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Old Arguments May Cost Linux the Desktop

itwbennett writes "The old Linux arguments that pit one tool against another — Evolution vs. Thunderbird, LibreOffice vs. OpenOffice, and GNOME3 vs. Unity vs. KDE vs. everything else — may cost Linux its shot at the desktop, opines blogger Brian Proffitt. 'We can compare LibreOffice to OpenOffice.org to Office till the cows come home,' says Proffitt. 'But what happens when Google Docs gets truly robust enough for business and high-end document production? Or Prezi gets enough mindshare to start an upwards trajectory of user numbers?' It should be the case that increasing reliance on cloud software will make it easier for businesses to choose Linux, but for that to happen, Linux communities need to stop fighting the old fights, says Proffitt."

591 comments

  1. The op is a... The author is an idiot by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1, Troll

    n/t

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    1. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Abreu · · Score: 0

      Also: The old "Fragmentation will doom Linux, like it doomed Unix" argument??

      Really, Slashdot editors?

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    2. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by somersault · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In other news this week:

      Call Of Duty vs Battlefield - who could possibly choose? Certainly nobody could ever like both!
      Brown bread vs white - when will the madness end?
      Blondes vs brunettes vs redheads - the human race is falling apart!
      Peanut butter vs jelly - the only choice at breakfast time is to cry :'(
      Coffee vs tea - the hot beverage industry will implode if we don't just CHOOSE ONE gods-damn-it!

      --
      which is totally what she said
    3. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by piripiri · · Score: 1

      1. Write an article about Linux
      2. ???
      3. Proffitt !!!

    4. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I like how there is no mention of how the whole Firefox/IE argument has kill Microsoft on the desktop.....

    5. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Also: The old "Fragmentation will doom Linux, like it doomed Unix" argument??

      You're claiming that fragmentation didn't doom Unix?

    6. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by calmofthestorm · · Score: 1

      You call it "fragmentation". I call it "choice". Now if linux would go back to innovating and stop (badly) copying OS X and Windows I'd be a lot happier, but still.

      --
      93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
    7. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by wjousts · · Score: 1

      TFA doesn't claim Linus is doomed, it simply claims the opportunity to gain significant traction on the desktop is being lost to fragmentation.

    8. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by wjousts · · Score: 2

      Crap. Linux, not Linus. Typing to type while eating lunch. Why oh why can't we have a fucking edit button.

    9. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Nope, Linux did that.

    10. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by AvitarX · · Score: 2

      Have you used windows, osx, gnome,unity, or kde?

      They are not copying at all.

      Gnome2 was it's own take on application menu and taskbar, kde 4 was a complete reimagining of the traditional desktop. Unity is it's own think, though I guess it has a dock bar (like windows and osx). Kde has an application menu,like gnome2 or windows. Gnome3 has a very unique interface. Unity has an application dashboard which is fairly unique.

      They really aren't copies at all.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    11. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by poity · · Score: 1

      Variety in entertainment is good, everyone wants variety in enjoyable things. Perhaps that's one of the reasons nerds like variety in their software -- software is partly fun/entertaining to them. But for people whose idea of fun is different, software is merely a cold hard tool, and a tool is only useful if it's consistent.

      --
      your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    12. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      So, some seemingly random guy waxes prophetical?

      He's pointing out what everyone already knows, and which is in a way a strength of Linux. Linux offers choice. Choice isn't fragmentation. Fragmentation is incompatibility across a seemingly compatible platform. Linux has had varying distros for years, since the beginning. It is no surprise to the Linux market that there's all this competition, which, seemingly the Windows and Mac markets don't truly have (with just one OS variation, with just one office product, with just a single supplier).

      The fault in most logic regarding the migration of Linux to the desktop is that it isn't there already. It is. In the US? Probably not, though it has a market. In Europe, yes to some degree. In other parts of the world. Yes, to a larger degree. What isn't being seen is that Linux isn't on a profit/loss motivation. It has the time to grow. There's nothing such as profit AND loss driving it. It can just grow. Steadily. Like a glacier, if need be.

      If Google Docs picks up speed then the Linux desktop benefits. Every Linux device benefits. You can use it on Linux just as you can use anything else. And, for the record, IMHO, the cloud won't replace the desktop for at least another generation, if at all. Certainly data will become more internet integrated though it will lack the security of a stand-alone desktop. Microsoft will NEVER create a new product that has the penetration of their two current monopolies. They must rely on what they have. That's a deal-ender, as they are profit/loss driven.

      As far as Linux goes, well, it is a part of every Android device, every one of them. As it grows Linux grows. As people use it and understand that it is not Windows they will understand that they have a choice other than Windows on the desktop. This hasn't gone unnoticed by the Linux community. As each Android device is accepted the community clarifies for everyone that Linux is the elder brother of Android. Accepting other than Microsoft and Apple is a big deal. Huge, in fact. People just haven't brought that concept to the forefront of their mind, yet.

      Let's move on and realize that there are going to be a million would-be pundits professing prophecy some without the true innocent motivation of a true prophet.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    13. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by SomePgmr · · Score: 1

      If it's trollish then Slashdot syndication, definitely. Dunno about that profit bit though.

    14. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Stenchwarrior · · Score: 1

      I don't know why you were modded Off-topic; I think the analogy makes perfect sense.

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      Loading...
    15. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by leonbev · · Score: 1

      If the Call Of Duty and Battlefield franchises were fighting over a small 1% of the Third Person Shooter market like the desktop Linux distributions currently are, I'd think that people would be worried about their future growth prospects as well.

    16. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      OSX _just_ got the ability to resize a window from any corner. have you ever put in 10 to 15 hours weekly, regularly on Snow Leopard, Gome, KDE, Windows XP, Win 7 ??? If you did, you would know that you were talking out your ass.

    17. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by The+Dawn+Of+Time · · Score: 1

      Don't bother injecting rationality into this discussion. Slashdot posts these articles to get the fanboys arguing and up their pageviews. You'll contradict their wishes unless you incoherently rage about why your opinions are objectively superior.

    18. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by The+Dawn+Of+Time · · Score: 1

      Are you the keeper of the one true motivation, brother? Should we all check our opinions with you first?

    19. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason there isn't an edit button is idiots like me. I'd wait for a new story to show (compulsively hitting reload). Then I'd copy and paste from the relevant wikipedia page, and wait for the +5 karma whore mod. Then I'd edit everything to links to goatse.

    20. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Narcocide · · Score: 1

      Enlightenment 0.16 was the epitome of window manager evolution! Accept no substitutes! If you use another window manager you are a moron!

    21. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Teun · · Score: 1
      You have an edit button, it's called Preview.

      Hell, you're not even shown the 'Submit' button without at least once going through this preview!

      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    22. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blondes vs brunettes vs redheads - the human race is falling apart!

      actually the human race is unifying - only a matter of time until just brunettes are left.

    23. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by kdemetter · · Score: 1

      The tools are consistent, there are just a lot of them, specifically suited depending on the task.

    24. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Andrewkov · · Score: 1

      This must be why I don't read the articles.

    25. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Also, we should have not just one USB standard, but 5, no sorry 20 different USB types. Companies will get richer designing and making them, and we will have more choice and time to ponder over the minutiae in the differences.
      While we're at it, let's create 5 HTML standards, and then we all code for each standard, creating much joy in the heart when we strive to make bug-free, consistent web pages.

      In addition to also, I dislike the way there are standard CPU, power and bus sockets on a PC. It's too simple, and makes newbies think they're more 'expert' than they actually are. Okay, RAM also has a couple of variables to look out for, but that just leaves my mouth watering. How about ten different types of RAM connector? No a HUNDRED! Drool... it would be very satisfying to fit the correct one in place if only one type of RAM out of a thousand works. Also, we can spend time learning 'unnecessary' technical details.

      Last, but not least, we need not just one or two (for competition) types of GUI, but a thousand million! They can all have different ways of working with say the GPU, and different methodologies for handling events, processes, and such forth. It won't be out of a need for genuine competition, and building on each other's efforts but instead done as a way to reinvent the wheel, form cliques, and build glory for one's self.

      The world will be complete, when we all use different number systems, have a thousand incompatible OSs built for a thousand incompatible CPUs, 57,900 different power/data/audio socket types for mere variety, split our currencies into a 1000 more currencies to further the admin market, invent 1000 new languages so we can speak in secret sometimes, and 20 different types of tin, so we can have 20 different types of tin opener to open them in slightly, but almost not completely nearly, different ways (I drool when I think of the job creation possibilities for that alone).

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    26. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by sexconker · · Score: 1

      In other news this week:

      Call Of Duty vs Battlefield - who could possibly choose? Certainly nobody could ever like both!
      Brown bread vs white - when will the madness end?
      Blondes vs brunettes vs redheads - the human race is falling apart!
      Peanut butter vs jelly - the only choice at breakfast time is to cry :'(
      Coffee vs tea - the hot beverage industry will implode if we don't just CHOOSE ONE gods-damn-it!

      Neither. Both series are shit.
      White bread because it tastes better, if you want healthy, don't eat bread.
      Brunettes.
      Jelly. Peanut butter is the devil's anal seepage.
      Hot chocolate. You get all the benefits of tea (because the benefits come about by drinking hot water), and you get something that tastes good without pouring endless cream and sugar into it like you have to do with coffee, and if you want, you can even get caffeinated versions.

      Any more brain busters?

    27. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by dkuntz · · Score: 1

      Redheads... always redheads.... they're much more fun!

      And... dont you put peanut butter WITH jelly?

      --
      OMG... I have a sig?
    28. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by rgviza · · Score: 1

      /don fireproof underwear
      I thought it was due to a lack of ability to run applications (out of the box) used by, well, everyone?

      Don't give me the WINE argument either... I can do WINE, so can a lot of other geeks but put an average Mac or Windows user on a linux system and they'll be wondering where outlook, word and excel are. None of them will have any idea how to install WINE, or even that WINE exists. They only know that their professor only accepts Word documents or that the accountant at work only accepts their expense report in the form of an Excel spreadsheet running their custom macros.

      "crap! I can't write my paper or do my expense report. f**k! My office install cd isn't working! Where's outlook?" That's what's going through most user's minds the first time they use linux.

      When you can put an office (or [insert windows software here]) install cd in the cd drive on a box running a linux distro, and the install Just Works(tm), linux will gain traction.

      Linux distros needs to be easy enough that people don't need an IT professional in the house to use it, install their software, get connected and do day to day tasks using the software which is often required by the people they have to work with. A lot of users have no choice.

      The FOSS community isn't interested in gaining traction on the desktop. Not interested _at all_.

      If they are they are going about it completely wrong. Desktop penetration is only achieved by making your OS easy to use and keeping the pain manageable.

      The only distro that comes close to reaching this goal is Ubuntu and they're not doing that great of a job. That's why apple is spanking linux in the desktop market.

      A successful distro will need to hire a focus group of typical DFUs, find out what they need to fix, then fix it. Users don't give a rat's ass about fragmentation and users are what you need for desktop penetration.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    29. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Windows 7 still doesn't have have the ability to mousewheel a window that isn't active and foregrounded.

    30. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure #3 is also ????

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    31. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by wjousts · · Score: 1

      I understand their "stand by your comments" attitude, but surely a 5 minute editing window isn't asking too much? Just for those "oh shit" moments when you stop the type 5 ms after hitting submit.

    32. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by wjousts · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but I don't bother to read the preview because I DON'T MAKE MISTAKES. Well, except for that one time....

    33. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by fnj · · Score: 1

      Author truly IS an idiot. Go ahead, troll me too, asshole moderators.

    34. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by somersault · · Score: 1

      CPU sockets are not standardised, they are vendor specific.

      Your reducto ad absurdum is.. well, absurd.

      I'm not campaigning against standards, but neither am I going to campaign against choice.

      Standards are important for things like document formats, driver models, graphics APIs, etc.

      But saying that Thunderbird vs Evolution is detrimental to end users is pretty silly. Only one will come installed as standard, meaning that the people who don't give a f*** don't even need to think about it. Even Gnome vs KDE doesn't affect much these days, since most (all?) apps now work fine across both. I don't think these are the main things stopping people adopting Linux.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    35. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by LibRT · · Score: 1

      +1. I never understand why people get so emotionally (or otherwise) wrapped up in the whole "linux on the desktop" notion. I've used linux for about 5.5 years exclusively at home, and as long as it does what I need it to do, I couldn't care less that my neighbors use windows or iWhatever. And your point about Google Docs (or any web-based tool) being a plus for linux is spot on: if you're the sort of person who cares about these things, you should welcome the idea that things people want can be accessed via the web using linux just as well as any other operating system. I was up in Lake Tahoe a couple of weeks ago and my uncle complained that his computer had broken. Turned out it was a bad hard drive. I asked him what exactly he used the machine for. "Browsing, email, stock trading". That made it easy - no need to even bother with the hard drive: I made him a bootable Ubuntu USB stick and now he uses linux on his desktop (altho he doesn't really know what that means - to him, a browser may as well be the operating system, and if someone asked him what OS he uses, he'd likely say "Firefox"). But I don't have any vested interest in him using linux: it just happened to be the right (and easiest and cheapest) tool at the time to serve his needs.

    36. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by SatanClauz · · Score: 1
      so, is it so inconvenient for you to click the left button before scrolling the mouse? I mean, your cursor is over the window already anyway.

      then there's always that pesky "Activate a window by hovering over it with the mouse" in the access center...

    37. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by AugstWest · · Score: 1

      Seriously... "But what happens when Google Docs gets truly robust enough for business and high-end document production?"

      Uh, at that point the desktop is just a browser, and people can use a free operating system and a free browser to access it?

      Web applications are good for Linux, not the enemy. Logic, it's your friend.

    38. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Uhhh...maybe because its true? I own and run a little PC shop, it is guys like me that Linux really needs to grow. We get ZERO price breaks from MSFT so there is no loyalty there, and we certainly aren't doing it to get rich, we do it because we love computers and helping folks.

      But with all the fragmentation nothing in Linux, not any of the real important stuff, ever seems to get fixed! Take drivers, everyone else has an ABI, Linux don't. You don't want an ABI? Fine and dandy then fix it so the drivers don't break when you upgrade the thing! Maybe if everyone wasn't spread so thin with a bazillion distros then you wouldn't NEED an ABI because there would be enough guys working on drivers to keep them from breaking constantly! I tried Ubuntu/Mint, Mepis, and PCLOS, these are the ones usually listed as "friendly" Linux distros. In every single case the 6 month upgrades broke something. Do you think I can afford to give away lifetime free support?

      And please don't say LTS, I've been down that road and found that LTS is a codeword for "really old software" thanks to the totally messed up some software requires certain kernels. That is totally nuts! And the ONLY way LTS might be even kinda sorta viable is if you catch it right at release because last I checked XP has more time left than the current Ubuntu LTS.

      Look I'm old enough to remember when we actually HAD choices in OSes, we had Commodore, we had GEM, we had DOS, we had Mac System. With the XP EOL countdown I would really like to have a "third way" as I have a feeling a LOT of former XP machines will end up on my doorstep. but as it is now with every Linux I try its the same: Install and fiddle until everything works perfect, Oh look, there's an update or upgrade. Install updates or upgrades Linux falls down with broken drivers, lather rinse repeat.

      If you are a server admin, addicted to CLI and getting paid to deal with that? Linux is cool beans daddy-o. if you are a geek that thinks fiddling with OS guts is fun, and learning Bash commands is a good way to spend the weekend? Linux is for you. programmers? Ditto.

      But if you are gonna gain REAL share you NEED guys like me, who can market and service your product, but right now the service and support costs would bankrupt me. My time is a minimum $35 an hour, at that rate a single borked driver forum hunt can cost me MORE than a copy of Windows 7 HP. If there wasn't 50 bazillion choices, if everyone settled on some standard and everyone worked on it? maybe things like this wouldn't happen and guys like me could get on board.

      Time is ticking fellas, the XP EOL is less than 3 years now. That is gonna be hundreds of millions of boxes with NO Windows licenses. Will they end up in the dump like the last ones I got, because the cost of a Win license is worth more than the box, and I can't keep the drivers working 100% in Linux? Or will guys like me be happily installing "Linux Home Edition" and putting them in the window? That is up to you, the community. All guys like me can do is write articles and point out in forums like this what we need to sell your product. Of course all that will most likely happen for our trouble is a bunch of labels of shill and troll, and the community can go back to enjoying their 1% share and arguing for Vi VS Emacs.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    39. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The tools are consistent

      AAAHHHHHHAAAAAAaaahhhhhaaaaaAAAAAHHHHHHAAAAAA

      I don't think anyone, anywhere, ever would argue that the tools in linux are consistent. Man, that's some funny shit.

    40. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Well, choice is good for the initial stages for competition sake. But in the end, the best solutions will either converge, or the others will die off. Admittedly, that could take a few decades/centuries though.

      I just think it would be a much more 'noble' and forward-looking venture to create the best possible OS with all the best ideas coming together from many sources using a democratic or meritocratic process. Something to build for the future, which could stand the test of time, rather than splinters of varying goodness all over the place. Maybe Haiku has more of that kind of philosophy I guess...

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    41. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Why would someone need to install Windows based Office when in many distros an office suite is installed by default? In my dstro and DE it's in the Applications Menu>Office.

      Linux distros needs to be easy enough that people don't need an IT professional in the house to use it, install their software, get connected and do day to day tasks using the software which is often required by the people they have to work with.

      They were....10 years ago. My first Distro was one based on Red Hat 6, I was able to install, use it, get connected and do day to day tasks without being an IT professional.

    42. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Toonol · · Score: 1

      It is somewhat counter-intuitive, but recessive genes do not diminish in frequency over generations. If 10% of a population has blonde hair, a hundred generations later, it will still be 10% (well, there is random drift, but it is as likely to be higher as it is lower). Recessive genes are no less likely to pass between generations.

      Of course, if blonde hair is beneficial or detrimental to reproduction, that will have an effect... but I can't imagine blonde or red hair being a detriment to breeding.

    43. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 2

      Try using software with multiple scroll-boxes, in windows you need to click, then scroll. In linux you just hover and scroll, then move to the next one. You really don't realize how much of a PITA that click is until you've used linux for a while, then had to use a windows box.

      Other "small" but SERIOUSLY useful things include
      "highlight, then middle click" for copy/paste (no keyboard),
      alt+MMB for re-sizing (no grabbing the corner)
      alt+LMB for moving a window (my GOD that is useful!)
      virtual terminals (WAY better than that "task manager" pos)
      ssh: vnc is crap and always will be for remote application use

      I could go on, but you get the idea. The big things in linux are amazing, but it's the little things (that have existed for over a DECADE) that really piss you off when you are forced to use a non-linux system for even 5 minutes.

    44. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      forget 5 minutes, 10 SECONDS would be enough!

    45. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by SQLGuru · · Score: 1

      But, can your OS of choice scroll your browser window even when the mouse is hovering over a different window? I actually find it convenient that my window focus doesn't change unless I initiate that change.

    46. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      You're thinking of Linux in the same frame as you think of your commercial enterprise. That means you miss a significant point. Linux isn't harmed by not being adopted by some specific sector. Linux also isn't helped by "gaining share", whatever that is supposed to mean. There are commercial interests tied to Linux, but they aren't Linux. Linux is not so much a "product" as a "revolutionary spirit". If you can figure out how to take a revolutionary spirit and make it into a commercial venture or whatever, there are way better interests than Linux.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    47. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by blacklint · · Score: 1

      As a former KDE user (and current Microsoft employee), that drives me batty. Luckilly, there's freeware to the rescue: http://antibody-software.com/web/software/software/wizmouse-makes-your-mouse-wheel-work-on-the-window-under-the-mouse/. Scrolling some windows without focus causes the taskbar icon to glow for a notification, but other than that, it works great.

    48. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Hell, you're not even shown the 'Submit' button without at least once going through this preview!

      Bullshit. I can see both, under the checkboxes for "no karma bonus" and "post anonymously"

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    49. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Oooookay...that is the most weasel worded pile of BS I've read in awhile. Revolutionary spirit? Did you stand on a soapbox while composing that? It is a fucking OS not the Magna Carta! And it isn't harmed by not actually being used? WTF? So not having...ohhh I don't know....support for all the major software, hardware drivers actually written by the companies that made the software, zero retail presence AT ALL, none of that matters huh? Its just you and RMS dancing through the flowers?

      And folks wonder why businesses like mine avoid Linux like the clap. you people are fucking delusional, you know that?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    50. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Darfeld · · Score: 1

      First,ssh as a windows implementation. Second ssh and vnc aren't exactly comparable...

      But part from that I agree. Plus scrolling unactive windows allow you to keep an other windows on the foreground. It really bother me sometimes when I can't do that and I have to clic one windows then the other then the first etc... Call me lazy if you want, but desktop comfort is all about small things like that. (and modularity is a key features I think, because nobody like the same settings... That's my first issue against Unity.)

      --
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      (='.'=) copy it in your sig
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    51. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

      The difference is that peanut butter makers don't have to decide whether they are going to make peanut butter for use with brown bread or peanut butter for use with white bread.

    52. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he was referring about the TFA's author.

    53. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by peterbye · · Score: 1

      As each Android device is accepted the community clarifies for everyone that Linux is the elder brother of Android.

      Which just adds to the confusion, as many Android users now think that Linux is 'made by Google'

    54. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by SatanClauz · · Score: 1
      Those alt+mouse button ones sound very useful.

      I tried making a script with AutoHotKey for those but it wasn't working for me. I'm not really good with it but it can probably be done.

      http://www.autohotkey.com/ - give it a shot! and if you are able to make it I hope you remember this thread and share :)

    55. Re:The op is a... The author is an idiot by somersault · · Score: 1

      You know, when you make the whole post a link I know you're trolling. When you use a link shortener I know you're trolling.... soooo.... I don't even know what you're linking to, but I don't give a fuck.

      --
      which is totally what she said
  2. Old? by Lord+Lode · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is LibreOffice vs. OpenOffice an old argument? It's hardly a year old...

    1. Re:Old? by obergfellja · · Score: 1

      it still falls within the "argument" and arguing over which is better is an old concept. Six in one hand, half a dozen in another, so, meh.

    2. Re:Old? by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      I think he means it's a continuation of the same fight seen often enough before.

      I'd rather agree. Competition is good, but too much can hurt things. A bit more cooperation would not be bad.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    3. Re:Old? by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      Regardless, how does arguing which is better in the presence of of online alternatives cost Linux the desktop? Google Docs and Prezi both work fine whether the user is running Linux or Windows or BDS or OSX, or has LibreOffice installed or not or whatever else. The premise here seems flawed.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    4. Re:Old? by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      Yes, but look at all the distributions of linux, each with their advocates. In many cases, there isn't one clearly advocated piece of software for the solution, except, maybe OpenOffice (now with LibraOffice, that may no longer be the case), and Firefox.

      Users don't want to have to make that decision. It's what do I use at work, what is being recommended by a large majority? In Linux, not much.

      It's a great setup for the the mobile device, where there isn't much of a comfortable choke-hold, and where Linux has been embraced by only one huge vendor, but outside of that, there are other, more "comfortable" options for the general user.

      Linux is good to great for the server, good for the power user, and not so good for the desktop/notebook user.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    5. Re:Old? by hedwards · · Score: 1

      There is no argument there, the only folks on the OpenOffice side at this point are shills. LibreOffice is OpenOffice with a ton of fixes to it. Pretty much the only folks still using OpenOffice are people who use distros that haven't yet switched over.

      The other ones there's at least some legitimacy to both sides, even if Unity does blow chunks on large screens, I can at least envision how it would be helpful on smaller screens and the bugs can be fixed.

    6. Re:Old? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For LibreOffice vs OpenOffice it will be at least half a year, probably longer before the OpenOffice brand is producing anything new again Given how far LibreOffice has got and the fact that all the major distributions bundle it (with Abyword NOT OpenOffice for almost all the others), I think the conclusion to this one has already happened, it is jut that OpenOffice is so big that the tail is still twitching.

    7. Re:Old? by spooky_d · · Score: 1

      It is pretty new, true. But it expresses the core of the argument. There are these internal fights that hurt the desktop environment on Linux immensely. It's vi vs. emacs all over again. Nothing new, you know?

      Because of this fight there is no focus. The Linux kernel is a success story because it's a very well focused project. Because there's one project. If there were two, and people always would prefer Linuxx and not Linuxs because one is in C and the other in C++ and they would debate which one is better, the Linux kernel as we know it would be nowhere.

    8. Re:Old? by Korin43 · · Score: 1

      Uh.. what argument? They're basically the same software. Maybe some distros package OpenOffice and some package LibreOffice, but does the end user actually care?

    9. Re:Old? by Korin43 · · Score: 1

      The Linux kernel is a success story because it's a very well focused project. Because there's one project. If there were two, and people always would prefer Linuxx and not Linuxs because one is in C and the other in C++ and they would debate which one is better, the Linux kernel as we know it would be nowhere.

      Yeah it's good thing Linux is the only free open-source kernel.

    10. Re:Old? by spooky_d · · Score: 1

      There are not many Linux distributions that would use BSD kernels. I don't really know why :D

      And I'm sure GNU Hurd will be a rave.

    11. Re:Old? by antdude · · Score: 1

      And not much differences between them at this time. Give it a year or more, and then compare. I still have OpenOffice installed on my Windows and Linux machines. I am still waiting for big differences for these Word, Excel and PowerPoint clones.

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    12. Re:Old? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Zen Koan:

      Q) Which is the better tool, a hammer or a screwdriver?

      A) Depends on whether you're driving nails or screws, doesn't it...

      Know your objective, know your tools, choose appropriately.

      You're welcome.

    13. Re:Old? by fnj · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, "Competition is good, but too much can hurt things." I think you might want to go back to the drawing board on that thought.

    14. Re:Old? by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      Is LibreOffice vs OpenOffice even an argument to begin with? It seems pretty much like OpenOffice.org is going the way of XFree86.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    15. Re:Old? by trevelyon · · Score: 1

      I was questioning some of the comparisons too.

      Evolution vs Thunderbird: Don't almost all gnome distros ship with Evolution as the default client? My experience is that thunderbird is installed by users that want the differences between it and Evolution (or they just use webmail instead). How is this different from Thunderbird vs Outlook Express?

      LibreOffice vs OpenOffice: What distro is not shipping LibreOffice default? I think the verdict is in on this and Open Office is pretty much dead or did I miss something?

      Gnome 3 vs Unity vs KDE vs Others: This is actually the one example that IMO is relevant to the point they were making. They seem to see this as fragmentation. Considering the past 10 years of the Linux Desktop it could also be seen as establishing the "major desktops". Even though Ubuntu has a lot of market share the verdict on Unity and Gnome3 seems to be far from decided. In their quest to get "the average user" they may well find they alienated the power user, you know the one who often installs a distro for people.

      I don't claim to know what the future will bring but I don't think fragmentation is what is holding back commercial applications from becoming available on the Linux desktop. That might more be a combination of poor corporate understanding of how to operate in the Linux ecosystem, smaller user base, fear of openness, competing free apps (some of which are very good already). I suspect these more than fragmentation are what is holding commercial interests back. Then again I've thought Linux was ready for the desktop 5 years ago and the many users I've deployed it to seem to agree.

    16. Re:Old? by Korin43 · · Score: 1

      There are not many Linux distributions that would use BSD kernels. I don't really know why :D

      Uh.. That would be because if they didn't use Linux, they wouldn't be a Linux distro.. by definition.

      Also, the Debian operating system (generally considered to be a Linux distro) does run on the FreeBSD kernel, and GNU Hurd.

    17. Re:Old? by syockit · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't want to focus on a project unless you either (a) are paid to work on it (or gives you a form of profit, or (b) are enthusiastic about it. There are kernels written in C++ or Java but most of them do not get enough funding, and not many C++/Java enthusiasts are interested in working on a kernel. Likewise, those who just don't want to program in C for the Linux kernel will never work on the kernel unless there's something in for them. People who code for KDE because of their preference for QT/C++, won't code for GNOME, and vice versa. Ditto with other desktop environment projects. And if you force them to work on solely one DE? "Over my dead body, might as well I don't code at all!"

      You need to remember that most of the developers for non-profit open source projects are there by their own choice. Some will form teams if they think their shared vision is good enough for them to cast aside their differences in ideologies. But you can't force vision/ideologies on everyone, there is no obligation upon them.

      --
      Democracy is for the people; you only vote once per season and we'll do the rest of the work for you don't have to.
    18. Re:Old? by spooky_d · · Score: 1

      I was just noting that the guy in the article talked about Linux distributions.

    19. Re:Old? by spooky_d · · Score: 1

      KDE and GNOME are two highly polarized projects. Each with its own visions, and the freedesktop specifications to make them work together. But it seems that that doesn't work. Why? It's simple: because each desktop environment decides it could reinvent the wheel and it does just that.

      What KDE and GNOME don't really offer (and, in fact, none of the desktop environments) is CHOICE. How come? Well, it's not a real choice when it comes prepackaged. You want a better console application? Sure, you could use Konsole in GNOME, but on one hand you'll be lynched by the GNOME fans, and second of all you'd have to KNOW that you want Konsole. And you'd have to avoid a component that you can't uninstall (because it's core component in GNOME) in order to get your application. You'll have two. Aaaaand, talk about configurability. You'll see some fonts in GNOME, some in KDE. Thus: some for GNOME terminal, some for Konsole. Or have you ever changed the default browser in Kubuntu? Man, that's a disaster. Sure, it works better, but you'll still have to use their all shenanigans to make it work. And sometimes it will just pop up the konq just because (at least that was the case one year ago).

      I might talk about old bugs, but these kind of things keep me away from the Linux desktop since a few years now. Sure, Linux on server? Swell! On my desktop? Never. How can I play my Steam games (wine doesn't work as great as it should)? I can't even look at HD youtube on my desktop, with either open driver or proprietary driver. That's why I think there's no real focus on the desktop, so it's dead to me.

      You need to remember that most of the developers for non-profit open source projects are there by their own choice. Some will form teams if they think their shared vision is good enough for them to cast aside their differences in ideologies. But you can't force vision/ideologies on everyone, there is no obligation upon them.

      I said all these just to prove a point: The fact that even if the open source projects are indeed done by their own choice, the core is not good enough. Why Windows is so great? Well, for what we're talking about, for one reason: you can use your Qt application, your Gtk+ application, your GDI application, your winforms application on a VERY stable core. GNOME and KDE remove my choices because they want to make too much. And instead of freeing choices and letting the initiative run free, it makes a choice for you. Windows is tabula rasa - I can write ANYTHING on it. Including new settings applications. On GNOME I can't install my favorite tweaking application, because that tweaking application is created for KDE, and it's not doing what it's supposed to.

      The way I see it, for the desktop application developer, Windows is a much better platform. It's stable, and it gives you the freedom to use and implement whatever you want. It doesn't get in the way, like GNOME and KDE do. And all the other fights like Evolution and Thunderbird (if I want to use Evolution I have to install half or 3/4 of GNOME). The way the Linux desktop is built, it just doesn't work. Why does KDE have to be so huge? Why does GNOME have to have so many libraries? Why aren't the modules more independent? They could be, but they won't. And if you have two smaller giants, climbing on their shoulders will get you much lower than climbing on the shoulders of a single giant, two times taller.

    20. Re:Old? by Noughmad · · Score: 1

      There are not many Linux distributions that would use BSD kernels. I don't really know why :D

      Well, there is at least one: http://www.debian.org/ports/kfreebsd-gnu/

      --
      PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
    21. Re:Old? by spooky_d · · Score: 1

      And I am pretty sure that distribution is really influential. I think Ballmer woke up horrified that the KFreeBSD-GNU will attack Microsoft's dominance on the desktop.

    22. Re:Old? by Korin43 · · Score: 1

      And what I'm saying is that the fact that all Linux distros use Linux is about as surprising as the fact that Ford doesn't make Toyotas.

    23. Re:Old? by spooky_d · · Score: 1

      Me too. And I am equally surprised :)

  3. freedom to choose by mrflash818 · · Score: 2

    ...is more important than monoculture, in my humble opinion.

    If only 1 percent of computer users use Linux, then I will argue they are the Top 1 percent ;)

    --
    Uh, Linux geek since 1999.
    1. Re:freedom to choose by ByOhTek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Is there anywhere in the OSS community where cutting the number of options in half would produce a monoculture?

      Admittedly there is only one Linux kernel, heavily modified, but you could add the BSD Kernels and Hurd to make up for that.

      With desktop environments, a dime a dozen would be highway robbery.

      There are a few that stand out in any of the areas, but in general, a bit more cooperation probably would help more than hinder. Getting rid of the ideological and dick-waving flame wars of who's project is the best solution for a given problem, and seeing (and in some cases, combining) the strengths of the competition (or even, in some cases, merging products) moreso than is done now, would probably help.

      Some of the issues is that there are too many choices, which most users don't want. They want what works, and on average case, does best, not three tools that do about the same thing, but only handle a small part of that "thing" the best.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    2. Re:freedom to choose by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      Some of the issues is that there are too many choices, which most users don't want. They want what works, and on average case, does best, not three tools that do about the same thing, but only handle a small part of that "thing" the best.

      No they don't, they want whatever the next TV commercial tells them to want. Too many choices, is like too much money. It is a problem we should all be so lucky to have.

    3. Re:freedom to choose by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      No they don't, they want whatever the next TV commercial tells them to want.

      Right, so they don't want to choose... were you trying to contradict yourself?

    4. Re:freedom to choose by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not at all. The point is they don't want to choose, so FUCK'EM!
      These are the same people that would complain about too much money, idiots!

      I DO NOT GIVE A FLYING FUCK AT A ROLLING DONUT ABOUT THEM.

    5. Re:freedom to choose by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      OK, maybe a better way of putting it, is that most people want the choice to be made for them, and not to have to make it themselves. Commercials are one, but by far, not the only, way of handling that.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    6. Re:freedom to choose by the_humeister · · Score: 1

      Some of the issues is that there are too many choices, which most users don't want. They want what works, and on average case, does best, not three tools that do about the same thing, but only handle a small part of that "thing" the best.

      No they don't, they want whatever the next TV commercial tells them to want. Too many choices, is like too much money. It is a problem we should all be so lucky to have.

      "Too many choices" and "too much money" are two entirely different things. Money is fungible. Desktop environments are not.

      If you ever watch women shop for shoes, you'll know that there is such at thing as "too many choices".

    7. Re:freedom to choose by Sebastopol · · Score: 1

      i know you are kidding, but linux will forever be something a broad group of technology enthusiasts use to "feel" superior. they don't want linux to become mainstream, otherwise they will lose their very identity! this isn't about making the world better, it is about feeling special. it is the same situation as the new (old) hipster trend, except hipsters can buy a new identity a lot faster than technogeeks, as technology is in limited supply, but stupid sunglasses and ugly clothes are a perpetual resource.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    8. Re:freedom to choose by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Too many choices, is like too much money. It is a problem we should all be so lucky to have.

      I don't see how.

      Too many choices have a negative impact on happiness. Decision paralysis means that we have to intentionally downplay the effects of choice, through heurtistics and other mechanisms. Analysis of decisions can make unchosen options more attractive and chosen options less attractive.

      Decisions aren't free. If Linux is your hobby, customizing it involves time... time that you want to spend. But if you're using your computer to get laid, you want something that just works.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    9. Re:freedom to choose by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      If you decide to use Linux, you've already made a decision. Non-deciders would use Windows.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    10. Re:freedom to choose by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      So don't become paralyzed. If the computer is not your hobby; realize that what desktop environment you pick really is not that important, pick the first one off the list that ships with your distro and never look back.

      Some decisions just don't need to be agonized over. Pick something a move on. Learn not to waste time and energy on things that don't matter much either in absolute terms or relative to yourself, so you can focus on things that do matter.

