MESSAGE
DATE | 2008-03-28 |
FROM | Mark Simko
|
SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Re: Linux ready for the home desktop?
|
It's been true for eons that if you repeat an untruth often enough and long enough, and it goes unchallenged, that it becomes the accepted truth. I think the Linux desktop is affected by just such an altered reality.
I've been using a Linux desktop for well over a year, and it is now also my favored OS on dual boot devices such as my laptops.
The Linux desktop is:
Faster Has more features Is more reliable Requires much less maintenance Stays current with much less effort Costs less to have and maintain Takes much less time to maintain
I wish to point out that Vista, even after being available commercially for a year, is still not ready for the desktop. That the only other desktop OS available from M$ is sunsetting on its availability is going to be very difficult to those that are standardized on M$ products. I think we'll begin to see a significant migration to Linux, although I see an even greater migration to Mac, which has already begun.
That said, Linux could benefit from some work being done on certain things. For instance, there is a great need for a commercial grade accounting program for Linux. GnuCash needs much more work, and the port to Postgres needs polishing. Basing GnuCash on XML is a problem on many levels. GnuCash also needs to have a built in year end closing, the ability to create customer statements, and the ability to see network drives.
Even with the few warts, Linux is much better than what M$ has to offer right now. Linuxland should be more attractive to commercial entities than it is. Right now, in M$land, if you have a successful product, M$ will either buy you out and perhaps kill the product, or try to crush you by giving away an inferior imitation with it's next service pack. Perhaps wider adoption of Linux will make it more attractive to the commercial entities.
signing off (spell and grammar checked by yours truly) Mark
On Fri, 2008-03-28 at 06:05 -0400, Michael L. Richardson wrote: > Please stop saying that Linux is not ready for the desktop. 1. Every > time you say it,it turns people off from GNU/Linux OS's. 2. If you wait > for GNU/Linux OS's to be perfect they never will be. 3. Are there any > OS's out there that don't have problems? > > ***** > Check this out: > www.globalabundanceprogram.com/mlr52 > ***** > > > > > > > *************************************** > Check this out: > www.globalabundanceprogram.com/mlr52 > *************************************** > > > > Mark Simko wrote: > > That is one reason why Linux is more ready than Windoze. > > > > > > On Thu, 2008-03-27 at 12:55 -0400, Ruben Safir wrote: > > > >> On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 06:31:55AM -0400, Scott Ehrlich wrote: > >> > >>> I introduced my parents to Linux [Ubuntu Gutsy] at their place, and they > >>> tried it for a few days. It was still too new for them, so they opted > >>> back for Windows. > >>> > >>> I was considering re-introducing it to them at some other point, until a > >>> few days later, my Linux box (Ubuntu) presented me with a reminder why > >>> Windows and Mac are still desktop-ready, but Linux isn't - the obligatory > >>> filesystem check if the machine has been rebooted at least 30 times. > >>> > >>> This leads me to the question of can this check be turned off? I know it > >>> is a kernel function, and not distro-based. If it can be turned off, what > >>> are the consequences? > >>> > >>> How do the [net/free/open]BSD families handle checks, since their kernels > >>> are different, I think. > >>> > >>> Thanks for feedback. > >>> > >>> > >> If GNU/Linux is not ready for the desktop, what else can a person use? > >> Seems to me nothing else is better, or even usable. > >> > >> Ruben > >> > >> > >> > >>> Scott > >>> > >>> -- > >>> This message has been scanned for viruses and > >>> dangerous content by MailScanner, and is > >>> believed to be clean. > >>> > >>> _______________________________________________ > >>> Discuss mailing list > >>> Discuss-at-blu.org > >>> http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss > >>> > > > > > >
|
|