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Rasterman Says Desktop Linux is Dead

Posted by CmdrTaco on Sat Jul 20, 2002 09:21 AM
from the popular-view-these-days dept.
anguished writes "The future of Linux, its best hopes for blowing past everything else on an x86 machine, once was located in a little Austrailai website, with a window manager called Enlightenment, which we all hoped to be good enough to build and configure. In an interview with Linux and Main, the recently silent Rasterman talks about GNOME, KDE, E, and his view that the future of Linux requires new playing fields."
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  • by dowobeha (581813) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:26AM (#3922240)
    I posted this in another thread, but it got buried, so here goes...

    For you and me, KDE and GNOME, along with any of the good standard distros makes GNU/Linux a great, pretty-easy-to-use choice.

    But that's not good enough.

    What I'd like to put together is Linux for Technophobes. The machine that Joe Schmoe, who has never used a computer, can walk in to Wal-mart, take home his new box, and be able to use it for email, web browsing, and word processing with zero assistance from anyone else.

    He should open the box and find a simple (a la iMac) one-page sheet that shows him how to connect the mouse and keyboard.

    A simple wizard sets up the net connection with him.

    I'm picturing a very simple interface for the Basic mode. One big button that says Email and has a picture of a mailbox. Another for the web browser. Maybe a couple more apps, but not many.

    And, if you click on the Advanced mode button in the corner, you get switched to KDE or GNOME.

    Let me know what you think, and maybe we can put something like this together.
    • by JanneM (7445) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:12AM (#3922440) Homepage
      What I'd like to put together is Linux for Technophobes. The machine that Joe Schmoe, who has never used a computer, can walk in to Wal-mart, take home his new box, and be able to use it for email, web browsing, and word processing with zero assistance from anyone else.

      The basic problem is that a computer is wrong for technophobes. It is a do-it-all machine, not an appliance. Trying to limit the thing to those common functions have been tried repeatedly without success; people still know they got a computer and expects it to be as versatile as one. Look at the expensive failures of Audrey and other such machines.

      On the other hand, devices like mobile phones, Palms and so on have been successes. At heart, they too are specialized computers, but they do not look like or act like computers, and the buyers do not expect them to. There is where Linux for non-technical users has a future.

      And, if you click on the Advanced mode button in the corner, you get switched to KDE or GNOME.

      "My thingy is broken! I did something and now it's all wrong!"

      /Janne

    • by 0x0d0a (568518) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:41PM (#3924958) Journal
      What I'd like to put together is Linux for Technophobes

      This is a long-standing want. However, not only is Technophobe Linux not there, it isn't even accessable to most IT people.

      I spent a few hours last week explaining to a corporate IT guy that does Windows how to set up networking on a RH 7.2 box (some option had gotten misconfigured somehow so that the routing tables were routing everything back through loopback.) Now I have to tell him how to set up CD burning on another Linux workstation he's putting in (and explain to him why he's using SCSI drivers on his ATA burner). And you know what? I can guarantee that he doesn't think that Linux is a better desktop OS than Windows. He has to go through hell to get basic stuff working, since he hasn't spent few years eating and breathing Linux.

      Now, you can say that that's because the distro manufacturers haven't decided on a common front end with a standard way of setting up networking (or heck, CD burning). You can claim that this "isn't a Linux kernel issue", or that "Mandrake 9.0 *will* fix things" or that "you could write up a couple of perl scripts in a few hours that would do all this for you". But it comes down to the fact that this guy can sit down and reasonably quickly set up things on a Windows box, and can't even come close to doing that on Linux. He's willing to learn, from a professional standpoint, Linux as a second OS -- spend some hours reading documentation or so. But he isn't going to eat, breathe, and sleep with Linux. He's willing to read a HOWTO, but when I tell him that the HOWTO is out of date and doesn't cover his specific distro and is way more complicated than necessary, he's got pretty good reason to be upset. He's a professional that "wants to get the job done". He isn't a Linux hobbyist or a revolutionary, and he wants to support Linux users at the company better...but he won't sacrifice ridiculous amounts of time to do it.

      When it comes right down to it, Linux, besides being a nice server platform, makes a *lot* of sense as a computer hobbyist's desktop, or a programmer's desktop. If you're willing to put in some time, you can make Linux do great things. There's a lot of functionality present that a programmer can unlock. I'm typing this from my only computer -- a Linux desktop. I wouldn't trade it for a Windows box, ever. But I also put in huge amounts of time to understand what's going on, why something doesn't work, and whatnot. And most people are simply not willing to put in that much time.

      Furthermore, most people writing software for Linux fall in the same boat -- techies writing software for techies. It's okay to ship software without a graphical config util or documentation that someone can use without *really* understanding what's going on. Out of date documentation is okay (say...how to set something up in a non-devfs environment, because surely the end user will know how to do the translation to his devfs stuff).

      When I say "Linux is better than Windows", there's an understood appended "for me". I'd hate to be deprived of my stability and performance, my flexibility and customization of my environment, my freedom to eke performance out of my computer and easily get at its guts. But for most users, computing comes down to light use. Even most IT people just want to get a machine working -- they don't love dicking around with the thing to see how it works. And for them, there is a very high price to pay for Linux -- huge quantities of learning time. Once you're through that...well, you can fix *anything* that goes wrong. But in the meantime, you may not have mail or sound or something else working properly. Maybe you don't have fonts, or don't understand how to secure your system, or how to set up modules to auto-load.

      The distro manufacturers have attempted, with some degree of success, to slap front ends on all this, to hide the stuff designed for techies to work with. But, you know...it hasn't worked that well. Front ends have a constraint that they have to work well with hand-editing. They should expose all they're doing, not change every distro version, and very preferably not change from distro to distro. I know how to set up a mail server at a "low level" on the system, through the config files. I've also done so through RH's front end on RH 5.2 or 6.0 or sometime around there. But I have no idea what the "accepted graphical way of doing things" is for Debian, or Caldera, or even SuSE. Because there's no standard simple way of doing things, documentation is restricted to going least-common-denominator for everything, and explaining how to set up things through config files. No fun for new users.

      Let's look at printing. I started using RH at 5.2. Back then, IIRC, you used lpr and had a utility called "control panel" from which you could launch a Tk front end called "printtool" which could edit a few config files to set up printing. Over a few years, in that time alone, we've moved to LPRng/CUPS, gone through a linuxconf front end, changed print filter systems, and haven't remained "user compatible" (i.e. user skills do not transfer) across distros.