      So what if you picked XFCE and it turns out Gnome or KDE actually is better (as if there even is an objective answer) they all work. Any of them will get your spread sheet application launched and your browser pointed at Facebook just fine.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    11. Re:freedom to choose by SuseLover · · Score: 1

      Is there anywhere in the OSS community where cutting the number of options in half would produce a monoculture?

      Admittedly there is only one Linux kernel, heavily modified, but you could add the BSD Kernels and Hurd to make up for that.

      With desktop environments, a dime a dozen would be highway robbery.

      There are a few that stand out in any of the areas, but in general, a bit more cooperation probably would help more than hinder. Getting rid of the ideological and dick-waving flame wars of who's project is the best solution for a given problem, and seeing (and in some cases, combining) the strengths of the competition (or even, in some cases, merging products) moreso than is done now, would probably help.

      Some of the issues is that there are too many choices, which most users don't want. They want what works, and on average case, does best, not three tools that do about the same thing, but only handle a small part of that "thing" the best.

      I call BS on the bold statement. Nobody seems to have problems with the 1000's of choices in the Apple app store or Android market, so what makes you think lots of choices are bad for Linux?

    12. Re:freedom to choose by digitalchinky · · Score: 1

      TWM - check. Applixware - check. FrameMaker - check. ImageMagick - check. Mosaic - check. Since all of this is only compatible with my nostalgic memories of yore, I haven't been able to communicate my ever soaring levels of inferiority to everyone that doesn't want to listen, thus your stereotype is jaded by noise rather than signal :-) I also use Microsoft stuff from time to time too. (I don't actually know what a hipster is, new or old - though I guess I could check aliweb)

    13. Re:freedom to choose by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      Too many choices, is like too much money.

      that's the fiction we'd all like to believe. Unfortunately, it's just not true. The cost of too many choices is no choice at all. Yes, it's a TED talk, and it's one of the best I've ever listened to.

      You think your choices are up to you?

      Guess what: choices are EXPENSIVE. All by themselves. Choices themselves have a high price. Fewer options reduces the cost of choosing, and makes you more likely to buy. Witness Apple, which has the "consumer" model and the "pro" model... and that's it! Did you want the Macbook or the Macbook pro?

      Sorry, it's just true. Too many choices mean people leave.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    14. Re:freedom to choose by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Your red herring is pretty stupid. People want choices, but they don't want to choose between 8+ choices they have never heard of and have no way to compare. They certainly don't want to have install many or all possible choices and then test and compare them all. Nor do they want to pick one and hope it does all of what they need and want. Most people want a few, easily evaluated choices. That is what they get on MS Windows and on Macs.

      I have recently gone to the web sites of some FLOSS apps and discovered that the home page was nothing but a change and bugfix log, some screen shots, and a forum. There was no description of the application or it's purpose, no list of features, and no documentation (apparently, that is what the forum was for). In short, there was nothing on the websites to allow me to evaluate the offerings without downloading, installing, and testing them. I work for a living and I don't have time to do that.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    15. Re:freedom to choose by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      I DO NOT GIVE A FLYING FUCK AT A ROLLING DONUT ABOUT THEM.

      And, that attitude is the reason Linux will never be a mainstream desktop or laptop operating system. You and your ilk do not care about the majority of actual computer users. Remember that the next time you want to complain about Windows and people who use Windows, and then STFU.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    16. Re:freedom to choose by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      As you know, the choice of Ford v GM has cost the car industry dearly.

      Disclaimer: I drive a Nissan

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    17. Re:freedom to choose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I DO NOT GIVE A FLYING FUCK AT A ROLLING DONUT ABOUT THEM.

      Well, good luck with your career in the software industry then; that attitude killed:

      Digital Equipment Corp (I was there for that one)
      Data General (my brother was there for that one)
      Wang (I left the co. just before the death spiral; those idiots didn't even have a LIST OF THEIR CUSTOMERS)

      and a lot of other non-trivial high-tech enterprises. If you don't care, you'll get screwed. "Don't tell us what you want, we'll tell you what you need" doesn't fly in the long run, especially if your SW stinks, doesn't do what the market needs, and you don't listen.

      That attitude will kill your company; it can kill your individual career if that attitude gets back to your users...or even your boss.

      Wise up.

    18. Re:freedom to choose by dward90 · · Score: 1

      Watch this video

      Choice and corresponding competition drive innovation, which creates better products for users. The current browser market is a great example of this, where Chrome/Firefox/IE (and Opera and Safari to some extent) compete fiercely for market share and are thus required to make compelling improvements for users.

      Having a multitude of choices does have real downsides, though. When you have these choices, you're never really sure you made the right one. KDE/Gnome etc. have this problem, where users switch back and forth because of various updates/changes/features that they do or don't like at any given time. Because they flip, they aren't confident that they are getting the best experience, which degrades the entire experience of using the OS.

      --
      My other sig is clever.
    19. Re:freedom to choose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problem with that argument: ubuntu users.

    20. Re:freedom to choose by Beetle+B. · · Score: 1

      There are a few that stand out in any of the areas, but in general, a bit more cooperation probably would help more than hinder.

      The assumption that there isn't enough cooperation is likely a poor one. Standards do exist, and they do play relatively well with one another. No matter how much they cooperate, there will still be some difference to quibble over, and people are going to see that which makes noise (the quibbling) and not see that which works due to cooperation.

      --
      Beetle B.
    21. Re:freedom to choose by Swarley · · Score: 1

      My problem with FOSS software in general is too many mediocre choices. I go looking for some specialized software or utility and I find 10+ different applications that all solve the problem in a different way, covering a different subset of all the elements of the problem, and are all decidedly mediocre in their execution. As someone who doesn't actually contribute to OSS I could easily be missing something about this (although since most users don't make software, my misconceptions will likely be those of the normal user too) but I would much rather see the open source community gravitate more and work together to make fewer better applications. Instead everybody makes their own movie player until we have 30 video players that are all crappy and never make it past version 0.6b. And for Linux we get these different environments that use different technology to generate different UIs and include different options etc. If choice is the goal, why can't we have one environment that lets you chose the UI that you want? If the environments are cross compatible, then why do we need so many? I can understand the idea of choice in terms of interface, but why so much choice in terms of the underlying technology?

      The Mac example is extremely pertinent. Not only do they offer a limited number of options, but it's EXTREMELY clear what each option is supposed to be for. Cost vs. performance vs. portability. The choices are built by one company and thus they aren't afraid to specialize these options. In Linux, all the options are made by different groups who each want their option to do everything and be THE option. So it's NEVER clear what each choice is good or not good for and it's because the wild west development structure means that every option is built to be good at everything and none of them ever actually achieve that. As a longtime windows user who's tried a handful of different linux distros and desktop environments, I can tell you that the ONLY decision that is clear in terms of what you get and what you give up is picking a "lightweight" environment or a "full featured, desktop class" environment. That was the only choice that was ever clear to me. KDE vs. Gnome? No idea and I don't have the time to mess around with it. There's the "just use Ubuntu and forget about the rest" group, but the rest of the community spends all their hot air talking about how Shuttleworth is undermining the broader OSS community. But those people don't really try to compete with Ubuntu. They don't throw their collective weight behind a unified competitor with more respect for the community. I can see the appeal of an organically organized and intrinsically motivated community of software developers, but as a smart and technical (but non-software developer) user I can tell you that the in-fighting, needless competition instead cooperation, and the vast wasteland of largely irrelevant distros used by people who need to feel different or validate the idea of choice by chosing something obscure is really off putting.

    22. Re:freedom to choose by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Not at all. The cost of too many choices is that you'll need to find some opinion to trust. Yeah, at lab environment with limited interaction people resort to "no choice", but only because they don't have the possibility of talking about the issue.

      The bad news is that the opinion most people trust is the one that comes from that screen people have on their living rooms. But here I'm repeating a GP.

      Anyway, if you think too many choices is a bad thing, it is your job to show how one can merge distinct choices so you get the best of both. It is a feat that is recognized to be impossible on most cases, have a try. I'd suggest you start at the emacs x vi flamewar.

    23. Re:freedom to choose by internettoughguy · · Score: 1

      If you ever watch women shop for shoes, you'll know that there is such at thing as "too many choices".

      Pervert.

      There are definitely a lot of choices, but that can easily be solved with some kind of ratings system and more metadata. Also since they are free, provided there is little time cost in adding and removing them, it doesn't really matter if you make the wrong choice from time to time.

    24. Re:freedom to choose by thePuck77 · · Score: 1

      You mean when it's not running most professional mathematician's, programmer's, and scientists' desktops, the majority of internet servers, and the majority share of phones?

      I don't use Linux to feel superior, nor do most of the users I know. I tried hard to use the tools I prefer to code with on Windows. It was just more and more a pain in the ass. The castration of the CLI and the move to Powershell annoyed me immensely. I also really prefer the software manager and the level of customization. Maybe most people would find a lot of the software in the repositories geeky/nerdy/boring/whatever, but I like it. In the end, Windows is good for gaming, so I keep a partition on my main box, but I generally live in Linux because I actually prefer it. While I am aware that there are people like you describe (and there seem to be some in any subculture), most of the people I have known and worked with in the OSS community are involved for very different reasons, ranging from the practical to the ideological (I lay somewhere in between).

      --
      "We live as though the world were as it should be, to show it what it can be." - Joss Whedon via Angel
    25. Re:freedom to choose by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      For the most part, because for any given task, there are rarely 1000s of options on those app stores?

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    26. Re:freedom to choose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's actually an argument out there that says advertising works because there are too many options for consumers. If you go to buy a vacuum cleaner you're faced with 10s of different companies each with hundreds of different models.

      This creates a problem for the human brain -- we cant consider all these different models / brands, so our brain short circuits and stops thinking rationally. It comes up with a solution using various heuristics that have evolved over time, and most advertising makes use of these heuristics to unconsciously influence our decisions.

      See for example: The Science of Influence by Kevin Hogan.

    27. Re:freedom to choose by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      I don't make software for users. I don't ever see users.
      I don't get paid by users.

      This is why I can have that opinion.

    28. Re:freedom to choose by Sebastopol · · Score: 1

      Users != zealots. I was a bit too broad. I was focusing on the zealots that make a big deal out if it. My company switched from AIX and SunOS to Linux in the late 90's, and all engineering work is done on distributed computing. So technically, I use Linux 90%+ of time (except for Excel and Outlook), but I'm not referring to myself because I'm not waging a religious war and pouting about the failure of it taking over the desktop. The professionals you mention don't need a dumbed-down OS for work, but you can bet your CLI that when I get home, I want to use something simpler than iOS!

      To be more specific, the people that are whining about its failure to displace Windows XP are my rant's target. But the PC is close to dead, so the idea of a "desktop" is a moot one. Just look at the parent of my comment to see who I was targeting.

      Thanks for the clarification.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    29. Re:freedom to choose by thePuck77 · · Score: 1

      Ah, I see where you are coming from. I agree, users != zealots, and your remarks apply to that subset of zealots who are worried about things like replacing Win and so on. I just don't see the point in framing things in those terms (as a battle or war...it's just silly). We are all attempting to use tools, and we should simply use the best tools for our respective goals. For me, what it comes down to is Linux provides a better overall coding/research environment, then OS X because at least there you have macports/homebrew and a *real* shell, then Windows, which I always feel like I am in a battle with just to get it to do what I want. Cygwin never worked well for me, and while I can use Eclipse, EMACS, etc on Win, there are always a million little things you have to do to get the same level of functionality you have in a *nix system.

      Thanks for explaining.

      --
      "We live as though the world were as it should be, to show it what it can be." - Joss Whedon via Angel
    30. Re:freedom to choose by PipsqueakOnAP133 · · Score: 1

      *sigh* I would so mod this up if I had points.

  4. "May cost"?? by tigersha · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will. That is some /. nerd fantasy.

    --
    The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    1. Re:"May cost"?? by Chrisq · · Score: 0

      Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will. That is some /. nerd fantasy.

      I think it had a shot years ago. And missed.

    2. Re:"May cost"?? by obergfellja · · Score: 1

      would be nice, but it is not going to happen, like Java running a whole house. It is a pipe dream which will never be.

      On the other hand, I can see Linux, in the kernel sense running more than just phones. I know a few linux nerds are squirming over that and want to Down Mod my comment for that, but lets face it, Yes, Linux (as we know it on Desktops) has certain standards, and the Android (with linux kernel) is technically the more successful cousin of the Desktop, so to speak, and we need to focus on how we can spread the concept of Linux (as a kernel) to all devices. The "Desktop Linux" is like Communism (on paper), Great idea, but won't take off to the full extent we would like without people looking down on it as an inferior product of our work in terms of desktop (by the populous).

      In short, lets take the Java dream in running everything with one tool and use that dream for Linux. (kernel based).

    3. Re:"May cost"?? by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So then my desktop does not exist?

    4. Re:"May cost"?? by GooberToo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I keep hearing this. Oddly enough, back when Linux had 1% of the desktop market, its continued to grow on desktops.

      People seem extremely confused about what this all means. Will Linux every have 80% of the desktop market? Not likely. Is the current desktop count under reported? Extremely likely. Realistically, the year of the Linux desktop arrived years ago. As you said, 80% is some /. nerd, idiot, fantasy. Just the same, Linux likely has something between 5%-8% of the desktop market. And frankly, even 1% means the Linux desktop has arrived.

      With the idiocy which claims the Linux desktop hasn't arrived means OSX hasn't arrived either. That's dumb and by all reasonable accounts, completely untrue.

      Realistically, the lie is that the Linux desktop is a lie.

    5. Re:"May cost"?? by Gedvondur · · Score: 1

      I would agree.

      Useability issues, hostile support community and general lack of hardware support (desktop) all contribute to Linux being an unpopular desktop.

      Really, support is the kicker, not acquisition cost. The industry has been turning PC support folks into the equivalent of data janitors for years now, both in prestige and pay. If you are dedicated enough to get *good* at supporting Linux, you are going to get a much-better paying admin job, not keep on schlepping desktops for minimal cash. Supporting Linux desktops creates more costs than it saves in Windows licenses in both ongoing issues (doing business with MS-Office using partners, etc) and cost of support personnel.

      The Windows world churns out people good enough to do desktop support constantly. They are easier to find and will accept a smaller compensation package. Some of them are even lifers at desktop support, not good enough for data center admin jobs.

      It's too bad really. I would have liked to see a good Linux desktop. For myself, I've always ended up removing any Linux desktops I've installed. I want to do things, not mess with the OS, which is what I end up doing every damn time. Thus, Windows and OSX for me.

    6. Re:"May cost"?? by datajerk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will.

      Define desktop. If it is the principle UI that you use to communicate with the Internet and run applications, then...

      There are 7 billion people. ~2 billion PCs and ~5 billion phones worldwide. The growth UI will be in phones and other low cost devices. *That*, is the new desktop and it will be Linux-based.

      My TiVo and my Blu-ray player run Linux. That could be considered a media desktop. Or media UI. For some, sadly, TV is their principle app.

      Linux has won the desktop OS wars. It's just that nobody knows it yet.

      As for desktop UI apps, the future is HTML5.

    7. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think this is true now, but I don't think it was 3-4 years ago.
      I remember in 2007 installing distributions on my netbook and being very impressed at having a good selection of robust and well featured software 'out of the box'. Everything was working. A bit more spit and polish, a few more features and it would have been a system anyone could use and be proud of.

      And then it all seemed to go wrong. I don't know what happened, but around the time KDE4 came out everyone (well, the main distros at least) seemed to focus on rewriting everything, replacing known good apps with new, less feature packed versions.

      Now I install a distro and I'm not in the least impressed. The variety of applications installed is lower, the selected applications offer far less functionality than they did in the past, except now I have lots of shiny Apple style buttons and bullshit desktop cloud semantics.

      I know I could go into the repos and install different applications, but that's kind of missing the point. And they're often barely changed as development resources have been lost elsewhere.

      In short, I'm pretty disappointed with the state of Linux desktop at the moment and to me it seems to have gone more backwards than forwards over the last few years.

    8. Re:"May cost"?? by GooberToo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      hostile support community

      That's a new one.

      and general lack of hardware support (desktop)

      That's just simply not true. Linux has superior hardware support than does Vista and Win 7.

    9. Re:"May cost"?? by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      making an idiotic comment, ignoring the obvious meaning of the statement, does not make you look clever or bright. It does quite the opposite of that, in fact.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    10. Re:"May cost"?? by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Well thanks for telling me that. I wonder what it is I am using here then? Must be my imagination running on this computer.

      Yeah, that's it. I must be dreaming then, because GNU/Linux on a PC at home has no shot and is a fantasy.

    11. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well i'd reply but as I just discovered that i have no desktops either at home and a couple bogged down forgotten boxes at work. As a rightful owner of four windows licenses I could have left at least one on a hd...
      On a second thought... no.

    12. Re:"May cost"?? by Vorpix · · Score: 1

      why are people modding this up? i bet this guy had the same short-sighted view about the mobile market before Android came out and now is the market leader. as more and more applications are moving away from desktop apps to online based applications, it's certainly plausible that at some point in the future people will start asking why they are still paying for the privilege of an OS like Windows when everything they need to do on their computer takes place in their browser. and as the differences between "computers" and "phones" is continually blurred, how can you be so sure that at some point in the near future ChromeOS/Android won't become a dominant player on the "desktop"? that too is certainly plausible.

      --
      frog blast the vent core
    13. Re:"May cost"?? by arth1 · · Score: 2

      would be nice, but it is not going to happen, like Java running a whole house. It is a pipe dream which will never be.

      One man's dream is another man's nightmare.

      In short, lets take the Java dream in running everything with one tool and use that dream for Linux. (kernel based).

      fewer "one true tool" approaches, but a standard kernel API, so the kernel can be switched out at will. Get some competition.

    14. Re:"May cost"?? by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will. That is some /. nerd fantasy.

      Maybe. But answer this question: will Windows have a desktop monopoly forever?

      If your answer is "yes", then I have nothing further to say :)

      If your answer is "no", then my next question is "what will compete with it?".

      I think one obvious contender is MacOS. But with cost of entry in the $600 range, they will never have a monopoly - so that leaves a PC market open to chaotic competition... much like the cell phone and (maybe?) tablet market. I think you'll see companies hawking Linux-based systems just like Apple uses BSD. Why? It works well and is already written. In other words, Linux is one of the easiest ways to fill the gap left by a collapsed monopoly.

      So no, desktop Linux isn't going to be the force that busts up the MS monopoly. But something will, and Linux will likely be there to grab a chunk of the share when that happens.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    15. Re:"May cost"?? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I guess the issue is does it matter anymore? Yes, you won't be going to Big Box Computer Store and buying a notebook with Linux on it, but you'll have smartphones and tablets running it. The Desktop Wars are rapidly receding into the past, a conflict that simply doesn't have a lot of meaning anymore. That's why companies like Microsoft and Google are pushing forward to leverage their online offerings, and why one of the end products of this is browser neutrality. Even Microsoft has basically conceded the point that they can't win the Second Browser Wars.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    16. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hao come i has to do all that stuffs to maek mah whyfie and nvoodooia caerd werx?

      lawl rtfm nub

    17. Re:"May cost"?? by Hatta · · Score: 2

      I don't know what you're talking about. Linux has run on my desktops for 10 years.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    18. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GNU/Linux use is growing. There is a not insignificant demand. I am the CEO of a tiny little company that supports free software systems and we're getting orders for 20,000 components. That might seem small to you although my point is NOBODY is serving the market or we wouldn't be getting these orders. It' has been the case for a while. Since at least 2005 that GNU/Linux has been a serious candidate and contender. There is a lack of major companies trying to make a buck off it though and so support is a challenge. There just isn't any support. At least until recently. We're 3 years old and doing very well. Other companies hired 70 employees and basically went bankrupt. We have 1/7 that number and very profitable. The demand is growing. Partly because we actually market almost exclusively to a non-Linux customer base our products and services and partly because we develop free software solutions as needed to ease support. We also only use hardware that is free software compatible. This eliminates a huge part of our support costs. About half our revenue is generated from selling and supporting GNU/Linux systems. It doesn't matter if you need Quick Books today. Tomorrow we will have you running on something better. I think RMS has a point about not supporting non-free software on GNU/Linux. It encourages users to use it. That being said we're not supporting only totally free distributions or forcing uses, or not supporting (to the extent we have to) non-free software. We simply avoid marketing it, encouraging it, and selling products which depend on it. Free software doesn't have to mean unprofitable. Once you free up resources from the lack of non-free software licenses you just make up for it elsewhere. People have a certain amount of cash they'll spend on a new computer / support services and our goal is to get all that cash.

    19. Re:"May cost"?? by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      My TiVo and my Blu-ray player run Linux. That could be considered a media desktop.

      Sorry but there is no such thing as a "media desktop".

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    20. Re:"May cost"?? by Anon8---) · · Score: 2

      Sorry but I have to agree, a big part of the support community is like a conglomeration of elitist hackers with a mindset of "linux is for hackers", "linux shouldn't become too user-friendly", "if you can't use it don't try" and "stop noobifying linux". Sad as it is, they are also the ones that propogate the image, that linux is for pros only.

      Linux has superior hardware support than does Vista and Win 7.

      Since most hardware is available for operating systems with the biggest user-base (Windows and Mac) your statement is simply not true. I could pick any hardware store around, walk in and ask them for linux compatible hardware and most of the time they'll just give me a blank stare or respond with "you simply have to try it out". Why else are there databases on the web of linux-compatible hardware ?

    21. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      but the support community /is/ hostile, at least to a newbie who doesn't know what grub means

    22. Re:"May cost"?? by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 2

      hostile support community

      That's a new one.

      Actually, it's pretty old. I doubt you'd find too many people here on Slashdot that haven't run into some hostility from open source developers or their groupies in their early years.

      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    23. Re:"May cost"?? by ChrisMP1 · · Score: 2

      As for desktop UI apps, the future is HTML5.

      I think I speak for most here when I say this:

      Oh gods no, please no, no no no no, never!

      --
      <sig>&nbsp;</sig>
    24. Re:"May cost"?? by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's pretty old. I doubt you'd find too many people here on Slashdot that haven't run into some hostility from open source developers or their groupies in their early years.

      The same can be said for just about anything software related. That doesn't make it true, or even well grounded.

      And frankly, the ONLY complaints I've ever heard have been about specific applications - never Linux as a whole. And even those are typically driven by some dumb user saying such-n-such application must have feature x and developers saying something like, "great, but we don't have y and z, which are requirements for x - would you contribute x?" Followed by the user getting all pissed about how only he has vision and the developers are pooh-pooh heads.

    25. Re:"May cost"?? by hedwards · · Score: 1

      A kernel without a base userland was never a good idea. Sure you get competition, but you also get frequent switches over minor disagreements and you end up not really knowing what's going on in the userland because you don't really know what's going to change version to version.

      The arguments that they're referring to are probably the least important ones as they happen at such a high level that it's relatively easy to manually change it for yourself.

    26. Re:"May cost"?? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Sorry but there is no such thing as a "media desktop".

      Yes there is. If I put media on the top of my desk, I have a media desktop.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    27. Re:"May cost"?? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Linux has superior hardware support than does Vista and Win 7.

      Now that is funny.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    28. Re:"May cost"?? by tendrousbeastie · · Score: 1

      In what way does a mobile phone, or a TV, operate from a desktop?

    29. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Define desktop.

      OS used by at least 50% of computers used by humans (not scientists, programmers, etc. Those ARE NOT humans)

      My TiVo and my Blu-ray player run Linux.

      Who cares? Nobody knows that. And worst, those ARE NOT DESKTOP SYSTEMS

       

      As for desktop UI apps, the future is HTML5.

      FUCK YOU! and FUCK YOU EVERYONE who thinks the same

    30. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iOS is winning the smartphone OS war.

      Windows 8 will be a mobile OS. Don't write off the most successful consumer OS (which is what we really mean by desktop OS) in the world.

      Android uses Linux but who cares? Firmware flashing means that, for most people, a Linux OS is as locked down as Windows or Mac.

      Gnome will never win. KDE will never win. GNU will never win. The bazaar has never created consumer friendly products. We need the cathedrals at Redmond, Cupertino and Mountain View.

    31. Re:"May cost"?? by Palshife · · Score: 1

      If it is the principle UI that you use

      TV is their principle app

      You meant to say 'principal'.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    32. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Define desktop. If it is the principle UI that you use to communicate with the Internet and run applications, then...

      It is the UI that your company issues you so you can run Microsoft Outlook and Microsoft Office to connect to the company's Microsoft Exchange Server, Microsoft Active Directory, Microsoft Sharepoint Server, and internal web pages built with VBScript for IE6.

      At home, it is the UI that came with your computer when you bought it from a major OEM.

      The growth UI will be in phones and other low cost devices. *That*, is the new desktop and it will be Linux-based.

      And you are not allowed to jailbreak it to run your own software on it, and if you try to start a business around it then Microsoft will sue you for infringing on one of their 250,000 phone-related patents.

    33. Re:"May cost"?? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Your desktop is irrelevant and you are being disingenuous which makes you look like a fool. The phrase "Linux on the Desktop" means, and has meant for many years, ubiquitous Linux based desktop computers used by mainstream users. You know, those people you said you "I DO NOT GIVE A FLYING FUCK AT A ROLLING DONUT ABOUT THEM".

      The small group of people who use Linux as their primary desktop operating system don't even register when compared to those that use Windows and Mac OS X. You and your ilk don't even qualify as an anomaly in the data. As a group, you don't even make it out of the margin of error for the count.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    34. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5 billion phones? Citation needed. There aren't even 5-billion phone-using humans in the universe!

    35. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, have you ever asked a question on a support forum? If your question is answered at all (which is usually not often for me), the responses are usually "just use X instead" or just use Y command or method to fix the problem.

      Well, I don't know how to/want to get X other program, and maybe I don't have even the slightest clue about Y command/method. I've got this problem, I've got a bootup prompt or a terminal window. Is it SO painful for them to say "type "laskdjfasdklfj" at the prompt, and then "akjasdfkjasdf". Not everyone has memorized the friggin' OS or Distro. I try getting away from Windows, but asking for help just drives me back. I've compromised and have a dual-boot system.

      If I have a problem with Linux, I've already resigned myself to just formatting and reinstalling it, and back up all of my files onto SD cards regularly. It's just far easier and far less hassle in the long run than asking for help. I've also come to learn that I should never, ever update Linux. If it locks up and crashes during update (which is 95% of the time), again... help is unavailable, and the end result is format and reinstall.

    36. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had a real bad experience with self-claimed Linux experts, not because they were Linux experts but because they were generally really rude and ignorant fools.

      Thats what you get in some of the Genius/Expert/Pro users, outright stupid effing responses to simple questions which don't stroke their cucumber hard enough, stay away from them, seriously, they don't get enough socialization and thats their problem, not yours.

      Just outright telling me to f-off after asking a really simple to answer and myself explaining in clear terms what the problem is, this is because they wanted a question which would really test their so-called self proclaimed skills, but in the end they didn't know anything, they didn't know anything because they weren't google and they weren't a Manual, so all they really wanted to do was drag me around and call me stupid.

      I've heard many stories over the years, one paticular story involves a Windows oriented computer store purchasing a Linux server for their small buisness, the computer comes in, got set up, and 3 days after it was installed the Partition crashes, wipes everything off the system, it tries to fix the problem but it cannot, and the Linux store refused to fix a problem with the OS under Warranty without getting paid, so what did the computer store owner do? He gave the guy the finger and told him to get lost.

      This is the problem with Linux, when it stuffs up, where is the expert in how to fix it? Not even on the other end of a phone line at $3.50 a minute, definatley not just down your street, most of the time on the internet, now if it were Windows, the computer store owner could've re-installed it, because its so darn easy to learn how to fix it when it stuffs up, and what computer store owner doesn't know how to reinstall Windows?, Even Windows Server, and if it were something as simple as a small hardware server, then the thing could've been sent through the mail back to the manufacturer, under warranty.

      Now if the system was designed ruggedly and stable, so that it should never EVER die/fail, then that situation could've gone better, but instead, Linux has come in and made its otherwise spotless record look like cream crap, see, everyone thinks that Linux is the be-all and end-all of Stable, Reliable, Enthusiast-oriented Operating Systems, but its not, its an experiment let out into the wild, anyone who has had problems with Dependencies knows just what Linux looks like to them after it screws up or just doesn't work with one dependency because the program requires an older version of a Dependency, so you have to install a slightly newer one, but then that most times breaks a few other things or everything depending upon that, then leaves you with an awful awful mess of unconfigured files, files evenly distributed like tiny little bits of glass all over your fresh newly installed Operating System, and thats the aftermath from just ONE little problem, for a person who uses Windows for only the applications they need, no spyware, nothing unnecessary, thats just insanity for a person like me and is not on.

      But what kind of person does a Package manager attract? Thats right, the turn-key user, which then leaves you with a problem when a Package manager screams bloody mary and says "error, cannot find required dependencies".

      The Mainstream user who doesn't even know that they are using Linux, appliance users, embedded key-turn applications, multimedia devices for your tv, your mobile phone, THIS is where Linux should be, the mainstream, right now though the Linux Desktop requires far too much tinkering for my and many peoples tastes, and the ONLY way it will get there is if it becomes /Just-Like-Windows-or-OSX/.

      I will be a happy Linux user if I NEVER have to see a command line just to install a new application, for everything else I would be happy to use a command line with, because thats me tinkering, and I know I only have myself to blame when I screw up, but in every other situation, its some one elses screw up, and that pisses me off the most.

      Sincerely,
      A Future Linux User.

    37. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will.

      Define desktop. If it is the principle UI that you use to communicate with the Internet and run applications, then...

      There are 7 billion people. ~2 billion PCs and ~5 billion phones worldwide. The growth UI will be in phones and other low cost devices. *That*, is the new desktop and it will be Linux-based.

      My TiVo and my Blu-ray player run Linux. That could be considered a media desktop. Or media UI. For some, sadly, TV is their principle app.

      Linux has won the desktop OS wars. It's just that nobody knows it yet.

      As for desktop UI apps, the future is HTML5.

      Wrong. Wrong. And wrong.

      The desktop refers to: the desktop computer. Linux isn't a mainstream desktop OS, if not only for the many closed source drivers that are required by desktop computers. Desktop computers can be used to run spreadsheets, word processors, or provide entertainment (media/games). They are very much general purpose computing devices, and they even have specialized OSs designed specifically for them (eg. you wouldn't install a server OS on your desktop, would you?)

      The problem Linux has in general is that it doesn't do all of these, in tandem, well enough to displace Microsoft's, or even Apple's OS. If you want to cripple the average desktop user's experience, then install Linux. Instantly you'll have a lot of issues that "average" desktop computer users expect to not exist.

      Linux may actually exceed desktop OS performance in a few areas, but until it can do everything that "average" users expect on a desktop computer, it will never be a good desktop OS. Phones aren't desktops. Tablets aren't desktops. I might even suggest that netbook/laptops aren't desktops. (in fact I prefer HP's Linux install on my HP Mini rather than Windows XP Home).

    38. Re:"May cost"?? by fnj · · Score: 1

      Your desktop and mine both don't count, I guess. There's not a chance we could be using them. Boy, we must be really stupid not to know that we can't be using what we're using.

    39. Re:"May cost"?? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will. That is some /. nerd fantasy.

      Nonsense. There is always the possibility of a virus infecting humankind that turns everyone into an obsessive, tinkering computer geek. If that were to happen, it would at least be a possibility.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    40. Re:"May cost"?? by formfeed · · Score: 1

      Linux is running on people's TV, their router, their phone, and more and more on their tablets.

      It is just that none of them know that they are using Linux. Instead they're using Android, Chrome, the Tv-master 2000 User Interface, or whatever.

      The question is not, whether Linux will show up on the desktop, but rather in what form.
      Hackable, user installable, and easy to tinker? Or hidden and shiny like an apple?

    41. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I can build a linux box for a friend in less time and with less required maintenance than a windows box takes, and they are happy with it, linux has a shot at the desktop market.
      I have delivered 3 such machines now. The only significant problem has been flaky wireless configurations on my parent's laptop. They never even booted Vista again on that system.

      I would say we are there in terms of being able to support users - at least on par with windows - for a fairly common subset of the use cases. It is now a matter of perception and the remaining use cases.

    42. Re:"May cost"?? by tknd · · Score: 2

      Oh, I like this. Let's just redefine "desktop" to mean something else where linux happens to dominate and we'll say "the linux desktop has arrived!!" By that logic I can redefine BSD to mean OSX and OSX to mean iOS and now that iGadgets are so popular the BSD desktop has arrived!

      Of course it is all nonsense. By desktop we mean that PC that most office workers are forced to use. We mean the UI that those workers are forced to use. We mean the software platform and training everyone is put through. That "check point" on the average office worker's resume that says "knows how to use 'x' software". That software is currently called MS Windows and MS Office except in some major software houses where users are technical enough not to need training (think Google). But go to any non-technical company like say a company in the finance industry, or a paper pushing agency. MS Windows is everywhere. MS Office is everywhere.

      That's not to say that integrators have taken Linux and developed their own product based on Linux. That is quite true as well! But remember, these are specialized applications. I'm not going to call the point-of-sale computer and software I saw at the local supermarket a "desktop" even if I very well know it had Gnome behind it.

    43. Re:"May cost"?? by datajerk · · Score: 1

      Duh! Thanks.

    44. Re:"May cost"?? by datajerk · · Score: 1

      http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/five-billion-people-to-use-mobile-phones-in-2010-un-1900768.html

    45. Re:"May cost"?? by datajerk · · Score: 1

      I'll admit to using the term "desktop" liberally. But my subtle point was that, "who cares, times are changing".

      The "average" user is changing. And the traditional desktop may no longer be as relevant in the future.

    46. Re:"May cost"?? by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      I'm not a Linux newbie and I"m not even for sure what it means. I know it's the bootloader and perhaps stands for GRand Unified Bootloader or something like that. I know about the configuration file, that I edited to showmenu and change the default boot timeout.

    47. Re:"May cost"?? by Jonner · · Score: 1

      Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will. That is some /. nerd fantasy.

      If by "have a shot" you mean dominate in the way Microsoft does, then of course it's a fantasy. If "have a shot" means that many people find it useful then that's already the case.

    48. Re:"May cost"?? by datajerk · · Score: 1

      WW there are more Linux-based handsets than iOS. There are about ~100 different types of phones WW that run Linux and only one that runs iOS. Apple cannot make enough iOS handsets to meet the WW demand for smart phones. Recently Apple became the #1 smart phone maker, but #1 does not equate to > 50% of the market. iOS will never be #1 and it does not have to be. BTW, I use iOS and OS/X. Both minority OSes. Nothing wrong with that. But I still firmly believe that WW as developing countries have to pick smart phone, tablet, and desktop OSes, Linux is going to be the winner in the long run.

    49. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      !Linux. Android.

    50. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll admit to using the term "desktop" liberally. But my subtle point was that, "who cares, times are changing".

      And if you'd left it at that and not concluded that therefore Linux wins, nobody would be arguing.

    51. Re:"May cost"?? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It's too late. That's what you get for the sin of writing desktop apps in vanilla C in 2011.

    52. Re:"May cost"?? by thePuck77 · · Score: 1
      1. 1. There are DBs and lists of supported hardware for all OSes.
      2. 2. Hardware is not "available" for a given OS. OSes support hardware.
      3. 3. Run just about whatever you want and it will work under Linux nowadays, and it will work out of the box. On my Intel i7, 8 gig, ATI HD5770 box, under Win7 I need to download and install drivers for my HDD, my sound card, my video card, my keyboard, my webcam, and my mouse. Under Linux...I install Linux. The only drivers I need are video card drivers, and I don't even *need* the video drivers, except automatic fan speed control isn't supported for my card so it runs like I am playing a game all the time with the OSS drivers.
      4. 4. The ignorance of people working retail shouldn't make your computing choices.
      --
      "We live as though the world were as it should be, to show it what it can be." - Joss Whedon via Angel
    53. Re:"May cost"?? by Anon8---) · · Score: 1

      The whole point was trying to make is vendors write drivers for windows first, therefore it is logical that windows supports more hardware than linux.

