty OSX layer on top to resell it, they brought the dock over with it, and prettied that up too. But this was still really no major innovation in the interface per se. You can still start your apps the way you always did in Mac OS, via the finder and such. It was just something new to look at, with bouncing icons and all that pretty stuff.

      Also, it doesn't have to be thinly disguised, as I will outright say that Macs are just overpriced toys. If you want a computer to do work, you buy a PC. If you want a computer to play games, you buy a PC. What does that leave Macs for? Just people who want to be different, while they use the web and some email.

      Enjoy Steve Jobs conning you into buying a whole new computer with every few OS versions.

    3. Re:Apple is just there for the ride by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      So wait, the OS 9 > OS X switch is discounted in this 20 year history but the Win 3.1 to Win 95 one is in as "innovative changes"? Like I said - if one is allowed, so must the other be.

      The single file menu is the Mac way of doing things. It doesn't hamper multitasking, since only the active application shows the menu bar at the top - if you click on another application during your multitasking, the bar changes to that app. You cannot physically click in two places at once with your mouse, so having the menu bars attached to the windows serves no real purpose. The Mac UI states that the menu is always at the top. No one else "mimics" this because all the Linux UIs tend to mimic the Windows way of doing it. One is not better than the other, it's just whatever method you get used to, or prefer.

      If you're going to argue that the fact that the single file menu is a reason that Mac "hasn't innovated" then I am going to say that the fact that Windows has had separate window-based file menus all the time as a reason that they "haven't innovated". Neither OS has changed their UI in that respect. You can't have it both ways.

      And if you don't believe that the Dock is anything more than eye candy, then you really are wilfully disregarding its function. It is far more than just eye candy, and the Dock itself has also gone through some UI changes over the years - most recently with the pop out stacks and grid listings in 10.5. Like them or loathe them, they are new and weren't there in 10.0.

      Your belief that the Mac is only a toy is also showing ignorance of the Mac as a tool. I don;t doubt that a Windows box is a useful tool (hey, they sell a lot of them and they are everywhere) but the Mac is far more than just a pretty box. People do actually buy them to do useful tasks beyond "web and email" and that you think that's all they're god for is just showing up your ignorance.

      Such as it is, Steve Jobs has never conned me into buying a new computer. I am still using all the Macs I have ever bought, none of them bought because they couldn't run the latest Mac OS (like the whole Vista debacle). I bought new machines because I wanted them, not because my powerbook couldn't run 10.5.

  74. Inconceivable!... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That word, you keep using that word, I don't think it means what you think it means..." - Inigo Montoya, "The Princess Bride".

    Been a while since I saw it, but wasn't that one of Fezzik's (Andre the Giant) lines?

    1. Re:Inconceivable!... by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

      "That word, you keep using that word, I don't think it means what you think it means..." - Inigo Montoya, "The Princess Bride".

      Been a while since I saw it, but wasn't that one of Fezzik's (Andre the Giant) lines?

      No, it was Inigo Montoya.

  75. really? MS store anyone? by purpleraison · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry but even the vaguest notion of a Microsoft store reeks of bona-fide grade-A concern over the success of the Apple stores.

    Microsoft should certainly worry about Linux distros as well, but the bottom line is that Microsoft is struggling to regain legitimacy after its failed ventures as of late, and the competition (both Linux and Macintosh) are quickly filling the void with their products.

    --
    I am open source, and Linux baby!
  76. Am I the only one... by gillbates · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Who thinks we'll see a Microsoft Linux distro in the future?

    I mean, think about it - to continue with Windows, Microsoft must:

    1. Write drivers for practically every piece of hardware in existence, or risk getting blamed for system instability caused by the hw vendor's outsourced drivers...
    2. Continue to patch numerous holes in the operating system on an ongoing basis.
    3. Continue to push for proprietary and closed standards in order to increase its market share.

    Microsoft isn't good at any of these, yet they continue to pour money into Windows, in spite of the fact that it has very little value as a platform. People buy Windows for the familiar user interface (which MS actually got right), not for its security or stability. Why wouldn't Microsoft put its interface and API on top of a Linux kernel? They can still do the proprietary Windows thing, but let the Linux folks get the device drivers and system stability right.

    I know some people here are anti-Microsoft, but if MS hoisted Windows onto Linux, you'd have many, many more drivers written for Linux, and the choice of OS would be practically moot. For the end user, it would come down to the choice between running a free WM such as KDE or GNOME, or paying some extra for the familiar Windows UI. And we could dispense with the incompatibilities with the two systems, and get the best of both worlds: the stability and security of Linux, with the ease of use and familiarity of Windows.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    1. Re:Am I the only one... by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      GNOME follows Fitts's Law (yes that is in fact how you spell it) out of the box (all four corner pixels are utilized) but Windows doesn't (except if something is maximized)

      M$ didn't get the GUI right, they just got it "usable" and now, popular (but IMAO wrong).

