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2008 MAY BE THE YEAR OF THE LINUX DESKTOP

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 2:56 ID:bXekAt5A

Is 2008 the year of the open-source desktop?

Red Hat Linux is now widely deployed on the servers in my data center. Users have no idea what operating system underlies our Web applications and databases, nor do they care, as long as those tools are highly available.

But the desktop is uncharted territory. Over the past year, I’ve been on a quest to find an operating system that balances ease of use, stability, low cost and high functionality. My experiences were the subject of an article in CIO magazine that described how I tried to use my enterprise applications with Windows XP, Mac OS X, Red Hat and Fedora. Recently, I’ve spent months running Novell’s SUSE Linux and Canonical Ltd.’s Ubuntu, and I’ll report on those efforts soon.

Based on these experiences, I think I can say when the open-source desktop will become a more widely deployed end-user operating system: when it becomes a product and not a project. That will require the following:

    * The open-source desktop should recognize my video chip set, my wired/wireless networking hardware and all my storage devices without being custom-configured, which would require me to search the Web to learn how others have done the same thing with the same hardware. Searching the Web works, but even for a high-level engineer, a typical laptop requires a lot of trial and error.
    * Wireless support should include the common security protocols: WPA, PEAP, LEAP and EAP-FAST. The wireless client should roam as I change locations, associate with the most optimal access point and work perfectly upon waking from hibernation.
    * USB thumb drives should work seamlessly without having to manually mount a volume.
    * The open-source desktop should include a browser, a robust e-mail client, an office productivity suite, a photo editing tool and a GUI tool for setting my configuration preferences.
    * It must be stable and reliable.
    * Finally, the average user should be able to use it (which rules out all command-line operations).

I’ve not been able to find anything that meets all of those criteria, but things are beginning to change. The newest releases of open-source operating systems and applications are almost good enough. For the first time, I can consider using them as my primary desktop tools. I’ve run into a few issues with my e-mail client, my SSL VPN client and wireless networking that require consultation with a high-level engineer, but day to day, my experience is positive. I believe that 2008 will be the year when the open-source desktop reaches the point where a nonengineer can install and use it effectively.

This is not about being anti-Microsoft. I oversee thousands of machines that use Microsoft software, and many users need applications that are available only for the Microsoft environment.

It’s not about being anti-Apple. I respect the user experience of Mac OS X, and I wish Steve Jobs would license the operating system to other hardware manufacturers, who could then offer choices that meet other needs, such as a 2 lb. subnotebook for road warriors.

What this is about is recognizing that the open-source desktop is nearly ready for select desktop users. Dell has begun to offer open-source options for its desktops and laptops. Lenovo is certifying and supporting SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop on the ThinkPad T60p.

Let’s hope 2008 will be the year that the projects end and we can assess all the products based on their suitability for each user.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 3:29 ID:cVh1BQe8

Your post was too long, and as a consequence, I didn't read it

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 3:31 ID:e8TBs52A

If you want it so damn fast, get in the 'project' and fucking contribute.

Furthermore, you'd better hope the project never ends, otherwise shit will go obsolete!

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 4:42 ID:BldEkVTf

>>1
1999 was the year of the desktop. It may not have been the year for your desktop but it was the year of the Linux desktop.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 5:16 ID:gIjhlI40

windows still isnt ready for the desktop.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 5:34 ID:WkwCx+kI

2008 will be the year where I'll build an amazing platform made of:
- GNU/Hurd
- Linux desktop
- Parrot as a common application environment
- Perl 6
- Compiled Ruby
- PHP 6
- Python 3000
- VmWare with DirectX acceleration, to run:
- Duke Nukem Forever

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 7:28 ID:hSxkRuDF

Ubuntu.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 9:33 ID:gIjhlI40

>- Linux desktop
lol wut?

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 20:37 ID:n06viPIs

If MS want everyone to go to Vista then it's already assured that 2008 will be the year of the GPL OS.

At least when they fucked ME up we still had Win2k to fall back on. This time... they fucked it good and proper.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-12 21:26 ID:Heaven

>>6

If you're running GNU/Hurd, you probably don't need Linux. Unless of course you're virtualizing one under the other.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-13 9:41 ID:/v8yJ55Z

>>8
Every year is the year of the Linux desktop.

>>10
Of course I'm virtualizing it, it's not fun otherwise.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-14 0:27 ID:taIqAedG

Ubuntu is great, and secure. But I'm on XP pro atm, for the following reasons:

1) programming. Everyone expects programs to be in windows. Also php works better on windows, theres no endless .conf files to edit
2) games. Everyone plays games
3) its just a little bit faster with gui than ubuntu. windows open up instantly.

However i do duel boot. ubuntu is great for music and ipod things. My friend put ubuntu on his parents computer, and because they are noobs they love it. no virus scanners or firewalls to fork out for.

Name: Linux Fanboy 2007-06-14 3:55 ID:QK288u0Q

>>12
Fuck you.

1) PHP fails.  Real men don't use scripts for their webservers.  FastCGI/binaries or GTFO.
2) Emulation or GTFO.  LOL WOW.
3) Commandline or GTFO.  LOL GUI.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-14 6:09 ID:fgxxPl2C

Dude, even I left the 80's...

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-14 8:09 ID:LW76nqtz

Also php works better on windows, theres no endless .conf files to edit

LOL enjoy your endlessly exploited webserver you dumb faggot.

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-14 16:37 ID:OxmQx8qc

20XX is the year of desktop Linux.

Don't change these.
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