      The same thing happens with sound -- I've personally tried and set up four different sound driver systems on my computer (native Linux kernel, OSS/Free modules, ALSA .5, ALSA .9). The "right one" to be using changes over time, and learning another requires throwing away what you learned about the last. I have fun learning the new stuff...but it's fairly understandable that a lot of people don't.

      Now, this sort of thing makes Linux not particularly approachable to the non-hobbyist. They can plonk down $90 and avoid at least *weeks* of learning material that they aren't particularly interested in. For your average sysadmin, MS products require learning a *lot* less to get up and running than Linux does. It's only to the hobbyist that *wants* to play around with the system that Linux makes much sense.

      Maybe that's a good thing. I like Linux quite a bit. If it changed a lot to serve the newbies and non-hobbyists out there, I'm not sure I'd like it as much. And to be honest, there's not a lot of incentive for me to "fight for Linux world domination". I like coding for Linux much more than for the Win32 API, so I'd like there to be a healthy Linux coding job market. I'd also prefer that my box have reasonable hardware support, which requires vendor support, which requires a threshhold number of users. I worry that MS will always try (and manage) to make life miserable for me as long as they have market domination. They'll make me interact with .doc and hit me with tons of Code Red scans. However, aside from that, I'm not too broken up about people using Windows. If they'd just leave Linux and Linux-using folks in peace, most of us wouldn't care nearly so much. I don't like MS much, but I'm not going to go after them if they don't go after me, and I'm not going to try to "liberate" their customer base -- writing code to be used by other hobbyists is good enough. There's just a lot of techies out there that would prefer to run their platform of choice in peace and be left to it.

      Finally, I'd like to point out that the only person I know that works at Microsoft is an avid Linux fan and does all dev work possible on Linux. I asked a few other people that I was doing some coding work with, and found that the three other people that they knew that work at Microsoft all run and code on Linux at home. The fifth person was the only exception -- he didn't know anything about Linux, but on the other hand he was the "scrub" of the group, knowing little about systems, and instead of working in the DirectX or Office teams, was relegated to writing some QA code in VB. Most hard core techies appear to really like messing around with Linux.

      I've come to start to wish that there was a way for MS and Linux to coexist. I'm willing to let MS have the regular users as long as they don't keep harassing the Linux hobbyists. If Linux had decent hardware support, no constant attacks from Microsoft in the form of "compatibility issues", and didn't have to put up with so much FUD...well, that'd be fine with me. RH and MS can go beat their heads over who gets the regular users. I'm not all that interested in fighting a war for them, just for my ability to do what I want on Linux.

      I think there are a few people that disagree. Stallman, obviously, is a revolutionary, and will probably fight against any form of non-free software...but people like him, talented and extremist activist coders, are few and far between. The KDE folks seem to be willing to do an enormous amount of work to pander to Windows folks, and seem to want to really attack MS (frankly, I personally prefer the more unique flavor of GNOME, but as a pull for Windows users, KDE does a better job). But that's about it. The rest of us seem to mostly enjoy coding, playing with Linux, writing bug reports to and talking with other computer enthusiasts, and if a non-techie user can benefit...well, that's icing on the cake, but there's no reason to waste tons of effort to try to support them.

      Maybe some people here can identify. I volunteer to do Linux tech support sometimes on #linpeople. It feels really rewarding when you help someone out who's really interested in learning the system, and who loves messing around with computers. You've taught them something that they can build on. But users that "just want their problem fixed" and don't really care much about what's wrong or learning how to be able to handle problems in the future...well, helping them just doesn't have nearly as much draw to me.

      Well, this comment ended up a lot longer than I intended...:-)
          • by Radical Rad (138892) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:26AM (#3922493) Homepage

            I am serious about putting TechnophobeLinux together. Please reply if you are interested in helping.

            I hope you change the name for Christ's sake. Hell, even "AnalProbeLinux" would sound friendlier than that!

          • Sorry for the depressive info, but if you wanna make anything even remotely "friendly" or "easy" to Joe User using linux, you need to make major changes to the filesystem layout.

            Having C:\Windows and C:\Program Files is okay on a windows box; they're just points of no-entry, aka advanced stuff you never need to look at. Instead you have "My Documents" to put documents into, and "My Pictures" for pictures. As you get more advanced you could even install a new program. It goes, logically into Program Files, and you get a link automaticly in the start menu.

            Now lets look at the linux version. There's /home/joeuser, which has nothing. You could add, say, documents, pictures to it. So now we have those two nice folders. Now Joe is feeling brave and starts learning about his computer. He finds in his home dir: .bash_history, .kde3, .mcop, .mozilla, .qt, .bashrc, .DCOPserver_localname_localname_0, .ICEauthority, .kderc, .mcoprc and .xftcache.

            Okay, well, so be it - just ignore all of that. Now Joe wants to install NewCoolApp. He starts the installer that was written up for TechnophobeLinux, which kindly asks him to provide the administrator password for the installation. Said and done, and the installer spews files all over his disk. They go into /bin, /usr/bin, /usr/local/whatever, /usr/share/whatever, a bunch of man directories, some in /etc, and maybe some in /opt/whatever as well.

            Honestly, how many people here have actually read the guidelines for filesystem layout? I know which stuff goes in /bin as opposed to /usr/bin (which is also mostly different on different distributions btw...), but Mr. User is most likely to have one partition for everything on his simple desktop system, and none of it matters. Say what you want about the stupidity of putting apps in C:\Program Files\Vendor\ProgramName but at least it's fairly obvious that the "program files" end up under "Program Files" (duh) and possibly C:\Win(NT|dows)\System, which kinda makes sense since they're system files.

            Joe is going to have a lot of questions rather quickly. For instance, why isn't there user stuff in /usr? Who is /usr/share shared with? What's optional with /opt and why isn't the rest optional? And why is my home directory full of config files if config files go into /etc? And why are there at least two */bin dirs (containing not only binaries but other runnable files btw)?

            Say what you want about the Windows registry, but at least it's not laying around in plain view in Joe's home directory. And separating /bin and /usr/bin makes perfect sense on a server handled by a skilled person who could actually do something if /usr would be unavailable anyway - Joe certainly wouldn't be able to poke around the system using /bin and /sbin tools to set things right.