      --
      $ make available
    2. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a Linux user and I don't think that's really needed, we have better GUI's nowadays such as KDE4, etc.

      I think Microsoft is slowly losing market share and their monopoly due to their low quality products, and now people seems to be more aware of the importance of open standards, etc. and things like the European Union and the world are against their antitrust cases, their anticompetitive tactics doesn't work anymore, and they know they can't beat Open Source and Linux either.

      It might look and sound funny but they already have started their Open Source thing: http://www.microsoft.com/opensource/ - and I see that in order for them to stay relevant in the future they will have to learn to interop with Linux in a better way, open specifications, play nice, etc. As Linux will gain more market share in the future.

    3. Re:Am I the only one... by diego.viola · · Score: 1

      I'm a Linux user and I don't think that's really needed, we have better GUI's nowadays such as KDE4, etc.

      I think Microsoft is slowly losing market share and their monopoly due to their low quality products, and now people seems to be more aware of the importance of open standards, etc. and things like the European Union and the world are against their antitrust cases, their anticompetitive tactics doesn't work anymore, and they know they can't beat Open Source and Linux either.

      It might look and sound funny but they already have started their Open Source thing: http://www.microsoft.com/opensource/ - and I see that in order for them to stay relevant in the future they will have to learn to interop with Linux in a better way, open specifications, play nice, etc. As Linux will gain more market share in the future.

    4. Re:Am I the only one... by Starker_Kull · · Score: 1

      Who thinks we'll see a Microsoft Linux distro in the future?

      It would be a very smart move for Microsoft; they could offload a tremendous amount of development pain, use their influence where it would do some good (make the hardware vendors cough up the specs), etc.

      I don't think it will happen, though, because Microsoft has a deep, deep infection of ego. Large corporations, particularly successful ones, tend to get this at some point. Such an infection may only kill off your innovation and usability - monopoly and political power can prop up your balance sheets for a very long time. But it can blind you to real, oncoming competitive threats, because the idea that someone else can be better than you is organizationally inconcievable. It's rarely curable, although a near-death experience (assuming it doesn't lead to a full-dead experience!) can do the trick.

  77. Stop posting one analyst's view when it's slanted by tyrione · · Score: 1
    http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-10170883-94.html

    "We're very focused on both Apple as a competitor and Linux as a competitor," Ballmer said.

    And concerns regarding Google's open-source mobile operating system Android are not far behind.

    "I think the dynamics with Linux is changing somewhat," Ballmer said. "I assume we'll see Android-based, Linux-based laptops, in addition to phones, and we'll see Google more and more as a competitor in the desktop operating system business than we ever have before."

    "The truth of the matter is all the consumer market mojo is with Apple and to a lesser extent BlackBerry. And yet, the real market momentum with operators and the real market momentum with device manufacturers seems to primarily be with Windows Mobile and Android," Ballmer said.

    Apple's market share in the PC space is growing due to the iPhone and iPod, all thanks to OS X.

    The truth of the matter is that Linux and OS X are eroding Microsoft's dominance, but OS X is the bigger player.

  78. Forest for the trees. by chaz373 · · Score: 1

    Personally, I think everyone is being misdirected. It would seem, from a shareholder view, that MSFT loses a lot more money to piracy than to either Linux and Apple, at least going by the data provided by MSFT. So, in terms of bang for the buck, MSFT would be better off spending dollars on tightening its DRM or creating a new way to secure and consistently monetize its intellectual property. Certainly, that would be detrimental to users, but in this economy, it might be easier to try to clamp down on piracy than to having to go slog it out in the marketplace. I doubt MSFT will want to relinquish their current price points in order to try and entice a few customers who are used to "free" or relatively free software. No, I think they're more likely to put the squeeze on non payers and pirates than on the Linux set.

    --
    There is no security when liberty is sacrificed.
    1. Re:Forest for the trees. by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      And watch ~half the pirates turn around and use Linux?

      --
      $ make available
  79. Apple is selling hardware, not software by Britz · · Score: 1

    There was a similar story before. Here is my comment from that story:

    I do believe Apple and Microsoft are not direct competitors, because Apple is selling computers and Microsoft is selling software. And many people even run Microsoft Windows on Apple computers. The only thing Apple does not do is sell computers preinstalled with Microsoft Windows like the other companies that build PCs.