    54. Re:"May cost"?? by rastos1 · · Score: 1

      Define desktop

      This is a desk. It's surface facing up is it's "top". A desktop computer is a computer placed/used on the top of the desk. Occasionally it is placed somewhere close but has the peripherals stretching to the top of the desk. Tablet, mobile phone nor your microwave are not a "desktop".

      You are welcome.

    55. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I'll take a swing at this one. If we continue on in this little scenario, then there's a divergence to be had. Either we continue in the extremely inefficient desktop paradigm 'til the cows come home, or we move into mobile markets. I'll give you one guess who the dominant player is there; ProTip: Android IS Linux. Perhaps there's some irony that this was typed on an Iconia rather than my dusty Pavilion.

    56. Re:"May cost"?? by thePuck77 · · Score: 1

      How is that logical? Hardware vendors don't generally make the drivers for Linux, the community does. Generally we don't use the proprietary drivers that they do make...because we don't need to. Again, one feature that most people wouldn't care about (I'm sensitive to noise) is what makes me download and use the proprietary drivers for my 3D card. Everything else, including compositing, desktop acceleration, and 3D, works just fine with the open source driver. Windows *requires* me to download drivers to use my hardware, Linux supports almost all of it out of the box. Look at the actual support lists, rather than going on what seems "logical" to you. Perhaps in the first few weeks a piece of hardware is out only the proprietary driver exists, but after that there is Linux support.

      If anything, I have generally had less problems with hardware support with Linux, simply because the community will actually support the hardware longer than the month the hardware is brand new (as opposed to Microsoft or the hardware maker).

      --
      "We live as though the world were as it should be, to show it what it can be." - Joss Whedon via Angel
    57. Re:"May cost"?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen.

    58. Re:"May cost"?? by mikechant · · Score: 1

      I think you're assuming this refers just to current or recently sold hardware.

      When you take into account all the older hardware which will never get a driver for Vista or Win 7, there are a huge number of devices unsupported by those Windows releases which work in Linux.

      Example: Vista did not support my Canon scanner, which was only about 5 years old when Vista was released. Linux still supports it now it is 10 years old and will probably support it until it finally breaks.

      If you buy all new hardware every few years, and are happy to trash perfectly working but now unsupported peripherals, you'll probably get better support from windows. If, like me, you want to use hardware until it breaks, Linux means you can often do this, while still running an up to date OS.

    59. Re:"May cost"?? by dokc · · Score: 1

      I could pick any hardware store around, walk in and ask them for linux compatible hardware and most of the time they'll just give me a blank stare or respond with "you simply have to try it out". Why else are there databases on the web of linux-compatible hardware ?

      The problem is that if you go to the same hardware store and ask them for windows compatible hardware most of the time they'll will just give you the same blank stare.

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
    60. Re:"May cost"?? by terjeber · · Score: 1

      It does, but there is a difference between "The Desktop" and "A Desktop". You'll learn the difference once you hit middle school or so.

    61. Re:"May cost"?? by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 1

      And even those are typically driven by some dumb user saying such-n-such application must have feature x [...]

      Would it be too much to ask that you not prove the point you're arguing against? To label any user that makes a feature request (or even demand) "dumb" is hostile.

      [...] and developers saying something like, "great, but we don't have y and z, which are requirements for x - would you contribute x?" Followed by the user getting all pissed about how only he has vision and the developers are pooh-pooh heads.

      And why shouldn't the user get pissed? He's just a user, not a developer. To ask that he contribute the feature he's asking for is beyond asinine. If he were capable of doing so, he wouldn't be asking; he'd probably just maintain his own "fork" of the software with his personal customizations.

      It seems that you don't see a problem because you're actually part of it...

      I understand that developers of open source software essentially work for free and in their spare time, and it can be very frustrating when even one of their users doesn't seem to appreciate their work, but that's life. And if you don't want "dumb users" harassing you about your own hard work, don't share it publicly; don't set up public forums or IRC channels; don't do anything to encourage these "dumb users" to communicate with you. "Problem" solved.

      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
  5. whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Diversity is what makes Linux so great. It's a good thing... not a bad thing. Everyone has their preference, and if there's something you don't like, then good because there's 10 other options out there.

    1. Re:whatever by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1

      Unless you are a developer.

      --
      Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    2. Re:whatever by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Why is that an issue? Does all this linux software not come from developers?

    3. Re:whatever by tepples · · Score: 1

      One can support all mainstream versions of desktop Windows with one binary. How easy is it to support all popular distributions of desktop Linux with one binary? Can you recommend a HOWTO for building a binary that will run correctly on Fedora, Ubuntu, SuSE, and everywhere else? (I'd use Google, but Google often turns up years-outdated guides, poor practice that isn't marked as such, and forum questions that have gone years without an answer.)

    4. Re:whatever by h4rr4r · · Score: 0

      Step 1. Release source
      Step 2. Stop talking to tepples because he is a fucking broken record.

      Releasing one binary is a dick move, at least make an rpm and a deb. Lots of guides out there for that.

    5. Re:whatever by solkimera · · Score: 1

      the humble bundle guys got it. plenty of the linux games are a single download, whatever distro your using.

    6. Re:whatever by tepples · · Score: 1

      Stop talking to tepples because he is a fucking broken record.

      I don't want to be a broken record anymore. What changes should I make to become less repetitive?

    7. Re:whatever by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      You act as though there is only one use case. You act as though these issues are not solved, in one way or another. Look at MojoSetup for example, which is just building on the work Loki did.

      Someone suggests in any thread netflix and you always bring up sports. Sure that market exists but for a decent group of folks netflix is good enough.

    8. Re:whatever by tepples · · Score: 1

      MojoSetup

      Thank you for the suggestion. I'll look over it. As for the other issues you brought up, let's take that to my journal please.

    9. Re:whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The last humble bundle also had lots of problems because some of the games wouldn't run properly on Debian.

    10. Re:whatever by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      The reason it's so easy in windows is because everything (framework, libraries, etc) is normally compiled right into the binary itself, this can just as easily be done on linux. The reason it ISN'T is because it's a stupid way to do it, if you have a 10 apps using library X, then you end up with a 10 copies of library X and waste a lot of harddrive space. Just link your libraries properly (any linux tutorial will show how) and let the distro maintainers handle the packaging, that's what they DO and they are probably MUCH better at it than you.

  6. Umm, what? by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, let me get this straight: "Linux On the Desktop" is doomed because, when 'cloud applications' come into the fore, there will still be nerds with strong opinions about native applications?

    Isn't that exactly backward?

    If "The Cloud" rises up and devours natives software, nobody will give a fuck about any application on the Linux desktop, except for the browser(the state of which is fine) and none of the suits will care about the raging emacs/vi crusades, so long as they can get their almost-thin-clients booted into gmail as cheaply as possible...

    The hypothetical rise of in-browser stuff renders battles about the relative value of assorted linux-native applications irrelevant, that's sort of the whole point.

    1. Re:Umm, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EMACS.. get it right. No crusade here.

      *trolling trolling trolling.. keep them messages rolling*

    2. Re:Umm, what? by tverbeek · · Score: 2

      When the Cloud takes over, Linux will "win" the desktop because the desktop won't matter, and Linux will be the cheapest one.

      Which will be a bit like "winning" a war in which the territory conquered turns out to be a worthless expanse of sand (and no oil).

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    3. Re:Umm, what? by Gaygirlie · · Score: 1

      If "The Cloud" rises up and devours natives software, nobody will give a fuck about any application on the Linux desktop, except for the browser(the state of which is fine) and none of the suits will care about the raging emacs/vi crusades, so long as they can get their almost-thin-clients booted into gmail as cheaply as possible...

      Considering that Windows can't really be stripped down to bare essentials, atleast not yet, and used just as a thin-client but Linux can be stripped down to fit in under 200 megabytes, INCLUDING browser... well, I'd say that actually makes it darn interesting for someone solely focused on "cloud" software.

    4. Re:Umm, what? by PantherX · · Score: 1

      I think the point is that the downfall of Office will be the downfall of all of this software. You pick your battles. If you pick the battle of Libre vs. Star vs. Open you've picked the wrong battle (Linux vs GNU/Linux anyone?).

      --
      Sig missing. Reward.
    5. Re:Umm, what? by GoodNewsJimDotCom · · Score: 1

      Exactly, things like 'the cloud' and Adobe Flash are good for Linux because as more and more aps get made, it is less likely you need to stick with Windows for legacy applications. When it doesn't matter what OS you're using, the free and secure OS becomes a valid choice.

    6. Re:Umm, what? by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "so long as they can get their almost-thin-clients booted into gmail as cheaply as possible..."

      Something like the USAF portable lightweight security distro is already fine for that.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    7. Re:Umm, what? by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      I'm assuming that disk space won't really be the arbiter, in a world where you can solder a few gigs of flash to an embedded board for peanuts. And, if it comes right down to it, MS could always suck it up and port real IE to WinCE, or whittle down their embedded NT derivative a little further.

      The big kicker will be licensing costs and administration. On the first, I don't see how MS can possibly win, since they rely on desktop licensing revenue. On the second, MS has a slightly better shot(AD, while it has some seriously annoying points, is quite useful); but chromebook-style linux appliance+ SSO webapps aren't fundamentally rocket surgery, so there could easily be competition from such players...

    8. Re:Umm, what? by hedwards · · Score: 1

      There's several projects out there that allow you to strip an install CD down to bare components, you can even strip it of things that you really do have to have if you want. Micro XP being one example and nLite OS being another.

    9. Re:Umm, what? by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      I'm assuming that disk space won't really be the arbiter, in a world where you can solder a few gigs of flash to an embedded board for peanuts.

      When I worked for a company that built hardware we'd have people spending weeks figuring out how to save a few cents on component costs; when you're shipping millions of units every cent you save means tens of thousands of dollars more profit.

    10. Re:Umm, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congratulations! You are now the Lord High Poobah of Sub-Saharan Africa! Have fun with that!

    11. Re:Umm, what? by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      When you are fighting to not be destroyed, the fact that your oponent teritory turned into a useles piece of sand isn't that terrible.

      Yeah, it is still useles. But you've still won.

    12. Re:Umm, what? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      And even claiming such "worthless" gem could be perfect for, say, a secret base. Eventually.

      Tempting. Sadly, the administrations involved usually mostly lack any sense of humour.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    13. Re:Umm, what? by chemosh6969 · · Score: 1

      The beauty is that you can always say "Next year will be the year of the linux desktop" because you can't prove a negative.

  7. No point by nyctopterus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Once people shift to using cloud-based software, the very reason for people to use Linux on the desktop (software freedom) is lost in any case. It will be a case of getting past the post after the race is over.

    1. Re:No point by tepples · · Score: 1

      Once people shift to using cloud-based software, the very reason for people to use Linux on the desktop (software freedom) is lost in any case.

      Cloud-based software might take over the desktop, but I've described in another post why it won't take over the laptop as quickly.

    2. Re:No point by hawguy · · Score: 1

      Once people shift to using cloud-based software, the very reason for people to use Linux on the desktop (software freedom) is lost in any case. It will be a case of getting past the post after the race is over.

      While that may be a reason why *some* people use Linux, those users won't suddenly stop using Linux because LibreOffice and Openoffice are fighting. For companies, however, its issues like cost, manageability, security that are important. Companies don't care how free and open LibreOffice is compared to Openoffice, they just know that users want MS Office.

      Let companies ditch MS Office for online alternatives, and suddenly companies won't find MS Windows on the desktop so neccessary. And along with it goes a large and expensive MS infrastructure (Active Directory, Exchange, windows file servers, and a whole host of other MS applications that companies run because they already have a Windows infrastructure so they may as well stay on Windows).

      So I say -- bring on the cloud! I don't care about the desktop applications, let me give user's a thin workstation that runs only a web browser to get to all of their applications.

    3. Re:No point by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I disagree. What keeps people using Windows is applications. There always seems to be that one app that there is no good FOSS replacement for. In the enterprise space it will be some mission critical app written in VB or a web app that requires IE6.
      Once those have been migrated to the cloud then you are free to move to a different OS and this is already happening. A lot of people are moving to the Mac because they can do everything they need to do on a Mac. In large part that is because so much of what we do is now on the Web.
      With Linux you still have an iffy UI situation and the driver and hardware problem. I know that if I get a web cam, printer, scanner, or what ever device I want at the store and it says "Works with Windows and Mac" that it will work with windows an Mac.
      Even if a webcam company writes a FOSS driver they can not easily make that promise because they can not package a binary driver with their device and be sure that it will work! Even if they submit it to the Kernnel they have to wait for it to be put in, for the distros to package it, and then if they want to fix it they have to hope that the patch they put in gets to the distros!
      The lack of a stable binary device driver interface makes Linux more trouble than it is worth for a lot of companies
      So people will us what comes on their computers. But then remember every Android and WebOS users is a Linux user.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    4. Re:No point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, software freedom is why I use windows :V Enjoying those 2 games on your linux machine?

    5. Re:No point by couchslug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Once people shift to using cloud-based software" ....they will get bitch-slapped by its limitations.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    6. Re:No point by at_slashdot · · Score: 1

      People use Linux on the desktop for many reasons, I use it because it's a better OS.

      --
      "It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." -- Prof. Dumbledore
    7. Re:No point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck the cloud. Never, and millions agree with me. Trust Google, please...

    8. Re:No point by couchslug · · Score: 1

      Good luck getting the Tooth Fairy to supply the bandwidth to support the Cloud, even with Santa Claus and Bugs Bunny laying extra fiber.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    9. Re:No point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right the opposite. The cloud runs on Linux and the best choice for clients is... Linux again.

  8. Software competition is actually good for you by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    When software models compete against each other, new features are created, if there was no competition in the Linux world, progress would come to a halt. Oh, and... cloud computing will never be used for anything serious. Trying going to bed with a picture of your SSN in the cloud and what that means for your bank account next breach, night OP.

  9. Prezi FTW by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    Only because it has the "it's different.... WOW!" factor. after that it will be a meh moment.

    Prezi is a PITA to use compared to Keynote or Libre Impress. I have given the info to some of the marketing people here and they give up after 10 minutes and go back to Libre Office and their dancing gif's and stupid looking presentations.

    Now Google Docs, if they come in FTW and have linux,Windows,OSX native apps that work when not connected to the intarwebs.... I'm all for it.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  10. Google Docs is a godsend to Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What itwbennett writes (or quoted?) is utterly stupid: Google Docs, if anything, made Linux much, much more viable on the desktop.

    Oh and btw: Google Docs is already truly robust enough for businesses: more than 50% of a country's GDP come from SMEs and individuals, not from big corps (even in the U.S.). And honestly for 99% of the SMEs out there Google Docs does everything they'll ever need.

    Google Docs, today, is already allowing individuals and people working in SMEs to not care anymore about version issues nor about backuping nor about synching. While, at the same time, allowing people to work at work on Windows machines and on their Mac Laptops at home / during the week-end.

    If GMail + Google Docs become ubiquitous, it means you can use Linux as a desktop much, much more easily than in the OpenOffice/Thunderbird days.

    Btw last I checked the strong Chromebook sales figures were kinda a case in point for it seemed like Google Docs on Chromebooks weren't exactly using neither Windows nor OS X as the underlying OS.

    1. Re:Google Docs is a godsend to Linux by bhcompy · · Score: 1

      Google Docs is only useful if it is a native application. Otherwise, it is mostly worthless and a pain in the ass(sorry, running an application within a browser is not optimal, particularly when free variants exist already).

    2. Re:Google Docs is a godsend to Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And honestly for 99% of the SMEs out there Google Docs does everything they'll ever need.

      Really? Can Google Docs make sure that my sensitive company correspondence doesn't get data mined by an advertising company?

      For any company run by someone with at least 2 digits in their IQ, that's a show stopper right there.

    3. Re:Google Docs is a godsend to Linux by kiwimate · · Score: 1

      Google Docs is already truly robust enough for businesses

      Really? It may be getting there, but it's taking way too long. Their spreadsheet app didn't have filtering until March of this year. Sorry, but that's not professional grade, no matter how small your company is.

    4. Re:Google Docs is a godsend to Linux by arth1 · · Score: 1

      And honestly for 99% of the SMEs out there Google Docs does everything they'll ever need.

      Have you seen a study? Or does "honestly" really mean "guessing wildly"?
      If nothing else, many companies have privacy concerns (or should have them if they don't).
      Then there are all the small businesses that don't have broadband Internet access, and in many cases can't even get it (in many rural areas of the US, POTS is all you can get) or reliably use it (like in transportation and fishing).
      My wild guess is that the sum of these are far more than 1%, but you honestly know better?

    5. Re:Google Docs is a godsend to Linux by couchslug · · Score: 1

      I prefer Gmail WITH Thunderbird. I can use Thunderbird Portable and Thunderbird installs sync'ed to my webmail accounts.

      I'm on a fecal Time-Warner connection, and I prefer the Thunderbird interface to Gmail. I can work offline using Thunderbird. Win/win.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    6. Re:Google Docs is a godsend to Linux by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I figure, at current rate of development, it's going to be another two or three years before Google Docs can really be said to be robust enough and feature-rich enough for the enterprise. I think Google knows this quite well, but by basically keeping everything in perpetual beta, they can work out kinks and add new functionality all while managing expectations.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  11. Meh by Beelzebud · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm done caring about the "year of the desktop debate". I use Windows 7 for gaming and I use Linux for everything else. If that puts me in a 1% camp, then so be it.

    1. Re:Meh by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      That is exactly what I do, but even I grow tired of linux desktop

      its fine as a workspace, its fine as a server, its fine for everything that linux is fine for, but desktop use is like a yo-yo, oh its getting really oh fuck it three projects forked and what the hell is kde doing?

    2. Re:Meh by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      To reduce the number of reboots you might want to look into wine or the commercial option crossover. I know, I know, it might not be as fast, and it might not support every game ever, but if it works for you it could be an option.

      I use it less and less as I start to become more interested in playing only games that are released for linux, but I still use it for AAA games.

    3. Re:Meh by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Been there, done that with Wine. When I want to play games, I just want to play them, not bug test and troubleshoot them. So for any sane person, that just wants to make the most out of their hardware, and play any current game of their choosing, then Win7 is the way to go. For me personally, it's what I prefer. I'd rather reboot the machine once in awhile, as opposed to spending more time trying to make the game work, than playing it.

    4. Re:Meh by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      For me it the opposite. I can't be bothered to keep windows working and bother with antivirus and all that BS.

      Also I used Crossover, which is commercially supported and does not require me to bugtest.

    5. Re:Meh by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Somehow I doubt you've used Windows much at all lately, considering there is no real work to keep it running. MS Security Essentials takes care of AV these days, and you don't even have to manually update it. There are reasons to avoid Windows, but these days stability isn't one of them...

    6. Re:Meh by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      I used a windows 7 machine not too long ago, still could not replace files in use, and all that other "single user OS in disguise" BS. I did not use it long enough to know about the AV issues or updates.

      I doubt it updates all the software on the machine via a central source though.

    7. Re:Meh by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      I used a windows 7 machine not too long ago, still could not replace files in use, and all that other "single user OS in disguise" BS.

      Ah, the joy of having to reboot Windows just to update a PDF viewer. I so miss it.

    8. Re:Meh by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Choose a better distro. Gentoo and Arch Linux can be kind of a pain, but because they don't insist upon installing all sorts of crap that you don't want, you have a much easier time deciding for yourself what high level packages you want. Personally, it annoys me that most distros seem to feel the need to install all sorts of crap that I might not even want.

      I tolerate it with Linux Mint because the selection is pretty sane, but in general distros should come with just the baseland, kernal and a basic selection of window managers.

    9. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What reboots? I use Windows 7 and I reboot once a month for updates, and that usually happens while I'm asleep. 10 minutes once per month isn't arduous for me.

    10. Re:Meh by formfeed · · Score: 1

      I'm done caring about the "year of the desktop debate".

      That's quite insensitive. I was already planning for the Year of the Linux Desktop and now it's quite a pain to get the down payment back from the caterers. Not to mention the printed cards and the tuxedo.

    11. Re:Meh by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      While Windows won't let you delete an opened file (why is still a mystery to me, in light of the following), it does let you rename it. So you can replace files in use in Windows, just that no-one (including Windows Installer) can be bothered to implement that for some reason.

      Oh, BTW, you can also in fact delete a file if the program that opened it specified FILE_SHARE_DELETE sharing flag. Another problem is that it's not the default.

      But no, it's not a single user OS, and it (NT) never was.

    12. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is it OS' fault, if Adobe was lazy and clueless with its installer too? The better SW vendors, such as ATI and Intel make even HW driver updates happen without reboot.

  12. But isn't this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the year of the linux desktop?!

  13. The desktop as it is today is done by Flipao · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Gamers and computer enthusiasts might stick with it, but regular users will use specialized devices as they become more compact, power efficient and above all, cheap.

  14. Might cost Linux the laptop by tepples · · Score: 2

    how does arguing which is better in the presence of of online alternatives cost Linux the desktop?

    It might not cost Linux the desktop, but it might cost Linux the laptop. Mobile broadband to use Google Docs or Prezi while riding a bus is still priced as a luxury service.

  15. Wasn't aware there was a goal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    1. This article blindly assumes that "linux on everybody's desktop" is a goal. It may be for some people, but if I had to put money on it, I'd say that 95% of linux users don't really give a damn. Linux will always be useful for them, irrespective of whether grandma can buy a desktop with linux pre-installed.

    2. Linux already IS on the desktop for millions of people. It's been on my desktop for 14 years. It may not be on grandma's desktop, but again, why would I care? I use linux because it's the best tool for what I do (and also the most fun and interesting for me) not because I'm on some kind of world-domination crusade.

    Nobody asked this guy to speak for them, myself included. So I kindly suggest that he piss off.

    1. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      I think part of the issue/annoyance is that the most vocal crowd tends to be the face of a group. In this case, the crowd is the "You are doing [X] with your computer and not using Linux? What's wrong with you, obviously Linux is the best choice for [X]!"

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    2. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by tripleevenfall · · Score: 2

      Precisely.

      Linophiles pining after the fabled "Year of Linux on the Desktop" are missing the point by 10 years. The desktop is over. The future in the consumer computing space lies in Android/iOS types of applications.

      In a decade people won't have bulky desktops taking up space in their house, they'll either be using sleek and instant-fast tablets, or portable devices that they take everywhere with them, plugging up to home entertainment centers if needed, but mostly being mobile.

      It's a silly argument. Linux failed in the consumer desktop space. The battle is over and it doesn't matter anymore.

    3. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by tripleevenfall · · Score: 1

      Ooh, I didn't even notice the slashdot meme, "It's been on MY desktop since..."

      mod +1 - qualifying cliche usage

    4. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I wish Linux (or some open unix-like system) were popular. I prefer the Unix way to the MS way, but because of the MS monopoly you can't get any good commercial software for anything except Windows, and sometimes Mac. Right now the only way to get unix and a decent proprietary software selection is to run Mac, but the hardware is very limited and the Franken-Mac thing is too much work and not a sure thing.

      I have a Mac laptop and a Windows desktop (and a Mac server and FreeBSD server in the basement), but I'd drop both if I could get MS Office, Photoshop, iTunes, etc, on a Linux/FreeBSD/whatever box. I'm hoping that the recent Mac resurgence breaks the Win monopoly. That would open the door to other competition. I bet Linux or some other open kernel could be as popular on the desktop as it is on cell phones.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    5. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by couchslug · · Score: 2

      The article is simply designed to get page hits. That is all.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    6. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by arth1 · · Score: 1

      1. This article blindly assumes that "linux on everybody's desktop" is a goal. It may be for some people, but if I had to put money on it, I'd say that 95% of linux users don't really give a damn. Linux will always be useful for them, irrespective of whether grandma can buy a desktop with linux pre-installed.

      The thing is that she can, but I sincerely hope that she won't.
      Not only because a 112 year old zombie would scare the crap out of the poor store clerk, but because I would have to support it. I don't want to support a system I had no hands in setting up, and no control of the software that goes on it.

    7. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by kakyoin01 · · Score: 1

      Linophiles pining after the fabled "Year of Linux on the Desktop" are missing the point by 10 years. The desktop is over.

      And Linux cannot simply move to these more desirable computer mediums, such as the more portable laptop or tablet (which run just like Linux already)? "Year of Linux on the Desktop" to me seems to be a phrase arguing that Linux can be used by many computer users as a useful, reliable OS in place of the current one, which is Windows. I don't think it is tied specifically to "desktop usage". Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong (and since this is /., of course someone will want to).

      --
      The more you know, the more you have to say and the more you should listen.
    8. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I'm at the point where I'll probably never buy a desktop again. I've been using a laptop solely for the last year. I still have my old desktop, as it hasn't broken yet, but I think that when it breaks, I won't replace it. That being said, I can't really see going from using a laptop to using a tablet for most tasks. It's so much nicer to type on a real keyboard. And the extra screen space really does help. Sure a tablet would be a little more portable, but it's not like you can just fold it up and put it in your pocket. You still need to carry some kind of backpack or shoulder bag to bring the thing with you. Once you're doing that, you might as well bring a laptop. If I had the funds, I would just get a Mac Book Air, or a Lenovo X1 and be done with it.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    9. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by kiwimate · · Score: 2

      Wasn't aware there was a goal

      Then you haven't been paying attention. It's a goal for several reasons:

      * Blind hatred of Microsoft by idealists;
      * Fervent desire to promote the FOSS agenda and/or ideology.

      Slightly more pragmatically:

      * The awareness that a niche product means limited options for those who want more choice.

      This is the irony. Linux is about freedom of choice, but if it is not prevalent on the desktop then you have a vastly restricted choice of anything outside of the most ubiquitous types of product. Software developers primarily write for most popular platforms first. Yes, many write for personal interest, but that gets you an odd bag lot of applications - it doesn't get you comprehensive coverage.

    10. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      I'm already at that point as well, and I've already specc'd out a box that will replace my fire-breathing 850W desktop (complete with massive Radeon Crossfire cards) with a small 180W file/print server.

      The 25" widescreen monitor will probably be part of an impromptu docking station that I'll plug my Core i7/6GB/nVidia laptop into, if I don't just plug the HDMI connector into the bedroom cable box, and replace the bulky 25" CRT TV there (and save a few bucks on the power bill by doing so).

      Long story short, the desktop as I know it is about to be no more. Instead of spending just shy of $1k on a new CG/gaming box every couple of years, I'll just do the majority of that on the laptop, spend $400 on a glorified file-server/print-server/render-node box, and keep the little box around until the internal 2TB RAID1-rigged disks run out of space.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    11. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by arth1 · · Score: 2

      Linophiles pining after the fabled "Year of Linux on the Desktop" are missing the point by 10 years. The desktop is over. The future in the consumer computing space lies in Android/iOS types of applications.

      In a decade people won't have bulky desktops taking up space in their house, they'll either be using sleek and instant-fast tablets, or portable devices that they take everywhere with them, plugging up to home entertainment centers if needed, but mostly being mobile.

      That's short-sighted. Ten years ago, people said the same about Tablet PCs and Palm Pilots. The thing is you don't know what will be popular ten years down the road, because there will be something new you haven't thought of yet. Android is a fad, just like pretty much all technology - how many years it gets, no one can predict.

      Once the masses discover something, it's already on the way down. It may linger for a while, but there will be something new and better already.

    12. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by A12m0v · · Score: 1

      I'm willing to bet that 10 years from now desktops will still be relevant, they don't have to be bulky, many desktops aren't.

      --
      GENERATION 25: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    13. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by realityimpaired · · Score: 1

      If I had the funds, I would just get a Mac Book Air, or a Lenovo X1 and be done with it.

      http://www.dell.com/ca/business/p/vostro-v130/pd

      You can get it for 1/3 the cost of an equivalent MacBook Air, and it's about the same weight, and the screen's the same size. The battery doesn't last quite as long (I get about 4h on mine), but if cost is an issue, then it's definitely an option. And to make it germane to the discussion at hand: you can get it with Linux preinstalled.

    14. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Carrot007 · · Score: 1

      Woooooosh.

      --
      +----------------- | What is the question!
    15. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by MrHanky · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the phrase "Year of Linux on the desktop" hasn't been used without sarcasm the last 10 years. Windows XP made sure that 1) Windows was stable enough to use and 2) that no competing platform could take over for as long as the web was designed for IE6.

      As for the future of computing being in smartphones and tablets, that's just hype. The only thing they do better than PCs is mobility, and for nearly everything else, they're worse. They come as an addition, not a replacement. The idea that they're taking over is as silly as when people fantasised about needing new roads when the Segway was introduced.

    16. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah! Keyboards are so old-fashioned!

    17. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by anyGould · · Score: 2

      And oddly, I'm at the other extreme - I can easily see myself buying another desktop or tablet, but not another laptop.

      If I'm at home, I want the full available horsepower, screen size, not to mention the ability to upgrade easily. Not to mention the ability to leave it running (either for calculations or downloads or whatever). That's a desktop machine. I've done the "bring laptop home, plug in various peripherals" trick in the past - it's frankly more effort than I want.

      If I'm out and about, I want something light with crazy good battery life. That's a netbook or a tablet. (And I think they're really synonymous functionally - it's just a matter of whether you need/want a physical keyboard. My wife uses a Eee Netbook for writing, I have an iPad with a bluetooth keyboard for the times I need to actually type). Again, the laptop gets squeezed out - I can't do much more with it than I can with the netbook/tablet, but I get horrible battery life and huge weight in exchange.

      That said, my brother swears by his laptop - but he also travels a lot (and thus his "home computer" needs to be portable). Also, considering how often he has to replace it, I think he spends as much time swearing *at* the laptop.

    18. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by anyGould · · Score: 1

      I think it brings up a good point, though - and one that's being ignored

      The argument isn't about what software Linux will support - it's supporting all the choices listed in the article already. The problem is that we're fighting over the default, and in many cases the user just doesn't care.

      The email client (Thunderbird vs Evolution) is the perfect example. This is fighting to be the last dinosaur in the tar pit - Joe Average User is already on some sort of web based mail, so at this point *neither* should be the "default". Maybe put an option up during install.

      The rest suffer the same thing - instead of having "Linux" to fight against "Mac" and "Windows", you have twenty different Linux flavors, and they're fighting with each other instead of against the actual competition. And when Joe User tries out Linux on a USB stick, he neither knows nor cares whether the client is Evolution and the desktop is KDE - it's just "Linux".

    19. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Respectfully disagree. I don't think people are going to want to bang out very long letters or documents on a tablet. The victim I see in this is the note/netbook space, with desktops facing a "rightsizing" since households aren't going to need more than 1-2 full-sized workstations.

      Nonetheless, the GTK "Broadway" demo gave me hope. I DO NOT WANT Google to own the future of my computing. Great search service, shitty custodian and arbiter of people's privacy. I think people are about to realize, faced with two greedy megalocorps who want inside their heads, just how valuable a little privacy and freedom can be.

      So, in my opinion, the future couldn't be ROSIER for the Linux desktop, though to satisfy the "average consumer", it probably won't be any flavor that we're familiarized with. Gnome's busy screwing the pooch, KDE is, well, KDE, and the rest are deliberately-minimalist entries that won't elicit the "WOW" factor that both marketing departments and the consumers themselves are going to expect. (I know that's a controversial thought around these parts, and I share in it to some degree, but iPhone/iPad/iEverything proves pretty decisively that eye-candy matters.)

    20. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but tablets are a JOKE for compute-intensive work like CAD. I don't see "the cloud" picking up that slack for a variety of reasons, not the least because no design engineer worth paying is going to put up with cloud latency when rotating a model view, let alone when regenerating a complex 3D CAD model. Same goes for heavy financial apps, inventory apps, all the stuff the company I work for does every day. Tablets just won't cut it when processing millions of records at a time, no way in Hell industrial or financial giants are going to put up with latency and risk exposure, and nobody is talking about tablet with the orders-of-magnitude increase in power required to do compute-intensive work.

      The Tricorder is fiction, folks: tablets are fine and all, but don't expect a teaspoon to carry a truck-sized load.

      Even if we DID get to the moon on the processing power of a contemporary wristwatch*, you just ain't going to design the next skyscraper on a g*ddamed cell phone (at least not in a reasonable timeframe).

      * Memory 16-bit wordlength, 2048 words RAM (magnetic core memory), 36,864 words ROM (core rope memory)
        Extra points and a free propeller beanie if you know what "core rope memory" is... From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Guidance_Computer

    21. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by couchslug · · Score: 1

      There need be no "default" across ALL distros. Just point the newbs at whatever Ubuntu is running at the time and call that good.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    22. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      because of the MS monopoly you can't get any good commercial software for anything except Windows, and sometimes Mac.

      You are right and you are wrong. The reason there is n MS monopoly is that there are effectively no good alternative for the desktop.

      Apple is a strictly regimented culture where one has to buy Apple's over-priced hardware to run their operating system and Apple's insistence on keeping this status quo has resulted in them having a minuscule market share.

      Linux is geared towards geeks and that causes a huge number of problems.

      • Poor UI. This is not just because X is a bolt-on and it is not because of the "GNOME vs KDE vs All Others". UI defaults, dialog/wizard locations, etc will change with no warning, rhyme, or reason.
      • Poor documentation resulting in one person posting the same question in 20+ different forums. Many will go unanswered, some will be answered with "RTFM n00b!" and/or "Google it", and an actual answer if one is lucky. Googling the question often results in the 20+ unanswered posts.
      • Reliance on the CLI. It is great to be able to use a CLI, but it sucks for Joe Luser to be required to use it when he hasn't ever had to use one.
      • Excessive use of jargon. Most people are not computer experts and don't know the jargon. Many don't even know the difference between RAM and ROM, or between memory and storage.
      • Installs where it either installs easily or one spends hours, days, even weeks trying to get it to work.

      Because of these things, Linux has not and will not get a reasonable share of the desktop market.

      Because Windows has a 90+% market share of the desktop business, application developers target their applications to Windows. Some will port to Apple, especially educational and artistic software. A few might port to Linux, but most won't because most people who use Linux are free (as in beer and as in speech) software fanatics. The developers don't see a market for selling their products in the Linux environment. Most will look at the cost of porting to either of these platforms and decide the cost outweighs the benefits.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    23. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by kappa962 · · Score: 1

      Mobility is a huge, huge feature, though. Mobility and the touchscreen interface. I love tweaking computers, and I ran Linux for years, but now that I have my iPhone, I rarely use a "real" computer. I can't see what major feature could possibly be added to it that would make it consistently more desirable to use than my iPhone. The two reasons I still get it out are A. Proprietary software and B. A real keyboard. The keyboard thing is pretty minor, though; It is trivial to set up a keyboard to work with a mobile device.

      I absolutely expect my phone to replace, not supplement, my computer. Maybe not a iPhone, but a phone of some sort. The sooner the better, I hate dragging my computer around just to do a few minor tasks.

    24. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Have you actually used Linux since 2003?

    25. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by jalefkowit · · Score: 1

      For the purposes of discussions like this, though, when someone says "desktop" they're talking about a category that includes laptops. "Desktop" in this sense means a general-purpose computing device with a keyboard and a pointer and an operating system that allows the user to install whatever software they wish. From this perspective, your laptop is just a desktop that happens to be pick-up-able.

      The distinction isn't between desktops and laptops, it's between "desktops," as described above, and mobile devices such as phones and tablets. "Mobile devices," in this context, are distinct from "desktops" in that they trade away the keyboard and pointer for increased portability and simplicity of use, and the ability to install software from untrusted sources for increased reliability.

    26. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by kappa962 · · Score: 1

      What about Enlightenment? It's still got some polishing needed, but the UI design/ eye candy possibilities are awesome.

