Posted on 10/29/2001 8:49:46 AM PST by Dominic Harr
Monday October 29 08:13 AM EST The "Lindows" conundrum
Why isn't anyone taking Lindows--a cheap OS that runs both Linux (news - web sites) and Windows code but looks like Windows--seriously? John Dvorak says because it could beget the massive transition that Microsoft perpetually fears.
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Lindows, (www.lindows.com) has a name that in itself is genius. It's software that combines Linux and Windows without violating any trademark or copyright--although I bet Microsoft will sue at some point. The concept is to make a cheap OS that runs both Linux and Windows code, but that looks and runs like Windows. The Lindows concept was dreamed up by MP3.com entrepreneur Michael Robertson, and is encountering skepticism. Nobody is taking it too seriously except me. I think Lindows might fly if it can conquer one simple roadblock, and that's running Microsoft Office 97, 2000, and XP. If Lindows can run these versions of Office, then look out below. Bombs away.
One reason I have high hopes for the Lindows OS is that there is a 20-person team working on it, not a 20,000-person team. Starting with the base Linux OS gave the Lindows team a nice head start, after which all the team had to do was translate Windows app-to-OS hooks. The open-source WINE project helped out there. But the Lindows team still must make its OS run the key versions of Microsoft Office. Once the Lindows team starts talking about running StarOffice applications, then you'll know the developers have failed.
Now, assuming that the team gets Lindows to work, Michael Robertson is a proven CEO who can promote it. This will be needed, since the industry as a whole will not want to see such a product succeed in the short run. The industry is currently geared up for continued growth through never-ending hardware performance increases. Nobody wants to see a compatible OS appear on the scene that would make a 90-Mhz Pentium run rings around a gigahertz machine, which is a distinct possibility. This development would do nothing positive for computer sales or the industry. On the other hand, it could allow a new category of computer to appear: the $299 el cheapo machine. I have no difficulty imagining such a machine powered by a cheap, low-end Duron with 64 to 128 megs of memory and a 10-Gig hard disk. This would reinvigorate computing, since it would change all the cost-of-ownership numbers radically.
Microsoft will publicly laugh off this attempt to encroach on its business, but you can be certain the company is going to keep an eye on the Lindows folks. Microsoft's risky strategy concerning pricing of Windows XP, and its onerous antitheft policing mechanisms, may become problems. Those problems could be the opening Lindows needs to make inroads into the significant and influential home computing market. The new Microsoft policies are aimed at the families in America and elsewhere who have multiple machines and routinely upgrade one of them, then steal upgrades for the rest of the family. This can no longer be done. A family of four today often has four machines, or maybe five if you include the laptops. On the Lindows Web site, the company is making a point of telling people that it will not implement the Microsoft policy regarding universal home upgrades.
The irony of the new Microsoft policies is that they will probably not affect or improve sales one iota. In many environments, people have given up on the universal home upgrade, and they leave the various OSs in place. I, for example, have various machines in my house running many different operating systems. If a machine craps out, I would like to get an OS installed on it immediately. So, like everyone else in the world, I would like to just grab whatever OS disk I can find and get the machine back up and running. With XP that may be impossible, so Microsoft's policy is an annoyance. This is the kind of annoyance that Lindows can exploit. With all the complaining that people do about Microsoft, the company's new policies are not wise.
Thinking about the competitive costs of operating systems is interesting. I've been fascinated by the Palm OS versus Pocket PC OS battle, which resembles in every way the battle between Apple and Microsoft over the years. Since the invention of the Mac, Apple has had the easy-to-use computer and interface, but has suffered market share loss to Windows. The parallels between this battle and the Palm/Pocket PC battle are obvious with one exception: market share. The Palm OS has commanding market share. People like to attribute this to the fact that the Palm was out first, and had a head start. But as far as today's computers are concerned, the Macintosh had a head start too. The real key to understanding market dominance boils down to price and performance, period. If today's Mac were seriously cheaper than a PC in every way, Apple would dominate the way Palm does. Palm devices are just dirt cheap compared to Pocket PC devices.
