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Linux Foundation President Used MacOS For Presentation at Open Source Summit (itsfoss.com)

Slashdot reader mschaffer writes:It appears that Jim Zemlin, President of the Linux Foundation, was using MacOS while declaring "2017 is officially the year of the Linux desktop!" at the Open Source Summit 2017. This was observed by several YouTube channels: Switched to Linux and The Lunduke Show. Finally it was reported by It's FOSS.

if, indeed, this is the year of desktop Linux, why oh why cannot people like Zemlin present a simple slide presentation -- let alone actually use a Linux distro for work.

A security developer at Google has now "spotted Jim Zemlin using Apple's macOS twice in last four years," according to the article, which complains the Foundation's admirable efforts on cloud/container technology has them neglecting Linux on the desktop.

Ironically, in March Zemlin told a cloud conference that organizations that "don't harvest the shared innovation" of open source "will fail."

3 of 284 comments (clear)

  1. Presenter laptop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When I present, usually my slides are loaded onto a conference laptop.

  2. Obligatory Nelson Muntz quote by quonset · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ha ha!

  3. Re:Because by chipschap · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is no good software for presentations on Linux that compares to Keynote or PowerPoint.

    I've found this to be true only at very extreme levels of flashiness where razzle and dazzle are more important than content, and you want people paying attention to the special effects rather than the point you're trying to get across, if there even is one.

    The most probable scenario for this, in my own experience, is suits selling expensive stuff to suits ... stuff that the salesman doesn't really understand and the prospective buyer maybe isn't capable of understanding.

    Short of that, if you, you know, actually want to get a message across, Linux has all sorts of excellent options.