            If you're truly going for an easy-to-use idiot-friendly linux, you're going to have to take some tough decitions. Toss the old layout out the window, pick something like /apps, /config, /system, /documentation, or whatever - and spend a long time compiling stuff from scratch to make it work. I once had plans to do this but never reached anything usable (see LFS [linuxfromscratch.org] for a good beginning). You will probably be flamed until you glow red from people saying you're fragmenting the standard and what-not, but sorry guys, the current layout is for server-techs, not for Joe.

            (Sorry about the rant)

            If you feel like actually doing something like that, feel free to contact me.

              • Hide the flaws instead of fixing them, that is? How about if every programmer figured out that, say, ~/config was a good place to put configs? That'd eliminate the issue instantly. ~/config would become one of these "difficult places" with no need to look in them. Even better, there could be a "config dir" for each user, $CONFIG, in /etc/joeuser, or why not /config/joeuser.

                Now about the /usr/bin etc issue, what happens when Joe starts learning about the computer. He wants to know more, and switched the "advancedness" lever one flip upwards. Suddenly it exposes a system that is none at all like what he currently knows. I would like a newbie-friendly system that "scales" its friendlyness all the way up to the advanced mode.

                Now here's the second problem with the FHS; where a program ends up depends on who installs it and when - if I install it it probably goes in /usr/local/bin or /usr/local/whatnot/bin, but if installed by the distribution it could go in any of /bin /usr/bin /opt/whatever/bin or /usr/something/bin.

                The solution to all of this is in my opinion to 1. Create an alternative FHS for desktops only and make install programs compatable with this layout or 2. hide everything and have a wizard/popup box for every little feature a-la the Microsoftish way. I don't really like that second answer, and the first one is hard on a linux-lover to even consider. But hard things must sometimes be done, if you want that "easy" system - not just an "easy" startup page that proves to be bogus once you reach level 2 in linux the platform game [tm].

                To cut it short -- one could make Linux (*BSD) look completely innocent. It would only take lots of time and quite a bit of creativity.

                Of course it would be possible to do - but it would be just that: "a look". Like a mask to cover the true nature of the beast, instead of a true change in the system. It's really just a push in where the user experience turns bad and where the learning curve derivate goes sky-high.

              • Re:Quick fix (Score:4, Insightful)

                by fferreres (525414) on Saturday July 20 2002, @06:44PM (#3924395) Homepage
                Nop, you need the subdirs. I think the "problem" has no solution. Windows is organized arround APPLICATIONS. Unix is organized arround TOOLS (little specific programs). Now we have a mix of tools and applications (application beign openffice, xine, etc.).

                Linux will always have this duality. If you know Unix, you will learn to chain the tools and do productive things, as well as learn the applications you need. Joe Average doesn't need this and will NOT learn them. He only cares about the applications: separate programs that are standalone where you only need to learn to use the app.

                Joe uses the PC for certain fixed problems solved with apps and sacrifices some flexibility in favour of user-friendlyness.

                Power users will learn the difficult way of doing things. They will be able to do complex stuff the standalone application can't (chaining tools, scripting, batchs).

                The inherent complexity of the file system could only be solved by mappings. If you are Joe Average, you could be presented a different file structure. But all the tools will still have to be somewhere regardless you seen them or not.

                A needed step would be database of where when what and beign able to present a list of every file an application installed. Something like an explicit package management: say a /progs meta filesystem. Like /proc this /progs could map all files installed by a package.

                Example: /prog/apps/openoffice/ would list all files instaleed by openoffice regardless of if they where mixed with other files (say you used /usr/local as prefix and not /opt/openoffice).

                I'd love (and probably many others will) to use rm -rf /progs/apps/openoffice to uninstall a program! Dependencies could be mapped to that dir also!

                Using a registry could be a problem, unless filesystem maped.
  • it's not entirely healthy either.

    I must say, though, that my recent installation of SuSE 8.0 professional has renewed my enthusiasm for a first-rate desktop distribution that's also a great server environment.

    From the animated startup icons, to the look and feel of the default K desktop, it's really the closest thing to the perfect distro that i've come across.

    And the installation is easier and faster (despite the 7 CD's) than Mandrake's!

    I think a lot of other distro's can take a lot of lessons from such a clean, smooth, stable distribution as SuSE has pumped out.

    I can't wait for more!
  • Linux is dead... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Xpilot (117961) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:35AM (#3922274) Homepage
    What, again?

    How many times has Linux died this year? I've lost count :)

    • Apple has you beat by a mile. It's been dying twice a year since the mid-80's.
    • Linux is alive (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Subcarrier (262294) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:06AM (#3922417)
      What, again?

      Exactly what I thought. People are so busy planning grand futures for Linux, and so disappointed when the software evolution fails to take us there, that they forget to enjoy the present.

      Linux will have a future. Just take my word for it. The journey, however, is more important than the destination.
      • Linux is doing fine thank you.

        Oh sure, it is a bit slow selling on desktops but that will change as more and more consumers find out that Microsoft can more than double the cost of every PC you need.

        The Microsoft office suite is $400 or so a seat. And, they are getting nasty about blocking the install on home, laptop and second or third systems by the same person. For $76, StarOffice suggests 5 personal installs. And, if $76 is too stiff, use OpenOffice.

        Once the white box boys figure out that they can deliver all PCs with a free copy of OpenOffice and simply charge $15 or so to have it preinstalled, the casual market for the Microsoft Suite could dry up completely. And, the same may be true with large organizations such as corporations, governments, etc. Why spend $300-600 more per PC when you can go with linux, OpenOffice or StarOffice and double the number of new machines you buy?

        Money is money.

        And, right now money favors linux hands down.

        Plus, that does not take into account the progress that Xandros, Lindows and others are making to expand the number of viable desktop systems under the linux banner.

        The absence of QuickBooks, TurboTax and a few other key applications is a problem right now. GNUCash is fine. And, other software does substitute for much of what people think they need Microsoft for. But, it takes time for that information to filter out. But, it will filter out. Those who sell PCs (not the big OEMs) will be taking the lead packaging complete systems including software for a whole lot less than the Microsoft burden. Then customers can decide if the extra money is really worth it. It is not if you can make the choice.

        And, if you write custom applications anyway, Java or Delphi/Kylix is right there to give you the same powerful GUI based RAD development systems you expect on Microsoft stuff.

        The more machines you need the bigger the price benefit helps linux.

        And, if you think that consumer PC buyers really want to pay twice the price for a system just because it has some Microsoft software on it that they rarely use, you are crasy. The typical consumer simply is unaware of what they can buy and use. That will change.

        • Once the white box boys figure out...Money is money.