    Since Apple is not planning on licensing their os to other computer manufacturers (they did this and the company almost went bancrupt, but was saved by Microsoft) the only os that does compete with Microsoft for coming preinstalled is Linux. If you think of all the companies that sell PCs.

  80. Not suprising by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Two reasons: Apple is smaller because it requires specialist hardware that is fairly expensive. NOTE this does NOT mean I am claiming Apples are overpriced, just that you can't turn an obsolete PC into a perfectly fine linux server or desktop.

    Second reason is that Apple is a straight competitor. Steve Jobs and Bill Gates/Steve Ballmer ain't enemies, they believe the same thing: Software should be paid for and the end user does NOT get to own the piece of software let alone use it in any way that they want to.

    Linux on the other hand says "Here is all this great software, use it, don't pay for it and do with it what you want how you want to for as long as you want to." EEK!

    Or to keep it simple, an Apple buyer might be persuaded to buy MS office for the Mac. A linux user is a far thougher sell and might even use something like OpenOffice or even worse Abiword (remember that OpenOffice is as complex as MSOffice but Abiword, that is so scary because it says "not only am I not going to pay for MSOffice but I don't even need all that it offers").

    Apple is a competitor, Linux is an assault on the very principles that MS thinks should govern software.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Not suprising by gbarules2999 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Cue the people claiming "OpenOffice.org doesn't even match the functions I need or want!" That's shortsighted. Think in two years. Think five. Ten. How functional and appealing do you think Ubuntu 10.04 will be? That's why the parent is correct; now it's getting there, and soon it will BE there. Then what will "pay to play" shops like MS do, if they can't innovate to sell anymore?

    2. Re:Not suprising by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Informative

      Second reason is that Apple is a straight competitor. Steve Jobs and Bill Gates/Steve Ballmer ain't enemies, they believe the same thing: Software should be paid for and the end user does NOT get to own the piece of software let alone use it in any way that they want to. Linux on the other hand says "Here is all this great software, use it, don't pay for it and do with it what you want how you want to for as long as you want to." EEK!

      Do you know many Linux developers? Do you know where the average person is likely to get Linux? Linux ships pre-installed by for profit companies, just like OS X and Apple. Most Linux developers are not freaky hippy socialists, but are paid by commercial companies and enjoy spending those paychecks. Apple develops FOSS software and contributes their changes, just like most other companies that work in it. They don't just make FOSS but few major contributors do. Most profit from closed source software, hardware, and/or services and they use FOSS to save money and have more flexibility for the commodity parts. For Apple, the money maker is the polished interface and usability experience. For IBM it is services to get that stuff up and running. For Juniper it is specialty hardware and software in combination. It's all the same business model from MS's perspective though.

      Or to keep it simple, an Apple buyer might be persuaded to buy MS office for the Mac. A linux user is a far thougher sell and might even use something like OpenOffice or even worse Abiword...

      That's not what scares MS. They've built their entire business on leveraging their monopoly market share. Apple has avoided competing in the desktop OS market, bypassing it entirely. Sure they weaken MS's power, but only a small amount and only increasing gradually. Linux, on the other hand, is a direct competitor and can't be killed by MS's usual tactics because of the licensing. OS X install base may grow a few percent a year. Linux could explode into huge share in only a few years especially as it is cheaper than Windows can be and flexible enough to be a good fit in emerging markets like netbooks, where Windows is very weak.

      If MS is ever considering having to market MSWord to Linux users, they have already lost the war and will have to retool all of their business plans in dozens of markets at the cost of huge amounts of their profit.

    3. Re:Not suprising by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      NOTE this does NOT mean I am claiming Apples are overpriced, just that you can't turn an obsolete PC into a perfectly fine linux server or desktop.

      A: You shouldn't be afraid to say it. Even Apple admit that they produce a premium product(read overpriced, as in the cashew nuts in hotel rooms)
      B: You actually CAN turn an obsolete PC into a Linux server/desktop.

  81. The style of this slide by Lord+Lode · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Everyone who uses MS office, produces the exact same layout of slides. And now someone from the creators of MS Office creates a slide, and, it looks totally different and much better! What software do MS people themselves use to make slides then?

  82. Linux is a Zombie OS by Homer's+Donuts · · Score: 1

    Whenever a PC user gets fed up with something his PC cannot do, he either upgrades the OS, or ditches the machine.

    MSFT depends on this to sell new copies of its OS. It exists in symbiosis with hardware vendors, who sell hardware/upgrades to handle the new OS.