    27. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by MrHanky · · Score: 2

      Just what exactly is superior about a touch screen interface? Not writing. Not viewing things, as the screen gets smudges. Not photo editing, as your fingers get in the way of the things you manipulate, so that you can't see the things you work on. Surely not ergonomics, as you really need to hold the device when operating it. Usability? Touching an icon with your finger is that much easier than using a pointer? Hardly. Pinch to zoom is easier than using the scroll wheel? Don't make me laugh.

      A touch screen isn't better than a traditional mouse+keyboard approach, it's simply necessary to get a big screen on a small device.

      But yeah, mobility is pretty huge. Just not for doing actual work.

    28. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      The reason there is n MS monopoly is that there are effectively no good alternative for the desktop.

      That simply isn't true. They became a monopoly despite competition that was as good or better. OS2, MacOS, and Amiga all were IMHO better than Windows 3.1. Windows 95 was a big jump, but it wasn't significantly better than MacOS and many would argue that it didn't surpass Amiga or OS2.

      UI defaults, dialog/wizard locations, etc will change with no warning, rhyme, or reason.

      The world seems to be handling the transition between XP and 7, which are pretty darned different. If you can go from XP to 7, you can handle XP to Gnome.

      Poor documentation resulting in one person posting the same question in 20+ different forums.

      The same thing happens with Windows questions. Seriously. Look up the error I'm currently dealing with: "This device cannot start. (Code 10)".

      Now, don't get me wrong, the MS website has a big pile of useful information - and it is better than Ubuntu's community-oriented support. That said, Ubuntu is a non-profit organization and MS is a gazillion-dollar-profit organization. Presumably, if there were a competitive market, another company who sells something with Linux as their base kernel would have decent documentation.

      Reliance on the CLI.

      If Apple can tame FreeBSD, then someone can certainly tame Linux. Not too many Android functions force you to drop to the command line.

      Excessive use of jargon.

      Again, I don't think people find jargon to be an issue when using their Linux-based phones. I'm quite certain that it can be made desktop-friendly as well.

      Installs where it either installs easily or one spends hours, days, even weeks trying to get it to work.

      Few people install an OS. And frankly, if you had tried in the past few years you would find that installing Ubuntu is a cakewalk compared to installing Windows 7. And while things like wireless driver support still lag on Ubuntu, may God have mercy on your soul if you have hardware without drivers during a Windows 7 install. :) Ubuntu hardware support isn't as up-to-date as Windows 7, but if your hardware is supported the install process is actually easier on Ubuntu.

      Because of these things, Linux has not and will not get a reasonable share of the desktop market.

      I don't think those reasons are things that people consider when they buy a computer. Most of the time it is: "can I run this program that we have at work/school". Almost 100% of the time the computer at work is Windows and the computer at school is either Windows or a Mac.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    29. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by sexconker · · Score: 1

      Precisely.

      Linophiles pining after the fabled "Year of Linux on the Desktop" are missing the point by 10 years. The desktop is over. The future in the consumer computing space lies in Android/iOS types of applications.

      You'll pry my desktop, monitor, full-size keyboard and mouse, and fully functional, locally-run operating systems and applications from my cold, dead, hands.
      Oh wait, no you won't. They're too heavy for you, and you'll be busy futzing around with your mobile thing of choice at 30% of the functionality, 10% of the performance, and 5% of the interface operability.

      Nothing will ever replace the desktop for me. If the desktop is replaced for the masses, then that's your own fault for choosing inferiority because it's shiny or fits in the pocket on your hipster skinny jeans.

    30. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by garyebickford · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Analogy: I mostly drive a stickshift, and when I don't I drive a 4WD F250 set up for trailer hauling. Both are small-percentage niches, and most folks find driving either one either impossible or intimidating. Some folks drive muscle cars, some folks drive Neons. I don't see BMW going out of business because it only has, like, 1% of the auto market. (I don't drive a beemer either - too much $$ for anything I want.) And I used to spend my time doing all the fixing and stuff, but nowadays I let the garage guys do that - it's cheaper for me, considering my time.

      Having said that, I think it would be interesting to see if one could build a linux-based laptop that is equivalently shiny, smooth, and fast-and-easy-to-use as an exotic car. That would answer the 'desktop niche' question with, "This is my very niche-y desktop - it runs circles around your MS-Windows Volkswagen." I don't think it can be done (yet).

      The first thing that would have to be done would be to unify the GUI (menus and mouse usage) and make inter-communication between apps seamless for every application that is installed - both are a lot better than they used to be, but menu items still often show up in random locations, depending on whether the developer came from Unix (Linux vs BSD), MS Windows or Apple GUI world. Let's see - where are preferences ... errr. options are in this app? Do I use ^F, cmd-F, alt-F or ^f to find something in this document/mail/file/??? Ideally the one-true-glue-layer would allow all those things to be left out of the developer's consciousness, and handled entirely by every GUI front end. The developer could just expose the 'Find in document' and 'Find among documents' API calls, and the user could pick whatever GUI layout they prefer. IMHO NeXTStep did this the best of anything I've used - better than OSX IMHO. _Every_ application's menus worked the same.

      --
      It's easier to be a result of the past, but more fun to be a cause of the future! http://www.spacefinancegroup.com/
    31. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by kappa962 · · Score: 1

      I much prefer the touchscreen for browsing, which is the primary activity of most computer users. I also much prefer it for doing real work. I am an audio engineer, and I love the ability to go into a crowd and use my iPhone to make things sound good where the people are, instead of where the sound board is. Dragging a mouse out there would be absurd. Trying to manipulate multiple parameters at once is also much easier with a touchscreen. (assuming that it is multitouch)

      I can't imagine that I'm in the only career for which touchscreens are better than mice. And for the casual user, browsing is much nicer with a touchscreen. And for non-casual use, my observation has been that most power users much prefer using keyboard commands, and use the mouse very little. The mouse is not the best input device for most things. Even in photo editing, most power users are using Wacom tablets rather than mice.

    32. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      are you really sure you need 180 watts for a file print server?
      I have an iomega connect which currently retails at 50 euro it runs linux has 4 built in usb ports as well as ethernet and wifi. ssh access is easy if you need it. I have 2 printers a black/white laser (samsung) and a hp multifunction inkjet for colour , it has a scanner/copier built in which i use occasionally and there is a cheap 2 tb hdd holding most of my files (on ext3) it even runs bittorrent.

      I have a few desktop systems i can't remember the last time I turned them on. In fact the only real reason to turn them on is to transfer the data to the iconnect.
       

    33. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just an FYI, the screen isn't the same size, and it holds half as much RAM as a MacBook Air or the X1. Also, it comes with a dual-core Celeron, as opposed to a Core i5 or i7.

    34. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      That simply isn't true. They became a monopoly despite competition that was as good or better. OS2, MacOS, and Amiga all were IMHO better than Windows 3.1. Windows 95 was a big jump, but it wasn't significantly better than MacOS and many would argue that it didn't surpass Amiga or OS2.

      That was then, this is now. OS2 was similar to Windows, but wasn't 100% compatible and was an outlay to purchase. MacOS was, and still is, tied to Apple's expensive hardware. Amiga may have been a better OS than Win 3.1 but didn't have a foothold in the business market. I addressed why MS even has a near monopoly in my previous post, something you did not address.

      The world seems to be handling the transition between XP and 7, which are pretty darned different. If you can go from XP to 7, you can handle XP to Gnome.

      Oh, sure. But, Windows doesn't have a long history of arbitrary and capricious changes the way FLOSS products do. And, the XP/7 changes are not as major as XP/GNOME.

      The same thing happens with Windows questions. Seriously. Look up the error I'm currently dealing with: "This device cannot start. (Code 10)".

      OK, what device?

      Now, don't get me wrong, the MS website has a big pile of useful information - and it is better than Ubuntu's community-oriented support.

      Thank you admitting I am right. You can stop there because:

      Presumably, if there were a competitive market, another company who sells something with Linux as their base kernel would have decent documentation.

      Redhat is another company that sells Linux as their kernel and there is still crappy documentation.

      If Apple can tame FreeBSD, then someone can certainly tame Linux. Not too many Android functions force you to drop to the command line.

      If it can be done, why hasn't it been done? Answer: "Linux is geared towards geeks" not users.

      Again, I don't think people find jargon to be an issue when using their Linux-based phones. I'm quite certain that it can be made desktop-friendly as well.

      If it can be done, then why haven't the done it? See above.

      Few people install an OS. And frankly, if you had tried in the past few years you would find that installing Ubuntu is a cakewalk compared to installing Windows 7.

      I have installed WinXP, Vista, Win7, Ubuntu, and RedHat in the last few years. I know what I am talking about. Win7 installed easily. Ubuntu was three times as difficult and required me to do a lot of CLI work after saying it had installed successfully.

      I don't think those reasons are things that people consider when they buy a computer. Most of the time it is: "can I run this program that we have at work/school". Almost 100% of the time the computer at work is Windows and the computer at school is either Windows or a Mac.

      And, if you had read my post instead of cherry-picking points, you would understand that I was addressing why it is almost 100% Windows. The reason is that Linux is not geared towards the average user. Instead, it is geared towards geeks who treat not being able to solve problems with Linux as a sign of incompetence, refusing to help or answer questions 90% of the time. In order for "Linux (or some open unix-like system)" to be popular, it has to be geared to the average user, not be tied to over-priced hardware, easy to use, have a stable UI, be a platform that is easy to program for, and a platform where the users will actually pay for software. Linux fails most of these. OSX fails at least the over-priced hardware.

      The GNU/Linux community does not actually want "Linux on the Desktop", regardless of what anyone says. Apple has shown it is doable, but the community doesn't want to do the work and take the steps necessary. The community wants using Linux as one's primary OS to remain a badge of honor and a test "geekness", which directly conflicts having a popular OS. Also, a large part of the community doesn't want to pay for software which perforce limits sales and thus interest in bringing commercial software to Linux.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    35. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Yup - I upgraded my desktop for $300, and the previous one cost me about $300 and lasted me around 4-5 years. There is no way I could have gotten that kind of performance out of a laptop. Oh, and in the process I migrated all my data from old hard drives to new ones, and did most of that while the desktop was fully operational (running various daemons from mythtv to samba).

      Oh, and I'm using the same monitor I was using in around 1999 or so. I might just upgrade that to recover the electricity savings if I can find a decent cheap replacement, but I'm not throwing out an LCD panel every time I upgrade.

      Desktops are always going to be the best bang for the buck.

    36. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Why, yes, yes I have. I work with it a lot at work on servers and occasionally l load it on a computer at home to see the state of Linux. I am never really impressed with it, especially when I compare it to Windows and Mac OS X. Oh sure, it has come a long way, but it is always a step or three behind both Windows and OS X because both GUIs take there cues for both of those and the lagging hardware support. It has been for a while and, from what I can tell, will be this way for the foreseeable future. When it comes to Linux, innovation doesn't happen in the desktop/laptop GUI or the user space. Almost all the innovation comes in embedded mobile device and server spaces.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    37. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Lanteran · · Score: 1

      Ugh, why must redundant be next to insightful?

      --
      "People don't want to learn linux" hasn't been a valid excuse since '03.
    38. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by tripleevenfall · · Score: 1

      The meme has always meant, this is the year that some new innovation will make Linux palatable to novice users, and we'll start seeing widespread adoption on home desktops by novice users.

    39. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by tripleevenfall · · Score: 1

      But nobody bangs out very long letters on a laptop today, really. People communicate in short bursts. Even email is going the way of the dodo, for home users - people are using social networking for personal messaging.

    40. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by tripleevenfall · · Score: 1

      The question was not whether neckbeards trolling around /. will go that way, it's whether the mainstream of society will

    41. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by IANAAC · · Score: 1

      I don't want to support a system I had no hands in setting up, and no control of the software that goes on it.

      Wait, so what do you do when grandma brings home a shiny new Windows PC? Either you support it with all its crapware (contradicting your statement) or you wipe it clean of all the crapware that comes with it and install a clean Windows. If you're wiping it clean to reinstall clean Windows, that's no different than doing the same with Linux.

    42. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      It's clear that we won't agree on why Windows has a monopoly, so I won't argue the point. Fact is, it doesn't matter "why" - they won't have a monopoly forever. And when that day comes, and for whatever reason, there will probably be competition again. And just like in the phone market, I see no reason why Linux wouldn't serve as one or more of the competing kernels. The hottest phone OSes right now are both based on open source unix. No phone is based on the traditional Windows kernel, AFAIK - though MS does have a "Windows" branded offering that does use some similar tech (.NET).

      Oh, sure. But, Windows doesn't have a long history of arbitrary and capricious changes the way FLOSS products do.

      You need to pick on a specific project! Linux doesn't have such a bad history, but other open source projects certainly do. Microsoft doesn't have a reputation of change, but Apple certainly does. There are terrible proprietary as well as open source projects in this regard.

      And, the XP/7 changes are not as major as XP/GNOME.

      Perhaps. But no worse than going from Windows to Apple, which people do all the time. Or changing smart phones. Or getting a new DVD player. People can handle small changes - the two big Linux desktops are very similar to Windows IMHO.

      If it can be done, why hasn't it been done? Answer: "Linux is geared towards geeks" not users.

      PalmOS does not require command line. Android does not require command line. Linux has been tamed, just not by Red Hat (or even Ubuntu).

      I have installed WinXP, Vista, Win7, Ubuntu, and RedHat in the last few years. I know what I am talking about. Win7 installed easily. Ubuntu was three times as difficult and required me to do a lot of CLI work after saying it had installed successfully.

      All I can say is we're both posting our personal experiences, and they have differed. I don't have any statistics or anything to back my argument up, so unless you do I'll just have to come away saying that people's experience installing OSs seems to vary.

      And, if you had read my post instead of cherry-picking points

      I assure you that I was reading your post - I just didn't respond to every last item. No one else is going to read this, so if I didn't care what you had to say I wouldn't bother corresponding with you! :)

      The reason is that Linux is not geared towards the average user.

      I agree that all but a few Linux desktop distributions are not geared toward the average user. It would be pointless to make such a beast, since Windows has a monopoly. When companies need a kernel to build a new OS around, they sometimes choose Linux - sometimes something proprietary. For phones Apple went with the open-source mach and BSD, Google and Palm went with Linux. For tablets, the mix seems to be some open source (Apple, Samsung) and some not (Windows, RIM). If someone needed to come up with a competitive Desktop OS, I see no reason why Linux wouldn't be just as well represented.

      In order for "Linux (or some open unix-like system)" to be popular, it has to be geared to the average user, not be tied to over-priced hardware, easy to use, have a stable UI, be a platform that is easy to program for, and a platform where the users will actually pay for software.

      I agree with all of those except for "not be tied to over-priced hardware". Anyway, I think that Android shows Linux can be all of the things you listed.

      The GNU/Linux community does not actually want "Linux on the Desktop", regardless of what anyone says.

      I don't think you can speak for the whole community like that. Currently my use of Linux is minimal (I switched my server to FreeBSD to take advantage of ZFS), but I much prefer the unix way to the Windows way and so I'd love to see unix desktops more popular. So here's one member of the "community" rooting for Linux Desktop.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    43. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by lennier · · Score: 1

      a netbook or a tablet. (And I think they're really synonymous functionally - it's just a matter of whether you need/want a physical keyboard.

      How absurd! It's patently obvious that removing the keyboard from a portable computer turns it into a completely different kind of device, not even a kind of computer really, which requires a whole different operating system and a completely incompatible set of applications all provided by a different vendor, with your data locked up in its own proprietary micro formats.

      I mean, otherwise people could just mix and match keyboarded and keyboardless portables and desktops at will, as if computers were some kind of ubiquitous data-processing device, and then where would we be? Back in the jungle, that's where.

      And of course if you want to read a book on a computer - well that's an entirely different kind of thing, and you need a whole new class of device just to even think about doing that. It's just common sense!

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    44. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      It happens to be on a lot of "grandma's" desktops for a whole lot of reasons. One of those reasons is simplicity of remote administration. Another is configuration stability. An important one is ease of use. Linux happens to be a pretty good choice for setting up a "grandma" user, especially one that needs to be left alone with the system, with maintenance maybe once or twice a year.

      Every time this topic comes up, you'll hear from the people who setup their parents/grandparents with Linux in order to _solve_ a raft of problems they were tired of dealing with.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    45. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tablets aren't going away, neither are smartphones, and iOS/Android are popular enough that I think they'll remain as long as they keep updating and improving the experience. However, the same can be said for laptops, desktops, and netbooks. Desktops aren't going away because tablets exist, because desktops serve a much different type of user and different user experience. First, desktops are generally high power, bulky, and power hungry machines that are used for running intensive programs (professional video editing/photo editing, professional audio recording and mixing, 3D modeling, CAD, rendering, compiling, running scientific computing and simulations, and of course gaming). These functions may be possible on high end laptops, but for everything you can cram into a laptop you can cram twice as much into a desktop for the same or less cost. Desktops are also stationary, so public computers are most likely to remain desktops. They are harder to steal. I doubt hotel kiosks are going to switch to iPads anytime soon, and this is one of the main reasons.

      Laptops are replacing desktops in areas where the power of desktops is no longer necessary or where portability is key. They are common among business users though I don't see programmers ditching their multi-monitor setups for a tiny laptop screen anytime soon, but docking stations may be used to eliminate the desktop PC. Netbooks also still serve a point of being an ultra-small PC that can run full PC software. This may not be as important after Windows 8, but I doubt all Windows applications are also going to be ported to ARM and there are some apps that will require x86.

      As for Linux? It's always going to be here, that's the greatness of open-source. I don't care who all chooses to use it, I know I will, but it doesn't need world domination or anything like that. Since it isn't commercial software, there isn't even a benefit to having a large user base because you won't get any money from it. Choice is good, and sometimes you choose to have multiple OS'es or multiple PC's and that's fine. I have my personal gaming custom-build with 3 monitors and Win7 but I also have my new Android tablet. I use both regularly for the things they're best at. I also have a large 17" laptop and a 10" netbook which get regular use.

    46. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by bzipitidoo · · Score: 1

      Blind hatred? Blind?? After all the antisocial things MS has done? And that GNU/Linux has not done. Google hopes they are good. GNU/Linux is good.

      You want the list? Or do you think you might be able to remember a few of the sleazy, scummy things MS has done?

      The reason Linux still won't be on every desktop anytime soon is practical concerns. Look at all the pain buyers of the Linux versions of the Humble Indie Bundles had to go through to get those games to work. Chase down and install missing libraries, and hope they are compatible versions. Dump the open graphics drivers for the proprietary ones, because decent 3D performance is impossible otherwise. Search the Internet for solutions to the cryptic error messages. Deal with random crashes and hangs. Think about installing WINE and running the Windows versions.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    47. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by f()rK()_Bomb · · Score: 1

      Those are all problems on any recent linux. Those sorts of issues are why win7 is my desktop base with Linux in vm. I ran Linux as my base os when I was younger and idealistic, it's totally not worth it, far nicer integration and usability in win7

      --
      "The space elevator will be built about 50 years after everyone stops laughing." - Arthur C. Clarke ~1980
    48. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by sglewis100 · · Score: 1

      http://www.dell.com/ca/business/p/vostro-v130/pd

      You can get it for 1/3 the cost of an equivalent MacBook Air, and it's about the same weight, and the screen's the same size. The battery doesn't last quite as long (I get about 4h on mine), but if cost is an issue, then it's definitely an option. And to make it germane to the discussion at hand: you can get it with Linux preinstalled.

      The model you linked to is as little as $379. Of course that's a Celeron processor. The mid line is $578 and has an i3 processor at 1.33 GHz. None of the models you linked to have flash rather than HDD. The only one to support 4gb of ram is $699. So let's assume you meant to say the 4gb model for $699, which is about half the price of the MB Air 13.3 base model. Because you weren't trying to compare something so drastically different just to say "look, OMG! cheaper!). So, other than being half the cost, the ONLY things you give up are:

      * About half the battery life.
      * Trade a 1.7 i5 processor for a 1.3 i3 processor.
      * Trade 128gb SSD for 500gb SATA drive at 7200 RPM (no wonder the battery life suffers).
      * 1366x768 resolution versus 1400x900.
      * Half a pound heavier.
      * Noticeably thicker.
      * Slightly longer, slightly wider.

      To be fair, the Dell has a few extra ports (although no Thunderbolt), and has that hideous red plastic option. It also ships with ad supported Word and Excel. To get Pages and Numbers on the Mac would cost $40 in the App Store, although you lose the ads.

      And if it does come with Linux pre-installed as an option, than you linked to the wrong model, because your link is Windows 7 only.

      How is this equivalent, and 1/3 the price?

    49. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by crutchy · · Score: 1

      I agree, and those peddling this "goal" are pressuring developers to bloat their software for "desktop" use. In my humble opinion Linux should be in a league of its own and should not try to mimic other operating systems. I don't use Linux because it has flashy desktop themes, Firefox and something that makes IE look bad; I use it because its free, but also because I'm a bit geeky and I don't mind solving problems without whinging to the friend/colleague who "knows everything about computers" as long as they have Windows. I've only been using Linux since Debian Lenny so I'm not a seasoned expert by any means, but I'm gradually researching how to thin my Linux boxes down so that I can do what I need to without a window manager at all. I don't mind the command line (its kind of retro and makes me feel a bit like a hacker, even if I'm only trying to figure out why my wireless stopped working) but unfortunately it seems like most new software is designed for windows (pardon the pun). The answer to how "the desktop" become synonymous with "windows" is obvious, but why should "the linux desktop" also be synonymous with windows? To me it seems like a backward step. Lets go back to the roots of Linux (no pun intended this time) and make a totally awesome operating system with all modern software that doesn't require a mouse or an i7 processor, but requires the user to be slightly less moronic than those that use window-based operating systems. I'm only a hobby programmer, but I would never design software to be used by morons; if anything the best security measure is to make software more difficult to use. Also, if I have modern software that I can run with decent performance on an old 486, then I wouldn't care if hardware vendors didn't get onboard because of insufficient market share because I wouldn't need modern hardware or drivers to suit. As an aside (for the zealots), when the global economy collapses in the probably not too distant future, more people may find they have to consider installing linux on their existing computer because they can't afford to upgrade to the latest and greatest forced into new machines by Microsoft and Apple.

    50. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by WorBlux · · Score: 1

      If you care enough you should be using something like arch, slack, or gentoo and build your system to you own specs.

    51. Re:Wasn't aware there was a goal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How can you ask somebody to "piss off" in a kind way? Being rude isn't kind - not even close. It is one thing to disagree. It is something else to be unecesarily rude.

  16. what's this "desktop" you speak of English? by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    more like the year of linux in your pants!
    errr.... pocket.... yeah, that's what I meant...

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  17. Arguments May Cost Linux the Desktop? by jazman_777 · · Score: 2

    That all the arguing in the community is what is holding Linux back is itself a tired old argument.

    --
    Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    1. Re:Arguments May Cost Linux the Desktop? by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      I have to wonder why Taco even bothered posting this article. We've been seeing essentially the same argument -- any linked to many times on /. -- for over ten years now. I'd bet five bucks that this "Brian Proffitt" character hasn't even been using Linux on the desktop that long.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    2. Re:Arguments May Cost Linux the Desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually Open Source is such a success BECAUSE of this freedom to choose. I've yet to hear of a distro that comes with evolution but prohibits you from using thunderbird or some similar idiocy. All major distros have apt-get or yum or something similar which let you install anything you want, if we're talking about regular users that is. If not, you can always make your own repo or compile it from source for personal use.

      Unlike proprietary software, the developers are working on their projects because they want to, when they don't like something leaving or forking is always an option, and incredibly no one loses.

      Conclusion:
      The article's author is an uninformed idiot.

  18. already lost by aahpandasrun · · Score: 1

    Linux had its shot at the desktop when Netbooks first appeared. It lost that battle. I doubt it will have another one.

  19. Why would the community care... by pulse2600 · · Score: 1

    ...about porting Linux apps to the Cloud? TFA talks about how OpenOffice/LibreOffice will never make it to the cloud in time to be competitive vs Google Docs/Office Live...but if the Linux/FOSS crowd wants their software to remain open, why would they use such applications in the cloud? Would providing the app via the cloud into a browser be considered "distribution" of the application or binary, and if so would the cloud provider be required to provide their modified source to interested parties? If not, I see no reason why OSS advocates would even want to use such applications in the cloud...and without those who are most feverishly supportive of Open Source, what real market would "Cloud LibreOffice" or "GIMPCloud" have?

    1. Re:Why would the community care... by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      what real market would "Cloud LibreOffice" or "GIMPCloud" have?

      To an individual? Nothing.

      To an IT department? If they were "good enough", they could replace (or reduce) the need for local storage and backup, MS Office licenses, network drives, local machine application installation and configuration, etc. I don't think the average user cares what their "cloud" provider does behind the scenes, but an IT department might like to run something similar to Google Apps on their own hardware with full access to the code and configuration.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    2. Re:Why would the community care... by Jonner · · Score: 1

      ...about porting Linux apps to the Cloud? TFA talks about how OpenOffice/LibreOffice will never make it to the cloud in time to be competitive vs Google Docs/Office Live...but if the Linux/FOSS crowd wants their software to remain open, why would they use such applications in the cloud? Would providing the app via the cloud into a browser be considered "distribution" of the application or binary, and if so would the cloud provider be required to provide their modified source to interested parties? If not, I see no reason why OSS advocates would even want to use such applications in the cloud...and without those who are most feverishly supportive of Open Source, what real market would "Cloud LibreOffice" or "GIMPCloud" have?

      You seem to think all "OSS advocates" are feverish and prefer Copyleft licenses such as the GNU GPL. In fact, the Free and Open Source communities often use permissive licenses and there are many successful projects under such licenses.

      You are astute to wonder about the effectiveness of Copyleft for web (cloud) applications. For authors wanting to apply the principle of Copyleft to web apps, there is the AGPL.

  20. Contradictory... by osu-neko · · Score: 1

    TFA:

    The old arguments about desktops and application superiority aren't going to matter if all the other platforms have moved on.

    Headline/conclusion:

    Old Arguments May Cost Linux the Desktop

    Make up your mind. If everyone moves to the cloud as their new platform, as noted, it simply won't matter, but that doesn't cost Linux anything, it just makes the local platform irrelevant. That happens regardless of whether people are arguing about desktop apps or not. The article gives no compelling reason why such arguments are actually harmful, or cost Linux anything, just points out how they become irrelevant. The author seems to want to argue both ways -- that someone the platform has to remain relevant when people move on to the new platform... to what end, I don't know, since the point seems to be people are inevitably move to the cloud, and the author mistakenly portrays that as "other platforms moving on" rather than "other platforms being moved away from as well in favor of the new, cloud platform".

    --
    "Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies."
  21. desktop itself is doomed by spire3661 · · Score: 1

    Lets be honest here, soon we wont have desktops like we have had for the last 20. We are right back to the micro, mini and mainframe paradigm, but now the micro-comps will be MIDs (consumption), mini-comps will be dedicated workstations (production), mainframes are the cloud (storage, processing). Linux is never going to be loved by the masses. People love marketing, Linux is pretty much the opposite of sexy marketing.

    --
    Good-bye
    1. Re:desktop itself is doomed by Jonner · · Score: 1

      Lets be honest here, soon we wont have desktops like we have had for the last 20. We are right back to the micro, mini and mainframe paradigm, but now the micro-comps will be MIDs (consumption), mini-comps will be dedicated workstations (production), mainframes are the cloud (storage, processing). Linux is never going to be loved by the masses. People love marketing, Linux is pretty much the opposite of sexy marketing.

      I'm going to assume that by "Linux" you mean "GNU/Linux on the Desktop" since Motorola, Google, Samsung and others have been putting huge amounts of ad money into marketing Android.

  22. correct me if i'm wrong by shadowrat · · Score: 1

    But if google docs gets so good that everyone is using it, isn't that one more thing that makes what desktop os you run irrelevant? That would be good for the linux desktop, right?

  23. LInux kills the Linux Desktop by Osgeld · · Score: 1, Informative

    last night I visited mod archive, and wanted to use its web player, which uses java and I didnt have it installed

    Firefox pops up "you need a plug in" do its little search thing cant find shit, goto java's site there is source and RPM but no deb and I really dont feel like compiling software to listen to chiptunes

    BUT thank god it was in the software manager thingie! fired it up let it install, restarted firefox "you need a plug in"

    so now its a half hour later and I am digging around in a fucking ubuntu forum trying to figure out the magical cryptic command to get fucking java working in a browser, I finally found

    sudo apt-get install sun-java6-jre sun-java6-plugin sun-java6-fonts

    restarted firefox and OMG it works but now I have to go to bed. WTF, you seriously want people like my parents using this garbage as a mainstream OS? I don't even want to deal with it anymore, cause every single little nitpicky thing turns into a pain in the ass, and there are a trillion variations so it never seems to ever be "fixed" it just moves around distros

    1. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      ...and all of this "buy why can't it just install the plugin that the obscure Russian website asks for" is precisely why Windows is such a security mess and why you have to clean granny's machine for her.

      Perhaps a relevant web search might have helped.

      What happens when granny has a glitch in her web managed Internet router? Or wants to do something new and interesting?

      If you can't be bothered to poke around a little or search Google then YOU ARE LOST regardless of OS. MacOS won't even help you.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really feel for you mate. Best thing you can do is just fuck off.

    3. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Weird. I have to keep uninstalling the Java plugin from Ubuntu because Ubuntu keeps reinstalling it for me when I don't want the damn thing creating security holes in my web browser.

    4. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      oh theres my little linux troll stalker, how you doing bud

    5. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by tokul · · Score: 1

      so now its a half hour later and I am digging around in a fucking ubuntu forum

      You lost computer literacy test in less than five minutes.

      http://www.google.com/search?q=ubuntu+java+plugin

    6. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      yes I did not say I was on google drooling on my desk, I had to try a few different things cause I am not on ubuntu and mint's forums suck

      point is its a simple fucking download and go on mainstream OS's, but oh no not on linux!

    7. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by burning-toast · · Score: 1

      Hey, at least you no longer have to dig around and link .so files into different hidden mozilla plugins directories AFTER installing the java packages.

      Maybe file a bug report with Ubuntu or Oracle, or Mozilla? Seems that it's an intended feature which is not working... just a thought.

      The other thought is... maybe the media plugin wizards have absolutely dick to do with the quality of the operating system? Ya know, since the plugin was indeed provided by the operating system packagers... maybe the failure is with the plugin maker for not packaging it directly on their site, or maybe it was with the browser maker for not finding it correctly?

      On the plus side, you now know how to get the java plugin for firefox working in one simple step, namely installing the package which gives you the plugin. I have no idea what package it was you tried to install through the software manager, but it wasn't the right one. You can thank sun / oracle for not making the right package to install available from their website and instead leaving it for you to find though. On that note, it's a good thing that the Ubuntu development team compiled it all for you and stuck it into the repository too. All you had to do was find and install it since the automated firefox wizard didn't know where to find it.

      I just hope you and your parents don't have to rely on the "Fix Network Problems" or "Fix Device Problems" wizard that Microsoft gives you with Windows, boy will that leave you feeling slighted after you paid all that money for it.

      I think that knowing how to do basic things like locating missing media plugins, or resetting an IP address of a network connection is reasonable knowledge for a computer user to have. Requiring linking libraries or unloading and reloading kernel modules / drivers is where it goes too far into systems administration territory. Fortunately you didn't have to do any of that. You can run into both problems on all of the operating systems after all... only on one of them it's entirely voluntary and does not require purchasing the OS it's self.

    8. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by fnj · · Score: 1

      I'm perfectly fine with stupid people continuing to use Winblows and everybody with a working brain switching to linux.

    9. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      yes there is a typical linux answer its everyone else's problem our software works fine

      that applies to zilch in the real world, and I seriously hope your not comparing windows automatically finding a IP address to installing 3 random packages that on every other system is a 1 click download and go

    10. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      why can't it just install the plugin that the obscure Russian website asks for

      Well, you can, technically speaking - I've yet to see a phishing website providing .rpm or .deb with malware, but I don't see why they wouldn't do so in some hypothetical future where Linux is on, say, 20% of all desktops.

    11. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by burning-toast · · Score: 1

      Now that I'm on an Ubuntu (10.04) installation at home... and I have never run a Java applet through Firefox; I decided to test this out and see how bad it really is. I browsed over to http://www.java.com/en/download/installed.jsp (Java test page) and I got the pop up for missing plug-ins. I clicked on the wizard's next button and it requested to install the necessary package and prompted for the administrative password. I entered it and then it installed and reloaded the page just fine. So, someone must have filed a bug report... funny how that works.

      And as a matter of fact I WAS comparing the Windows diagnostic wizard with the Firefox plug-in wizard. You don't seem to have much technical experience if you both think the only thing the wizard in Windows does is renew the IP address and you think that the 3 packages you had to install were somehow random. The windows wizard does more than that (or tries to) and the 3 packages you had to install were all part of the plug-in you wanted to use.

      And lastly, I didn't reassign the blame from anything to anything else. I said it was probably a broken wizard in Firefox you should submit a bug report on. Though at this stage I can see how you get into frustrating encounters with computers at the slightest hint of misbehavior. And I question if you have been keeping your install even half up-to-date since my experience was so vastly different than yours and I'm not even on the latest and greatest versions of anything.

    12. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      you fucking blamed me, my distro, java, and firefox!

      you make it out that its MY fault that firefox cant find java, submit a bug report so I can watch it stagnate for 2 years as firefox marches on, why bother

      you make it out that its MY fault that when I went to the highly praised software manager and clicked install "Java(tm) plug-in, java se 6" and that it did install something, but fuck if I know?

      you make it out that its MY fault that Java doesnt have a DEB package, one of the top fucking 2 package management systems?

      now your blaming me cause I didnt know what 3 packages to install, you know there is fucking 3 pages worth of java shit when you go look? who the fuck has time to figure that all out? the linux nerd and not many others

      Sorry I am not linux jesus and involved with every pissant open source software thing, its obviously MY fault that linux is fucking broken at every god damned level unless you dedicate yourself to fucking with it constantly.

    13. Re:LInux kills the Linux Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your vocabulary seems to have become more and more limited as the conversation has gone on. Perhaps you need to upgrade your dictionary/thesaurus package?

  24. Linux = Servers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Period.
    I know people will disagree, since this is freetard-land and all, but you need to accept it.

    1. Re:Linux = Servers by 0123456 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Linux == servers
      Linux == desktops
      Linux == webcams
      Linux == TVs
      Linux == Blu-Ray players
      Linux == phones
      Linux == anywhere that people want a free, secure OS

    2. Re:Linux = Servers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux != useful

  25. Economies of scale by tepples · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It may not be on grandma's desktop, but again, why would I care?

    Developers of specialized software lack the resources to support every platform. They choose which platforms to support based on which could make the most money for them. And right now, Windows and Mac OS X have much clearer economies of scale than GNU/Linux. So if GNU/Linux isn't widespread, it won't draw a large selection of specialized software, especially in those markets that free software has historically had trouble serving.

    1. Re:Economies of scale by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Office software is not "specialized". It is the least specialized stuff possible. It's the dumbest sort of thing to fixate on.

      As far as a platform to buy payware goes, MacOS is kind of pretty weak actually despite all of the protestations to the contrary. It's really hard to fight against the entrenched monopoly with a 20 year head start even if you are Google and Apple.

      The fact that Macs could not compete against MS-DOS of all things should have made this point a bit more obvious.

      So Google Docs can finally be a suitable drop in alternative for msoffice. Fine. Toss it on the pile with the rest. THAT objective was never really a problem.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Economies of scale by arth1 · · Score: 1

      The fact that Macs could not compete against MS-DOS of all things should have made this point a bit more obvious.

      That could be because DOS, ironically, gave people more freedom. More rope to hang themselves with, sure, but also more freedom to customize and augment it for particular purposes. Mac was, is, and probably will continue to be "one size fits all".

    3. Re:Economies of scale by tepples · · Score: 1

      Office software is not "specialized".

