Posted on 09/30/2015 4:57:21 AM PDT by ShadowAce
That's me.
It's hard to disagree with his outlook.
Yup. All of my internet work except for some very specialized things is done on Linux.
Until Linux stop coming out with these weirdly named versions and produces a coherent way to install that even grandma can do, it will NEVER take over the desktop
It’s a shame because it is clearly a superior operating system.
But it suffers from the same problem I see in the workplace. Programmers (who go home and do online battle in their mom’s basement with the name “DeathWarrior”) believe they are too superior to want to enjoy mass-market appeal.
This smugness over their operating system’s superiority because early in the Unix days and persisted as Apple and Microsoft leapt into multi $trillion dollar powerhouse positions.
I write software for a living- I would RATHER program for Linux, but it is far more difficult than programming for Windows. Even though it is older and better.
We’ve had to fire more than a few of these people for their smug behavior, in the face of reality.
I don't understand why there has to be just one desktop. Seems silly to me.
I don't take a sports car to Lowes. Wrong tool for the job.
Everyone chasing a single, perfect, desktop is chasing shadows.
/johnny
I’ve got a question for you Linux experts. I want to install Mint along side my current WinXP, Windows 7 and Windows 10 installations on the same PC but keep windows boot manager and not use Mints. Is there a way to do that? I’ve setup another partition just for Linux (70 gBytes) but I don’t want Mint to take over the boot menu.
Popular consent, almost never right, usually wins the technology race. That is the ONLY reason that Intel CPUs triumphed over the 68000 class machine.
Thaf would make Eclipse the leading development environment. Microsoft has that market cornered. Xcode and Eclipse are the bastard step child of AD. They work but V Studio is nearly perfect and developers do care.
Uh--no.
The main reason is that Apple kept a *very* short leash on programmers for that chip (they were the only ones using it). With x86 being more open and available, it became more popular.
He mentioned he is using chrome.. and android, where does Linux fit in? (The Unix base doesn’t fit in..)..
Honestly, I don’t care if the rest of the world doesn’t use it... it is still the most secure OS in the world.. (no matter what the Mac fan-boyz say... Mac/Apple is still based on Unix)...
Am I the only person left in America who thinks having data and apps primarily in the cloud in a business environment is a bad idea?
Absolutely. When I want to get work done I prefer the desktop computer. Also, I use the Cloud mostly for backup and to keep my work folders on various computers synchronized. Everything saved to the cloud is also saved to an identically named local folder.
Oh, and Mint, in y opinion, is still the best and easiest to install (and the best for crossover from Windows..).
ChromeOS and Android are both Linux
Chromebook sales this year: 7 million
Desktop and Notebook sales this year: 317 million
Let’s see:
In 1997 the thin client was supposed to kill the PC.
In 2008 the Netbook was supposed to kill the PC.
In 2012 the Tablet was supposed to kill the PC.
Phones, tablets mini and maxi, iPod Touches, Nettops, Chromebooks, appliances, all have their place. For most of us, a Chromebook can no more be our main computer than a Nissan Leaf can be our main car.
Our new mainframe will be Linux
Nope, but sometimes it sure seems that we are alone.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.