          I'dl ike to suggest that the "white box boys" know their own business better than anyone. If it were really true that they could make more money by pre-installing RH 7.3 and OpenOffice then you can rest assured that some enterprising company would be doing it and eating everyone elses lunch. The fact that this is not happening leads me to believe that your assessment of the "readiness" of Linux isn't quite where you think it is. You subscribe to the "peole don't yet realize we're ready" theory while I subscribe to the "you're in denial about the fact that you're not ready" theory.

          Perhaps it's the edge of consumer-friendliness that Windows has over Linux at present that kills it. I mean how much money are these "white box boys" - or anyone else for that matter! - really making on one unit? $50? $30? Less?? You get two support calls and suddenly you have made $0.

          I think there is no reason to claim that Linux will save these guys money until you have an example to point to that's convincing enough to make others follow. When/if that happens you won't have to claim it - we'll all be watching the OEMs trip over themselves to sell Linux-based computers.

        • It's not just a matter of money, it's a huge matter of convenience- that's what drives a large part of the consumer market. Make it easy, transparent, no thought required, and you'll have a chance.

          On one hand, it really sucks to see people throw up their hands and say "We've LOST, let's go home." I don't see this as a "war" between M$$ and Linux, I see it as a process that involves building alternatives, and educating consumers about their availability. Some processes take time...

          Also, consider this- there's not too much more that M$ can pack into upgrades of Excel and Word. For all practical purposes, each successive upgrade (from a consumer perspective) will offer diminishing returns. This is the reason that a company like M$ would want to turn the whole notion of a software "purchase" into a software "rental." Change it from a tangible commodity into a service, and you've got yourself a nice fat, predictable revenue stream. And you don't have to resort to extortion to get people to upgrade.

          There are two things I think the Linux camp can do to continue with this process: focus on the little things that make it suck, and do what it takes to provide seamless interchange between apps on Linux, and apps on Doze. Consumers are generally lazy, so CONVENIENCE is the key.
    • My thoughts exactly. I was like, whoa it's the video game syndrome. You died, press start to continue.
      I think KDE3 is great and the inclusion of Xine in RH 7.3 install was very impressive even if I was a bit disappointed with the perfomance. I was floored by what I saw. I assume 8.0 will be a real bitch for Redmond. And as far as bloat, it was still quite nimble on my ol' Cyrix233, albeit with a fat stack of RAM, but these days even cheap bastards can have lots of RAM.
      And as far as apps, well people who say things like that obviously haven't installed Wine correctly. It's not that hard. There's thousands of Win9X apps that run fine under Wine already and that includes lots of the high end stuff.
      This dude may be the rad hacker, but his opinions on the progress of linux seem tainted by some personal distaste for certain people in the open source community.
  • by PhysicsGenius (565228) <physics_seeker.yahoo@com> on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:36AM (#3922278)
    It's all about the servers, baby.

    Nobody is using Linux as a desktop system--it just doesn't have the intuitive point-n-click of a Mac or the games offerings of Windows. People are using Linux for the server-side. That's where the real power is. The one who controls the server controls the desktop, Microsoft has been saying that for years.

    I've been saying for years that E was eye-candy and that development efforts were better focused on the shortcomings Linux has on high-end server machines such as quality NFS support, a standardized email package and high uptimes. Too bad it took Rasterman, boy genius, 5 years to figure it out as well.

  • Well.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mindstrm (20013) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:36AM (#3922279)
    Of course the desktop is dead.

    If we want a desktop that works,that will compete, there are two things that have to happen.

    We need a single distribution. That's right. We need totally focused efforts.
    We need a single desktop. No more of this "I can choose 10 window managers." I'm not saying take away the choice, but we need to pick one system and say "THIS IS IT" and the community can code for THAT.

    Until we have focused, unified efforts towards bringing out a rock solid desktop, it won't happen. There is too much choice for the consumer.
    • Re:Well.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by 1010011010 (53039) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:56AM (#3922364) Homepage

      Exactly. Adboce, for instance, will keep shipping their ugly Motif-baed Reader, in the absence of a standard. With Windows, there's a standard. With Apple, there's a standard. There can be deviation, and even themability, but they know that if they code in certain way, it will fit in with the rest of the system in a harmonious manner. Preferences are all stored the same way, etc.

      With Unix, it's "whatever you want to do," and not much matches. If Adobe could code for Gnome/Gtk/GConf, for instance, it would fit in well with the rest of the gnome desktop, which Sun and HP will be shipping soon. As it is, do they choose Motif? Gtk? Qt? FLTK? Eh? And if they choose an alternate toolkit, how do they query the perferences for the "native" desktop? At least on Window and Mac, they can make their MDI widgets look Windowsy and Macy because they know what's expected, and can look up preferences in an standard way.

      • Re:Well.. (Score:3, Informative)

        Exactly. Adboce, for instance, will keep shipping their ugly Motif-baed Reader, in the absence of a standard.

        In the case of adobe, it's all about 'history'. once upon a time they bought some kit which allowed them to develop apps simultaneously for Win16/Unix. That kit used Motif. ATM, company which made the kit, is probably dead. If They would switch over to something like wxWindows [wxwindows.org], they could use any kit on unix side. AFAIK adobe apps always come statically compiled anyways.
    • We need a single distribution. That's right. We need totally focused efforts.
      No - we - don't

      Competition is essential to pressure evolution. Even MS knows this, and promotes internal competition, to compensate for its monopoly status. Trying to mimic MS, however is not feasible. Linux doesn't have the slack MS's bank account provides. External competition is then the only viable option - and let the market filter out inefficient companies.

      We need *standards* - for stuff that can be standardized. Filesystem hierarchies, file formats, etc.

      Having dozens of interoperable distributions is really our best scenario, and linux is headed that way.

      We need a single desktop.
      Nope. We need a desktop standard API, for the basic stuff. Adding menu options et al. Forcing people to one desktop (directly or indirectly) is not an option. I though this was obvious...
      • by Raul654 (453029) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:46AM (#3922595) Homepage
        Programmer man-hours are a limited resource, whether you work for Microsoft or Linux. Linux has a larger talent pool, but that effort is divided into dozens of differnet desktop enviroments, all of which, IMHO, are inferior to windows (and I haven't seen whole lot of improvement here, either). Konq is a terrible way of browsing the file system, not to mention slow. You can't even copy/cut/paste reliably between applications. So forget about coding for them. Linux is wonderful for programming and remote access, speed and reliability, but when it comes to the UI, it stinks.
        • ...but we don't. If the goal is known specifically, then a single project (or at least, a fewer number of projects) would probably be a good idea.