      Businesses, as I understand them, will choose a platform that 1. runs the specialized software that they need and 2. has office software compatible with the office software that their suppliers use. I agree that OpenOffice.org vs. LibreOffice matters little because they both use .od* files. But there are occasional compatibility problems between either of the two and Microsoft Office. And I've seen cases where a business will choose Microsoft Office in part because the specialized software that it uses runs on top of Microsoft Access.

    4. Re:Economies of scale by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      But there are occasional compatibility problems between either of the two and Microsoft Office.

      There are compatibility problems between Microsoft Office and Microsoft Office. I had to install a 16-bit version of Office a few years ago to open some Word documents that I found on an old CD.

    5. Re:Economies of scale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      . But there are occasional compatibility problems between either of the two and Microsoft Office.

      The small company life I've witnessed don't depend on the compatibility of the office formats. PDF is all we care since at the end it will all be printed and archived anyway. Supplier editable contracts don't really work and proposals are whole documents delivered on a certain date. Custom Office applications I've come across are mostly Excel spreadsheets with macros.
        Any software which requires significant learning to become profitable and forms a core of the business, like a CAD package for a design company, is another matter. The DWG/DXF and the like do work but the software may still have to implement national standards or provide a localized user interface filled with specialized terminology.

    6. Re:Economies of scale by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 0

      When DOS was up against the Mac, the Mac wasn't running the unix based operating system it is today. MSDOS was pitifully simple and functionality was barely noticeable. Unix has been the recipient of thousands of man years of work and is a far superior platform. If MSDOS was up against Mac OS X Lion today, there would be no competition.

  26. groan by tero · · Score: 1

    ...so maybe the article author should try to figure out just what "linux" or "linux community" means.

    Because they certainly don't mean what he thinks they mean. And therefore his reasoning is flawed from the start.

    Linux is just the kernel.

    There is no monolithic "community" who can make up their collective hive-minds about OpenOffice vs whatever.

    There's plenty of companies, pushing out dists - and some of them might have some sort of ambition to get their particular dist on someones desktop, but it's hardly representative for the entire "community" (which doesn't even exist).

    1. Re:groan by tepples · · Score: 1

      There's plenty of companies, pushing out dists

      So how can a software developer target all of them?

    2. Re:groan by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      So how can a software developer target all of them?

      Release the source.

      Or if you really must release binary-only software then it's hardly an insurmountable problem; we used to support at least seven or eight different versions of Unix and Mac on numerous different CPUs and that included a lot of code in assembler. If you actually care about releasing multiple versions of your software then abstracting out the differences isn't hard.

      Of course what most companies do is dump a load of old, buggy, shared libraries full of security holes that they linked to into the application install directory and then expect you to add that to LD_LIBRARY_PATH because "that's how Windows does it".

    3. Re:groan by tepples · · Score: 1
      I have a few questions about details of the solutions that you mentioned.

      Release the source.

      How many mainstream video games come with full source code from day one? How many mainstream individual income tax return preparation applications come with full source code? I don't know of any.

      Or if you really must release binary-only software then it's hardly an insurmountable problem; we used to support at least seven or eight different versions of Unix and Mac on numerous different CPUs and that included a lot of code in assembler.

      In other words, it appears you were treating UNIX platforms as several distinct platforms that share the vast majority of the code, but you shipped separate binaries for each. Did you have a separate install disc for each platform, or did all versions come on one distribution medium?

      If you actually care about releasing multiple versions of your software then abstracting out the differences isn't hard.

      Is it also easy to provide technical support for people who can't get a .rpm or .deb package from $popular_distro to work on $less_popular_distro?

    4. Re:groan by dokc · · Score: 1

      There's plenty of companies, pushing out dists

      So how can a software developer target all of them?

      Why all of them? There are several big distributions: Debian (with derivatives including Ubuntu), Fedora, openSuse which every developer can target with very little effort. If the application is important for some other distribution somebody in community will find the way to use it on it's favorite distro or somebody will pay support for it.
      The effort should not be bigger then targeting all of the Win2000/XP/Vista/7.

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
    5. Re:groan by KugelKurt · · Score: 1

      There's plenty of companies, pushing out dists

      So how can a software developer target all of them?

      Just throw the source code at OBS http://openbuildservice.org/ and get packages for practically anything.

  27. New plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Write pointless article rehashing what everybody's been saying for a decade about fragmentation and the Linux Desktop
    2. Submit to Slashdot
    3. ?????
    4. Proffitt!

  28. you would be surprised t what and who by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    is putting important info into the cloud. I was recently with a document management company and we started cloud based solutions a few months before I left. We had large companies small companies, banks, schools all going cloud... it scares me to be perfectly honest

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  29. "Linux on the desktop" by countertrolling · · Score: 1

    It's like expecting hobbyist ham radio operators to take over the broadcasting industry

    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    1. Re:"Linux on the desktop" by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      The real question is to question the whole idea to begin with. Is it even really needed? What's really needed?

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  30. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  31. Nonsense by DaleGlass · · Score: 2

    It won't cost Linux the desktop for the same reason why having to choose between Google Talk, AIM and MSN doesn't do that to the Windows desktop: those things aren't really significant and not new either.

    Evolution vs Thunderbird doesn't matter, as they're pretty much equivalent for most purposes. Besides, a lot of people use gmail and don't really care about either. Then it's not like Thunderbird doesn't run on Windows, creating exactly the same choice.

    Libre Office vs OpenOffice doesn't really matter at this point in time either, as the differences are tiny, and the file format is standard anyway. Long term there'll probably be a clear winner. I'm betting for Libre Office because that's what Ubuntu is shipping right now, and Oracle is a hulking behemoth.

    But, there's a bigger thing here, and it's that all such discussions are ultimately pointless. The OSS world is fluid and distributed. No matter how much somebody might pontificate at great length about the need for unity, nobody is obligated to care.

    Libre Office for instance, appeared for a good reason, and I doubt very much the developers that work on it will suddenly "see the light" and go back to trying to submit patches to Oracle, just because some guy wrote an article saying it "might cost Linux the desktop". I'd say that most developers don't really care. At least when I contribute patches to Linux software I don't do it because of some world domination long term goal.

    I think what is needed is open standards. So long I can use whatever I like to do my work, why would I need to care about what the rest of the world uses?

    1. Re:Nonsense by Nerdfest · · Score: 1

      As long as open standards are in place, I think Linux does have a shot at the desktop. With most things moving to web based implementations, as long as open standards exist, why not use Linux? The problem is that MS and Apple will be trying to push proprietary protocols and solutions as those help define the need for their OSes.

    2. Re:Nonsense by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      Libre Office vs OpenOffice doesn't really matter at this point in time either, as the differences are tiny, and the file format is standard anyway. Long term there'll probably be a clear winner. I'm betting for Libre Office because that's what Ubuntu is shipping right now, and Oracle is a hulking behemoth.

      Oracle no longer owns Open Office. It's in the Apache Foundation's hands now.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
  32. Too late by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But /. told me OSX but unix on the desktop and killed Linux chances.

    In all seriousness though, no OS can recreate what MS did to acheive
    that kind of penetration (pun intended). It was a case of right place/right time
    combined with a ruthless business sense.
    And lastly: Much of Windows suckitude had to do with it's dominance. Notice how it got better
    as the market was disrupted with alternatives. (Make no mistake, going from " we're in the drivers seat" to
    "here is a force we cannot disrupt with SOP" is significant). Why aspire to recreating a bad situation?

  33. Hold it by notemaker · · Score: 1

    Doesn't the cloud make the host OS less significant? I'd think that'd be an argument *for* Linux on the desktop. What's that Windows license bringing you again?

  34. Never 'gonna happen by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Linux, and open source in general, will never be that popular, simply because of cognitive load. It's software designed by engineers, with no clear understanding of style or ergonomics.

    To use a car example, it's like a car with high torque and excellent gas mileage, but ugly to look at and the instruments are labelled differently and in the back seat.

    Many companies hire artists and usability experts to look at the final product and make tweaks and recommendations. Some even take the trouble to engage focus groups of customers to find out what features are confusing, what aspects are uncomfortable, what looks ugly. They take this information and change their product for the better.

    For the most part, the success of Apple products is for this reason: the iPod was not the first MP3 player on the market, but it's usability and aesthetic appeal and robustness made it highly popular.

    Open source, on the other hand, is usually done by a single engineer putting in most of the effort. The results usually have the following pattern:

    1) Documentation: Writing documentation is boring. Put up a wiki and let the users fill in the details.
    2) Aesthetic looks: This is not important. Give the user a panel to change the environment to suit their tastes.
    3) Compatibility: Not important. "Search for text" is different in every application, it's impossible for your fingers to memorize the action.
    4) Simplicity: More features is better! Try viewing the man page for "ls" some time. Or preferences in VLC.
    5) Descriptives: Don't choose descriptive names for anything. Instead of "Internet Explorer", "Paint Shop Pro" and "Media Player", use terms like "Gimp, Firefox, and VLC".

    This last is one reason why old folks have a tough time using the new technology. They have to learn a completely new language: Every random word that they *thought* they knew ("pidgin", "handbrake", "calibre") means something different in the new system.

    Gimme a break.

    The top five or so open source projects try to deal with these issues, but the overwhelming majority are robust, strong, functional, and totally enigmatic.

    Where are the open source tech writers? The ones who take that part of the problem and work alongside the engineers to ensure quality documentation? Where are the open source ergonomic experts, the usability analysts, the aesthetic artists? Who ever does usability studies, or consistency between apps?

    Until the engineers get a clue, open source projects will never be more than a closet of hobbyist projects.

    Making good software is more than robust coding.

    1. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where is the like button? Okian Warrior you nailed it here!

    2. Re:Never 'gonna happen by tizan · · Score: 1

      Really ?...Going away from the desktop environment to the portables/phones....if your argument is right we should not have android being so popular...it is linux mainly with mono-use-case apps

      Or is it simply that no significant hardware distributor was willing to face the ire of MS to promote linux on its machines.

    3. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd argue making good software is all about robust coding. Making usable software, however, is not. Other then that your points are decent.

    4. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have some good points, but two of them are problematic:

      1) Documentation. Products should be easy enough that documentation is not necessary. See iOS.
      5) Descriptives. You use product names in your example. Try "Web Browser", "Photo Editor", "Media Player"

    5. Re:Never 'gonna happen by AttillaTheNun · · Score: 1

      Where are the open source ergonomic experts, the usability analysts, the aesthetic artists? Who ever does usability studies, or consistency between apps?

      Until the engineers get a clue, open source projects will never be more than a closet of hobbyist projects.

      Making good software is more than robust coding.

      A damn good question. Why do open source projects attract ONLY coders? Why is this the fault of the engineers?

    6. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux, and open source in general, will never be that popular

      Wow you are years late. People may not know that they are using open source software or what this means, but MOST of the world uses it anyway, eg Firefox, Android, VLC, Webkit, (Apache and the like too) and a large etc. Open source already won, it is only that you dont know about it.

    7. Re:Never 'gonna happen by w_dragon · · Score: 1

      The person running the show is the person responsible, and the engineers are the ones running the show.

    8. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you been asleep since 2008? KDE 4 and GNOME 3 are almost exactly what you're recommending, and there's a huge backlash against them. AwesomeWM and Arch Linux (frequently in combination) are routinely praised as the best thing since protected memory, and they're about as nerd-centric as it's possible to be.

    9. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Nukedoom · · Score: 1

      Is there a way you can save and bookmark comments on Slashdot? Because this truly gets into the heart of open source and their lack of appeal for the masses.

    10. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Mr_Silver · · Score: 1

      Linux, and open source in general, will never be that popular, simply because of cognitive load. It's software designed by engineers, with no clear understanding of style or ergonomics.

      Linux had its shot at the desktop in 2007 with netbooks. However thanks to the manufacturers using shonky unknown distributions (seriously, why was it not possible to use Ubuntu? Or Fedora?) customers were only too happy to abandon them for Windows based versions even though they were significantly more expensive.

      There was a phenomenal opportunity for Linux on the desktop and, sadly, those manufacturers involved managed to spectacularly cock it up.

      I doubt manufacturers will ever get that kind of chance again and, even if they were, I see no proof that they would learn from their previous mistakes.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    11. Re:Never 'gonna happen by WarlockD · · Score: 1

      No his argument still stands. Android, when it first came out, was practically unusable. No video recording, sluggish interface not to mention dropped calls when the damn phone app froze. Oh, but programing it was soo easy! So easy that they didn't implement a bare metal C interface till the next major reversion, so there was no chance for an early launch for graphical games or apps

      Also its Google. They spent the money to get the tech writers, the ergonomic experts and artists together. You think that interface came out of thin air? There are reasons they abandoned X11 and allot of the standard lib interfaces. It still took Google YEARS to get it as popular as it is now. IPhone won not because of apple fanboys, but because my damn grandma could text to her granddaughter for the first time in her life and not feel like a fool. Even though I have an EVO now, I hesitate to recommend it because of the glitches.

      A better comparison is the Palm OS. You look at it and you know someone sat down and designed the UI and programing interface BEFORE they even started on the real work. The interface, above all else, always is smooth. When you load an app that will take a while, you can put it in the background and go back to it intuitively. However the cost was a SDK that came a month after release and a very poor SDK at that. Yes, it also runs linux. To this day, I STILL believe it has the ability to take down Apples dominance with Google being a second.

      How about Moto MING ? Anyone remember that nice little Linux phone? It was AWFUL. Small screen, resistive display. You hit the "X" on such a small part of the screen. You couldn't even dial numbers with your fingers on the thing. You basically had to root the phone to get anywhere on it and that's not something a normal person could do. So does this mean linux is crap phone phones? IT'S ALL DESIGN AND USABILITY!

      Okian Warrior is right by all accounts. Open Office is a bitch to use if all you want to do is a school paper and never used it before. Gimp might have allot of technical ability but the interface is (well was) mind boggling X11 trash interface.

      If the answer to question "Will you still use this product with no documentation and a non-intuitive interface?" is "Yes, because its technically superior to X", that product won't make a dime unless its a niche market.

    12. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Many companies hire artists and usability experts to look at the final product and make tweaks and recommendations. Some even take the trouble to engage focus groups of customers to find out what features are confusing, what aspects are uncomfortable, what looks ugly. They take this information and change their product for the better.

      OTOH, Gnome did this and their UI seems to have gotten worse the more they have focused on improving it.

      5) Descriptives: Don't choose descriptive names for anything. Instead of "Internet Explorer", "Paint Shop Pro" and "Media Player", use terms like "Gimp, Firefox, and VLC". This last is one reason why old folks have a tough time using the new technology. They have to learn a completely new language: Every random word that they *thought* they knew ("pidgin", "handbrake", "calibre") means something different in the new system.

      And in the other corner we have Lotus, Excel, Access, Visio, Powerpoint, Outlook, WinAmp, Napster, McAfee, and Norton saying that a unique name distinguishes a product from its competitors and people will recognize it when they are introduced to the product. In a third corner we have trademark lawyers and law students grumbling that a name like "Media Player" is not descriptive.

    13. Re:Never 'gonna happen by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Where are the open source ergonomic experts, the usability analysts, the aesthetic artists?

      We're busy telling Ubuntu and Gnome what a disaster their new UIs are. Sadly, they don't care.

    14. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as it continues to be reposted every week or so, it should be fine.

    15. Re:Never 'gonna happen by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Open Office is a bitch to use if all you want to do is a school paper and never used it before.

      Uh, what? You... type stuff... and you... print it out. Or email it or whatever.

      Open Office is no better or worse than any other word processor I've ever used. Yesterday, for example, I was using Word and deleting a bullet point would also delete the bullet point from the line above it but leave the text. Eventually I discovered that if I changed the format of the line of bullet point text before I deleted it then it wouldn't remove the bullet point from the line above. Exactly how easy is that to use?

    16. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5) Descriptives: Don't choose descriptive names for anything. Instead of "Internet Explorer", "Paint Shop Pro" and "Media Player", use terms like "Gimp, Firefox, and VLC".

      This last is one reason why old folks have a tough time using the new technology. They have to learn a completely new language: Every random word that they *thought* they knew ("pidgin", "handbrake", "calibre") means something different in the new system.

      Gimme a break.

      And see how quickly the courts decide that the project is not allowed to use the descriptive names due to trademark infringement....

    17. Re:Never 'gonna happen by jabjoe · · Score: 1

      "Until the engineers get a clue, open source projects will never be more than a closet of hobbyist projects."

      What world are you living in? Even if you think everything you run is closed (and it probably isn't), there is a massive sea of things running free software, not just open source, that you will interactive with everyday. It's not unlikely you own a few. There are plenty of big companies and government departments that even the Linux desktop is used. Wake up. It's everywhere already.

    18. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there a Godwin's law for car analogies?

    19. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What kind of engineer would put the instruments in the back seat? That's not a clumsy interface, it's completely unusable. You may not have a high regard for engineering, but that is ridiculous.

    20. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with pretty much everything you mentioned, with one exception: VLC.

      VideoLAN Client seems pretty descriptive to me... For me it immediately intimates that it's a client, for viewing video, over the LAN.

      However, there used to be a VLS to go with VLC. I think maybe 10 years ago or so they moved the server functions into the client, and deprecated VLS.

    21. Re:Never 'gonna happen by dsmithhfx · · Score: 1

      "Gimme a break." No. You don't get a break. Windows, life sentence. Enjoy.

    22. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You shouldn't tell that to my dad who has happily been using Ubuntu for the last 3 years. He likes it... it works.. and he doesn't have to worry about 0-day exploits in IE :)

      Windows doesn't have quality documentation... it just has YEARS of baggage... So your point is moot.

    23. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I had mod points, I'd blow them all on this post. Well said.

    24. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Why do open source projects attract ONLY coders?

      set rant = on

      Because tech writing is dirty, dangerous, and dull. Take it from me, I've been doing it for over 25 years in SW.

      Dirty since, if you do it right, tech doc takes forever and requires LOTS AND LOTS OF TECHNICAL REVIEW before it can be considered complete, concise, and accurate. Tech doc creation is also surprisingly non-intuitive and non-trivial: writing directions for a simple task can be exasperatingly complex. As to dull? Write "Insert Tab A into Slot B, and then press Return" day after day and see if you don't start praying for relief.

      Dangerous because if you do it wrong, people get lost and pissed off, often coming back at you and the product with "nasty, big, pointy teeth". That's bad enough when you're getting paid to do it: when you do it for free it's even harder to take. Especially when your editorial input comes from native English speakers using nonsense like "irregardless" or (my personal favorites) "baited breath" and "on tenderhooks" and whose suggestions include rip-roaring grammar, usage, and clarity problems (as in how the Hell can I edit a doc if I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT YOU'RE TRYING TO TELL ME?).

      OK, so not everyone is a linguist , but if you're going to correct my words, at least have a clue, OK?

      PS as to this, from a few notes down: "Products should be easy enough that documentation is not necessary. See iOS." I reply only HA HA HA HA HA HA; I've been hearing about that since I wrote "self-documenting" COBOL code, yet I still have a vibrant and apparently not self-limiting career in Tech Doc (I usually get hired after the company realizes just exactly how screwed they are re getting people to use their "intuitive and easy-to-use" product and way too late to prevent them from pissing customers off with bad, little, or no doc).

      "Can't you just write it for us over the weekend?"

      set rant = off

    25. Re:Never 'gonna happen by TheUser0x58 · · Score: 1

      Many companies hire artists and usability experts to look at the final product and make tweaks and recommendations.

      Hmm. These days, serious consumer-oriented software development efforts will have these types of folks sitting at the table before the first line of code is written (and usually calling the shots over engineering throughout the whole process). But yeah overall great points, wish more people realized this.

      --
      -- listen to interesting music, support independent radio... WPRB
    26. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are using Linux and open source software every day more than you realize. It's all around you.

      Desktops: for example Ubuntu has done a great job in offering a standardized desktop environment.

      People then complain, oh but X is different there, it should do/look/feel like Y instead. And this is nonsense. Even Apple isn't objectively usable if you've never used it. When you sit in front of it, as a purely new user, you're lost. Totally lost. Nothing makes sense. You do a short learning presentation, use the system for a while, and then it feels natural.

      It's the same way with Ubuntu, with any modern, well-designed system.

      VLC: there are not really many preferences in VLC, unless you enable the Expert mode. Do you know what it means if you enable Expert mode? It means you're an Expert and are not scared of the new preferences which pop up. If you think you're not, then don't enable it.

      Man page for ls: hint, you don't need to use or know all those options. I'm sure it can feel dreadful to try to assimilate that amount of information. But just start with "ls" and "ls -la" for now. That's all you need. If you need more, then go back to the documentation and see if it's there.

      Descriptive names: again, try Ubuntu. They've named the menus that way. You can always name the menus whatever you want. You can even change the menus to have just the stuff you need. You know, YOU have the freedom, not someone else.

      And this complaint about lack of documentation I don't understand. First, you complain that there isn't enough documentation. Then, when there is documentation (case of "ls"-command), you then complain that it is too detailed.

      And just because you have all the tools, doesn't mean you need to use them all the time!

      Give Ubuntu a shot. It's based on Debian, very nice, power-user friendly too, and at the same time you can isolate yourself from the big bad computer as much as you like.

      Where are the open source tech writers? The ones who take that part of the problem and work alongside the engineers to ensure quality documentation? Where are the open source ergonomic experts, the usability analysts, the aesthetic artists? Who ever does usability studies, or consistency between apps?

      The Open Source world moves fast. If you have software with no documentation, chances are it's so bleeding edge that you shouldn't be using it unless you are comfortable reading and understanding the code itself. To me it looks like you are not such a person, but you consistently try to swim deeper than you can, and then complain. This is OK, it's a way to learn. There is a learning curve. Once you figure things out it will be much easier.

      Good luck!

    27. Re:Never 'gonna happen by nightfire-unique · · Score: 1

      Man. I don't know what else to say except... the 90s called.

      Open source software runs the world (Apache, Tomcat, Linux, PHP, MySQL), and a significant portion of the desktop world, if you consider Firefox, LibreOffice/OpenOffice, KDE, Gnome, etc.

      User requirements are unique enough that there is room for multiple players! We on the OSS side do not want 100% market share. In fact, most of us don't care about market share. What we do want is good, secure software that works correctly.

      You don't need features. Cool. You want it to look a way you're accustomed to. Excellent. You also want clean, well-written documentation that's up to date. I get it. We all get it.

      So go buy your proprietary software.

      The rest of us our perfectly content to continue doing our thing.

      --
      A government is a body of people notably ungoverned - AC
    28. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do user experience design for software (not open source). As a designer, you can make a product a lot better but you can't code so you rely on the developers you work with to implement the product design properly. In my job that gets done because a) the developers know me and we respect what we both bring to the table and b) because management would be on them for not implementing the feature as designed if they didn't.

      In an open source environment (thinking small project here and not working for Redhat) you may be working with a developer who you only contact via text (IM/Email) and who may have their own ideas about how to get things done that may work well for them or for more technical people but wouldn't work for what we're building. Without easy ways of building up my own influence or having a structure that enforces them listening to me it all just seems like a huge excercise in frustration.

      Additionally, a trained designer can get a lot more paying outside work as a lot of us have background in print design/photography or can even design websites/apps on contract work. If I had to choose between working on a paying gig where I might get to stretch my legs a little and try something new or working on software remotely with someone who may or may not decide to toss aside my work and go with a command line interface because "it's easier and faster" I'll pick the paying job with fewer hassles any day of the week.

    29. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think what you fail to see is that most of what you're saying is true of closed-source/proprietary/non-free (call it what you will) software as well. I have paid good money for programs that have less documentation than a lot of OSS apps do these days. Projects that are large enough to support them have usability teams now.

      The top five or so open source projects try to deal with these issues, but the overwhelming majority are robust, strong, functional, and totally enigmatic.

      It really comes down to the apps that have institutional support. MySQL and the associated tools, VirtualBox, and OpenOffice all had outstanding documentation and at least some thought was put toward usability when they were being actively backed by SUN. Mozilla Foundation's projects are all reasonably well designed and well documented. GNOME is pretty well covered all around too, since it's supported by all the major distros save one. GIMP is one of the few tools I can think of for which the community has really stepped up to the plate with docs and UI stuff, without major backing.

      Really though I think limiting it to "top 5" is a bit of an exaggeration. maybe more like top 5%

    30. Re:Never 'gonna happen by dondelelcaro · · Score: 1

      To use a car example, it's like a car with high torque and excellent gas mileage, but ugly to look at and the instruments are labelled differently and in the back seat.

      No, it's more like a car whose steering wheel looks like an F1 steering wheel and a dash panel which looks like a 747 flight engineer's station. Difficult for someone used to driving a normal car or flying a piper cub to master, but capable of generating incredible performance for those who understand its function.

      --
      http://www.donarmstrong.com
    31. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where are the OSS tech writers and QA folks? They are on the sidelines exactly because the "engineers"
      tell them to f!@k off whenever they mention that their pet baby has usability issues. The fact is that a lot of people
      write software to pump up their egos; they shudder at the hint of criticism. Just look at KDE4 and Gnome3.
      The general consensus is that both were huge steps backwards. Did the developers listen? No! They told
      the end-users to go to H-E-Double Hockey Sticks. (Somewhere, someone at Microsoft is smiling.)

    32. Re:Never 'gonna happen by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      You have some good points, but two of them are problematic:

      1) Documentation. Products should be easy enough that documentation is not necessary. See iOS.

      That is incredibly hard, and something that most engineers suck at.

      5) Descriptives. You use product names in your example. Try "Web Browser", "Photo Editor", "Media Player"

      Of course he's using product names. His point is that the product names in open source software all all weird. This does not help, and is deliberately obtuse. The names are chosen to be distinctive and different from the thousand other open source projects that do the same thing.

    33. Re:Never 'gonna happen by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Okian Warrior is right by all accounts.

      He's mostly right.

      Open Office is a bitch to use if all you want to do is a school paper and never used it before.

      For that use case, OO is overkill, what you need is something like Wordpad or Microsoft Works Word Processor (which I actually liked more than Word) The closest LInux equivalent would be Abiword, which I like more than OO/Librewriter

      Gimp might have allot of technical ability but the interface is (well was) mind boggling X11 trash interface.

      Try using the 1.14 version sometime, god that was horrible...it's got some better.

    34. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the engineers have a clue, but closet hobbyists think they know best.

    35. Re:Never 'gonna happen by vlueboy · · Score: 1

      Where are the open source ergonomic experts, the usability analysts, the aesthetic artists? Who ever does usability studies, or consistency between apps?

      I see what happened there...aren't all of these jobs exactly the NON-CODER jobs doomed by the non-fulfillment paradox? The one were we the "analysts" are all asked to fork the projects if we want any solutions those fields, or outright told that the problem does not exist?

      Since we're not "coders", then we just cannot, especially in behemoth projects. (See RAM leaks in FF)

    36. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Re car analogy... there are a lot of engineers in the world, and they would obviously enjoy driving these cars (designed by engineers for engineers as you imply). They would also be the most better off (with better gas milage and such).

      They might be a minority, but so are millionaires.

    37. Re:Never 'gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's all eventually going to mature into a few stable interfaces. You're the one who is delusional to think otherwise. Things just don't move at the pace you "want" them to in the open source world, but the end results are always worth it, and there are people who care about unified interfaces working on that sort of thing. It's just not a primary focus right now given there are real technical issues to resolve! :)

  35. Linux lost the battle for the desktop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    About eight years ago, when Red Hat pulled their desktop distro from the shelves. They were the only vendor that would have had the credibility and financial resources to stand up to Microsoft and Apple.

    Assembling and maintaining the desktop operating system stack is perhaps best done on a single campus by a company that can afford to hire UI designers, usability folks, localization staff, product marketers, project managers, customer support specialists, and QA testers (as well as developers) in droves, and keep them on the payroll for release after release.

  36. Network effects by tepples · · Score: 1

    Apart from Call of Duty vs. Battlefield, the examples you give don't have built-in network effects that make a product more useful when everybody else is using the same product. When everybody is using the same operating system, everybody can run the same applications. Or is everybody already running the same operating system of HTML + CSS + JavaScript + CACHE MANIFEST + localStorage?

    1. Re:Network effects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Derp. If they're all running Chrome, what's the diff.

      The OS is increasingly irrelevant, so free (as in cost, nobody gives a shit about the other sort) finally matters. Which is the only reason Linux might show up on a few corporate desktops now.

    2. Re:Network effects by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It certainly seems to be approaching the point where platform will be irrelevant. You'll be using the same family of apps on your phone, tablet, notebook or desktop... hell even your TV. The actual operating system is going to pretty much become irrelevant.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    3. Re:Network effects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd actually say it works with redheads, brunettes and blondes too....

  37. Cost it's shot? by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

    What shot at the desktop? That battle was fought and is pretty much over. There are new battles ahead, and the desktop is evolving into something else. You can see both Microsoft and Apple are taking their desktop operating systems in decidedly non-desktop directions. What is the open source world doing? Well if Ubuntu Unity and Gnome 3 are any indication it doesn't look good in my opinion.

    1. Re:Cost it's shot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed....I love the principles of Linux/Open Source but Linux is outdated and I'm not about to try to export my principles to someone else--don't cast your pearls before swine. Windows 7 is freaking awesome, the thought of Ubuntu turns my stomach. Expensive, but who really cares? When productivity is a concern a few hundred dollars per desktop is meaningless.

  38. Here we go... by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

    1. Write inflammatory blog post about Linux on desktop.
    2. ???
    3. Proffitt

    --
    I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  39. Summary, translated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Some dude I've never heard of writes idiotic opinion on blog."

    I think one of the problems with people who make statements like this is they have their thinking about Linux and free/open software all wrong. In particular, they see the world as defined by its conflicts. So immediately they jump into "Linux vs. Everything else". Linux vs. Windows. Linux vs. Mac. If you're stubborn and think in a box perhaps this mentality makes a lot of sense.

    I don't see it that way. First, I don't think Linux ever set out to deliberately take over the world. But to me, Linux is more like a tool that I use. I am very glad to have it, but do I care how it does relative to others? Only insomuch as it's good to have a vibrant community of developers and users. If that can be said (and I think that statement has been true for most of Linux's existence), then great. Beyond that, I'm not very interested in the horse race.

  40. When Ubuntu started by drolli · · Score: 2

    to gradually improve things in gnome, i was happy because that was actually the first time i have seen that things - even small things where continuously getting better (talking about 2007-2009). In the end they really had me stopping using the terminal, something which was absurd a few years back.

    But now that they decided to go the (steep) way of pushing gnome in one direction which keeps and makes it usable, but rolling out their own shit (Yes, i mean it - 11.04 made me think about switching back) and weirdly enough did not adress the obviously missing parts (e.g. pdf commenting is possible only in okular, openoffice would need a closer look by somebody who integrates it), i am extremely pessimistic.

  41. Why is this a bad thing? by Haedrian · · Score: 1

    We have 'arguments' for who gets to come with the system. Why is this a bad thing?

    Whenever your position is shaky, you are driven to do more. When IE locked down the market, it stagnated. Now there are so much different competitors, you need to innovate.

    This is a GOOD THING. If I'm developing something and I want to get default, I need to be better than the current one. So I innovate.

    Plus you can still get the other choices, so there's no loss.

  42. One desktop does not a market make by tepples · · Score: 1

    So then my desktop does not exist?

    In the sense of the return on investment of a commercial off-the-shelf software developer, your desktop probably doesn't exist enough to be profitable by itself.

    1. Re:One desktop does not a market make by h4rr4r · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Which is not what the question was at all. I don't care.

      On top of that as indie game studios now often support linux, I am not sure you are correct.

    2. Re:One desktop does not a market make by DJHeRobotExVV · · Score: 1

      Which is not what the question was at all. I don't care.

      On top of that as indie game studios now often support linux, I am not sure you are correct.

      As most indie game "studios" are groups of people working out of an apartment if working in the same physical location at all, I feel that your conflation of indie game studios with what an average person would term "real" game developers whose staff typically exceeds 50 people in one location is disingenuous at best.

    3. Re:One desktop does not a market make by westlake · · Score: 1

      On top of that as indie game studios now often support linux, I am not sure you are correct.

      Less than a quarter of the payments for the Humble Indie 3 bundle were for the Linux versions - even though the average Linux gamer was paying $12 each and the Windows gamer $5. The Humble Indie Bundle 3

      Something less than a ringing endorsement fof the port to Linux.

    4. Re:One desktop does not a market make by dokc · · Score: 1

      So then my desktop does not exist?

      In the sense of the return on investment of a commercial off-the-shelf software developer, your desktop probably doesn't exist enough to be profitable by itself.

      My Linux desktop is profitable because I'm siting in front of it. There is no profitable desktop by itself.

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
    5. Re:One desktop does not a market make by tepples · · Score: 1

      My Linux desktop is profitable because I'm siting in front of it. There is no profitable desktop by itself.

      Then please allow me to rephrase it more directly: Catering to one user isn't profitable for a commercial off-the-shelf software developer.

    6. Re:One desktop does not a market make by dokc · · Score: 1

      My Linux desktop is profitable because I'm siting in front of it. There is no profitable desktop by itself.

      Then please allow me to rephrase it more directly: Catering to one user isn't profitable for a commercial off-the-shelf software developer.

      Sure, but at home, I would define myself as an average user: browsing, e-mail, playing video an music sometimes, writing a letter once in 3 months. So, no "catering" needed and I have everything what I need on my Linux PC.

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
  43. Do you have a solution? by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    Others have covered why this is not actually a problem or why it was never going to happen in the first place, but my issue with this is no solutions are proposed. It's easy to come up with potential problems, but kind of pointless if there's no solution. What would a solution even look like?

    Wait until one of the options is clearly far and away better in all aspects than everything else and go with that one?
    Declare by consenus that "this one" is the way to go?
    Agree to elect a decision maker to decide all those old arguments?

    It seems like the timescale for the first one is infinity. The second one won't happen on it's own either. The third one would be absurd and would only work until the first decision is made, at which time most people who were on the losing side of the argument would still go with gnome or unity or open office, or whatever.

  44. This guy is right by fudoniten · · Score: 1

    This guy is totally right. All this choice is just too confusing. There are too many competing options, and it's ruining things for everybody.

    So I'm going to start listing alternatives, and we'll get a simple, fair show of hands. I hope the losing projects have the good grace to step down, disband, wipe their code base, and instruct their users to migrate to the winning project. Oh, I'm sure it'll be hard, but it's the only way to get to the Year of the Linux Desktop.

    Okay, let's start at the basics:

    vi, or emacs?

  45. Religious wars by wjousts · · Score: 1

    The only thing bloodier than the Windows / Mac / Linux religious wars are the internal Linux wars.

  46. Obligatory XKCD by erroneus · · Score: 2

    http://xkcd.com/934/

    But you know, there are a lot of people who are disagreeing with the article, but I generally agree. At first the "fighting" was productive. It served a purpose as it created a competitive environment in which various projects could mature. I don't think that's the case any longer. Now we are seeing different drives behind projects and now we are seeing a lot of "change for the sake of change" and version number escalation clearly meant to make people think there's a huge difference between (for example) Firefox 4.x and Firefox 5.x.

    And if various projects can't manage to work together for a common cause or goal, then it is highly unlikely there will be much acceptance of Linux in the Enterprise for desktop use. Why should they when there are so many flavors and styles out there? We're not just talking about theming, but also various internals as well.

    One thing that is horribly wrong with Linux today is that a useful software package is nearly impossible to create which works on ALL of the current distributions. That's a tremendous and obvious block right there.

    The last time I spoke words like these, someone use the word "shill" to describe me. I am a hard-core Linux user. I favor RedHat based Linuxes (though I'm not pleased with F15 at all... mostly GNOME3's fault) and the only Windows anything I use are in VMs that are called up on an as-needed basis. So it's not like I don't love or use Linux and definitely not like I'm not a user and don't know what I'm talking about. I've been at this since the beginning of RedHat 4.0 and have watched it grow and improve since that time. I'm no shill. But I can definitely see where things are going wrong and they are. The community must change and especially mature.

