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I think Jerry is wrong on this one. Simply put, McAllister hits on points I've been saying (or being told by users) for years. It was interesting he mentioned tax software. How many people do I know that struggled with WINE or had to boot up VMware to do their stupid taxes? It's those sorts of little things that help to disqualify Linux by the death of a thousand qualifications. My parents can't switch to all Linux, because of things like tax software. I moved my mom over to Linux for a year or so. I "converted" to Mac OS X during that time and she ended up following because she was constantly frustrated at having to have me come look at her machine to do "one more tweak" to make it do stuff. She is now a Mac evangelist. She loves the "just works" photo downloading, easy music management, the compatibility, etc. Despite my best efforts (and at the time, still a belief that Linux could work for almost any desktop user), I couldn't replicate that experience using Linux. IP constraints are real. I can boot up a new Mac, and not only will it be (by most people's admission) the most beautiful looking desktop available, it will also play virtually any media file I throw at it without having to download or configure anything. This is powerful. People don't want even easy downloads. They just want the system to work. They want to download an AAC file from the iTunes store and sync it with their iPod Touch. They want to install TaxCut directly from the CD with no tweaking (unless the system does it automatically). They want to open the computer up from sleep mode and have it work in less than five seconds. I think McAllister's other point is valid too. One person uses Ubuntu, another uses Kubuntu, another insists on openSUSE. You can't just pick up a single book and learn how to do everything in each of them, because each one works differently. Fragmentation has been a major issue for years. That most distros have centered on GNOME (and KDE marginalized itself with version 4; in the words of a friend, managed to do the impossible feat of making Vista look good) doesn't solve it. Which I say with disappointment. I thought (and still think) Linux is a great solution, but as long as most of the developers are so busy ignoring what the users want, Apple will continue to be the only provider of a successful desktop *nix. A few observations on what Linux needs: 1.) It needs someone to pour millions of dollars into WINE and bring it up to the point that it can run current versions of Photoshop, TaxCut, Quicken, etc. It then needs to be tied into the DE so closely that the end user is blissfully unaware of the compatibility layer. Focus on apps that really cannot easily be replaced with something already on Linux and only worry about currently supported versions -- no one cares if Office 2002 runs on Linux any longer. 2.) It needs one of the two major DEs to be completely marginalized so that there is one standard "Linux desktop." 3.) It needs a major OEM to make Linux its flagship OS and focus totally on making really slick, desirable systems (think MacBook Pro or even Dell Adamo -- systems fully capable of being "cool") that come with it pre-installed. 4.) It needs to come with pre-installed, licensed codecs for MPEG-4, QuickTime, DVDs w/ CSS, etc. 5.) It needs to come with one best of breed app for every job, never two sort of OK ones. If one cannot stand by itself, don't bundle any (except through a download service, see below). All of this is actually quite doable. Here's what Ubuntu should do. It should create Ubuntu Pro for $49 off each LTS release. Ubuntu Pro would be a paid product so as to buy those codecs. For the moment, it could also include a license of VMware (but, with Canonical working with VMware to make it "rootless," much like VMware and Parallels for Mac). On top of that, it would launch the Ubuntu App Store, which would be an attractive, GUI driven app store much like iTunes Store is for the iPhone/iPod Touch. Leveraging the existing apt-get architecture, Canonical could make waves as being the first to bring the same ease of installation that iTunes does for iPhones to a desktop OS. They could make it so, like the iTunes Store, app developers could pay $49 to join and sell apps for a 70-30 revenue split. this would generate huge sums of cash for Ubuntu, which could use that to drive development, but it would also make it easy to incentivize the same sorts of creative developers who helped Apple distribute 1 billion iPhone apps in less than a year. Likewise, Canonical could sign a deal with Amazon to build in the Amazon MP3 store (think as it is on Android, which in turn is copying iTunes) and perhaps even Amazon Unbox. Integrate shopping directly within Rhythmbox so that it is as good or better experience than iTunes on Mac/Windows. The last step is finding an OEM. Dell needs a new plan. Work with them to launch a complete line from netbooks to luxury laptops of systems with Ubuntu Pro preloaded. With Ubuntu's subtle, tasteful artwork team, it'd look nice, be very functional and could be slotted in price maybe $200 less than the equivalent Apple. These systems shouldn't be Windows or Linux systems -- a totally separate Linux line with its own unique features That would perhaps sell some in a bad economy... Here's an idea that would make it killer: find a way to take one of those instant boot "light" Linux systems and find a way to make it so that it could seemlessly fade into the full distro that could boot in the background while the user was already doing stuff. Instant on could be a killer app. One last thought, while I'm busy musing. Linux needs a killer app. Apple has the iPod. Windows had Office. Neither was totally unique, but both gained a following that drove people to adopt the platforms they worked best on. Linux needs something that people want. Linux needs to be aspirational rather than utilitarian. That'll sell. Thoughts? -Tim On Apr 29, 2009, at 9:55 PM, Fred A. Miller wrote: > http://www.linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2009-04-28-009-35-OP-SW-0005 > > -- > Gun-toting Americans are clearly more self-sufficient than the sissy > Europeans. This is great news for everyone except Barney Frank, who's > always secretly wondered what it would be like to be taken by a Somali > pirate. > --Ann Coulter > > _______________________________________________ > ChristianSource FSLUG mailing list > Christiansource at ofb.biz > http://cs.uninetsolutions.com --- Timothy R. Butler | "Bad is so bad, that we cannot but think good Editor, OfB.biz | an accident; good is so good, that we feel tbutler at ofb.biz | certain that evil could be explained." timothybutler.us | -- G. K. Chesterton
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