    Some of the machines that are supposed to be going to the PC graveyard are turning into Linux's Zombie Army.

    Every day the Zombie Army grows larger. How long until the hardware vendors see the utility in servicing this market?

  83. It maybe okay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We don't know if the poster was a black person. In that case using the word "nigger" is okay.

    1. Re:It maybe okay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't know if the poster was a black person. In that case using the word "nigger" is okay.

      No, that most certainly does not make it ok. That is the most absurdly racist comment. My race does not make any actions "ok" or not.

  84. someone in Redmond is hallucinating by v1 · · Score: 1

    There's something seriously wrong with that "wheel chart" of theirs comparing browser and OS dominance.

    It shows the "Apple" OS wedge at about 20%. Then it shows the Safari wedge at about 1%. Firefox is popular on the mac platform, but nowhere near THAT popular that (at the very least) 95% of mac users use firefox. ((20-1)/20)

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    1. Re:someone in Redmond is hallucinating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're reading the chart wrong. The big 20% OS wedge isn't Apple; it's unlicensed ("pirated") Windows. Read the key.

  85. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

    Well, it would be more amusing than the Seinfeld commercial.

    Watching paint dry is more amusing than the Seinfeld commercial.

    --
    $ make available
  86. And now, a fish down the pants with Vern Fonk... by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    "Apple has that young hipster, Linux has that cute penguin, but look! We've got a fat nerdy guy with a fish in his pants! Look at him dance!"

    Well, it would be more amusing than the Seinfeld commercial.

    Especially if they got Vern Fonk to do the commercials:

    "Savings never tasted this good!"

    "Dance! Shipoopi!"

    Cheers,

    c

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
  87. My conclusion from this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The perception still is that Apple owns the high-end market and Microsoft owns the low-end. For now...

  88. I'd be more worried about Linux if I were M$ by freerangegeek · · Score: 1

    They can still manage to monetize Mac's OS. They do still sell office and other products for Mac. M$'s problem with Linux is that they can't sell software for it, so they have no potential way to generate revenue from it. Can you really see them doing their own di$tro?

  89. Nah, nobody is that much of a geek. It was games. by PCM2 · · Score: 1

    You got your Apple //gs and I got my Apple ][+ for the same reason the other kids got their C-64s and Atari 800s. It wasn't "because we liked to figure things out." It was games. What did we want to figure out? Games, mostly. Winning games was good, so we figured out how to hack games. Free games were even better, so we figured out how to get around copy protection. Perhaps in the long view some of us wanted to figure out how to write games of our own, and so we learned to program. But the games came first; if you're telling me you got into computers because figuring out arcane flags for command-line programs was really exciting to you, or you loved figuring out how a floppy-disk filesystem worked, I'm calling you a liar.

    Besides, this old trope that "the Mac hides everything from you" has been around since the day the Mac came out, and it wasn't true then and it isn't true now. The reason modern OSes seem to "hide things" is because they are in fact exponentially more complex than the DOSes of the 80s. A kid who "likes figuring things out" has a helluva lot more to figure out in the JDK or the .Net runtime than he did learning machine language for an 8-bit processor.

    It sounds like you're arguing that Linux is a better educational tool because it forces you to twiddle around in the command line and "figure things out." When I was a kid, I would have just said "it breaks all the time." I'd have been much happier figuring out the things I wanted to figure out on an OS that worked when I wanted it to do something. (Not a knock on Linux, because I don't actually believe you even need to know much about the command line to run Ubuntu, but that's what you seem to be saying...)

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  90. Statistics by garphik · · Score: 1
    Statistically speaking ... 97.3% of all statistics are made up

    Hard to believe so many people are still using windows ...

  91. Truth is by mahadiga · · Score: 1

    Replace SOFTWARE DEVELOPERS with OPEN SOURCE and MBAs with CLOSED SOURCE in my SIGNATURE.

    --
    I'd like to buy homeland for our 10 million people. http://twitter.com/mahadiga
  92. Face it, for God sake! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux was born in 1991... Where is this OS after 18 years? Linux is in nowhere. There are no major applications for Linux, there are no commercial games, all the free alternatives to apps and games "just" sucks, are buggy and ugly.

    Mac OS was born in 1992. Where is Mac OS today? Evolved in a graphically beautiful desktop, productive and has lot of highend applications and a vast universe of games. Major apps and games developers announces Mac versions of their products while Linux is abandoned.

    If Linux users doesn't want to pay for a software, forget to see decent big software players on that field. So, you, Linux users, are using what you deserve to use, a old outdated computer with a bunch of useless and unfinished software. Eat that.

