Slashdot Mirror


Ask Slashdot: Could Linux Ever Become Fully Compatible With Windows and Mac Software?

dryriver writes: Linux has been around for a long time now. A lot of work has gone into it; it has evolved nicely and it dominates in the server space. Computer literate people with some tech skills also like to use it as their desktop OS. It's free and open source. It's not vendor-locked, full of crapware or tied to any walled garden. It's fast and efficient. But most "everyday computer users" or "casual computer buyers" still feel they have to choose either a Windows PC or an Apple device as the platform they will do their computing on. This binary choice exists largely because of very specific commercial list of programs and games available for these OSs that is not available for Linux.

Here is the question: Could Linux ever be made to become fully compatible with all Windows and Mac software? What I mean is a Linux distro that lets you successfully install/run/play just about anything significant that says "for Windows 10" or "for OSX" under Linux, without any sort of configuring or crazy emulation orgies being needed? Macs and PCs run on the exact same Intel/AMD/Nvidia hardware as Linux. Same mobos, same CPUs and GPUs, same RAM and storage devices. Could Linux ever be made to behave sufficiently like those two OSs so that a computer buyer could "go Linux" without any negative consequences like not being able to run essential Windows/Mac software at all? Or is Linux being able to behave like Windows and OSX simply not technically doable because Windows and OSX are just too damn complex to mimic successfully?

1 of 359 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Yes and No by sn0wflake · · Score: 1, Troll

    This will probably be labelled flamebait because I'm hurting some Linux users feelings. I don't know where you people buy your hardware, but it must be located in fairy tale land. I tried giving Linux a chance once a year since 1997 until 2015, and each time there was always a problem with hardware recognition. Last time I tried giving Linux a chance it couldn't recognize a standard Intel RAID card that has worked out of the box since Windows Vista, yet Fedora had no drivers for it, and it didn't give the option to search online for a driver. So I downloaded a driver from Intel and tried installing it. Fedora couldn't find the package because it was in a different package format. I simply rolled my eyes and mumbled "f*ck this sh*t". That is Linux in a nutshell; constant stupid idiotic problems with everything.