          The future is not known, though, so it must be evolved. Evolution requires variation, and multiple, competing projects are a good way to get that variation.

          (Lack of variation is one of the reasons Microsoft is so stagnant. It's also a prime reason why they buy technology from others. It's not so much that they can't write code--their problem is that they can't generate variation, so they import it.)

          --Mike

    • Re:Well.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by isorox (205688) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:21AM (#3922481) Homepage Journal
      To be honest, I couldnt care less what you think. I use enlightenment - nice pretty effects, virtual desktop (ctrl-shift-left/right/up/down). Laptop used wmaker as e is too slow. My girlfriend likes kde. I use afterstep at uni as it makes a change.

      We dont need one desktop. We dont need one distro. We dont need one operating system. You use BSD? I dont care. Use windows? Fine. use a mac? Great.

      What we do need is open API's and file formats. Then when you install acrobat, it calls WindowManager.AddProgram("Acrobat", INSTALL_DIR, "acrobrat");. Then your window manager can choose what to do with that.

      We need standard api's, so if you like GTK, acrobat calls a function - drawToolbar() - you get a GTK toolbar.
      If you switch to QT, then acrobat calls drawToolbar(), QT draws a toolbar.

      standards API's with many implementations. Hell you could set up different programs to run in different toolkits using different apis. As a user.

      I'd also have it that commercial companies can implement the standard API's in a closed api. As long as the interface is available, who cares, you arent forced to use it.

      Forcing everyone run OfficialLinux v1.0 is no better then forcing everyone to run windows.
  • What a coincidence (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:37AM (#3922283)
    Linux is dead everywhere but in the area where Rasterman is currently working. Imagine that!
  • by mtngrown (24296) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:38AM (#3922284)

    was raising the bar far higher than anyone ever before imagined.

    Before e, wm's were not very interesting.

  • Why doesn't Sues and Mandrake make a 1 CD distro, with Openoffice, KDE, Cups, The gimp, mozilla, and the best version of wine etc and a few games, and maybe apache?

    I like to have 10 different databases loads of servers and evrything anyone could ever want in a distro.

    My Mum wouldn't use it and doesn't need it

  • Frankly... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Fnkmaster (89084) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:44AM (#3922309)
    Raster isn't wrong - it is the apps that matter to end users. I think we always knew that. He's also not wrong about the GPL, though I think it's not for the reasons he states (technically the license of the OS/desktop environment shouldn't matter as long as commercial entities can develop apps for it, but in marketing/PR/perception terms, it does matter).

    However, I find his defeatist attitude annoying. I think the reason for it is simple: he seems to be a pure technologist, and therefore upon observing that the technically superior OS loses on the desktop, he gives up hope, embracing the idea that making the coolest, whiz-bangest WM for the ultra-31337 geeks is the best course of action (and while at it, take pot shots at the KDE and GNOME dudes).

    What we need is more people who know how to market Linux to software companies so that the damned applications will get developed. This is not a technical problem, it's a business problem: there are too few desktop Linux users, thus a relatively small business imperative for software companies to incur the overhead of porting applications. Furthermore, the fear of free clones of your application and the culture of imitation in the Free Software world scare companies aware from producing commercial products for Linux (note that I think this fear is unfounded: a sufficiently complex, powerful application takes an awful lot of effort to clone. Your work should stand on its own quality).

    The reality is that we need to find more ways to entice companies to develop commercial, closed source software for Linux if we want it to succeed on the desktop, for the masses. Don't say it's already there, we all know it's not. And we need to remember that the solutions to business problems are usually not found by technical means.

        • Up until he released it, I had never seen desktop windows that were anything but square.

          Xclock, Xeyes ?

          Probably didn't see many that weren't rectangular because it turned out to be mostly useless.
  • by omnirealm (244599) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:48AM (#3922326) Homepage

    At the start of each new school year, Microsoft hits our campus hard. They hang big banners, set up booths in the student center, and get the managers to make the on-campus computer store employees wear Microsoft t-shirts.

    The BYU Unix Users Group gives its own response. This year, we're going to have a booth in the student center too. We're inviting students to bring their machines, and a group of volunteers will install Linux on their machines on the spot, for free.

    We're making up flyers that read, ``Thrusday and Friday only! Get a FREE COPY of OpenOffice Suite version 1.0 (must have student ID or employee ID). Save HUNDREDS of dollars on your computer software this year!''

    We're not just going to be pushing Linux, but Free Software in general. For those who are queasy about jumping full-force into Linux, we will offer to install Mozilla and OpenOffice on their Windows partitions, so they have some familiar ground to refer to when they boot into Linux.

    The biggest debate in the group at the moment is which distributions to recommend to the newbies who bring their computers to the booth. I argue that since we're installing it for them, those who live on-campus and are on the university's network should use Debian because of the ease of maintenance. Others claim that Mandrake/RedHat/SuSE are more user friendly in general, and so they should be advocated instead.

    In any case, we're doing what we can to let starving students know that they don't have to shell out hundreds of dollars to feed an addiction to proprietary software, when perfectly usable and functional Open Source alternatives exist for them. KDE+Mozilla+OpenOffice+Evolution is a powerful combination that makes Linux very much a viable desktop operating system.

    Plus, anyone who switches over has the best support team around: the campus Unix Users Group! A perusal of our mailing list shows that we don't sleep at night until your problem is solved. :-)

  • Last night, I just turned off Windows 98 at home.
    It's replaced with the newest Red Hat. My two teen-agers love it (with the sole reservation that they can't run Final Fantasy any more). Our local parochial school is switching to Linux in its computer teaching lab. At work, we're a Fenster-frei environment: we route telephone calls, all done under BSD and SCO.

    So Linux on the desktop is dead, eh? Guess a lot of people like me just missed the obituary.
  • by Tyreth (523822) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:52AM (#3922348)
    In the experience of people I talk to about computers, roughly:
    * 40% seem open to hearing about Linux - they just want something easy to use, cheap, etc
    * 20% are skeptical at first then very impressed when they see it ("If I set up a new business I'd definately use Linux")
    * 30% would use it if it had the games they wanted
    * 10% adamantly support Microsoft without knowing anything about it - perhaps just for the fun of opposing me

    So in my experience, Linux has a very bright future for the desktop, at least for those people I encounter daily.