I sense that Microsoft has lost sight of the simple fact that price/performance is everything, and prefers to believe its own publicity about innovation. I don't even need to go into the mess it's creating with all these nickel-and-dime schemes involving Passport, and the sneaky advertising Microsoft intends to implement with XP. That's all beside the point.
Lindows may not succeed, but it's at least possible. Even if Lindows comes close to success, the product could beget the massive transition that Microsoft perpetually fears.
Could have been Windux.
I think that's what happened. What capability are you looking for, that is absent from SO 5.2? I've been using it on Windows 98SE for almost 2 years. I've found that some things are in a different place from their equivalent in Office 97, but they are still there.
AB
We're looking at precisely that at my company, and have discovered one of the downsides to the Linux apps world is an established training base. Most of the admin staff here is smart enough and willing enough to learn Star Office, but in the absence of formal classes would have to figure it all out by themselves, which constitutes a buyin of prohibitive proportions - we can't afford to lose the productivity we would if all of a sudden everybody becomes unfamiliar with, say, their word processor.
OTOH, if Microsoft continues with this licensing madness it just may push the associated cost below the threshold. It's difficult to make a business case for such technical issues as DHCP over static IP addresses, (for example), because management doesn't speak the language. Telling the boss that the contract he just signed may be changed without his knowledge or permission whenever the holder wants to IS language he speaks, and it shouts "danger, Will Robinson, danger!"
One solution to run three top Operating systems? Buy a Mac computer (iBook or iMac) and then get Virtual PC ($100) to run Windows. Your Mac would run Mac OS X which is BSD/Unix based with all their nice free software, you get all the Mac ease-of-use, plus you can run Windows in emulation.
I've got it running and it works beautifully, even getting the Blue Screen of Death in Windows every so often! Can't get more realistic than that.
-- A re-invigorated Mac user
I think StarOffice must have a lot of MS Office's functionality, since it reads MS Office files pretty well (mainly there are formatting issues, not functionality).
It is true that WINE Is Not an Emulator. WINE will run Solitaire.exe, maybe, but it won't run Word.
It is a lot harder than it sounds to replace all of Window's DLL's with Linux equivalents. Withouth specs and source code one could say that it is impossible.
I love Linux, and have used Win4Lin, but any Kluged-together Linux/Windows compromise will always suck. Too much overhead.
A comprehensive office suite is all that is keeping Linux from taking over the desktop. WordPerfect is pretty good, but it is not open source. Abi Word is almost there as far as word processing goes, but the rest of the office functions are still missing.
You can get StarOffice for Windows. Install it along side Office and let them use it and become familiar with it, while still having Office as a quick and redily available fallback. If they then become comfortable with it the next step would be the OS. Of course you could start with LINUX on the server side first, run SAMBA and migrate files and data to the new NT server ;-). Then start migrating your general desktops.
Just a thought... but think of the cost savings once the initial learning curve and Windoze mentality has been overcome.
There is a 'quiet' revolution going on in software. Java has become the language of choice for new software development.
The reason this matters to Linux?
Because the 'next generation' of software that will be offered to consumers in a year or three will work on Windows, Unix, Linux *and* Macs.
The next generation of software is 'platform independent'.
Altho almost nobody knows about this yet, outside of the software world.
Microsoft can afford it, tho.
$15 mil is what, an hour's income to them?
But the entire add campaign seems lame. The 'Teletubby Land' green fields, etc, and people flying thru the air? Okay . . . doesn't sell *me*, anyway.
Hmmmm, probably true, since that is what most people use their computers for. Personally, I run RedHat 7.0 at work, and Windows ME at home. (Putt-Putt Saves the Zoo doesn't work under Linux....) But I have been less than enthused with StarOffice. I don't do much word-processing, so it is enough for me to read attachments that people send. However, when I DO have to write a paper or proposal, it is a bit awkward, and I usually use my Windows partition.
Now, what I would REALLY like "Lindows" for would be for cross-compilers that I can only run under Windows. (And before flaming me about building my own cross-compiler, the flamer must have done so himself/herself! I lost my mind unsuccessfully building a StrongArm cross-compiler!)
Bill Gates promised us this back between windows 95 and windows 98.
Wasn't it called Cario?
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