    1. Re:Obligatory XKCD by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      No amount of groupthink with overcome the fact that Microsoft had a 20 year head start.

      Apple is the shining example of a company that did everything in the non-Linux way and look how much that did for them?

      Now they are pushing souped up ipods because they know they already lost the desktop battle.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Obligatory XKCD by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Apple doesn't compete in the enterprise because they don't want to. IBM did and they were forced to allow clones. Apple, as we all know, is vehemently opposed to clones.

      And participating in the enterprise means they have to care a lot more about parts, suppliers, availability, living up to enterprise expectations and all that. They could if they wanted to, and so I can only conclude that they don't want to.

      And yes they show all the signs of bowing out of the end user computer market all together in favor of iConsumer devices... interesting isn't it?

    3. Re:Obligatory XKCD by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      One thing that is horribly wrong with Linux today is that a useful software package is nearly impossible to create which works on ALL of the current distributions.

      No, it really isn't. It is easy and the procedure is exactly the same on Linux as on Windows and OSX. The procedure is as follows:

      If your program depends on a library which is not a standard system library on all systems then either statically link it to that library or ship the .so/.dll/.dylib with it.

      Simple. ldd is your friend.

      Linux doesn't have much by the way of standard system libraries compared to Windows or OSX. You probably don't want to provide your own libc or libgl.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    4. Re:Obligatory XKCD by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      One thing that is horribly wrong with Linux today is that a useful software package is nearly impossible to create which works on ALL of the current distributions.

      [joke]Haven't you ever heard of source tarballs?[/joke]

      I know, I know, I avoid source compiles as much as possible.

      (though I'm not pleased with F15 at all... mostly GNOME3's fault)

      Switch to XFCE, you'll be mostly pleased.

    5. Re:Obligatory XKCD by erroneus · · Score: 1

      In that, you are right. I have been playing with F15+XFCE a bit and it's a great return to simplicity. As I went back to F14 for now on my main machines, I'll continue to play with XFCE in a VM a little while longer, but the compositing options make it more pleasing to the eye even without wobbly windows... perhaps I can still get that though when I am running on bare metal.

  47. Cloud == New Mainframe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rest is bickering over your favorite terminal.

  48. No worries the desktops killed themselves by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    Really? Unity vs Gnome 3 vs KDE 4 whatever? There is no difference, they ALL suck. I have used Linux for a LONG time but the recent changes to the basic desktops have me ready to throw in the towel. Yesterday I accidently let Sabayon upgrade... instant problems as gnome 3 greeted me with its "fuck you". As simple a thing as opening a samba share requires killing a runaway browser process every single time.

    The odd thing is that I had just helped some people migrate to Gnome 2 to get rid of constant virus infections when all they wanted to do is browse the net and play flash games when this shit hit. First Ubuntu and now everyone else.

    I am now considering going for a Ubuntu LTE and just not updating it at least Ubuntu makes it bloody clear you are about to destroy your productivity.

    The author claims Linux people should work together. Well they have. KDE/Gnome/Unity bundled forces and ruined the desktop. And for what? Tons of bugs, lots of disgruntled users and still not going to be adopted mainstream.

    I had to check if Smedley hadn't finally led off by SOE and started working for opensource. Gnome 3 and the NGE have a LOT in common. Wonder if any of the three desktops will ever admit they were wrong.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  49. Windows Embedded by tepples · · Score: 1

    Considering that Windows can't really be stripped down to bare essentials

    It isn't quite the 200 MB you ask for, but Windows can be stripped down to 600 MB.

    1. Re:Windows Embedded by dokc · · Score: 1

      If we continue like that both Windows and Linux are dead.
      And the winner (weight 1.4MB) is:
      MenuetOS

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
  50. If the cloud takes over... by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    It should be the case that increasing reliance on cloud software will make it easier for businesses to choose Linux, but for that to happen, Linux communities need to stop fighting the old fights, says Proffitt."

    If the cloud takes over, most of the old fights should become irrelevant... apart from Firefox vs. IceWeasel vs. Epiphany vs. Konqueror vs. Chrome vs. Lynx. Last time I looked, ChromeOS and Android were, technically, Linux.

    LibreOffice vs. OpenOffice, Evolution vs. Thunderbird

    ...provided distro designers wise up, realize that none of those will be household names to switchers, and have large friendly icons called "Wordprocessor", "Spredsheet", "Mail", "Browse the Web" (with a "preferred applications" config somewhere for those of us that give a damn) that should be irrelevant.

    GNOME3 vs. Unity vs. KDE

    If distros keep rushing these out before they are ready* and still lack key functionality then this will kill linux on the desktop deader than it already is, without help from the cloud.

    * That's me giving Gnome 3 and Unity the benefit of the doubt. I'd like to give them a chance, but I prefer to use virtualbox to play with new distros, and it doesn't seem to want to play nice with all the new eye candy.

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    1. Re:If the cloud takes over... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Xfce, light weight iterative development, reliable.

    2. Re:If the cloud takes over... by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      Xfce, light weight iterative development, reliable.

      I know, I'd just like to try Unity and Gnome 3 without them crashing and glitching... then I'd feel entitled to slag them off on Slashdot.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  51. There is no fight for the Linux desktop by Dennis+Sheil · · Score: 1
    There is no fight for the Linux desktop. Ubuntu completely dominates the Linux desktop in terms of users. Look at how many Ubuntu's versus other desktop Linux's people hit one of the most popular web sites on the Internet with. Ubuntu has twelve times the number of desktop users that Suse has. Ubuntu has twelve times the desktop users Fedora has. Ubuntu has eighteen times the desktop users Debian has. So the dominant solutions for the average user have already been decided in al of the above - Evolution, LibreOffice, Unity.

    As this is free software though, there are not winners or losers in the traditional sense. People happy with Thunderbird, Openoffice and KDE can continue using them. It's not like KDE is going away any time soon, even though Unity so dominates the Linux desktop. Unity is still very heavily dependent on the Gnome framework in terms of libraries and applications. Canonical does not have anywhere near the manpower to handle what the Gnome project handles. It's an ecosystem where everything benefits from everything else - Unity benefits from Gnome, KDE benefits from freedesktop.org work by Gnome developers. And vice versa - the fd.o library which handles PDF format is done mostly by KDE-centric developers - only Carlos Garcia Campos is more Gnome-based.

    Compared to Windows or MacOS, a Linux desktop/workstation is a dream platform for developers, so it is never going away. The only question is will it break through to the wider public? As Linus says, Linux had done well on the low end with embedded and mobile, and does well on the high end with servers and "cloud" (whatever cloud means). It also is a popular desktop/workstation for IT people. Now, efforts like Ubuntu are trying to make headway into the standard user desktop area. Although they've been more focused on servers, Red Hat and Suse have done a lot of work in the desktop department as well, something which Canonical benefits from.

  52. Wait a minute... by Ecuador · · Score: 1

    are you telling me this is NOT the year of the Linux desktop? That's news to me!

    --
    Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
  53. Cost Linux the desktop? Linux never had it by Erasmas · · Score: 1

    Linux is at 1% of the desktop/browser client market, and is now behind both IOS and Android in market share, and losing ground rapidly. KDE, GNOME, etc. all need to go away for Linux to have a shot at being anything more than a backend server OS. As long as there is no standard "Linux" desktop environment, then it will never be able to compete for end users.

  54. Y'all looking at the wrong end of the horse by tempest69 · · Score: 1

    The application fight is not the issue that needs primary attention.
    Microsoft is coasting on an interface/ architecture that is "good enough", Linux and Mac are doing the same.
    It should be better... Imagine three people playing a game on one machine (three monitors/ mice/keyboards/headsets) , with a fourth playing the same via a thin client, and a fifth playing over the network. This is doable with modern hardware, but the OS isn't there. There are dozens of major architecture problems hobbling "modern" operating systems. Fixing these flaws would be a major advantage to Linux, Mac, or MS.

    Storm

  55. "Old arguments"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...LibreOffice vs. OpenOffice, and GNOME3 vs. Unity..." Aren't these things just a few months old?

  56. Leap from consumption to production by tepples · · Score: 1

    mini-comps will be dedicated workstations (production)

    But will home users still be able to afford these? Otherwise, it'll be more difficult for home users to make the leap from consumption to amateur production.

  57. Not necessarily. by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1

    Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will. That is some /. nerd fantasy.

    Not necessarily. Android on the âoetablet topâ begins to crack that door open. Certainly Linux may never crack Windowâ(TM)s hold, but with greater interest in Linux based *consumer* front ends â" on tablets right now â" the possibility of expansion to low end and high end systems a la various Apple products is a greater possibility.

    I do think, however, that Linux will never have the middle ground.

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
  58. For the masses an internet browser is all u need by cod3r_ · · Score: 1

    I don't see cloud computing taking over entirely, but desktops are becoming increasingly less important to the masses. Esp considering even computer gaming is falling to hand held devices and consoles which to me is a large part of Window's stranglehold. Until large companies start putting out linux versions of their software though I don't think linux will ever be much more than a server or a developers desktop. Everyone else can just buy an ipad and be happy

  59. FREE is what killed Linux on the desktop by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 1

    Linux has always been made by hobbyists, for hobbyists.

    In the commercial software world, the distance between "functionally complete" and "release candidate" is very large and labor-intensive, i.e., expensive. Hobbyists can use the "functionally complete" version, but grandma has to have the polished product. Because of that extra expense, it generally requires a large financial interest to make that last mile of development feasible.

    Most of the open source projects that have been successful with the masses are those that were backed by commercial, profit-making entities: OpenOffice (Sun), Android (Google), Red Hat...even Firefox is made possible by the for-profit Mozilla Corporation.

    Linux may have a better chance of success in the future, as more of the functionality users want becomes available inside the Web browser, and the underlying OS becomes less relevant.

  60. Prezi by jiteo · · Score: 1

    Prezi will only catch on when they remove the retarded "Create game-changing presentations online" tagline from their front page. Things that were game-changing: revolutions, the car, flight. Things that are not game-changing: presentations.

    1. Re:Prezi by Noughmad · · Score: 1

      Prezi will only catch on when they remove the retarded "Create game-changing presentations online" tagline from their front page.

      Things that were game-changing: revolutions, the car, flight.

      Things that are not game-changing: presentations.

      No, you don't understand. Revolutions and new forms of transportations changed life. Presentations can only change games.

      --
      PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
  61. this boat sailed a decade ago by spidercoz · · Score: 1

    no news here, move along

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  62. drivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    graphic card drivers. full on 3D, movie decoding, multiscreen, flash support.. that's all we need.

    sincerely, the desktop users

  63. Prezi by jiteo · · Score: 1

    Prezi will only catch on when they remove the retarded "Create game-changing presentations online" tagline from their front page.

    Things that were game-changing: revolutions, the car, flight.

    Things that are not game-changing: presentations.

  64. yup. cloud killed the IT staff by decora · · Score: 1

    finally the suits can have touch-button control of every single user, what they are doing, what they are looking at, etc.

    and you dont have any of those fucking nerds getting in the way soaking up profits.

    next step - get rid of users.

  65. Not unless it changes a whole lot by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    For Linux to ever have a shot on the desktop, it would have to stop being Linux. Namely it would have to get some standards beyond the kernel. It would have to become a system where a lot more was standardized and you could rely on features, packages, UIs, etc being in all distributions. To desktop users, an OS isn't a kernel, it is a rich experience that comprises, well, everything you find on a Windows or MacOS disc. Until that happens, it'll never be an OS people want to use on the desktop because people don't want choice, they want consistency. That doesn't mean it couldn't still be flexible, just that it would have mandatory features and defaults.

    Along those lines it would have to do away with having source be something a user had any idea existed. No distributing programs as source, no recompiling the kernel to make something work, all binary all the time for users. Again, wouldn't mean it would have to get rid of source, just that the user experience couldn't include it. That would have to be all nice guided installers that are fast and easy.

    These things aren't important to servers, and completely unimportant to embedded devices, hence Linux has done well there. However they are what people need on the desktop.

    Notice that the end-user facing Linux that has had the most success by far is Android and it does precisely those things. It gives users and developers a consistent environment and set of tools that are guaranteed to be there, since they are a part of what Android is. It provides easy, binary-only installs for users so they just click on what they want and get it.

    That's what Linux as a whole would have to do to have a chance of capturing a significant share of the desktop market. So long as the answer to problems remains "Oh just use a different distro, that one doesn't have feature X and Y," or "Recompile your kernel with these options to make that work," it'll be the sort of thing that there isn't widespread interest in.

    1. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by Dusanyu · · Score: 1

      choosing mainline Ubuntu is most of your problem if you would have went with one of the smaller Ubuntu derivitives such as Linux Mint you would have had the Java plug ins working at install In the mean time Ubuntu which was at one time one of the netter desktop distributions is quickly sliding down to the bottom of the barrel in terms of hardware support and usability. I now would not wish Ubuntu on my worst enemy.

    2. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's what they've done far longer than Android. Take Ubuntu Linux. Although I'm a power user I've never needed to do a Kernel compile there even when changing to an unsupported kernel. All the software and tools have binaries available in PPAs which hide even minor choices (architecture, version). There's an app-store equivalent that's high quality (ratings, images, descriptions, certified-only, etc) and is pushed to the front. If PPAs were easier to find & add (like integrated into the main app search), I think it would be just as easy for new people.

    3. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by fnj · · Score: 2

      Disregarding your straw horse that a typical linux user now has to worry about compiling source code, which is nonsense, your premise about lockstep uniformity (which you don't even attempt to justify) leaves me cold, and implying that Windows offers a rich experience that linux somehow doesn't has me utterly mystified. You imply that linux doesn't come with important pieces that are present in Windows and OSX. I will pass on OSX, which I don't have much experience with, but just comparing linux with Windows indicates the OPPOSITE of your complaint.

      1) Want a word processor? All the common linux distros install an excellent one by default. Windows? Bzzzt. You're on your own. Gotta buy something.

      2) Spreadsheet? Same thing.

      3) Presentation authoring? Same thing.

      4) PDF reading? Linux comes with evince and others. On Windows you have to download Acrobat.

      5) Halfway decent text editor? Linux comes with excellent ones. On Windows you have to hunt one down.

      6) CD and DVD burning? Linux comes with it. Windows may include a crude one now; it never used to, when I didn't know any better than to use Windows.

      7) Any scanner I ever tried Just Worked out of the box on linux. On Windows you have to install special driver software. Some of them are no longer supported at all on recent versions of Windows, but work fine on linux. The same for a lot of other hardware (sound, chipsets, add-on cards, etc).

      8) Anything else you want to do. A myriad of apps are a click away in the Add/Remove software menu on linux. Oh, and they're all free too. On Windows, every one has to be tracked down individually, and usually purchased.

    4. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is completely wrong.

      Macs and Windows mancines don't have the same UI and they're both successful on the desktop.

      For Linux to be successful on the desktop it has to just work. The user can't worry about which wireless software their using, it has to just work. No freaky BS about having to edit a config file to get xxx protocol with security to work.

    5. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Namely it would have to get some standards beyond the kernel.

      you mean like LSB?

      you could rely on features, packages, UIs, etc being in all distributions.

      Oh! you mean like LSB!

      To desktop users, an OS isn't a kernel, it is a rich experience that comprises, well, everything you find on a Windows or MacOS disc. Until that happens, it'll never be an OS people want to use on the desktop because people don't want choice, they want consistency.

      You can choose any of the top 10 distributions out there. They will all pretty much have the same applications on them, one of two primary desktop environments, and the experience from install to working on a desktop will not differ significantly from using a windows or a mac install disc. The big exception is gentoo which asks some more technical questions and takes a hell of a lot longer.

      No distributing programs as source, no recompiling the kernel to make something work, all binary all the time for users. Again, wouldn't mean it would have to get rid of source, just that the user experience couldn't include it. That would have to be all nice guided installers that are fast and easy.

      I can download the source for plenty of programs aimed at compilation on windows and mac. So I'm pretty sure that has nothing to do with it. Honestly this paragraph just tells me that you haven't used any of the major distros in the last 5 years. Recompiling the kernel is only necessary for people who have REALLY exotic hardware needs (and therefore probably don't mind the compilation issue so much). Drivers are usually all handled through automatic detection and compilation against your headers, all done behind the scenes. I can install Ubuntu on just about any machine the same way I do windows. 1) put disc in tray, 2) smack forehead against spacebar until options are complete, 3) make some coffee while the installation procedure runs.The key difference between a windows install and an Ubuntu install at this point is that Ubuntu has the newest versions of all drivers and software, whereas on windows I will be hunting down drivers from 5 different manufacturer websites, and then spending another 3 hours hunting down and installing all the applications I need.

      Basically, what you're asking for is already there. You just couldn't see it with your nose so far in the air.

    6. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by couchslug · · Score: 1

      It would need at least ONE distro to have a sponsor who gave a fuck about desktop penetration and good user interface design.

      The different distros aren't a problem, the lack of ONE desktop distro of high stability and quality is the problem.

      Other distros do not detract from each other.

      Ubuntu could choose to pull LOTD off if they genuinely focused on a standard UI and stuck with it.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    7. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by nukenerd · · Score: 1

      Re: Sycraft-fu

      Crikey, time for you to catch up with some reality.

      I have been using Linux for 10 years and have never compiled anything from source, let alone the kernel.

      I have heard that the Mac offers a "standardised... rich experience" with consistent UI, features etc, but can't comment as I've never used it. Windows and its apps however I use frequently and they certainly do NOT. In fact it seems the thing in Windows apps for them each to add their own bling and "stylish" way of doing things. Overall though I would say Windows and Linux are similar in this respect

    8. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by rphenix · · Score: 1

      Except its not click and play: 1) Firefox is sluggish, Chrome always wants a newer flash version than is in the distro manager and 64bit OS makes for more fun when your trying to install from adobe's website but in a distro supported way so you can remove it cleanly. 2) ATI drivers suck. The open source one performs miserably (no videos for you), the proprietary one is shit when it comes to new hardware in particular. 3) RDP into windows machines, using Rdesktop on linux can leave you stuck in full screen with no way to quit easily if theres been a connectivity issue especially as console isnt available once x starts thanks to a Nvidia driver bug so blindly logging in, using sudo to killall the process not what id call simple. 4) Network Manager can only handle one vpn connection at a time not very good if you need to connect simultaneously and the bugs been open for years. 5) Want to use say a symbian phone on linux to sync your contacts, send txt's etc? If you can do it, it wont be easy but more likely you will find you can use your phone as a modem etc.. but the more useful features dont work. 6) Want to play some old linux games? Enjoy the hell that is now pulseaudio so legacy games dont work (at least not without workarounds many of which don't work each new distro version that comes out). When something doesn't work, enjoy the far outdated documentation because its done way differently now compared to two years ago and enjoy being told to RTFM, here is you refund in full, you've got access to the source code don't you? None of this bodes well for your regular mom and pop user. Back to Windows: OEM's package MS Office starter edition now so that takes care of the word processor/spreadsheet issues your talking about and its free otherwise install LibreOffice. PDF Reading What decent OEM wouldn't package Acrobat? but otherwise its not hard to install it or its more light weight alternatives like Foxit Reader. CD/DVD Burning is reasonably good out of the box with Win7/Vista. Notepad++ is a great text editor and not hard to install for the end user they have fancied up wordpad recently (I dont like it preferred the previous version) but no doubt good enough for end users who cant find alternatives. My main wish at the moment would be for Steam/Valve to support Linux if they can with Mac OS X there's no reason they couldn't with Linux is there?

    9. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by byrtolet · · Score: 1

      1) Want a word processor? All the common linux distros install an excellent one by default. Windows? Bzzzt. You're on your own. Gotta buy something.

      2) Spreadsheet? Same thing.

      3) Presentation authoring? Same thing.

      4) PDF reading? Linux comes with evince and others. On Windows you have to download Acrobat.

      5) Halfway decent text editor? Linux comes with excellent ones. On Windows you have to hunt one down.

      6) CD and DVD burning? Linux comes with it. Windows may include a crude one now; it never used to, when I didn't know any better than to use Windows.

      7) Any scanner I ever tried Just Worked out of the box on linux. On Windows you have to install special driver software. Some of them are no longer supported at all on recent versions of Windows, but work fine on linux. The same for a lot of other hardware (sound, chipsets, add-on cards, etc).

      8) Anything else you want to do. A myriad of apps are a click away in the Add/Remove software menu on linux. Oh, and they're all free too. On Windows, every one has to be tracked down individually, and usually purchased.

      I agree.

      No so easy is to setup your new printer.

      Recently I was buying a wifi usb dongle. In the shop, there were several, I bought the only one with linux support. It costed about 80% more than others. I plugged it and it didn't work. It worked after 2 hours compiling software, and I actualy had to have internet to be able to gather all of the requilred dependacies.

      Linux hardware support is just teriible. I had numerous problems with things that stopped working, with a new kernel versions -- Card readers, bluethouth dongles, video cards. And other things, just don't work on older kernels...

      Linux has to be better. Otherwise it will remain to be just a nurdy OS.

    10. Re:Not unless it changes a whole lot by Yfrwlf · · Score: 1

      Windows has installation CDs that are slimmed down as well as ones which contain more software. The solution isn't to have all distros include the same software. You said what the solution is: standards. All you need are standardized ways for the same type of thing to be done across any distro, like program installation standards. The system needs to be able to recognize all dependencies and to easily obtain anything which is missing. Then, who cares if libraryXYZ is missing? Your package manager will get it for you.

      The stupid create-your-own-software-universe model needs to die. Programs need to be cross-distro at the very least, and cross-platform preferably.

      Everyone: please just say no to any systems which attempt to lock you into a single vendor source for your software when alternatives exist that give you much more freedom. Using Android as an example, it takes away your freedom by locking you into Android-only apps. Why would I choose that over a distro which allows me to run any and all Linux apps? Want to buy something from the Ubuntu Software Center? Hell no, you shouldn't be ball-and-chained to a specific distro, and even if you did find the DEB file you would be locked out of RPM-based distros unless you somehow converted the DEB to RPM, but why should you have to?

      The point is that even open source software can make you a slave if it doesn't offer standards, because that is where real freedom comes from. Development time has a cost, so spend your time and money helping out projects which seek to give true freedom to all computer users world-wide. Programs like Zero Install perhaps? Standards groups like freedesktop.org?

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
  66. bad news from by nimbius · · Score: 1

    the magazine that conveniently forgot about the google chrome book, the asus netbook, and ostensibly the android platform as a whole has now concluded we must put aside our petty and childish preferences toward one piece of flotsam or whatnot in the linux ecosystem and fall lockstep into a uniform and marketable microcosm through which we can finally take "the desktop."

    interstingly enough "the desktop" seems to be on slow holiday for apple and microsoft, who see it more profitable to nickle-and-dime the general populous one microtransaction at a time for an amorphous entity thats resultant components are in fact mostly linux anyway.

    so id conclude that the 'shut up and pick something already or you lose' assertion is a nice way of saying 'get used to a choiceless slate of poking and prodding your next computer with one or more touches to purchase the next application we tell you you can have, and stop worrying about freedom.'

    of course, this could all just be my stallman gland acting up again.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  67. doesnt apply anymore by decora · · Score: 1

    considering that we now have multiple different versions of Windows 7, windows XP, windows Vista, and 64 bit vs 32 bit, etc.

  68. That's what happened to UNIX by Animats · · Score: 1

    That's pretty much what happened to UNIX on the desktop. The old wars between BSD, Sun's Solaris, Apple's A/UX, SGI's UNIX, and the actual AT&T versions are now mostly forgotten. They each had their own totally incompatible GUI. Sun went through about four proprietary GUIs, all terrible. Because of this, there were few graphical cross-platform applications.

    So when Windows NT came along, and X86 PCs got powerful enough to run it well, it just rolled over UNIX on the desktop. Around 1998, I visited Sony Pictures Imageworks, where they had dozens of SGI workstations and two NT desktops for testing. Two years later, it was almost all NT workstations with a few SGIs for legacy projects. Today, of course, almost nobody even makes UNIX workstations. (What's left of SGI still sells an "Octane III", if anybody cares. It's a big box full of Intel CPUs.)

    Linux on servers is more or less standardized, but on desktops, there's too much diversity. Mostly because the GUIs have never advanced beyond mediocrity.

    1. Re:That's what happened to UNIX by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "Mostly because the GUIs have never advanced beyond mediocrity."

      Refinement is boring, change is entertaining, so no surprise that GUIs are more about eye candy than user friendliness. I understand users are annoying, but they won't adopt systems which annoy THEM.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    2. Re:That's what happened to UNIX by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      The failure of Unix GUIs has more to do with cost than anything else...
      Even a lowend SGI desktop cost considerably more than an NT box, and as the performance gap closed it became increasingly hard to justify the extra cost.

      Windows also has it's own incompatible GUI, it is far less compatible with anything else than unixes have ever been with each other. And not just the GUI, the entire user land is simply not compatible with anything else at all.
      The same was also true of MacOS 10, AmigaOS, etc...

      Similarly, the windows interface has always been pretty crude, and in many ways worse than the various guis offered by proprietary unixes (the lack of virtual workspaces being my biggest gripe).

      The beauty of unix however, has always been that you could replace the default gui with a different one easily. I used to run Afterstep on a Sun box because CDE/OpenWin were terrible as you say.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  69. As was said... by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

    "Like fools we clung to the old hatreds...and fought as we had for generations. Until the day the sky rained fire, and a new enemy came upon us. We stand now, upon the brink of destruction, for the reign of chaos has come at last."

    1. Re:As was said... by tendrousbeastie · · Score: 1

      Warcraft was, I always though, more of a prophecy of what was to come...

  70. GNOME and KDE are by cfalcon · · Score: 1

    GNOME and KDE are already working on ensuring no one wants to use Linux desktop :P

  71. There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Rob+Y. · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You assume that Linux is developing in a vacuum, and it magically got good enough to be on your desktop. But that's not how it happened.

    Linux got good enough quickly enough that various critical players assumed it would soon (or at least eventually) be a viable desktop alternative. So they began to support it. You probably wouldn't be using Linux on your desktop (at least not exclusively) were there no nVidia drivers, various HP printer drivers, Broadcom (yes, a late comer) and, yes, Flash support available for it. But what you willfully refuse to see is that all of those things became available because their vendors assumed they'd get some advantage from providing them.

    There's a whole rash of things that never became available (Quicken, games, etc), because their vendors didn't see the advantage of Linux support, or were holding back to wait for critical mass, or wanted to jump in, but were stymied by the need to choose a platform on top of Linux (GNOME, KDE, etc) to target.

    If it becomes obvious that critical mass will never come, those last players may never jump in. And the first group may jump out (no nVidia drivers for new classes of cards, etc). Hell, even Firefox support on Linux is lagging Windows these days. So you can argue all you want that 'choice is good' and 'I can use Linux, so why should I care', but you can only use linux because other people have cared in the past. Wake up. World domination is not the goal - viability is, and that goal can slip through your fingers even though you are happy with your Linux setup today.

    --
    Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    1. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      There's a whole rash of things that never became available (Quicken, games, etc), because their vendors didn't see the advantage of Linux support, or were holding back to wait for critical mass, or wanted to jump in, but were stymied by the need to choose a platform on top of Linux (GNOME, KDE, etc) to target.

      Uhh... why would Quicken need to choose between KDE and Gnome?

    2. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by jalefkowit · · Score: 1

      Because (assuming they're writing it as a desktop app and not a web app), they would have to decide whether to write Quicken for Linux using GTK (the GNOME UI toolkit, which can look sketchy in KDE), Qt (the KDE toolkit, which can look sketchy in GNOME), or some other one entirely (which looks sketchy everywhere).

    3. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a whole rash of things that never became available (Quicken, games, etc), because their vendors didn't see the advantage of Linux support, or were holding back to wait for critical mass, or wanted to jump in, but were stymied by the need to choose a platform on top of Linux (GNOME, KDE, etc) to target.

      Holy crap, DO NOT WANT. Best thing about Linux is that proprietary software vendors don't see the profit in it. If it's not open source, please don't bother.

    4. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, even Firefox support on Linux is lagging Windows these days.

      LOL, is it? Which parts, exactly?

      I bet ActiveX and Silverlight.

      DRUMFILL!

    5. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      I have run GTK and QT applications in both KDE and Gnome without issue. Hell, I've run them in StumpWM without issue. The ONLY advantage to sticking to one framework is not having to install the extra framework (done automatically BTW) which basically just means you have 100MB less space on what is normally a 500+GB hard drive.

      Please stop perpetuating the FUD that gtk and qt are like baking soda and vinagre.

    6. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      What would stop the likes of Intuit from making an entirely custom, self-contained desktop application for Linux? Why would they have to even consider Qt or GTK to begin with?

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    7. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

      Tab catalog (or anything that uses GL).
      Tabs on top (at least under KDE, can't hide the titlebar, though Chrome handles this fine).
      Multi-threading (UI becomes unresponsive while connecting to sites).
      Smooth scrolling.
      Integration with whatever desktop FF is running under (for themes, file-save dialog, etc).

      A lot of this may be the fault of X or GTK or other libraries that FF builds on top of, but the point is that if there weren't competing Linux desktop platforms (or if those platform teams were at least as interested in having their apps integrate smoothly as they are in one-upping one another), Firefox on Linux could probably work as smoothly as it does on Windows.

      But feel free to insert pithy comments about MS plugins and completely miss my point.

      --
      Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    8. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

      OK, so you don't want Quicken (or other proprietary stuff). Did you read the rest of my post? Do you use the nVidia or ATI drivers or Flash? Do you have any peripherals that you want to connect that will require hardware vendors to provide specs to get the open source support you want? Do you realize that vendors only do that when they think enough of their customers want it?

      But feel free to tell them you don't want their drivers, etc. I guess you don't want anybody else to have them either.

      --
      Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    9. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

      They run 'without issue', as long as you don't think it's an issue that their widgets look different than the rest of your apps, or that their file/open dialogs have different functionality than your other apps, or, yes, that the order of the OK and Cancel buttons may be reversed from the rest of your apps. Silly little things, but there's no need for these little differences.

      And yes, some Windows apps look a little different from others, but not in fundamental ways like how they interact with the filesystem, or deal with MIME mappings. These are real issues. Maybe ones you don't mind working around, but then again, don't you think toolkit interoperability (at all possible levels) is at least as important as competing redesigns of the desktop paradigm?

      --
      Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    10. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      Ok valid points, but windows is no better. First of all, most of those gtk and qt apps have the SAME problem in windows. Second of all, most applications (unless written by Microsoft themselves) look COMPLETELY different from one another. Go look at some screenshots of firewalls, quicken, games, office and firefox and tell me with a straight face that they all look the "same"!

      The reason it's noticed in linux (at least by windows users) is because so much IS the same, that the small discrepancies stand out more.

    11. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since 2004 there hasn't been a version of Quicken for my country. (UK) A linux version for 2 penniles nerds that'll bitch that GnuCash is better, just coz its free? Yeah, right.

    12. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically I would argue that these early adopters have already benefited by supporting Linux. Linux is still a large platform, especially among "power users" and in information technology. Many games for example support running servers on Linux, even if they don't support the client, because it increases not only the number of servers but also the quality of servers -- people running Linux tend to do a better job at stuff like this.

      Nvidia benefits because Linux powers 95%+ of the world's supercomputers and without support for Linux people would be using ATI in their supercomputers instead, which is a pretty big market, not to mention Nvidia gets to brag about how their hardware is used in X number of the world's largest supercomputers.

      Intel and AMD benefit because of the large number of computers which run Linux -- not in the desktop world, but the server world, where linux is IIRC 30%+ of the market, and a large majority within web hosting (making up 49 of the top 50 web sites).

      In short I'd say your post is short sighted. Businesses jumped on linux *after* it was profitable for them to do so, not before, and most businesses who have invested in Linux have seen a benefit from doing so (otherwise they'd stop supporting it). Recently indie game publishers have been jumping on Linux because, despite Linux users being a fairly small minority among gamers, Linux has turned out to be more than 30% of the indie game market, larger even then Mac OS X. I base this statistic off the humble indie game bundles that were released recently. Size alone is not the only indication of how profitable something will be. 90% of a small market can be larger than 1% of a large market.

    13. Re:There's a reason it *can* be on your desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The desktop is irrelevant as far as the survival of Linux is concerned. Linux is a server OS; the best, in my opinion. Broadcom supports Linux because their enterprise customers want it, not because of desktop usage.

  72. Or maybe GDB? by TooMad · · Score: 1

    Programmer here. I develop for both Linux and Windows. With my limited knowledge of Linux the only debugger I know of is GDB. Yes, there are things like DDD but all of the ones I have seen appear to be a wrapper for GDB. I find it faster to do printf debugging on Linux than deal with GDB or a GDB wrapper. Windows I have Visual Studio, if you've used VS, enough said. While for the end user Linux is certainly better than Windows (unless you are a gamer) the developer is still going to pass his "savings" or lack thereof to his paying or non-paying customers. If I am wrong and there is something on Linux commercial or not please tell me so I can go out and buy/download it now.

    1. Re:Or maybe GDB? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Any decent IDE will wrap gdb and provide facilities largely similar to VS. Try KDevelop or Qt Creator (the latter is my personal favorite - lightweight and fast, but feels a lot like VS). But even Eclipse CDT or Anjuta should do it.

  73. Hardware support.... LOL by sgent · · Score: 2

    Linux has hardware support for things 20 years old that almost no one needs on a modern computer. Windows 7/Vista has support for almost every piece of hardware being sold today -- Linux does not.

    1. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by quintus_horatius · · Score: 1

      You sir are misinformed. Linux not only has good support for my current hardware, it also runs on my 20-year-old Pentium Pro. Show me a Windows version that does that.

    2. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by jittles · · Score: 1

      Show me a linux distro that has USB 3 drivers for my laptop or desktop. I haven't found any. Windows does.

    3. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by kwark · · Score: 1

      You forgot to tell us what laptop and desktop you are using.

    4. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by jittles · · Score: 1

      Dell Precision 4600 with a Renesas Electronucs USB 3.0 host controller and an asrock P67 Extreme 6 with an Etron USB 3.0 host controller

    5. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by kayoshiii · · Score: 1

      Linux has supported USB3 since 2009 or kernel version 2.6.31... If your kernel is newer than that you should have usb3 supported.

    6. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you're a gamer -- which I bet you are -- that's complete bullshit.

    7. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by Shompol · · Score: 1

      If USB3 manufacturers choose to boycott Linux, then I have no option but to boycott them in return. By the time usb3 becomes indispensable someone will hack a driver for it. For now I am a happy member of 99.9% of computer users who do just fine without it.

      Another example: Blueray disks. No Linux support. Surprisingly enough, no Mac support either. And most people are just fine without them. The manufacturers have a choice of easing the uber-secure nonsense, or watch their monstrous product continue to flop into oblivion.

    8. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by jittles · · Score: 1

      Sure the kernel supports the technology. But there is no driver for either one. At least not in the distros I have tried.

    9. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by kwark · · Score: 1

      What specific controller? The uPD720200 works fine with Debian/stable, but the uPD720201 and uPD720202 appear to not be released yet. The Etron seems to be work in progress, you'll have to install the drivers yourself.

    10. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      I thought Linux supported Blu-Ray data discs just fine Heck, I know that YDL users were able to mount PS3 games and explore the filesystem....blu-ray movies are a different matter, of course.

    11. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by Noughmad · · Score: 1
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    12. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by dokc · · Score: 1

      Linux has hardware support for things 20 years old that almost no one needs on a modern computer. Windows 7/Vista has support for almost every piece of hardware being sold today -- Linux does not.