    But I think the desktop is dead anyway. Rasterman says that embedded is the future - the level ground. This is true, but there is another path.

    Do you think 10 years from now we are going to be using desktops too? I doubt it very much. Minority report perhaps gives us a snippet of the future. Computer "desktops" will go 3D. Maybe we will control our computer with virtual reality gloves and speak commands, or perhaps even use our mind for some simple tasks.

    The future of computers will hopefully be power covered by simplicity. The way we think and use computers will change over time. We won't think "I need to use the computer to check e-mail". E-mail will become a daily part of life. Perhaps your house will say to you "You have 3 new messages". And then you respond "bring them up", and in front of you is projected an image of the e-mail, which could possibly be video rather than text. This kind of interface has no desktop. It is a simple and human way of interacting with computers. Desktops are cludgy things that expose people to some of the power of a comptuer that they don't need to see. What we need is a solution that has the simplest possible interface (like the e-mail scenario I gave) but has the potential for the user to hack it at it's base level (open source philosophy). That way the simplicity makes computers a powerful part of everyday life, but also gives the power to those who want/need to fiddle with the settings.

    I think the desktop is dead. It's like having 4 remotes with 20 buttons each. In a house you hide your electricy cables, and you hide your water pipes. With computers however we expose people to desktops - which I believe are a patchwork solution. Eventually there will be no "computer" that people fight to use. There will be no monitor or keyboard. The interface will be more natural and human, integrated into the house or building.

    Basically, desktops are getting close to their highest potential. The next phase will be something different, something that won't be solved by a new Windows release or by KDE 6.2 - it will require a shift in thought about how computers work, which will start off ugly at first and then progress into something beautiful looking. But as long as we have the desktop, our way of thinking will be constrained to 2 dimensions, which doesn't allow for the vast potential of computers in the near future.

    (3dwm plug [3dwm.org])

    • Desktop is dead! (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Stiletto (12066) on Saturday July 20 2002, @11:10AM (#3922696) Homepage

      I couldn't agree more with the parent poster. It's not "Linux on the Desktop" that's dead, but the DESKTOP itself that's dead (or dying).

      Normal people don't want to use computers, in general. They want to do tasks that they consider worthwhile. They want to communicate with others asynchronously. CURRENTLY, this is done through email, and CURRENTLY it requires a computer. Who says email NEEDS to require a computer? What if your email could be read to you automatically when you walked into your apartment? Most people would see this as a usability improvement over:

      1. Sit down
      2. Turn computer on
      3. Wait
      4. Double-click
      5. Wait while phone dials
      6. Click
      7. Click
      8. Scroll
      9. Click
      10. Click
      11. Stand up

      People don't want to use computers. They want to get things done. They want to create letters and presentations. Currently this requires a computer , a printer, and a lot of typing. Does it have to be this way? No! A lot of research has gone into voice recognition and computer vision. In the future we'll just describe a document or presentation in basic terms, using a natural interface like voice or gestures, and a device will spit out what was requested.

      I predict computing's next "killer app" will be something that allows people to get rid of their computers.

      • by mickwd (196449) on Saturday July 20 2002, @01:11PM (#3923242)
        "What if your email could be read to you automatically when you walked into your apartment?"

        When I eventually get the girl of my dreams to come back to my apartment, the last thing I want to hear is:

        "MickWd, get that larger penis you always wanted"

        "Hey, MickWd, this is Naughty Nancy. I'm horny and waiting for your call"

        "MickWd, having problems getting it up ? Try our new Viagra"
  • by Sleepy (4551) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:53AM (#3922350) Homepage
    A lot of people run Linux. A lot MORE have "tried" it, and then say to themselves "then what"?

    Linux just doesn't have any good, free software, and that's what's needed to run a desktop.

    At my last company, when I complained about Office attachments on the email and intraweb (against agreed-upon policy), the IT guy just gives me an Office CD and winks. When I state I run Linux at home, I get the "it's not my fault is it" (with the look of "you know, if it hurts when you slam the door on your head don't do it" look).

    Linux will not even BEGIN to be appealing until people can "take their work home" (Office warez CD). As cool as CodeWeavers Crossover is - I've used it - it isn't "free" with the OS.

    That's not a slam - I encourage commercial software on Linux, but the office-worker-at-home and the AOL user -- the majority of Windows users -- just want everything for free. They don't believe in Free Software or the GPL, and they don't believe installing MS Project on every computer is really stealing.

    Eleet coder wanna-bees is another group -- slightly more technical than Mom -- that Linux won't win over. These people download the ISO's as soon as their released, burn em, but only try every 3rd release and then on a spare computer. Since Linux won't run his pirated games (or at least not full speed), Linux sucks. Besides, you can't run MS Visual Basic on Linux, which is an industry standard. Everyone knows you gotta program Linux in Assembly, or sometimes C. ;-)

    For Linux to become more appealing to the masses, it doesn't need a lot of polish -- it's "good enough" right now. What's needed is for Microsoft needs to get tougher on licensing, which they won't do UNTIL they are SURE they have locked out the threats (by extending the Internet, apparently)

  • by Taco Cowboy (5327) on Saturday July 20 2002, @09:59AM (#3922381)


    Desktop Linux is far from dead. It's NOT dead.

    Just that it's not heading in the right direction.

    Lots of things have been said about the ease of use thingy, but that's just scratching the surface.

    What's important, looking at the larger picture, is that Linux is filled with programmers wearing beany caps.

    Translation : Linux programs are wonderful, but it's just NOT the world needs.

    Look at Windows. Lots of clumpsy and over bloated programs, but at least, they do what the world wants, and buys !

    We have put too much emphasis on SOURCE CODE, because we wear beany caps - that is, we are the people who almost always CHANGE THE PROGRAM BEHAVIOR OURSELVES, that's why we demand the source code to the program.

    But the world outside of us is that people do NOT want or need or know how to change the program's behavior, all they want is that the program does what they want - whatever they want.

    That's why we have NORTON UTILITIES for Windows, and there's none of Linux.

    That's why we have so much MUSIC, MP3, STREAMING, VIDEO, MULTIMEDIA utilities for Windows ... many of them are buggy like hell, but at least they ARE available.

    On the other hand, what do we have here ?

    KDE, GNOME, ENLIGHTENMENT, yeah, big deal !

    The users need MORE THAN WINDOWING ENVIRONMENTS, they need UTILITIES that do stuffs for them !

    That's what we fall short on.

    That's what we need to double and tripple our efforts on.