    Forget PC and M$ crap, use a Mac in your desktop and leave Linux in a web server, where it deserves to be and where it dominates all others. That is the reality.

    1. Re:Face it, for God sake! by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Linux was born in 1991... Where is this OS after 18 years? Linux is in nowhere. There are no major applications for Linux, there are no commercial games, all the free alternatives to apps and games "just" sucks, are buggy and ugly.

      Xen, VMware, KDE & Gnome (which includes better-than-windows-alternatives cd burners, media players, text editors), Wine (running windows applications natively on Linux - awesome really. Darwine doesn't even work half the time in comparison), various office suits (OpenOffice.org, staroffice, koffice etc.) Unreal series of games (that's like 9), Doom series of games (three), America's army, Quake wars, Second life, World of goo (and those are just the games at the top of my head).

      Now, with the applications mentioned above. I don't really see how they are more buggy or "just suck" compared to their OS X or Windows equivalents. Sure, there are annoyances, but I can find similar annoyances on either platform.

      Sure, there is software which is lacking on Linux, and I'll admit that. That said, I find Krita is quite a viable alternative to Photoshop and yes, it supports the common CMYK colour crap that people complain that Gimp is lacking. The video editing tools on Linux are certainly quite crude, but, Linux already has all the libraries and technology for creating a great movie editor - with software like ffmpeg which is used in xine, vlc, mplayer etc. which can play virtually any format and encode to any format, do you really think that iMovie will have a share of daylight the moment it's produced (when you consider the format and codec support)?

      I could go on, but, I don't really see the point.

      Mac OS was born in 1992. Where is Mac OS today? Evolved in a graphically beautiful desktop, productive and has lot of highend applications and a vast universe of games.

      Jesus, have you ever played stuff like Second life under OS X? It's terrible. The majority of games that are available for OS X and Linux, oftend tend to have weird obscure issues in OS X more-so than Linux.

      The reason for that is not to do with Linux compatibility, it's actually to do with the fact that OS X has a buggy opengl infrastructure, buggy drivers. Hell, even the developers of crossover games admitted that for EACH and EVERY SINGLE game that they make compatible for crossover games Mac that they have to add specific fixes, because of how buggy it is. While this is not the case for Linux, Solaris (running crossover application in elf compatibility mode), BSD experimental port of the same software.

      Major apps and games developers announces Mac versions of their products while Linux is abandoned.

      Major OS X applications like Photoshop.. Okay, Well, let's see here. Serious graphics designers would use 64bit software to make use of the vast memory support of 64bit system, except Photoshop only has 64bit support under Windows... Beyond that? What major software is there on OS X? Well. There is iTunes (which isn't as good as the opensource alternatives by a long shot), iLife, which... I guess the only advantage it has over the Linux equivalents is the movie editor. But don't forget you generally need to pay for all that and I honestly don't know many people who do movies to begin with (including OS X users).

      There is no real interest virtualization technologies - beyond running Windows, which is somewhat of a failing in my opinion, the majority of free, opensource office software is not available or terribly broken on OS X. OS X doesn't even have it's own special niche like Linux does in the server market (virtualization, superior performance, enhanced reliability) the desktop market (superior performance, enhanced reliability, next gen features implemented almost immediately - see desktop compositioning, it goes far beyond Windows and OS X now, free, works almost with any hardware - including hardware windows no longer supports).

      And you're trying to tell me

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  93. I wanna be a Ultralisk by drachenstern · · Score: 1

    But seriously, don't you remember it's the Archon's that are the best, and given enough time in a mission or brutal game, Protoss "should" win over all.

    I guess we do all need macs, huh?

    --
    2^3 * 31 * 647
  94. Re:Nah, nobody is that much of a geek. It was game by dave562 · · Score: 1

    To be completely honest, there weren't very many good games on the Apple IIgs, other than the Sierra games (Kings Quest, Police Quest, etc.) All of the good games were on the PC. Each game required its own boot disk. Each boot disk required figuring out how to write autoexec.bat and config.sys files. After a while I actually enjoyed figuring out how much lower memory I could free up. I interviewed for a tech support job at Interplay when I was 15, and I answered all of their questions about how to properly configure systems to get the games running, but they didn't hire me because I was too young. I really only got the interview because a friend of mine worked there and we would stay after hours to play Command and Conquer and Quake on the LAN.