      Says who?
      Show us some arguments (like e.g http://www.linux-drivers.org/index.html)

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
    13. Re:Hardware support.... LOL by jittles · · Score: 1

      As I mentioned to another poster, the problem isn't with the Kernel supporting USB. The problem is that the manufacturer does not supply Linux drivers, and none have been developed yet. I don't get to specify the computer my work gives me, so there is nothing I can do about my particular circumstance. I am just happy I have the choice to use Linux on the work machine.

  74. Choice... by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    Linux provides choice, and in virtually every other aspect of daily life there are choices... The idea of a computing monoculture is an anomaly, not something to aspire to.

    There are many brands of virtually all consumer goods, and most brands then have a large number of models to choose from. There's no reason software should be any different. The only thing we need, is standards so people can choose the software they want and then interoperate on a level playing field.

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  75. May? May? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Man, its game over. Years ago. Any decent open source program worth using has been ported to Windows.

    Linux on the desktop. Yall are dreaming, err, having a nightmare.

  76. what happens when Google Docs gets truly robust by tokul · · Score: 1

    what happens when Google Docs gets truly robust enough for business and high-end document production

    Record low temperatures will be reported in hell.

    Do you really think that serious business can entrust its data to some online application. Security, privacy concerns and customer record handling laws won't let them do that. In some places even translate.google.com is not trusted.

  77. The desktop is dead by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

    The argument that Linux won or lost the desk top is moot. It won some, lost most. The problem wasn't Linux, it was the microsoft monopoly and influence in business. Even though Linux was a superior product, the fortune 500 resists change. This is why IBM OS/2 failed as well.

    The desktop as we know it is going away. Sure, engineers will have their "workstations" (desktops really), but the general consumer is going mobile. Windows will dies as a predominant platform and be replaced by a mobile OS. That will probably be based on FreeBSD or Linux.

  78. Internet connections vary by tepples · · Score: 1

    If they're all running Chrome, what's the diff.

    Some devices have always-on, high-volume connections to the Internet. Others do not.

  79. the day that Linux takes over desktop market by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    is the same day the desktop market isn't important.

    Linux is an excellent Server OS a really good Workstation OS, it blends itself well to work well on mobile device. But the desktop is the doughnut hole Linux never really filled. Mostly because that market has some really strong players in that market. Microsoft Windows and Apple.

    Windows dominated because it has the bulk of the consumer apps, and hardware manufactures make sure they have drivers for that platform. Apple is next because it has always specialized in that area and has a real smooth seamless Environment (Please no anecdotal stories about how you were able to do X so much faster or better on your Linux box while the Mac guy struggled to do it, even though OS X was suppose to be the best at it) that is easy to use and efficient for desktop usage, they also have a tight control on the hardware so there is less hardware drivers they need to code.

    Linux has always have a moving uphill battle for Desktop mindset, Good drivers have and still are always a problem. Companies who do provide closed source drivers are treated like scum and in order for say Ubuntu to install them you have to agree that you are truly a bad person link to get access to the driver. And many of the open source drivers may not have the best specs so they have issues. Much of their UI choices are not done by UI experts but software developers who think they know what a good UI is.

    Linux will probably win the Desktop share at some point and it will probably be a really good system... However by that time the markets will be in a way that Microsoft and Apple don't care about the Desktop anymore, and are probably moving more towards mobile solutions away from the old Desktop Model. Leaving room for Linux to come in and take it... However at that time the Average Joe will not really need a Desktop or Laptop anymore and it will be more for Software Developers and High Computing uses like CAD and Modeling. The Desktop will fall to where the Mainframe is today. Still alive and strong but no longer a driving force in a usage and reserved for things it is really good at.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  80. it's a trick by bugi · · Score: 1

    I can only imagine the discussion that preceded the writing: Let's trick those zealots into trading their core values of freedom and openness for hierarchy and control by dangling shiny irrelevancies in front of them. Then we'll have have fewer targets and might gain some traction. Sure why not, everything else has failed.

  81. Linux has no goals (except own-goals) by petes_PoV · · Score: 1

    Since the lInux community consists of individuals each in it for his/her own reasons, there is no possibility of defining a coherent strategy or set of targets for the thing (you can't really consider it a product, or package or anything that implies there's an overall direction or design to it) that we call "Linux".

    While some might reason that this is its greatest strength, it's also the reason why it has, does and will fail to be adopted outside the geek world. If you were creating a building you'd use materials that stuck together and formed strong shapes that could support each other. Where this happens in the Linux world, it's purely by accident or at best a localised phenomenon that lasts right up to the first forking. After that you've just got a collection of pebbles again. Each more-or-less strong in itself, but not usable en-masse to make a strong structure from.

    Compare that with the MS products, or Apple's products. They might not have the strength of the individual Linux pebbles, but what there is does hang together to some extent and allows organisations to use those products as a foundation to build their businesses on.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
  82. Never heard of IMAP? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    This guy thinks of Thunderbird and Evolution as "offline e-mail readers." Really, that's what he calls them, using "offline" very consistently. And while it's true that they can be used offline, and maybe some people still use 'em that way (POP download, hang up the modem, read your emails off the ISP's clock, send replies to local SMTP, then dial up again and let the email go out), referring to them that way shows a pretty major misunderstanding of what is by far the most common use case of mail readers.

    So right off the bat, before he even really gets into the real topic at hand (web browsers as generic (but powerful) terminals, replacing specialized applications running locally), he's made it harder for people to take him seriously.

    All that aside, while I understand people's attraction to web mail and other web services, the author's premise really seems to be that this shit is the inevitable future. Hey, for the short-term, he may really be right. Most people are getting away with it, and putting their heads in the sand whenever they read a news story about spying, "cyber-warfare" and other DoS stories, the lack of accountability for free services, etc. But long-term, really?

    Do you think there's a trend toward less spying (both by governments and in terms of the diversification of other parties who do it)? Do you think liability laws won't catch up or might even get more lenient?

    Those seem like bad predictions, to me. I don't think working on local clients is last decade's battle at all; it's next decade's battle, after this luddite flirtation with the mainframe passes. People still take "the cloud ate my homework" and "I didn't know storing confidential info over there is a bad idea" excuse cards today, and I don't think there is a trend toward people generally acting more responsible, but nevertheless, people are eventually going to want good results, so they'll hold people who inappropriately use the cloud responsible, even if that motivation doesn't come from within.

    Local clients will return.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    1. Re:Never heard of IMAP? by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      ISP's are stingy with space and don't support IMAP. I do use IMAP with Gmail though, no ads, AND you can use gnupg and s/mime that way...if you want.

  83. My TiVo and my Blu-ray player run Linux by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    My TiVo and my Blu-ray player run Linux.

    And yet, you will never be allowed to run these selfsame Linuxen ironically enslaved to the Content Lords.

  84. Distributed apps = linux on the desktop by ukpyr · · Score: 1

    So the market looks likes it's going like this - mobile & thin clients for consumers and light producers of content, workstations for people making computationally expensive "stuff", and servers serving up stuff for both groups. Just my opinion, but it's well reasoned.

    It doesn't matter what host OS you'll be using for your apps - it'll be over HTTP and everyone knows that linux and friends are the best choice on the server side. :P
    Hence, linux is on the desktop - just not occupied with the boring crap of running a browser GUI.

    Server is the desktop. It just comes over the "cloud". duh, winning.

    OP is a troll though all the same.

  85. duh, make it better, you fools! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the braindead decisions Gnome and KDE have made with their interfaces, I'm finding linux less usable than ever. It's actually slid backward from where it was a couple years ago!

    Another slide: knoppix, king of all live disks has stopped doing its thing and is designed for blind people now. Nice.

    And how about the youtubes? That's been insanely popular forever. How's progress coming with FLOSS flash so users can actually use that site? Poorly? It's been on stallman's high priority program list forever. Oh, that's right the community just laughs at him instead of getting linux in working order.

    And the argument is really "it would be more popular if people weren't arguing online"?! Take this as a wakeup call. This is a quality issue. Build it and they will come.

  86. hilarious error by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    Local clients will return.

    Ha! Near the end I kept saying "local clients" where I meant "local applications". That just happens to include email clients. ;-)

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  87. Performance is what counts!!! by Openstandards.net · · Score: 1
    I multi-boot my bedroom pc, which is my primary pc when i'm home. very very happy with ubunutu. 6 seconds to boot. pc is ready 2 seconds after i log in. wireless connects very quickly and is solid. shuts down in 6 seconds flat every time. updates are non-intrusive. i dread booting into windows where it takes 30 seconds to boot, 60 seconds after login before i can click on anything, updates are a nitemare, pc response is slow, and shutdown is at least 30 seconds if there are no updates to install. the software on ubuntu blows away the options on windows, too. i'm typing this with ubuntu.

    When someone asks me to help them get rid of their virus, instead of telling them I can't help them, I now rush over with an Ubuntu install CD. Months later, I ask them how they feel about the difference, they say, "the computer is a lot faster." When I ask them if they lost any abilities, they say, "no". In all honestly, most users can't really tell that much of a difference. Facebook and Youtube are Facebook and Youtube.

    Performance is what people want now, even if they only intend to use their web browser. Their computer should boot and shutdown fast, and not put barriers between them and the apps they choose to use, web or desktop. Ubuntu is far superior in this respect. With Windows, you pay $100-200 more for an OS that is worth less than Ubuntu.

    So, why do people pay for Windows? Because they don't have a choice. They go to Best Buy, and there is not one computer that offers a lower price if you don't want Windows!!! This is the real problem, protected by Microsoft's unethical behavior of taking advantage of Congress' lack of understanding by insisting that if a consumer doesn't pay for Windows, they plan to steal it. Why on earth would people steal an OS that is far inferior to the free and legal OS?!?

  88. ChromeOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'But what happens when Google Docs gets truly robust enough for business and high-end document production?

    Then businesses will start running ChromeOS and Linux wins the desktop.

  89. The Goldilocks zone by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    This guy is totally right. All this choice is just too confusing. There are too many competing options, and it's ruining things for everybody.

    (OK, I did spot the sarcasm, but...)

    What's needed is the Goldilocks solution: just enough choice. A monopoly is bad. A new option every month is equally bad (diluting the talent pool and ensuring that nothing is ever finished). A couple of strong competitors for each major application = good.

    vi, or emacs?

    Sorry: nano.
    Seriously: it doesn't matter one jot. Anybody who has an opinion on vi or emacs will have the appropriate variant installed in a jiffy. What matters is that when Joe Luser double-clicks on a .txt file it should open in something which most emphatically isn't a marginally desktopized vi or emacs, has a "File: Save As" menu option and which is labelled "Text Editor" and not "KGViMACS2". When they double-click on a .doc or a .docx it doesn't really matter whether it opens in OpenOffice, LibreOffice or KOffice provided (a) it does a half-decent job of converting the .doc and (b) is described in the menu as "Word Processor".

    The real problem is not choice: its Linux, you always have choice if you know how. The problem is making sensible default choices for non-techy users who can't easily change things. Sticking to those choices for more than 6 months is good, too.

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    1. Re:The Goldilocks zone by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      What matters is that when Joe Luser double-clicks on a .txt file it should open in something which most emphatically isn't a marginally desktopized vi or emacs, has a "File: Save As" menu option and which is labelled "Text Editor" and not "KGViMACS2".

      I'm running XFCE on Fedora 15 and text files open in gedit, which reminds me, though I actually prefer Cream-ified gvim to gedit.

      When they double-click on a .doc or a .docx it doesn't really matter whether it opens in OpenOffice, LibreOffice or KOffice provided (a) it does a half-decent job of converting the .doc and (b) is described in the menu as "Word Processor".

      .doc opens in LibreOffice Writer, which is named LibreOffice Writer in the Menus, no popup with anything like "Word Processor" Oh wait, they weren't on...never mind... LibreWriter's says: Create and edit text and graphics in letters, reports, documents and Web pages by using Writer. And there's also a "Show Generic Application Names" option that changes it's name in the menu to "Word Processor"

  90. While reading that blog post by Drunkulus · · Score: 0

    You could have spent that time listening to Rebecca Black's new tune or teasing a cat with a laser pointer. 5 minutes you'll never get back.

  91. Open File Standards by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    And if the file formats can be opened in both, it shouldn't matter.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  92. The browser for everything? by tommy8 · · Score: 1

    Is it just me or does anyone else think the "all the apps will live in the browser" mantra is a little over hyped. Using the browser is great for a lot of things but it isn't for everything. No matter how fast your computer is a native app will always run faster. Also the cloud depends upon having unlimited internet access. Verizon just recently got rid of unlimited data plans and other wireless companies throttle; that is a total cloud killer. I'm sure cable internet companies like Comcast are also going to start throttling (if they haven't already) or charging more because why are they going to give away all that bandwith for free to some guy that watches 2 streaming netflix movies a day when his neighbor just uses the net to check his e-mail and look at his favorite news web sites? Further, with android and the iphone the app stores are very popular and all those apps run independent of the browser (atleast I think so I don't own a phone that runs either). It seems all apps living in the browser is dead on arrival.

  93. You got chocolate in my penut butter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trix are for kids.

    How are these arguments relative to Linux?
    the guy is a dipwad.

  94. It's on my desktop. by blair1q · · Score: 1

    I don't get this. Why would anyone care if Linux gets a shot at the desktops of big companies? It's not like free software is liable to make a bunch of money from being there. Or at all. It's the 0-cost solution, and being on more desktops won't change that. And it won't get improved faster just because it's there. The bug-reporting base is pretty mature by now. And, as I said, there won't be a lot of money coming in to create anything like and "investment" in it.

    It's on my desktop. Well, this one of my desktops. That's enough for it to be alive. It really doesn't matter if General Mills or Kodak or First Solar or Lehman Bros. (what? oh, uh, just e.g. that one, then) has it. Doesn't make shit-all of a difference to most people who use it now.

    1. Re:It's on my desktop. by tommy8 · · Score: 1

      Well I'm sure that the computer makers like Dell or HP would rather install Linux for free instead of paying Microsoft for a license.

  95. Nothing to see here, move along... by seandiggity · · Score: 1

    At best, this "story" is complete trollbait and flamebait. At worse, it's an advertisement for something most of us have never heard of (Prezi?). OMG kill all the KDE5 and Gnome3 devs or teh Googles and Prezis take over! Gnome2 and KDE3 for everrrrr....

    --
    Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
  96. It's ease of use that will doom Linux.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a skilled computer user, and I stick with Windows for very simple reasons:

    1) I'm used to it.
    2) I don't feel like sacrificing a virgin and then standing on one foot as I rub my belly whilst tapping my nose to fix something.
    3) All three OS choices are equal. It's just a matter of market share that makes one more of a target than others. Of course that also means, though highly skilled users exist, there are plenty of users that don't have a clue: resulting in infections. People will use the OS that works for them, and for the population in general they want it to work with their devices, video cards, games, etc; all without any extra fuss.

    My time is valuable, and I don't wish to spend it fixing a problem that either shouldn't exist, or take more than a few tweaks. The last time I used Ubuntu they went with a tablet layout for the desktop, and I shouldn't have needed to fuss as much as I did to fix it. After a good deal of fuss I got Slackware 13 to show video (once I remembered to switch to VESA as their NV driver sucks and wouldn't load so I could get the NVIDIA binary after switching to safe KDE as normal KDE kept failing to load.)

    I have quite a few friends in IT that agree, we like Linux, but until those problems are solved it still has to work. Right now Ubuntu has the greatest chance of making Linux a more used desktop. Once they get their heads out of their asses, and reverse that terrible table GUI decision they will be back on track. Up next is an easier office install, or getting some of the more advanced features

    Along with the Open Source ideal, although noble, following it can create problems. Like I said. Even skilled, intelligent users want things to just work so they can get to their games faster, or do their other work. So I disagree that it's fragmentation that's a problem. It's refusing to make it so everything done is the easy way, and trying to claim that "OMG it hash to be command line witsh text edited confgsh files or you a schtupid loserch." It's also seen as a hobbyist OS for the most part because of the amount of work you have to do.

    Sorry, but that really is the way many view the people that force that down our throats. We want to be able to make a few clicks, and see a tooltip on an option we haven't used for a long time. Not spend time reading a man file, and then hoping we don't make a typo so we have to hunt through the entire command. It's not that I don't want to work, but the fact that I want more time to do IMPORTANT work. AKA I want to be able to spend time writing an Android App, or working in Excel for my accounting studies (getting ready to go into my second semester that even my bro says you eat, breath, and sleep it for a semester.) If we get our own CPA office, we'll get a Mac Mini to act as a server since it's a really cheap solution for a login server (sorry but LDAP is a pain to set up), and we can connect it to an external raid through a very fast port.

    1. Re:It's ease of use that will doom Linux.. by aix+tom · · Score: 1

      All pretty valid points. Although for me, points 1) and 2) make me stick with Linux instead of Windows.

      1) because I'm just used to it, and 2) because I stand a better chance of figuring out what the problem is, since there is more information available to me on how stuff works, straight down to the source.

      Of course the *main* plus point would be that *you* have control over how your system works. Which, sadly, has been on decline with a lot of Linux projects. What I really liked was to look at project A,B,C,D, decide which one I liked best, then started using that. But nowadays that's completely impossible. When I pick project A, I can pretty much bet someone there will get it in their mind "oooooohhh, we need to be more like project C with the next release", and then I'm stuck with something that works like C, which I DIDN'T LIKE when I made my decision to pick project A in the first place.

      And, I too, like stuff done the "easy way". Ironically that made me go to Gentoo and Archlinux instead of Ubuntu. They might be somewhat more "complicated" on the technological side, but on the other hand they don't throw spanners into the works because of "ideological" reasons. For example, the media players just work out of the box instead of having to explicitly install "non free" packages in multiple additional steps.

      The main OSes have become a lot more alike. Since the 90s Linux has become a lot "GUI-ey", while Windows has a lot more command line possibilities than it had in those days. So from a technologically standpoint I could live will the major OSes pretty well. But what is becoming worse and worse these days is that things that could be possible *technologically* are disabled for ideological reasons.

    2. Re:It's ease of use that will doom Linux.. by gorzek · · Score: 1

      Well said.

      I find Linux to be an absolutely wonderful system to run a server on and to develop with. If I ever need to set up a simple server for any purpose, Linux can handle it without problems. You just set it up and leave it alone.

      The desktop experience, on the other hand, just isn't there. Drivers are still too finicky. I have to tweak more things than I prefer to get it to work the way I want. Ubuntu wasn't bad until they jumped onto this whole "Unity" concept, which I don't care for at all. I'm pretty accustomed to using a Windows desktop and I don't see Linux offering any particular advantages in terms of desktop productivity. At best, it is equal to Windows to Mac. Once you factor in games and driver compatibility, though, this doesn't hold true.

      I like Linux, and I think there is a viable niche for it on the desktop: low-power, very cheap computers, perhaps sold or given away in developing countries. It is flexible enough to run on highly limited hardware. Those are real strengths, but there is just nothing about it that makes it good enough to supplant Windows for most people. It doesn't offer a "killer app."

      The Linux world has been working on the desktop for over 10 years now. That's about as long as Mac OS X has been around. It still has an utterly pathetic level of desktop penetration. When is it time to say "enough is enough"?

    3. Re:It's ease of use that will doom Linux.. by bberens · · Score: 1

      If you purchase a computer with Windows, Linux, or OSX pre-installed I would suggest that getting from point A (opening the box) to point B (compiling an Android App) takes the same approximate amount of work. And in none of those cases would it require a command line. Ironically you'd be using the same tools to do that development any of the platforms so the existence or lack thereof for tooltips should be the same. If you use Windows because it's familiar then that's fine. If you use Excel (and hence Windows) because of market saturation/compatibility then that's fine also. But it's perfectly plausible to use any of the platforms listed without making any use of the command line. I personally use a mix of Windows and Linux and I rarely use the command line, and when I do it's stuff that generally exists on either platform (ping, telnet, etc.)

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    4. Re:It's ease of use that will doom Linux.. by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 2

      Do we really need to repeat this AGAIN? The *ONLY* reason windows appears to have better driver support is because the manufacturer/retailer spends all the time getting the drivers for you. Tell you what, buy a computer (with some windows version on it, such as windows 7), then wipe the harddrive and install linux plus windows (a *different* version than what came with it, such as Vista or XP). Now see which one takes longer to get FULLY working with drivers.

      Every time I have done this, windows took SIGNIFICANTLY longer, linux usually just "worked".

      Oh, and the only reason Mac seems to work so well is that there is extremely limited hardware available for it.

    5. Re:It's ease of use that will doom Linux.. by SQLGuru · · Score: 1

      No need to be anonymous. I've said the same thing for quite a while.

      Until someone can tell me which version of Linux is best for which uses and which window manager is best for which uses, I'll stick to Windows where I don't have to think about those decisions. I'm not scared of config files or compiling code or anything like that. But with Linux, there are so many spin-offs because one person decided they didn't like one aspect of this other version and it's a jumbled mess with no central control (that's a pro and a con). But, with too many choices, Linux will never win the desktop......because the mindless masses don't want that much choice.

    6. Re:It's ease of use that will doom Linux.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      “Mopping Up can be a lot of fun. In the Mopping Up phase, Evangelism’s goal is to put the final nail into the competing technology’s coffin, and bury it in the burning depths of the earth. Ideally, use of the competing technology becomes associated with mental deficiency, as in, “he believes in Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, and Linux on the desktop.” Just keep rubbing it in, via the press, analysts, newsgroups, whatever. Make the complete failure of the competition’s technology part of the mythology of the computer industry.”

      –James Plamondon, Microsoft

    7. Re:It's ease of use that will doom Linux.. by Darfeld · · Score: 1

      I would like to say it's the silliest thing I have ever read, but sadly, it's not.

      Still, this is plain stupid : if you want to try linux and don't know which distro to get, just pick one mainstream, preferably known for being user-friendly (Ubuntu is still the simplest distribution to begin). As you say, most distribution is about particular choices that are irrelevant to you, so you shouldn't even bother with that. (Well at first... you can always choose to think about it later, or not.)
      Some jerks will say you picked the wrong distribution for reasons good and bad, but the same jerks will still critic your choice to stay on windows anyway... (I may be a jerk saying your reason to stay on windows is stupid, but at least I won't critic your choice whatever OS you Choose, and by that I mean "not use by default".)

      Multiples distributions exist because some people aren't satisfied with the other ones. That fine : They work to have what they want and share it with others. It's nice really. If you're not interested, just stay mainstream, it really isn't as complicated as you make it sound.

      And then if you don't like, say, the windows manager, you can change it, because their are alternatives. And that is just great, because if you don't like what one thing is becoming, you can try something else. But as a beginner, you shouldn't bother to much with choosing a distro, since you'll only get a good idea of what you want with practice. In the meantime, the choices of a mainstream distribution are as fine as microsoft or OSX choices in usability.

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  97. Shup Up Or The Desktop Gets It! by Phil-14 · · Score: 1

    Dudes! Stop arguing about how y'all don't like all the nice 'innovations' we're making to the desktop with the new Gnome Interface/Unity, or the Linux Desktop Quest gets it! I'm not fooling around!

    --
    (currently testing something about signatures here)
  98. You're missing the point. by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1
    You're missing the point... entirely. The point of linux is not to "win" by securing as many desktops as possible. The idea is for it to work well, to allow users to choose how they do things, and to effectively run non-desktop systems. Yes, it works great on my laptop and my desktop at home, but without a wide variety of choices, I may never have given it a serious try. What should we do, pick names of apps/tools/desktop environments out of a hat, then give up on the rest? I might not be a linux user if the community had agreed on KDE and abandoned Gnome, as one example. What's next, one distro-fits-all? One company making decisions? Hooray for standardization, but I'll pass.

    Unity in software selection will not make linux better, and crippling its flexibility to meet wide-ranging needs would kill it. Sorry if such diversity is too confusing. There is a company based in California that is still making products you might like if you don't like having to make any decisions for yourself, or one in Washington that is winning the popularity contest if that is more your thing.

    --
    This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
  99. I wish people would just call it Unix, nix or *nix by BlueCoder · · Score: 1

    I am a BSD person myself. But we all run the same software more than less. Our apps run on windows.

    The beauty of the situation is true for Unix from the start. It's software and we have choices. It's all about mixing it up.

  100. What happens? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I'd like to know is what the author thinks happens when Google or whoever you entrust your data to, decides that you're not using your real name and disable your account...

    Old lessons that apparently need to be relearned.

  101. Thanks for the soundbite by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 1

    Thank you for the response.

    If the answer to question "Will you still use this product with no documentation and a non-intuitive interface?" is "Yes, because its technically superior to X", that product won't make a dime unless its a niche market.

    That's a brilliant soundbite! I've been looking for something like that for awhile. I'll definitely pass that on.

  102. in a sense I agree by renegade600 · · Score: 1

    Most new linux users don't know there is a difference between Gnome and KDE. They don't know the difference between evolution and thunderbird. They don't know the difference between libre and open office. and I can go on. They just pick a distro, install and use it. That is why I do not see how old arguments can put an end to linux desktops. What will end the linux desktop will be the actions of the popular distros,

    One of the biggest problems with the linux community was all the different distros. It made things very confusing and if you picked the wrong one to install, it could either be a nightmare or make you a believer. Then came ubuntu. It was doing good and turned a lot of windows users into linux believers until the last update. The last update turned linux into a nightmare for many because of unity. It just plain did not work on a lot of computers. Then there were those who did an upgrade and lost their installed programs because the latest ubuntu decided to change default programs. IMO, when you do an upgrade, you leave the install programs alone and just install the os upgrades. Actions like this is what will turn users off from linux and this is what I believe will kill the linux desktop.

  103. Linux will never be the dominant desktop. So what. by Aggrav8d · · Score: 1
    1. The OS matters less every day. As long as the web browser is compliant and the OS is invisible, 99% of users are happy.
    2. Since Linux utterly fails to be invisible (I have never had to 'man' anything in OSX) it is hindering its own acceptance
    3. Only an organized group with a plan is ever going to make a difference. The kind of boys who want to work on linux are hard-headed, stubborn loners who want it their way. They will never worry about the end user's experience. They will only work with others as long as it suits them. This kind of selfish treachery is we can't have nice things.
    4. The only people who crow about the year of the linux desktop are the people who get paid to write fluff pieces for tech blogs.

    Stop it, already. You're embarrassing me as a member of the human race.

  104. This Troll is completely wrong by John+Jamieson · · Score: 1

    A better title would be "The desktop lost the battle to Linux". With Android, more personal computing devices ship with Linux than any other OS.

  105. Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Variety, freedom of choice, and freedom itself are the reasons Linux is strong. Linux would not be the same if everyone used the same desktop shell, same software, and used the same ideas. It is the in the forefront of the movement and it drives creativity, innovation, and productivity. If it was not these things it would just be another windows or iOS.

  106. Embedded != desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux does not have a shot at the desktop and never will.

    Define desktop. If it is the principle UI that you use to communicate with the Internet and run applications, then...

    There are 7 billion people. ~2 billion PCs and ~5 billion phones worldwide. The growth UI will be in phones and other low cost devices. *That*, is the new desktop and it will be Linux-based.

    My TiVo and my Blu-ray player run Linux. That could be considered a media desktop. Or media UI. For some, sadly, TV is their principle app.

    Linux has won the desktop OS wars. It's just that nobody knows it yet.

    As for desktop UI apps, the future is HTML5.

    Firstly, I don't consider "embedded" to be equivalent to "desktop." Set-top boxes like DVRs are embedded products, not desktops.

    You're correct that Linux has essentially won the embedded space. Linux has won the server space. Linux seems quite likely to win the smartphone space, or at the very least will be a major player.

    The real question is, why does anyone care about the desktop space anymore? So long as you can choose a Linux desktop if you really want to, does it matter whether Linux has only 2% of it?

    Consider that Apple has a much larger (~8-10 %) share of the desktop/laptop (at least in US markets) and yet Apple is focused like a laser on its mobile (phone/tablet) products, which generate most of Apple's cash right now. The only OS vendor that seems to care about the desktop market is Microsoft, and they're only doing that because they seem to be totally inept at everything else.

    1. Re:Embedded != desktop by datajerk · · Score: 1

      My Apple IIe and I'll bet C64 users would disagree. They were embedded systems and desktops.

      That started to change as floppy drives become popular and then HD, and then bloated but much more capable OSes.

      Today, embedded may not be a desktop, but embedded can be a desktop.

  107. He's got a point. by jimicus · · Score: 1

    The popularity of Windows - and, for that matter, Windows' own admin tools - demonstrates that the world does not want a choice of a dozen different window managers, toolkits and widget libraries. The world wants one that works well, that most applications integrate with.

    Right now, it would not be unreasonable to describe the process of a project as:

    1. A commercial software firm comes up with an idea. At this point, we are at year one.
    2. They demonstrate that the idea is a good one (by getting lots of customers). This takes them a while; let's say it takes us up to year three.
    3. Microsoft spot this and either buy them or copy the idea and integrate it with an existing product. This process takes a year or two, so we're now about halfway through year 4.
    3. Another few years pass; the product goes through an iteration or two and becomes reasonably well-known (Year 7). A number of F/OSS projects are started, attempting to emulate it - either from scratch or by taking an existing codebase. Most die on the vine; a few don't.

    The complete product is quite complicated to replicate, so the F/OSS product starts out with a more reasonable target of replicating the functionality of an earlier version to what is current at this point - let's say they try to replicate the product as it was in year 4.
    4. It's damn hard to attract developers to a fledgling F/OSS project. So development is slow; meanwhile Microsoft are ploughing on with more and more new features. The first RC of the F/OSS project is released some time in year 8 or 9. Note that at this point, the F/OSS product is five years behind the state of the art.
    5. More time passes. The next version of the F/OSS project aims to iron out the biggest bugs and bring it a little more up to date - but it typically takes 2 or more years for the F/OSS project to catch up 1 year's worth of progress from the commercial product(s) it apes. Before long, the F/OSS product is ten years behind its closest commercial competitor.

    We're seeing exactly this happen with Office and Windows vs. LibreOffice and Linux. By the time Samba actually releases version 4, I bet you anything you like the majority of Microsoft shops won't be using a traditional fileserver at all - they'll be storing everything on Sharepoint because a properly implemented Sharepoint installation gives you a complete, searchable document management system.

  108. Proffitt assumes "linux communities"... by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    ...give a rat's ass what he has on his desk.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  109. Funny... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The OS beneath Chrome is... Linux.

    Linux will loose next to nothing, the big losers will be Microsoft and Apple.

  110. Compatibility from 16-bit to 64-bit M$ Office by tepples · · Score: 1

    There are compatibility problems between [modern] Microsoft Office and [decade-and-a-half-old] Microsoft Office.

    I imagine far more employees would be regularly opening documents made in the past month than decade-old archived documents. But I also understand your edge case, and there's a workaround. Such a business could keep only a couple licenses for the ancient version and corresponding OS around. I guess one of the advantages of web-based* office software is that as the document format changes, all existing documents are supposed to be migrated automatically.

    * Definitions of "cloud" are cloudy, and I don't want to make FFVII analogies.

    1. Re:Compatibility from 16-bit to 64-bit M$ Office by nukenerd · · Score: 1

      I imagine far more employees would be regularly opening documents made in the past month than decade-old archived documents. But I also understand your edge case, and there's a workaround. Such a business could keep only a couple licenses for the ancient version and corresponding OS around.

      Not every office is working in sales or publishing weekly mags. I am in engineering where we frequently need to pull up specifications of kit designed 20+ years ago. We may be more regularly opening documents made in the last month, but it remains important to be able to open older ones too. I am talking about life-and-death safety matters.

      As for keeping some old software, we tried this but our IT people refused to allow it "because it could not be supported". WTF??? we were not asking for "support". We did manage to keep hidden an old laptop with Word Perfect on it for a while, until a new clerk spilled the beans to IT one day and they confiscated it (to send it to the crusher).

      MS claimed that Word (up to a certain version) could read WordPerfect docs, but they seemed out to punish us in the process. Our WP docs, originally in a sober Times Roman were displayed in some whacky font (Sans Comic AFAIR). Why TF could not MS Word have rendered these old documents in a sane font by default? As time went on, later versions of Word refused to open these old documants at all.

      What is needed is a standard document file format that all office software of all brands use, on all platforms. I thought we had achieved that with the Open Document Format, but MS opened the worm can again, doing their level best to sabotage it with their special pleading and their corruption of standards committees.

    2. Re:Compatibility from 16-bit to 64-bit M$ Office by lennier · · Score: 2

      As for keeping some old software, we tried this but our IT people refused to allow it "because it could not be supported". WTF??? we were not asking for "support".

      I can see you've never worked in IT.

      Protip: There's no such thing as an employee using a piece of software to do corporate business-critical data handling that "doesn't need support". Oh sure, they'll all swear they won't ever need support, when they buy/borrow/smuggle in Elephant Brand Cheapo Data Splicer Time Limited 30 Day Trial Edition (Siberian Language Localisation) Cracked By Hackerzb0y13, but when it comes to the day before yearly financial reports are due, suddenly it'll be "Oh by the way, can you please recover my budget spreadsheet files so I can do my presentation at eleven? I think my computer has a virus, because it's coming up "file unreadable, retry ignore?"".

      If you work for a company, your software needs support. Trust me on this.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    3. Re:Compatibility from 16-bit to 64-bit M$ Office by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > If you work for a company, your software needs support. Trust me on this.

      Well, I work for an organization. I came to the conclusion that software needs support, there is an IT dept. to provide it and now and then I get:
      - We need to redo your profile;
      - We need to reformat your PC;
      - We need to reinstall Windows.

      It reached the point I must search for a solution and give it to the IT guys so they can come and fix the computer with the solution I found (because I'm not entitled to fix my own PC, for security reasons).

      So, in my view, if you work for a company, your software needs support -- and guess what? You won't have it.

  111. Fights? by eexaa · · Score: 1

    I always thought the flamewars were a part of UNIX specification.

  112. Putting Business Docs In The Cloud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what happens when Google Docs gets truly robust enough for business and high-end document production

    At about that time, the idiocy of storing internal corporate documents on someone else's servers should start to occur to enough executives that we'll all stop using Google Docs.

  113. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These battles have already cost Linux the home PC market. Clusers cannot deal with it. As an IT pro, I prefer Linux to Windoze, but still use Win 7 x64 anyway, to escape the constant nightmares of retrograde via update, repositories disappearing, etc., etc. I have now tried switching four times in the last ten years, the last attempt being just a few months ago. I always give up after a few weeks. I need to spend my time fixing clusers' computers, not fighting with my own PC. And don't even get me started about trying to run it on a laptop.

    I've sadly concluded that Linux is like fusion power. It's said that fusion power is the power source of the future and always will be. Unless Linus leads a core of the best developers in a new direction, towards a more stable, more cluser-friendly distribution, Linux will remain the "better" desktop OS that very few people actually use. In percentage terms, that is.

  114. lost a long time ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, but with both KDE and Gnome jumping the shark a while back, Linux on the desktop was lost a long time ago, in my opinion. Now I just run my distro under VirtualBox when I need to tinker, as I have no server needs presently. I cannot imagine trying to explain the cashew workspace crap to my parents. They actually used KDE 3.5 for a while.

  115. Obviously uneducated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since the entire world had standardized on a single standard automobile and a single width train track and a single spoon design I have no doubt that the world will eventually standardize on a single operating system and graphical user interface.

    Sarcasm over, on to reality. The idea behind the "cloud" is a return to private terminals and public computing servers. Essentially our personal computing devices become terminals and our data storage is placed on a hard drive. Applications are run over the web like Google Docs. However, this will not eliminate the various operating systems or graphical user interfaces or devices. There will always be a range of devices with a range of operating systems and a range of GUIs. There will also probably always be client side applications for situations where a device can not be connected to the "cloud" or for stand-alone systems.

    Like always some things will evolve and some will become extinct as conditions change. Get over it.

  116. Yeah by Windwraith · · Score: 1

    I solved this situation by installing both Emacs and Vim. Suddenly the wars ended.