    Not that we do not have the knowhow to do it, nor that we don't have the programmer-aid to do it.

    We have Kylix from Borland (FREE !) and how many of us are using Kylix to develop USEFUL UTILITIES for the users ?

    Do something about this problem and we will see the Desktop Linux comes alive.

  • not dead at all (Score:3, Insightful)

    by g4dget (579145) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:05AM (#3922409)
    Linux on the desktop is fine, really. I have seen quite a number of non-technical users use it, and they do OK. It is a bit disappointing to me that Linux on the desktop isn't any better than commercial desktops--it uses the same stale metaphors and the same cumbersome paradigms--but it isn't any worse either.

    I think the biggest obstacle for more widespread adoption of Linux right now is the kernel. Unlike userland, where you have thousands of independently developed programs available on the same machine, the kernel is one big, monolithic chunk. While drivers could in principle be developed and distributed separately, in practice, few are. Most Linux installs that I do involve recompiling the kernel. Whether it's merely packaging or architecture, something isn't working there.

  • Desktop Linux (and BSD, excepting MaxOS X) is really only appropriate at large installations where the environment is completely controlled and administered by professionals. While it's fine for a power user to install on their home computer, it really isn't appropriate for mom and pop. For that matter, neither is Windows. This means that desktop Linux is most likely to be found supporting scientific applications, Software development houses, Health care support, corporate desktops, data entry and call centers, and cash registers. It may become a viable home desktop system in the third world, should countries like China, Korea, Peru, etc decide to invest the money necessary to create localized infrastructure to support a wide scale Linux deployment for it's citizens similar to the old teletext systems used in Europe.

    To proclaim that desktop linux is dead is foolish though. I've seen some very large scale desktop Linux deployments Boston area genomics companies, universities, and software houses. These are often commercial Unix to Linux migrations, so I'm not arguing that it's hitting the Windows desktop market hard. But if you know your stuff there's definitely work to be had in this market. As long as I'm paid well for this stuff, I'd hardly call it dead! --M

  • by jsse (254124) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:10AM (#3922432) Homepage Journal
    Has it? Has the battle ended already? Do we have a closing date in this battle?

    Or you just feel tired and rest behind the lane, yell at the runners "We lost! Face it! Do you hear me? We lost, dudes!"
  • Why switch? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by be-fan (61476) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:11AM (#3922435)
    I think the main issue that's preventing most people from switching is that it isn't worth it. Linux, on the desktop, is not that much better than Windows XP on the desktop. Its not noticibly more stable, its not noticibly faster, but there are noticible downsides (application support and ease-of-use) to using it. I've been running Linux on a desktop machine for years now, and have recently settled in pretty well with KDE 3.0 and Gentoo. I use it not because it really gains me any technical merit I don't get in Windows XP, but because I hate Microsoft, the windows-style command line interface, and that blasted tooltip that keeps popping up in the corner of my screen in XP. Still, whenever I boot back into XP (to run Photoshop or the occasional game) I have to admit that Linux really isn't technically superior anymore, at least not in ways that a desktop user would notice. XP is reasonably fast, reasonably stable, and reasonably easy to use. For those less rabid then me, then, its an easy choice. They can endure the pain of switching to Linux, for a dubious set of benifets, or they can stay with Windows. This has been the situation forever. Why did MacOS never manage to take back its market share from Windows? Its been superior (from an average desktop user's point of view) for a very long time. Simply because people didn't percieve enough benifet from doing it. Windows was *good enough* compared to what MacOS was at the time. Now, if the timing had been different, had a Linux 2.4/KDE 3.0-style desktop been available around the introduction of Windows 95, would Linux have taken off? Hell ya. People would have seen a significant benifet in moving to Linux. Thus, if Linux ever wants to beat Microsoft on the desktop, it can't settle for being a "better Windows." It has to be *more*. Not just different, but a generation ahead technically. Now, this is what Microsoft does best. When they're not designing stuff like Palladium, MS engineers come up with genuinely cool stuff. A lot of it may be ripped of from other sources, and the first implementations may be less than perfect, but overall, they keep advancing the desktop. If Linux wants to be the next Windows, it has to beat Microsoft at its own game. It has to think up the next generation of user inteface and implement it before Microsoft can.
  • OS X (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Megane (129182) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:16AM (#3922460)
    Mod me down as a troll if you must, and it's sort of off-topic because the article here is talking about Linux on x86, but I've thought of "Linux on the Desktop" as total ass myself for a couple of years now. Now we get two articles in two weeks saying as much. Which is exactly why I've been working hard (and finally succeeded) to get OS X running on my old Power Mac instead of putting Yellow Dog or Debian on it.

    First, XFree was a pain in the ass to get set up. I haven't tried it since 4.x, but 3.x sucked because all the setup programs wanted to compute "optimum" modelines for your monitor and display card, which inevitably never worked for me. This instead of what I wanted: resolution and refresh, from the list of VESA standard modes. Oh, but I can just edit this annoying config file, commenting out a bunch of lines for modes I don't want. If it's a pain in the ass for me, it's impossible for mom 'n' pop. Before I gave up two years ago, I think only TurboLinux 4.x had a config program with resolution/refresh selection.

    Then there's getting the desktop environments running themselves. I didn't get very far on them, but in my experience, if you didn't pick the window manager favored by the distro, the others simply weren't configured to do anything useful. The only way to get menus to contain anything useful seemed to be by editing config files, and by this time I wasn't in any mood to search for more damn config files to edit.

    So I decided to stay with Slackware as a lean server-only OS on my cheap x86 boxen, and wait for OS X, which at the time was just around the corner. I've had it running on a laptop since pre-release, and this week it's put new life into a creaky old Power Computing clone box. And I've got it running on the iMac my mom got a few months back. It just works, without a bunch of tweaking, partly because Macs have nowhere near the hardware nightmare that exists in the x86 world. And it's full of that unix-y goodness which let me kill a frozen AOL client on her machine remotely.

  • by DevilsEngine (581977) on Saturday July 20 2002, @10:49AM (#3922604)
    It's quit tempting to look on Windows as the Nazis, or the Mongol Horde -- a force that must be crushed if civilization is to be saved. If this is your working analogy, then there is only total victory or inglorious death.

    However, much as we might like it, the world is not populated by dragons and operating systems are not the tools of St. George.

    Linux is not dead. Not now, nor is that a likely event any time in the near future. It's equally unlikely that Linux will soon drive Windows into the sea.