    Anyway, I digress. I do argue that Linux is a better educational tool because of the command line. A GUI is really just an application that sits on top of the command line and hides what is going on beneath the surface. If kids are really going to understand the computer, they will do it through the command line. You could argue that such low level knowledge is obsolete, and you very well might be right. I think that everyone has different learning styles. I learned a lot about computers when it didn't work right. I learned a lot when I tweaked a file and all of a sudden the computer didn't boot. For me it was like a big puzzle, with a lot of intricate pieces. "Oh, you have to load EMM386 and THEN push things into high memory, but you need the HIMEM switch in config.sys to actually enable it." Things like that. The equivalent in Linux is building the kernel, and including only the parts that are necessary.

    You very well may be right that modern OSes are too complex for the command line, 1980s approach to things. My own perceptions are probably blinded by my personal experiences. The command line was a real boon for my career. Comfort with the command line translated to comfort with *nix, comfort with Cisco IOS, comfort with COSMOS and comfort with System75. Most everything these days has a GUI, although I can't speak about 5ESS or whatever switches are being used these days, but they probably do too. These days tech support is a click away, and information is easily accessible. You're probably right. Kids shouldn't worry about playing around in the low levels of the system when the userland world is rich enough to keep them busy. Instead of learning a command line, they should probably be focused on APIs, object classes and the like.

  95. OS X is tied to apple hardware by CovenantMG · · Score: 1

    As long as apple has OS X tied to relatively expensive computers that force the purchase of a monitor unless you're willing to go totally underpowered (mini) or overpowered (servers) and requires you to have apple hardware to run OS X (without hacks yes I know they exist) then they will be a niche OS. Don't get me wrong..I love my iMac but I could have had linux up and running on a box with the same specs for 1/4 - 1/2 the price and used an existing monitor.

  96. Sure, right, uh-huh by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

    Ballmer has also stated that the iPhone and RIM don't have 'momentum' (despite selling in colossal numbers), whereas the real market momentum is in 'windows mobile and android'. Which no one buys.

    It's all marketing and PR BS. Apple's in a fantastic position, and will continue on that trend. Microsoft may have more money, people, and market share, but they've got nothing worth using it all for. The best they can come up with is a few stolen features, a few half-assed 'innovations', the occasional good idea, and a lot of competitors besieging them on all sides.

    1. Re:Sure, right, uh-huh by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

      Please join the real world.

      1. Part of the marketing around Apple products assumes exclusivity, that's why so much effort is made into making their devices look a certain way and why their stuff is more expensive than anything equivalent.

      2. As I've said several times before on Slashdot, I'm 47 years old and have been a techie in the telecoms and computer industry over here in the UK since I was 20. I've used (and still do) Linux, UNIX (Solaris & SCO) and Windows for years yet never once found any reason to buy any Apple product.

      3. I'm pretty interested in computers and notice what people are using around me, whether I'm at an airport, in the office or at a customer site. I see myriads of people using Windows, quite a large number of Linux (mainly Red Hat) servers and a few (SuSE and Ubuntu) desktops or occasional laptop. I've seen a total of five Apple machines - a notebook owned by an American instructor on a router course I did, a couple of students posing in Starbucks with a Macbook, and the one owned by a friend of mine that was given to him by his boss (who didn't know what to do with it) that now sits in a dusty box in the corner because he doesn't know what to do with it either.

      4. I work in converged telecoms and VoIP solutions and the reality is that Linux has basically trashed the commercial UNIX market when it comes to being the core OS of workhorse servers that drive tens of thousands of extensions, trunks, voicemail boxes, etc. Additionally, Windows gets used for the administration servers so that there's better integration into corporate intranets. No mention of Apple whatsoever, not even any administration clients.

      I accept that maybe in the US desktop market, Apple is second to Windows and Linux is third. But the rest of the world is much bigger than the US and certainly here in the UK (and the bits of Europe I've been to), you rarely see them. If nothing else, the main reason is because the already inflated prices of Apple products are made higher here because of complete ignorance of the Dollar/Pound or Dollar/Euro exchange rate.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    2. Re:Sure, right, uh-huh by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      You seem to have used my post as a reason to talk about yourself. This I don't really understand. Regardless...

      1. Part of the marketing around Apple products assumes exclusivity, that's why so much effort is made into making their devices look a certain way and why their stuff is more expensive than anything equivalent.

      The 'Apple is more expensive' line has been debunked over and over. The reality is that Apple isn't trying to gain market share at any cost, and since there are no competitors producing macs (well, not legitimately anyway) they can keep their prices reasonable, make a profit, and put that back into R&D, whereas companies like Dell have to slash their margins in order to sell more units and compete on price.

      2. As I've said several times before on Slashdot, I'm 47 years old and have been a techie in the telecoms and computer industry over here in the UK since I was 20. I've used (and still do) Linux, UNIX (Solaris & SCO) and Windows for years yet never once found any reason to buy any Apple product.

