Posted on 03/21/2013 2:06:17 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Gnome project cofounder and current Xamarin CTO Miguel de Icaza says he's done wrestling with Linux on the desktop, and that he now uses Apple kit exclusively for all of his workstation needs.
De Icaza is well known in the open source community for developing a number of client-side technologies for Linux, including the Midnight Commander file shell, the Gnome desktop environment, and the Mono project.
But in a blog post on Tuesday, de Icaza wrote that not only does he no longer use Linux for his day-to-day computing needs, but he hasn't actually booted his Linux workstation since October 2012. In fact, he says, he hasn't even bothered to plug it in.
De Icaza writes that his transition to OS X was a gradual one, and didn't begin in earnest until he took his Mac laptop on a vacation to Brazil around 2008:
Computing-wise that three week vacation turned out to be very relaxing. Machine would suspend and resume without problem, WiFi just worked, audio did not stop working, I spend three weeks without having to recompile the kernel to adjust this or that, nor fighting the video drivers, or deal with the bizarre and random speed degradation that my ThinkPad suffered.
While I missed the comprehensive Linux toolchain and userland, I did not miss having to chase the proper package for my current version of Linux, or beg someone to package something. Binaries just worked.
Even after that experience, de Icaza says, he only used Macs part-time for a long while. He says that during the period that he was employed at Novell, he felt compelled to endure Novell's desktop Linux products as a user would.
"I believed strongly in dogfooding our own products," he writes. "I believed that both me and my team had to use the software we wrote and catch bugs and errors before it reached our users ... I routinely chastised fellow team members that had opted for the easy path and avoided our Linux products."
But when de Icaza and his team were laid off following the purchase of Novell by Attachmate, he says, the incentive to keep "dogfooding" disappeared. Meanwhile, his frustrations with the limitations of Linux on the desktop had been mounting, and he was heading for a full meltdown.
"To me, the fragmentation of Linux as a platform, the multiple incompatible distros, and the incompatibilities across versions of the same distro were my Three Mile Island/Chernobyl," he writes.
These days, de Icaza is working on a different kind of client software ecosystem at Xamarin, producing cross-platform development tools based on the Mono Project for Android, iOS, and Mac OS X. And he says that when friends ask him to recommend a computer for them, he tells them to buy a Mac just like he says he's always done.
"Linux just never managed to cross the desktop chasm," he concludes. ®
“And (hallelujah!) STEAM has started porting games to Linux!!!! I was playing Half Life last weekend without using Wine.”
I need to do this.
I used Ubuntu.... not as nice and friendly as adds say..... I suggest you try out Mint (Cinn is pretty... Mate is better if you don’t care about eye candy... but KDE is complete control, with accessibility)...
Chjeers, and exactly... only gripe I have about Mint.. is NO encryption ... :p but I still use it, no one can change my mind ;)
( I encrypt the non-boot... only way around Mint’s only weakness)..
Cinn and Mate hate another problem I didn’t mention... the logging ( HDD read/write rate) is terrible... that is why I changed to KDE in the first place.. :p
I love KDE, and would go no other way since... but you mentioned Virus... not the OS’s fault..
Linux rocks
Linux is alpha quality software for the desktop, but some of the live cd’s are very good for rescue.
well duh. Linux on the desktop is for geeks not everyday users.
And that is the problem with Linux on the desktop. You can’t easily take a program that works on Linux and run it on all versions of Linux like you can on OSX and Windows.
RE: Linux on the desktop is for geeks not everyday users.
So, are they planning to make it more user friendly to make it appeal more widely, or is the target customer always going to be limited to geeks?
I’d really like to see a viable challenge to the over 90% dominance of Windows on the desktop.
GNOME sucks. Always has.
I’ve been using KDE since 1.x.
BTW, I also have a Mac. But I use Linux with KDE most of the time. I find it more productive than using Mac OS.
Same here!
I can’t see them ever fixing that issue with Linux. The issue is geeks will always push different things and they will never agree on one or even two flavors of Linux. So there is no way for them to fix this and run applications natively. OSX is the only option to windows that is end-user friendly.
Well Stated. Very few linux users see the types of problems this guy finds. If he starts to rework and fiddle with programs on a Mac or Win machine, he would have even more problems... especially since he would not be able to work from source code.
Sounds like you managed to install your Linux with one or more partition being on “cylinder” boundary rather than on “4096 byte” boundary. That yields write speeds about 1/3 what they ought to be on SATA disks.
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