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On Tue, 05 May 2009 05:49:48 -0500, Jon Glass <jonglass at usa.net> wrote: > 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. On this, we agree. Even if we admit "excellence" suffers a bit from subjective evaluation, that still misses the point. Chasing even a poorly defined excellence as the fundamental goal is better than doing what everyone else is already doing. Linux was never about market share in the first place. We might well celebrate having it, but losing it won't change what Linux developers do at the core. I ranted aplenty about the business of rolling-release as a symbol of something I don't like about Linux, and still don't like it. At the same time, I admit it is a direct result of the nature of Linux as a whole. While the negative effects of that model can be mitigated (RedHat, SLE, etc.), it is unlikely to ever change as long as Linux remains a bottom-up creation. Further, I agree Ubuntu is currently the best public face of Linux seen by those who will never actually come inside. I don't like it much at all, and Canonical really could do a lot better. I'm not sure anyone in the center of that community can explain why they don't respond better to consumer demand, but they've managed to grab the biggest chunk of that non-hobby user real estate. They won't get more until they move closer to the long release cycle of the commercial heavy-weights. That and some other advice they have so far spurned, but it's the defacto standard for now. And I would say, "Let them have it." Within my own hardened use pattern for Linux (or anything else), the utter lack of an overlord to guide it is the nature of Linux, is the very source for the things I feel I have to have. I'm sure the majority of Linux users, should they give it thought, would say the same for their own use. -- Ed Hurst ------------ Associate Editor, Open for Business: http://ofb.biz/ Applied Bible - http://ed.asisaid.com/index.html Kiln of the Soul - http://soulkiln.blogspot.com/
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