      Well good for you. I've never found any reason to buy any Ford, BMW, Sun, or Prada product. That doesn't mean there isn't a market for them, or that people who buy their products don't enjoy using them. I have, however, purchased several Apple products, but only after products from Dell, HP, and so on proved themselves to be unreliable and Windows proved cumbersome and insecure.

      3. I'm pretty interested in computers and notice what people are using around me, whether I'm at an airport, in the office or at a customer site. I see myriads of people using Windows, quite a large number of Linux (mainly Red Hat) servers and a few (SuSE and Ubuntu) desktops or occasional laptop. I've seen a total of five Apple machines - a notebook owned by an American instructor on a router course I did, a couple of students posing in Starbucks with a Macbook, and the one owned by a friend of mine that was given to him by his boss (who didn't know what to do with it) that now sits in a dusty box in the corner because he doesn't know what to do with it either.

      Again, good for you. I'm very interested in computers, and going to conferences, meetups, and events, I find that Apple products are in good supply. Three years ago, half of the laptops at a given conference were Macs. A few weeks ago I went to another conference, and this one was nearly 100% Apple. And none of these conferences were the least bit Apple-related, incidentally. The only conference I went to at which that this wasn't the case was a Microsoft conference, but at that one, almost no one had a laptop out.

      4. I work in converged telecoms and VoIP solutions and the reality is that Linux has basically trashed the commercial UNIX market when it comes to being the core OS of workhorse servers that drive tens of thousands of extensions, trunks, voicemail boxes, etc. Additionally, Windows gets used for the administration servers so that there's better integration into corporate intranets. No mention of Apple whatsoever, not even any administration clients.

      Ok, so Linux is used on servers, which isn't news, and people write apps for Windows. None of this is a big surprise. It's a question of market penetration, and Windows nets you a bigger piece of the pie. That doesn't mean that Apple isn't making significant strides and rapidly gaining in mindshare.

      What gets me is that you seem to have packaged this rant up for delivery whenever the least opportunity presents itself. Not a single measure of what you said has anything to do with what I said. You simply used a position that you disagree with, apparently passionately and vehemently, to spring off into your own personal diatribe. That's kind of sad.

  97. be aware micro$oft! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'cause we will put you 6 feet under and that for sure. go sue linux, we linux users don't care. i've never used anything else than debian all my life and if it is ever forbidden to use linux i will steal a big truck distributing cd's all over the continent (and maybe even the u-k. ;)). you will never win this fight. linux does not only suck less than your scrap-out-of-the-box os but it also RESPECTS it's users.

  98. Maybe its the timliness? by SpzToid · · Score: 1

    Ubuntu releases every 6 months like clockwork; and the quality is good. This simple fact must KILL Microsoft, (in all kinds of different ways).

    --
    You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
    1. Re:Maybe its the timliness? by atomic-penguin · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu releases every 6 months like clockwork; and the quality is good. This simple fact must KILL Microsoft, (in all kinds of different ways).

      Ubuntu may be Linux, but "Linux" is not Ubuntu.

      --
      /^([Ss]ame [Bb]at (time, |channel.)){2}$/
  99. Mac Servers are losing market share ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mac Servers are losing market share faster than they are getting new share.
    http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/02/20/1543208

  100. Wait.. by cloudkiller · · Score: 1

    I don't believe anything else Ballmer says. The guy is the poster child for M$ fuckups these days. Why would anyone believe what he has to say about his companies competition? His statement about Linux actually makes me think Apple is more of a competitor than any of us think.

    --
    [an error occurred while processing this sig]
  101. Stop being dim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft sells mostly software which runs on PCs manufactured by other companies - even if they do sell games machines as well.

    Apple sells mostly software and hardware combined.

    Trying to twist the data to fit your prejudice will not make it so. The previous post was roughly correct and yours was less so.

    1. Re:Stop being dim by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Microsoft sells mostly software which runs on PCs manufactured by other companies - even if they do sell games machines as well.

      And mice, and keyboards, and headsets and MP3 players, and..

      Trying to twist the data to fit your prejudice will not make it so.

      I'm not twisting any data. You are denying the existence of data by diminishing the impact of Apple's software division and Microsoft's hardware division. They aren't small peanuts, and they don't exist solely to push the sales of other divisions, like most cynical slashdotters seem to to think.

  102. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by AioKits · · Score: 1

    A cross between Mandatory Fun Day and FISH! gone horribly wrong...