    (although jokes aside, I actually have "conflicting" apps installed, although I am a KDE user I have Unity around for just playing around and stuff like that. Same with Vim/Emacs. I don't care about install space (NOTE: ANYONE WHO COMPLAINS ABOUT THE BIiiiiIG SPACE REQUIREMENT OF QT/GTK/WHATEVER LIBRARIES CAN GO *censored*. It's less space than downloading a movie (even a legal one)), and at times it's fun to change around)

  117. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  118. Intentionally crippled desktops hurt Linux more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The new Gnome 3.0 is so crippled I can't use it. I've heard that Unity lifts a lot from the bizarre Mac interface, but haven't used Ubuntu since Unity came out. If Linux keeps crippling its own desktops, the few of us will simply quit using them. I'm going to have to migrate to KDE by the time Fedora 16 comes out this fall (I've used Gnome on Fedora since the 90s), to get back the functionality that was crippled in Gnome 3 that I depend on to do my work. Open source is supposed to be about customization and the user experience. The new "cripple cabals" deleting features and the ability to customize reminds me of Wikipedia article deletion squads. I do not want this to happen to open source!

  119. Linux Airlines by Ensign+Nemo · · Score: 2

    Disgruntled employees of all the other OS airlines decide to start their own airline. They build the planes, ticket counters, and pave the runways themselves. They charge a small fee to cover the cost of printing the ticket, but you can also download and print the ticket yourself. When you board the plane, you are given a seat, four bolts, a wrench and a copy of the seat-HOWTO.html. Once settled, the fully adjustable seat is very comfortable, the plane leaves and arrives on time without a single problem, the in-flight meal is wonderful. You try to tell customers of the other airlines about the great trip, but all they can say is, "You had to do what with the seat?"

    However, I believe this more accurately sums up one of the big problems with linux:
    Disgruntled employees of all the other OS airlines decide to start their own airline. They build the planes, ticket counters, and pave the runways themselves. They charge a small fee to cover the cost of printing the ticket, but you can also download and print the ticket yourself. When you board the plane, you are given a seat, four bolts, a wrench and a copy of the seat-HOWTO.html. Half of the passengers however decide that they dont like the #10 bolts used to fasten the chair down and that since Linux is all about choice they're going to improve the bolts. So they whip out their tap and die sets and proceed to 'do things their way'. They then proceed to tell everyone around them how good their bolts are. Half of the plane doesn't care because 'it's just a goddamn bolt' and the other half insists on doing it their own way because 'they can'. They then split up into 50 camps each with a slightly different bolt thread or length. The plane can't take off until all the chairs are fastened, so the plane never actually leaves the terminal. All the other airlines' passengers laugh as they take off because LinuxAir travelers insist on debating the same stupid shit over and over and over and over ...

    1. Re:Linux Airlines by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 2

      That is the dumbest analogy I've read in a long time (the very last part). What is the airplane supposed to represent? A distro? In that case, LinuxAir simply lets you use what-ever damn bolt you want for your own chair and they take off just the same.

    2. Re:Linux Airlines by lennier · · Score: 1

      When you board the plane, you are given a seat, four bolts, a wrench and a copy of the seat-HOWTO.html.

      That was Linux 1998.

      Linux/Gnome/Firefox 2011 is more like:

      You arrive at the airport. There is one shiny ticket counter with a single flashing button called "Book a Flight!" There's nowhere to enter a destination. You push the button, and you are automatically allocated a seat on the next available flight to somewhere. Your luggage is whisked away by a serving robot, which then diligently saws it in half so it will fit in the under-seat space. You don't need to do a thing! At the boarding gate, the destination changes every five minutes, and you get to go wherever the latest destination is. It's a surprise!

      Once on board, the seat automatically reconfigures itself to something almost but not exactly matching your height, and the whole plane's decor (and the location and flushing mechanism of the toilet) changes every five minutes. You can push a button to delay the changes, but if you push it more than three times a door will open beneath you and you will be dropped out into the sky without a parachute. If you want to sleep, though, you can press a special "Long Term Support" button which lets you push the button twenty times before the door opens.

      You can play music and videos on the in-flight entertainment console, but half of them won't display until you give signed permission from your lawyer. An attractive stewardess visits you every minute asking if you need anything, and giving you a shopping cart of items to buy, and a locker to store all the goods in your pocket, and especially your wallet and the names and addresses of all your friends. But she won't promise that the locker is secure, in fact she laughs when you ask for a key, because privacy is silly.

      Sometimes, when the decor reconfigures itself, the entire passenger deck will vanish and dump you into a barren cargo hold until you open a locked panel with a pocketknife, twist fifteen coloured wires together, count the number of sparks, and enter the result into a slide rule attached to ticking gearwork. But it's okay because there's a grubby diary in another locked panel with notes scribbled by the last passengers to take the flight, suggesting which wires you should cut and which you should twist. Sometimes the notes are wrong; sometimes they are just a string of insults. Sometimes following the notes will mean a wall doesn't reappear, or half a seat, or the plane may just stall entirely. But the answer is always in there somewhere, and it's very rare for the plane to completely crash nowadays.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    3. Re:Linux Airlines by cyclomedia · · Score: 1

      someone please make all the linux distro folk read the parent post, as an abused linux end user for over a decade this is exactly what it feels like

      --
      If you don't risk failure you don't risk success.
  120. Linux on the Tablet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'But what happens when Google Docs gets truly robust enough for business and high-end document production? Or Prezi gets enough mindshare to start an upwards trajectory of user numbers?' It should be the case that increasing reliance on cloud software will make it easier for businesses to choose Linux, but for that to happen, Linux communities need to stop fighting the old fights, says Proffitt."

    What has mostly hindered Linux on the Desktop has been Microsoft's exclusionary contracts with the major OEMs, that vast market share is now diluted with the development of other non-Desktop platforms like the iPAD, Microsoft recognises the writing is on the wall, that's why it is betting on the Cloud and the xBOX in your living room.

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  122. Problem with the linux community... by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

    ... is that they cannot accept imperfection. They are too close to the code and need to stop designing for themselves and design for the masses. One can have 1 version of linux for the engineers, the other for the desktop. No one cares about the obscure stuff linux people argue about. They just want stuff to "just work" and be easy to understand and use.

  123. the cloud crashes by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    "the cloud", as offered by various vendors, is proving too unreliable to be entrusted with critical data. I'd never put my core data, or my employer's, on the cloud. Most companies feel the same way.

  124. Excel workbooks by tepples · · Score: 1

    I see your point about Word documents getting archived to XPS or PDF. But wouldn't this be harder for Excel workbooks, which contain formulas?

    1. Re:Excel workbooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is. We have fortunate the situation that the custom workbooks, which are thankfully small are either converted to open document format (ods) or used with an old version of excel until regulations, markets or most likely product offerings of the suppliers have changed so much that the automated worksheets are useless.
      Most official government forms are offered as templates, with minimal to no scripting so that is not a problem and any working and current spreadsheet will do. We therefore can select the most widely supported (meaning open) formats, or formats with the lowest risk for our internal use. Usually the numbers and expressions of intents are important, not the formulas themselves as those are either common knowledge or regulated.
      The situations where a collaborator sends (and vice versa) a document using a problematic format are successfully dealt with email and phone.. :)

  125. Whaaaaat!?!?!?! by mpapet · · Score: 1

    For Linux to ever have a shot on the desktop, it would have to stop being Linux. Namely it would have to get some standards beyond the kernel.

    Bwahahaha!! You mean, like Microsoft and Apple follow desktop standards? C'mon. See freedesktop for your desktop standards.

    it is a rich experience that comprises, well, everything you find on a Windows or MacOS disc.
    Oh, look at that, Debian releases desktop-specific disks. If I do nothing during install, I get a full-feature GNOME desktop. If I select options clearly presented, I can have KDE, XFCE, LXDE appear like magic when I reboot. I tell you it's MAGIC!!!!

    And since when does microsoft release a full-featured set of applications with their minimal installed OS? Apple? A default Debian desktop install gets you a very good image editor, very good "office" suite, PDF ripping, audio and video playing desktop, great web browsers. Apple and Microsoft cannot make the same claim.

    Along those lines it would have to do away with having source be something a user had any idea existed. No distributing programs as source, no recompiling the kernel to make something work, all binary all the time for users.

    1999 called and they want you back when this claim was possibly valid...

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  126. Not the Car Analogy... AGGGGHHH!! by mpapet · · Score: 1

    You are calling open source desktops out for things no one in the industry does.

    To use a car example, it's like a car with high torque and excellent gas mileage, but ugly to look at and the instruments are labelled differently and in the back seat.
    You've never owned a 70's era American car, have you? The funny thing is, some people Loooove those 70's cars.

    Where are the open source tech writers? The ones who take that part of the problem and work alongside the engineers to ensure quality documentation?
    Under the "help" menu option? If you have geek cred, man FTW!

    Where are the open source ergonomic experts,
    Are you kidding me? They are working for Microsoft or Apple. You know how Office looks nothing like the OS GUI? That's their hard work right there.

    the usability analysts, the aesthetic artists?
    Who? What? Is this the geek version of the old Hollywood line "I'm a director."

    Who ever does usability studies, or consistency between apps?
    When does this happen in the industry? Adobe doesn't talk to Apple or Microsoft when they are designing yet another loose menu. Microsoft's own Office dev team *clearly* does not talk to the OS people.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  127. It's on the desktop. by fishbowl · · Score: 1

    Those who are happily using Linux on the desktop, especially those of us who have used Linux on the desktop since before "Linux on the desktop" was an established meme, are puzzled by assertions that Linux is "not on" the desktop. It might not be on YOUR desktop, but that's neither a problem for you nor for Linux.

    I've never understood what the issue was, not even a little.

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  128. Did Brand Loyalty Slow Automobile Proliferation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the way the Blogger suggests? If it did, then the Blogger may have a point. how much faster do you suppose drivers might have taken to cars if there had been just one brand of car?

    Where might we be today but for Ford loyalists, Chevy loyalists, Buick loyalists, VW loyalists, Toyota loyalists and all the rest being ever ready to go to bat against any comer? To argue, to sneer, to smile the disdainful smile...?

    Had General Motors been a Microsoft, so every car today might be a Chevrolet, each with the same feature set, each with the same flaws... In fact, as I recall, didn't the original GM Board of Directors intend that?

    I wonder where they went wrong...

  129. Same old arguments by Penguinclaw · · Score: 1

    Linux being THE desktop for the masses? The trouble is most people, including most PC retailer staff, don't know what an operating system is! Let alone what a desktop is. My eldest daughter, an undergraduate, wasn't sure if a Mac was a windows computer and yet had experienced linux (Ubuntu) and liked it..... I think the real inertia to change is marketing and the fact that Microsoft is so dominant when it comes to purchasing new hardware that the masses don't see Linux and/or are scared of it because it is different. Most people I speak to think that a microsoft is the only choice out there. They are shocked and bemused when I explain and demonstrate Linux and the choice of desktops, applications available.... all free... and so much safer than Windows, once the basics of security are explained. Indeed they seem to become much more computer literate, which can only be a good thing. My point.... Why aren't our schools teaching our kids the real fundamentals of computing (do we really need gui all the time!) instead of parrot fashion learning of Office which spirals into the belief that only Windows and Macs exist........

  130. boat = missed by smash · · Score: 1

    In the late 90s, linux was a prime candidate for those wanting to flee from Windows 98. In the early 00s, the situation wasn't much different, with those wanting to abandon Windows ME and Windows XP.

    Now, Windows 7, for all the bitching here, is a good OS, that ships with most new computers. OS X is a very good OS that ships on the rest.

    So, your end user has a choice - 99.9% of the software on Windows, or they go to a Mac for a little less software and better reliability.

    What does Linux offer? The Windows UI fundamentals haven't' changed since 1995. The OS X fundamentals haven't changed since 2000 or so.

    Linux, with its new incompatible desktop APIs every 2 years, no standard desktop and little commercial desktop software is not a compelling option. Free is nice, but when 90% of computers are bundled with an OS in any case, and most upgrade hardware before they upgrade software, its not enough to outweigh the negatives.

    I say this as someone who was awaiting the linux desktop takeover since 1996. I gave up waiting and got a Mac.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  131. Get the basics right first! by GeekDork · · Score: 1

    Right now, the whole "Linux on the desktop" brouhaha is failing at the point where I have the choice of either

    • using a pre-3.0 kernel and having my desktop "experience" freeze for up to 30 seconds every time an application does something graphically challenging like, say, drawing a 32x32 icon, or
    • using a current kernel and at some point have X corrupt random drawing surfaces until the whole thing is entirely unusable.

    And that's not even starting with the overly half-assed state most "desktop" applications are in. Most of KDE is a pile of ugly hacks that manages to get worse with each iteration, only to be beaten by whatever cruft Mozilla is shoving out the door, actually losing features with every "release". Gnome is quickly going towards a point where they will be a sad imitation of an Apple UI without any usability or skillful design. The office suites are trying to rip off their commercial counterparts, but mostly fail because they suffer from an extreme amount of legacy ballast.

    This is not about "arguments", this is about failing to get the basics right. Linux doesn't belong on a productive desktop by a long shot, unless your idea of a desktop still is a bunch of terminal windows running vim/emacs/ed (or if that meets your requirements).

    --

    Fight hunger. Filet a politician and send him to a 3rd world country of your choice.

  132. Non-issue by vga_init · · Score: 1

    This is pretty much a non-issue. I've never seen the variety of applications and software available for Linux hurt Linux. In fact, more software, more projects, and more support is always better. Sure, some projects slow down, some fizzle out or just die, and some are engaged in constant ideological battles with each other, but I fail to see how this hurts the ecosystem as a whole. If anything the varies conflicts drive progress, since for every dead project 10 new projects come alive, and for every ideological battle a third concept emerges. The diversity and varied potential is a great boon for developers and even power users.

    End users could not care less about things like GNOME vs KDE; they'll just use whatever you put in front of them, and if they ever get around to trying the other and want to switch, they can go ahead and switch at their leisure. And switch back! It doesn't hurt end users at all because all end users have to do is get their software from a vendor that chooses for them. Look at the success for Android; did the Linux software ecosystem cost Linux a shot at handsets/tablets? No. A vendor took Linux, packaged it with whatever software they desired, and delivered to the customer. Easy-peasy.

    Linux communities can fight among themselves all they want. The fighting just makes us stronger and is a testament to the vibrancy of the community. How would Linux get any better if all debate ceased and differing viewpoints were silenced?

  133. WHEN by RedHat+Rocky · · Score: 1

    'But what happens when Google Docs gets truly robust enough for business'

    Yes, WHEN is the key word. Given the bugs that have been present and unaddressed in Google Docs for years, I'm not too worried about it.

    Seriously, when a simple bug, like sharing a document with a mailing list, sorry, GROUP, requires EVERY member to visit the link to the document in-browser or never see it again, has yet to be addressed, not scared.

    --
    Anything is possible given time and money.
  134. WTF? Are you even familiar with desktop linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Practically nothing you posted makes any sense at all.

    The thing keeping linux off the desktops is apps. There are all kinds of standard apps that just don't run under linux. Business, especially, will accept no substitutes.

    Source code? WTF? I have used Linux as my desktop for many years, and I never fuss with source code. I never recompile the kernel either.

    I find Linux *much* easier to install than windows. And these days, laptop makers can not even spare a windows dvd. I am supposed to make an image, and they do not provide any worthwhile software for that.

    Other than apps, Linux has every advantage over Windows: cheaper, faster booting, more choices, more secure, more stable, faster booting, less hardware requirements, easier installation, no DRM, live CDs, and so on.

    But, all of those advantages, put together, cannot make up for not running the apps you want. The whole point of an OS (I think) is to run your apps.

  135. Distro maintainers won't package non-free SW by tepples · · Score: 1

    Just link your libraries properly (any linux tutorial will show how)

    The problem I've run into is that when I've found tutorials with Google, I've had trouble determining whether they were still applicable or horribly outdated. That's why I ask people to recommend specific tutorials.

    and let the distro maintainers handle the packaging

    If you can't distribute the entire package as free software and free cultural works for one reason or another, the maintainers of the mainstream distros (especially Fedora) will decline to handle your packaging. So as I understand it, you have to set up your own repository for each major distro.

    1. Re:Distro maintainers won't package non-free SW by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      If you are distributing proprietary software, chances are it's for profit. In which case distributing a tarball with the binaries will get you into MOST distros (ubuntu, arch, etc), there are just a small handful (fedora) that you'll have to package manually.

  136. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly. This is pointless trolling. Gosh, let's all get worked up because we have (*gasp*) options, and (*shock, horror*) differences of opinion about them. If only we could all agree and be mindless clones of each other, how awesome that would be. If it weren't for Windows and OSX and GNOME and KDE and XFCE and so on all competing, there's not a snowball's chance in hell that we'd have seen all the desktop innovations that we have seen. We probably wouldn't have had a GUI at all if we'd all mindlessly agreed to be united in our devotion to a UNIX shell or to DOS or whatever. Disagreement drives progress. Get over it.

  137. Use Xubuntu, or Lubuntu. Problem solved. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I went back to 10.10 because I hated 11.04 so much. My next version will probably be Lubuntu.

    Yes, i mean it - 11.04 made me think about switching back

    Switching back to windows? Why? There are about 500 linux distros, if you don't like that particular release, of that particular distro, just find something else. Lots of good stuff out there.

    Maybe you should just get the network version of Debian, then try different DEs until you find something you like. I've done that, there is nothing to it.

  138. Hope the future ISN'T "Android/iOS types of apps" by spage · · Score: 1

    Yes the desktop battle is so last-decade, but you manage to utterly miss the current battle. The future may not and should not be compiled apps from a curated store written for a particular runtime on a platform controlled by a commercial behemoth. The alternative is running a bunch of HTML applications that run in any browser on ANY platform, that you can View > Source to inspect and modify. That's a free software battle worth fighting!

    Most of the get-off-my-lawn graybeards on Slashdot miss this point. They refuse to understand the potential of HTML, they conflate it with cloud computing and web services (I run several "web" apps from my hard drive), and they make dismissive snorts that native Gnome/KDE/whatever desktop apps will always be superior while ignoring the relentless advance of exceptional HTML applications. I think that's what Mr. Proffitt is getting at in the original article when he write "I have some doubts that any Linux distribution is going to be able to get its collective act together in time."

    At least Mozilla understands this battle, read The App Model and the Web and the rest of Mitchell Baker's recent posts. But the Linux users who should be Mozilla's natural allies in promoting an open Internet don't seem to understand what's going on; maybe that's why Boot to Gecko is based on Android instead of a Linux distro. A few other projects like Joli OS and Webian shell are moving past the Linux desktop to the browser. If these falter, there's still Google's ChromeOS, but it competes with Google's own Android ecosystem.

    --
    =S
  139. Reminds me of everyone who doesn't understand GNU by TheDarkener · · Score: 1

    /Linux... About 12 years ago I was at my local LUG and there started a semi-heated debate between a Linux guy and a non-Linux guy. The non-Linux guy said, in believing that the Linux CLI tools weren't "unified" enough (still not sure what he meant, he was comparing them to DOS commands), "If anyone ever wants Linux to succeed as a product, then they have to make things streamlined."

    Some people lightly chuckled, and a couple erupted into laughter.

    "A product?" I asked him.

    This is the separation point. People don't understand that the goals of Linux is not to dominate, unlike their (quote, unquote) "competitors". IMHO, the goals of GNU/Linux and the greater open source community is to build awesome software in the eyes of those creating it.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  140. fighting the future by spage · · Score: 1

    Thanks for making Mr. Proffitt's point, as he writes in the original article "The old arguments about desktops and application superiority aren't going to matter if all the other platforms have moved on."

    Native apps suck, on every platform. You can't select text everywhere, you can't Ctrl-+ to zoom, you can't bookmark/back/forward, you can't View > Source or View > Selection Source, you can't run bookmarklet hacks on them, you can't drag images out. Sure, the native toolkits haltingly advance in areas like HTML rendering and URL support, but every time I right-click in a native app and I don't have a rich context menu available, I curse the bloody thing. Meanwhile every week HTML 5 applications get better and every couple of months the browsers add APIs that eat away at the few remaining things that only native apps can do.

    --
    =S
    1. Re:fighting the future by ChrisMP1 · · Score: 1

      When do you ever want to bookmark/back/forward/view-source/bookmarklet-hack a native app? And, it's been a while since I've been on Windows, but here on Linux/GTK, most text of size is selectable (the little labels aren't, but I've never really wanted to). If your DPI/font size settings are configured, every program's text should be nicely legible.

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      <sig>&nbsp;</sig>
  141. Office and platform by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you worry too much. Who cares whether it is Google Docs, Libre- or Openoffice, KDE or Gnome? It doesn't matter.

  142. I put it on my desktop. In 1993. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux was on my desktop because I put it there in 1993 so that I could program on it. I helped get some of the first accelerated graphics cards enabled with XFree86 (back when accelerated meant finally having 2D blits and such instead of just a memory-mapped pixel buffer.

    We always had drivers for things with the same sorts of leap-frogging we see now.

    We had printer drivers because people were reverse engineering the serial and parallel protocols of dot-matrix printers long before Linux arrived, because Postscript existed on the better printers even back then, and because ghostscript collected the best drivers and could also output basic bitmapped image files which we could route through our own prototype printer language drivers. A filter to convert PBM to 24-pin Epson print codes was one of the first C programs I wrote with an actual purpose, outside an operating systems course. We had ethernet drivers because there were drivers and know-how on other Unix flavors and Linux was an open book.

    We had wireless ethernet at the same time as anybody else, that is once Linux had a viable networking stack. I had Linux on every laptop I ever owned, with APM suspend/resume and VMware hosting a Windows guest back before people understood what "virtualization" meant.

    We've always had the techie environment we needed, built by and for us. It never depended on mass investment. If anything, the desktop dream has destroyed the soul of a good open source community. Even hobbyists used to write portable code so their stuff could be enjoyed across the fragmented space of PC and Unix workstations. Now people have trouble writing code that is even portable just across Linux distributions.

    1. Re:I put it on my desktop. In 1993. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux is losing its way trying to satisfy all these cheap moron endusers looking for a free version of Windows.

      Linux should bo back to the way it was; an OS written by geeks for geeks. Everyone else can fuck off. If you need specialised drivers or the need to run Quicken, then Linux isn't for you... period.

  143. Linux failed in the Desktop Market? No it didn't by helios17 · · Score: 1

    It's a silly argument. Linux failed in the consumer desktop space No it didn't...It never even competed. It was never offered as a market choice. who's fault that is isn't the point. It "failed" because it never tried. No marketing, no exposure, no nothing. Linux will succeed but it will never be on the desktop...but it will prevail in the mobile market...they just won't call it Linux. Take the victory and move along.

    --
    Windows assumes you are an idiot...Linux demands proof.
  144. Users vs OEMs by jawahar · · Score: 1

    Users != OEMs
    Users are embracing Linux but not OEMs.

  145. I love choice by Ofloo · · Score: 1

    I love the fact that I'm able to choose, if something doesn't work now, I try and if it doesn't work out I just switch, it's that simple, .. what to do if there is no choice and something just doesn't work for you ? I'd rather have choice, ..does it really matter that much if someone is using KDE, UNITY, LXDE, XFCE or GNOME, .. Well that's just my humble opinion.

    1. Re:I love choice by Ofloo · · Score: 1

      The only thing that linux must decide on is HIER, the HIER isn't the same on all systems, .. on BSD seems to be the case up until now and this makes things lots easier, at least it did for me.

  146. this by cyclomedia · · Score: 1

    no one buys a computer for the OS anymore (outside of business, obviously). People expect things to be interoperable and don't care what's inside so long as it works and is shiny, so your (linux) phone can take photos, and you can plug it into your (apple) laptop and copy them over, then print them from the printer connected to your (windows) desktop. That's the idea anyway. Electronic goods are disposable as far as meatbags are concerned, if the phone doesn't work anymore, they take it to the shop to get replaced or fixed or they just toss it and buy a new one, nobody but us lot here actually installs or configures an operating system (upgrades, maybe, but they're largely automated now) so the "choice" between office suites and desktop environments is never made by meatbags.

    --
    If you don't risk failure you don't risk success.
  147. That may be true, but not for games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That may be true for Quicken, but not for games. And they have to (or had to) support Win9x, Me, NT, Vista. Now they have to support NT, Vista, 7, 32 bit and 64 bit. Just for Windows.

    And the mac versions? They don't use Windows GDI calls.

    But despite that, you gave two examples. Which widget kit you have on your desktop doesn't mean a fig to a game.

  148. That's not because Linux is hostile to HW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's not because Linux is hostile to HW, it's because HW vendors have been hostile to Linux.

  149. Stop bundling apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The solution to the argument is for Linux distributions to stop installing apps by default. Only install the core of the OS and let the user select what WM, file explorer, web browser, office suite, and so forth that they want. It's the one thing that has pissed me off since I started trying out Linux in 1995, all the goddamn apps that are installed by default. I don't care that they are free and open-source, 99% of them are crap and of no use to me.

  150. Linux will never be mainstream by Kungpaoshizi · · Score: 1

    Because the community as a whole can never have 1 goal. Everyone wants to do their own thing, and that will be their legacy. I've talked to numerous linux users who talk down about Microshaft, but ya know why I use Windows? Because a lot of people came together on one goal, Windows. If Linux would produce and keep maintaining advances on 1 single OS distro, then yes, I would consider it, but it would be a requirement that it had something comparable to Direct X. But until the community comes together, the products will always be half-ass.

  151. without choices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    linux would be warmed over windoze. no one has ever "owned" the desktop, not even micro$oft. i'm currently watching ubuntu evolve into something i don't like, so i'll move on to another linux offering. any suggestions?

  152. The future is in the phones by happyfeet2000 · · Score: 1

    In the future smartphones will be portable and powerful computers. Everybody will carry a copy of their work environment in them. People will come to work and connect their smartphones through a special connector to an external monitor, keyboard, mouse, lan connection, etc. All their files and programs will be on their phones and backed up on the internet. And those phones will use some variant of Linux, some super-Android-like OS.

  153. Might.... by aLEczapKA · · Score: 0

    Might??!

    That ship has sailed long time ago... -.-

    --
    -- All Gods were immortal.
    -- S. Lem
  154. "have never heard of and no way to compare" by mrflash818 · · Score: 1

    They can google reviews of the program choices.
    They can ask others in the same field, that use OSS, what they use.
    They can purchase and read magazines in the field that do reviews of software choices.

    The same process in the non-OSS world is used for:
    - picking a movie to pay to watch
    - going to dinner
    - buying a car

    --
    Uh, Linux geek since 1999.
    1. Re:"have never heard of and no way to compare" by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the vast majority of FLOSS programs are not reviewed either on-line or in magazines. FLOSS is rarely used in business, which is irrelevant because we are mostly talking about home desktop users. And, again, you are suggesting that people spend hours, days, even weeks researching something for Linux that can be found out in minutes for Windows.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  155. A few things... by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 1

    Corporate Desktop:
    Here are some things you should keep in mind. Since 2006, among Linux users, the Open Directory model where OpenLDAP runs a directory service, Samba 3.x runs a PDC, and Heimdal Kerberos runs the KDC, and FreeRadius runs RADIUS has been extremely popular. Open Directory (OpenLDAP+Samba+Heimdal Kerberos) was a definite step above the Sun Yellow Pages+NFS, or early NT4 Domains created by Samba 2.2, and it ran like a well oiled machine. Certain distributors supported it well. Mandriva and Suse being model citizens, while Ubuntu not so much. Ubuntu and Debian did a horrible job with Samba, LDAP and Kerberos. But Samba, LDAP, and Kerberos as Open Directory aren't MS Active Directory. That cost the Linux world many casualties. For the longest time, AD Dominated.

    I recently tried Samba 4.0 Alpha 15 and was able to create a mostly functional Windows 2008 R2 Style Forest. I ran into problems incorporating Open Directory applications and schemas used to OpenLDAP's model, but I am certain those can be resolved. Samba 4.0 will have all the features of Open Directory and all of Active Directory's forms combined. It will likely replace OpenLDAP and Heimdal Kerberos because it is so much easier to manage just one application that does all three, and is completely compatible with its predecessors in the Unix world's feature sets.

    In the future, I can see Samba 4 becoming the predominant Server for both Windows AD Clients, and Unix Clients running applications like NFS and AFS, FreeRadius, PostFix, eGroupware, and Zimbra. At the same time offering AD support to AD Clients. If you think it can't happen, just remember that Windows 7 has special code in it's registry to allow Samba 3 Domains to authenticate with Windows 7 clients, and even though Samba 3 style domains are still in some sense NT4 Domains, while NT4 itself is completely incompatible with Windows 7.

    Samba 4 can devour the AD market inside out.

    Home Desktop
    What really matters here are games. Linux desktop needs to be able to run games of all platforms, for Windows, this of course means Wine. Wine again, is in a position to become more compatible with Windows than real Windows. There are now, a few applications that will run on Wine but not Modern Windows. This is mostly Games from the 9x era. But as time moves on, we may see more XP games that work on Wine that won't work on Windows.

    Android support is another issue. A market for Android phones is growing, and Linux needs some sort of API translation layer to run Android games on PCs.

    Desktop Interface:
    Another thing is this: The constant desktop shifting and changing has to stop. someone really needs to back the Trinity Desktop Environment. Both KDE and Gnome now take away system resources from video cards to make the desktop look and interact more wth the user. This needs to stop. These effects slow the machine down, they slow games down, they slow EVERYTHING down. What I want is an interface that runs what I tell it to run. I would be extremely angry if my game was slowed down by KDE compositing, Gnome effects, Compiz or Beyrl. They look cool, but, they are completely useless and take away from resources I need for other things.

  156. The desktop has already been won by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Win the desktop?! Microsoft won the desktop a long time ago. That's yesterday's news. But I do agree that all the zillions of distros with new apps every year reduce overall adoption. I mean you can't even back on software installation working the same way from one distro to the next. I like Linux bu tue community needs to work on common functionality rather then my distro has more stuff the yours or mine has the least stuff.

  157. I have the final answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Evolution vs. Thunderbird, LibreOffice vs. OpenOffice, and GNOME3 vs. Unity vs. KDE

    gnus, docview / AUCTeX, stumpwm. Any other questions?

  158. people spend hours, days, even weeks by mrflash818 · · Score: 1

    Citation?

    OSS photoshop replacement, google "open source photoshop" ==> GIMP
    OSS M$ office replacemnt, google "open source office" ==> Libre Office, or Open Office

    OSS M$ anti virus, google "open source antivirus" ==> ClamWin, ClamAV, spamassassin

    Those took seconds. And all products a desktop user, home user, and office user are likely to find useful.

    --
    Uh, Linux geek since 1999.
    1. Re:people spend hours, days, even weeks by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      As has been stated here on Slashdot many times by slashdotters, GIMP sucks and Libre/Open Office has crappy performance.

      There are numerous comments by professional image makers complaining about GIMP. These are the people who actually work with image manipulation software for hours on end and they say GIMP sucks ass.

      There are articles and numerous comments complaining about the performance of Libre/Open Office. From start up and shut down speed, to spreadsheet calculation, performance has been their biggest weakness.
      To use the ever-present car analogy, you are suggesting one use a new Fiat to replace a one year old BMW M5. Are you don't making a fool of yourself yet?

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  159. BS by galanom · · Score: 1

    Most of Linux kernel developers code for money. Far from hobbyists.
    And Mozilla is non-profit.

    1. Re:BS by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 1

      Check the facts, the Mozilla Corporation is a for-profit entity. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozilla_Corporation

      You are correct about the Linux kernel, but nobody installs a "Linux kernel." It could be argued that the Linux kernel has been highly successful, since Android is based on it. The Linux desktop...KDE, Gnome, etc., are the parts of Linux that people see, and these have not made real inroads into the consumer market.

    2. Re:BS by galanom · · Score: 1

      I am confused about Mozilla Corporation and Mozilla Foundation.
      No, Linux kernel was not successful because of Android. You got it backwards.

      Wikimedia Foundation is non-profit.
      Apache Software Foundation is non-profit. BTW, apart from http server, the foundation also now has OpenOffice.
      The PHP Group is non-profit.
      Python Software Foundation is non-profit.
      Perl is developed by hobbyists.
      Ruby is developed by hobbyists.
      Internet Systems Consortium (BIND) is non-profit.
      PostgreSQL Global Development Group is non-profit. (but mysql is)
      X.Org Foundation is non-profit.
      Khronos Group (OpenGL) is non-profit.

      Oh, GNU is non-profit. Some widely used software is apart from base system, the gcc, gdb, glibc, gimp, GTK+ library (but QT is), gpg, etc. I'm sure I'm missing many.

      I don't get what you mean that "Gnome and KDE have not made it into the consumer market". 90% of Linux users use them (I don't).

      All these projects and immensely used in academia. I remember when I studied computer engineering, the only closed-source piece of software we used was MATLAB at the signal processing lab and scientific computation lab. The later is now switching to SciLab.

      The network infrastructure and main servers of my university also run on GNU software.

      Since I just graduated, I have no experience on computer industry but I am aware that it is successful in many applications like Supercomputing or embedded systems.

      And since Solitaire was ported to linux, windows has lost it's major element.

      BTW I had installed Linux at my parents and at my sister. Feedback was hugely positive. My sister who works in a bank who have windows was immensely content that I fixed her computer so not to crash every 5'. I really don't understand why your grandma doesn't do Linux. Perhaps you could tell me why?

    3. Re:BS by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 1

      All of your examples are either server software or developer tools. In these areas, open source software has been immensely successful. But the original article asked why Linux hadn't made a dent in the desktop / consumer market.

      Android was the first (and only) Linux-based OS to be widely used by consumers...and this boom was definitely fueled by for-profit enterprises.

      True, most LInux users use Gnome and KDE. But these Linux users are not typical consumers. You can't go to Best Buy (or even Fry's) and come home with a computer running Gnome or KDE, you have to install it yourself.

    4. Re:BS by galanom · · Score: 1

      Indeed. And I am 100% ok with that. Actually I'm not only ok, I want to stay that way.

      The more GNU/Linux/OSS is approaching the desktop market, more and more is becoming bloated with useless gimmicks (KDE4), try to impress and radically "innovate" by stupid ways (Gnome3), push releases prematurely (idk, is KDE4.x stable yet? I would rate 4.3 as alpha), change user interface all the time needlessly just to say "look we've done something!" (Gnome3, inspired by the Prince of Incompatibility Gates whose each version of Widows is moving elements to different places), abusing their role to become famous (I have two different apps in my start menu who are called "Image Viewer", as if they are the ONLY one image viewer ever created), blatantly and stupidly inflating versions to give false impressions (linux kernel recently (2.6.39->3.0->3.1), Firefox 3.5->4.0->5.0 -- are they copying Chrome?), try to assess roles that aren't given to them (I think KDE tries to become an OS by itself), etc etc.

      I want to say that the more desktop-oriented Linux becomes, the more idiot-proof tries to be. The more idiot-proof tries to be, the more bloated, cumbersome, and inefficient becomes. Traditionally unix was powerful by simplicity. I quit kde and gnome due to their "innovations" and constant messing with my system. I certainly prefer the simplistic xfce which does the job done.

  160. Fallacious Arguments by mrflash818 · · Score: 1

    As has been stated here on Slashdot many times by slashdotters...
    1. There are numerous comments by...
    2. There are articles and numerous comments complaining about...
    3. Are you don't making a fool of yourself yet?

    1-2: Burden Of Proof
    3: Ad Hominem
    http://www.don-lindsay-archive.org/skeptic/arguments.html

    --
    Uh, Linux geek since 1999.
    1. Re:Fallacious Arguments by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      1&2) Try reading slashdot.

      3) A valid question which you have answered by making a fool out of yourself yet again.
       
      Really, if you are going to be on website, you should really pay attention to what appears on said website.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.