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On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 4:55 AM, Fred A. Miller <fmiller at lightlink.com> wrote: > http://www.linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2009-04-28-009-35-OP-SW-0005 I've been thinking about this conversation a bit. And of course, in my case, I will be comparing it to the situation for the MacOS (my primary OS). In many ways, they are similar. They are both extreme minority operating systems with rather rabid followers. Of course, they are also polar opposites in some other, substantive ways. Apple tends towards the "whole widget", with deep, system-level integration of apps, and integrated applications to make the seemingly difficult normal, everyday--iLife, of course. On the one hand, it makes creative work easier, while on the other hand, seeming to tie the hands of those who like to tinker and customize their system to their heart's content. While there are Mac geeks (among whom I guess, I number), it is not a 'geeky' operating system. It is a monolith or hegemony of the system. Yes, it does allow a certain level of customization, but its need to integrate reduces severely the options, as does Apple's desire/need to control the whole widget. To describe it as an organizational chart, it's a top-down environment. Apple decrees, and you use what they decree. On the other hand, Linux is a bottom-up organizational chart. It is democratic to the extreme--some would say anarchic. It is that way by design and purpose. It is the de-centralization of Linux that is its strength that has gotten it this far. There is no central authority--none. There is no central plan--how could there be. OK, some people think that world dominance is the central plan, but I know just as many Linux users who are opposed to being a majority player. They like their sandbox, and don't want anybody else playing, nor their toys, thank you very much. The main goal of Linux is that you make it whatever _you_ want it to be! Not happy with any distro out there? Make your own! Not happy with how Gnome does things? Try another DE or better yet, wm, and roll your own desktop environment. The problem is that, in order to go "mainstream" or to gain market share, Linux would have to give up these very elements of its character that are what Make Linux "Linux." I do not see that as either wise, practical or even possible. It ain't gonna happen. On the other hand, what I _do_ envision being possible is that one distro will gain critical mass, and start to dwarf the other distros, both in sheer number of users, and devs supporting that distro in particular. This particular distro will have to focus on ease of use, out of the box. It will have to focus on compatibility with the most modern hardware, even at the risk of sacrificing backwards compatibility with later versions. One other facet of its success is that it must be possible to buy it pre-installed on computers. I think everybody can see where this is going. The obvious answer is Ubuntu. No, it's not the "best" distro, but it is the one best positioned to push Linux into the mainstream market. It will never completely eclipse the other distros--nor should it, but having one, good-enough and beginner-friendly distro (with the emphasis on beginner-friendly, not "user-friendly"), it can attract, and will attract new Linux users. Yes, there are still problems with Linux, and my list would be: 1. Lack of multi-media creation tools--video and audio. Sure there is something, but you gotta compete with iMovie and GarageBand. There's nothing close--and Windows is no better off, IMO. 2. Drivers--in particular, printer drivers. If there were a system set up where a computer could jump to find drivers, and install them automatically, without intervention from the user, when a printer was plugged in the first time, this would go a loooong way toward easing the pain of printing. I have had rotten luck with printers, and I doubt I'm unique. 3. Interface inconsistencies and look/feel. Let's face it, for the most part, Linux is ugly, and it takes lots of work and searching and compiling to get it to begin to look proper. Why? Why does Ubuntu insist on the ugly orange/brown look when it is universally panned by just about everybody? Icons are the biggest problem, of course, but some things, like drag and drop are inconsistent among programs and the system. This is a rather difficult issue to deal with, but it's important--the whole consistency issue is. 4. Games.... yeah, yeah... I know. Actually, I don't play games, so it's not important to me, but it seems to be important to a lot of people. Why? I do not know, but I am throwing it in here, because it is a far-too-common complaint. :-) I know there may be more, and will be dispute over my choices, but I call 'em as I see 'em. ;-) However, I conclude by saying that Those who chase the holy grail of "market share" are chasing the wrong thing. Linux ought to be chasing first of all excellence. Produce the best you can, and make it work. Secondly, Linux ought not sacrifice its principles. Yes, by this, I _do_ mean that people ought to come to Linux on Linux's terms, not theirs. Mac users come to MacOS on its terms, and Windows users do as well... Linux should be no different. Play to your strengths, I say. There, I've said too much. -- -Jon Glass Krakow, Poland <jonglass at usa.net> "I don't believe in philosophies. I believe in fundamentals." --Jack Nicklaus
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