    --
    "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
  103. This is because... by Bootarn · · Score: 1

    ...Apple has their own hardware. The reason Microsoft considers GNU/Linux a bigger threat is that it competes with them on their own turf, namely standard PC hardware.

  104. Re:as soon as os x for all pc comes out M$ will be by Yetihehe · · Score: 1

    Why would MS put a fish in their pants?

    It's the first step, remember: "extend, embrace, extinguish".

    --
    Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
  105. You have windows and linux mixed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux will far more reliably keep your data if you install it beside windows than if you take a linux install and put windows on.

    Even if you REALLY REALLY know what you're doing.

    And MS love it that way.

  106. Linux has always been the bigger threat... by apocalypse2012 · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has historically beaten all competition by driving them out of the market when necessary with free alternatives. This was the key role IE played in defeating Netscape and every one else. Windows beat OS\2 by virtually giving away the OS to every OEM that would install it. They know the value of Free. They cannot compete with free. As long as Linux is out there, they know its just a matter of time. They know that every new DRM strategy, every new virus, Every PC loaded with bloat ware is just another nail in the Windows coffin. Not today, not tomorrow. But within twenty years, you may be setting in front of a Microsoft distro of open source Linux. Microsoft will still be there, but they will no longer be the OS monopoly they are now.

  107. Kate Winslet: Shaming Alyssa Milano, nipwise by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    > Microsoft Sees Linux As Bigger Competitor Than Apple

    Apple's not a competitor to Microsoft. It's kind of like a tough guy in a movie who picks up one of the bad guy lackies and uses him as a shield against bullets.

    Microsoft uses them and their continued existence, at Microsoft's pleasure, as an argument to government that they're not a monopoly. Linux is in much the same spot.

    Linux Fan: No, Linux is (blah blah blah blah)

    Microsoft: Whatever. I respect your power. Just stay away from 99.9% of the profit center out there.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  108. The other one by Rix · · Score: 1

    Apple has accepted it's position in a niche, and isn't going to get out of it. As such, MS has absolutely nothing to fear from them.

    Note though that many other things were killing Apple at the time, and the OS they licensed was terrible. You can't reasonably conclude that they couldn't do better now that they have a decent OS.

    1. Re:The other one by Macka · · Score: 1

      Apple has accepted it's position in a niche, and isn't going to get out of it. As such, MS has absolutely nothing to fear from them.

      Note though that many other things were killing Apple at the time, and the OS they licensed was terrible. You can't reasonably conclude that they couldn't do better now that they have a decent OS.

      You don't get it. Apple's primary goal is to be profitable, very profitable: and they're succeeding very well. They are not chasing after the prize of being the dominant software provider, and aren't going to because YOU want them to. They're the no: 2 desktop OS in the world, and they're happy with that.

      Note though that many other things were killing Apple at the time

      Like what?

      You can't reasonably conclude that they couldn't do better now that they have a decent OS.

      Again, you show a complete (naive) lack of understanding WRT Apple's business model. If Apple suddenly went from ~3M OS X sales a quarter to ~30M sales a quarter, then they would also have to pull ~30M worth of hardware manufacturing capability out of their ass, and they just don't have that. If they broke their business model and loosed OS X on the work free from hardware encumbrance, then they would loose control of holistic Apple: that very thing that defines the Apple experience. They would be competing on Dell, HP and IBM kit, against the likes of MS Windows and Linux. They could mot compete on price using their own hardware: it would be a financial and marketing disaster.

      Personally I put my trust in Apple to know what's best for Apple's business. Not Rix !

  109. That's the point by Rix · · Score: 1

    You really need to work on your reading comprehension.

    Apple has accepted their niche position, and aren't trying to grow out of it. As such, they are absolutely no threat to Microsoft.

    1. Re:That's the point by Macka · · Score: 1

      And you need to keep an eye on where you started arguing from and stop trying to twist other peoples words to get out of a loosing position. No one is disputing Apple is happy in their niche position, and that's not what this argument is about.

      You started all this by criticizing Apple for refusing to license their OS and directly tied that to the reason why Apple doesn't threaten MS. This infers YOU believe they should license their OS and by association, that they should actively try and threaten MS.

      You are wrong. As I have explained to you: that is not going to happen because it doesn't fit Apple's profitable, niche, business model. You know, the one you agree Apple is happy being in.
         

  110. You're an idiot by Rix · · Score: 1

    TFA is about Linux being a bigger competitor to MS than Apple. My original post points out that this is because Apple isn't even trying to compete with MS in the vast majority of the market.

    Oh, and the word is 'losing' not 'loosing', you fucking simpleton.