    Windows will continue to be dominant on the consumer desktop for the immediate future. Windows has the applications, the games, and the thousands of developers grinding out the product. Could they do better work on Linux? Possibly, but it's not going to happen. Not with a relatively tiny marketplace further divided by flavors of installation and interface.

    Linux will continue to drive servers and as the desktop of enthusiasts. It's a niche operating system, now, and likely forever.

    For those that gnash their teeth over the evil empire, fear not! All empires crumble with time. But when something comes to push back the dark forces of Mordor, it will almost certainly NOT be Linux. It will be something clean and new, something that has a Vision (upper case "V") of computer interaction that goes past the creaky, cranky interfaces we have now and gives us a new way to relate to our machines. When it happens, Windows will go into the C/PM bin before Bill Gates can debug his digital living room.

    And Linux will still be there, clanking along, doing it's job.

    There is some space between death and triumph. Kind of like Switzerland.
  • by DrXym (126579) on Saturday July 20 2002, @11:10AM (#3922698)
    I really don't understand why Linux is dominated by the head-up-the-ass attitude that users are lusers. A good, well designed desktop helps everyone. OS X is very easy to use whether you're a newbie or an expert. Apple took the time to create a simple UI, one which is intuitive, where the settings are in one place and where there aren't a zillion advanced settings cluttering up things.

    As a power user on OS X I don't feel constricted by this. I still run X and various Unix tools thanks to fink and I find the UI to be straightforward and easy to use. In other words, the simplicity helps me get on with stuff rather than wasting hours reading through FAQs or HOWTOs just trying to figure how to share a folder or whatnot.

    The same cannot be said for a Linux desktop. I'm constantly wasting my time trying to find some stupid option in the zillion control panels KDE/GNOME puts up for me, or swearing at the stupid help system that doesn't integrate distro help with KDE/GNOME help with manpage help etc., or scratching my head trying to figure out to get my scanner to be recognized, or grinding my teeth because the distro fills its multiple menus of apps with cryptic apps with names starting with g or k.

    It doesn't have to be that way. Unless Linux becomes usable for everyone, not just experts it will never get on the deskop. Besides, the more users there are, the more jobs there are for admins and developers to meet demand. I would have thought it's in everyone's interest to see it succeed.

  • by wytcld (179112) on Saturday July 20 2002, @11:13AM (#3922709) Homepage
    There's this great thing that's been happening in Western culture over the last century, which consists in bringing visual intelligence to parity in media with verbal. But there's also this childish notion many tend towards in our culture (in most cultures) that if we valued A over B before, and now we learn that B has special value which had been overlooked in favor of A, then the revaluing of B should also demote A. Thus for instance there are many examples from "feminism" and "culture theory" of the equation of the written word with "linear" thinking and even "patriarchial" ideology, with some notion that this A should be overthrown by B. Well, we don't need the antithesis to triumph, we need the synthesis.

    Visually, despite all the new visual media from photography forward, we're still a pretty stupid culture. Most of our smarts are still in texts, from books to the ASCII files that make up most all the code and configuration of *NIX systems. And the main use of computers in business is in preparing, exchanging, storing and searching texts. It's going to be this way for a long time, because text is a place where human beings have established a foundation of collective brilliance that goes far beyond the world's best video collection. It's not going to be replaced by a Matrix-like collective video game anytime soon. And the moves in that direction will likely be rendered by text-based *NIX systems.

    Linux is just about there for handling text. AbiWord and OpenOffice will, within the year, have parity with anything else, and price advantage. XFree is anti-aliased. The major thing missing is the equivalent of Quark or PageMaker, and maybe a font front-end that's as simple as Adobe, so that Linux becomes backward compatible with print production.

    Computer games aren't anything most offices want to see their employees playing anyhow. What they care about is systems that allow workers to transparently produce and interact with texts. And that's what most independent knowledge workers care about too - even most programmers. Code is text, "higher level" tools that let you draw connections between objects in visual space will continue to suck for all but the most brain-dead programming.

    And the only part of the workforce that doesn't need to be literate any more is the unemployed.
    ___
  • Rasterman (Score:3, Funny)

    by haroldhunt (199966) on Saturday July 20 2002, @11:41AM (#3922809) Homepage
    Rasterman: Desktop Linux is Dead

    10 years later...

    Desktop Linux: Rasterman is Dead
  • by erroneus (253617) on Saturday July 20 2002, @11:41AM (#3922811) Homepage
    Linux is strongest as a server.

    It's easier to enter that market and to build a reputation. That part of Linux is working very well for the community. With all the news about various companies using Linux for processing vastly significant amounts of data for vastly significant purposes, in some aspects, Linux is leaving all others in the dust.

    It's Linux's reputation that will eventually bring it to the desktop, however. It's not the eye-candy of elightenment. It's not all the cool object-oriented inner-workings of GNOME. The reputation of Linux's reliability, availability and affordability that will eventually pull it onto desktops of home and corporate users.

    First and foremost, if a more agressive push to the desktop is to happen any time soon, is to more completely and accurately emulate the Windows look and feel. It doesn't matter that it's "inferior." The "inferior" argument hasn't held since day-1. It needs to be familiar to the people who want to use it. If they expect "Network Neighborhood" then give'm Network Neighborhood.

    It is not yet time to strengthen the weaknesses at the expense of existing stengths. Linux has a lot of strong points that are not being put to full use.

    The demand for the desktop will come in time but there should be no major push for it. If there were to be a huge push for it, it would mean a radical series of changes such as a more well-defined "LSB" and strict adherance to it. We would need to come up with a "Linux Standard Desktop" definition that GNOME and KDE and any other players should target themselves to. Graphics and multimedia standards will have to be rigidly defined and adhered to.

    These changes would have to happen very quickly and abruptly. It would cause a great deal of stress and confusion across the board. I say let it happen gradually and take the pressure off the desktop developers. There is no rush... not yet anyway. (Maybe after Win2k is pulled from the shelves.)

    In the mean time, keep "Linux" in the public's eye and make them want it more and more by focusing on it's existing and growing strengths. Showing the public a weak, buggy and kludgey desktop will only sour public opinion regardless of how much work and pride it represents the developers. The "first impression" will stick regardless of what changes happen after the fact.

    Linux on the desktop is not ready for prime-time. Let's not put it out there until it's ready. For now, let it remain the domain of the "L337" and let the public have Windows + Samba.
  • Rasterman is dead (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Jerry (6400) on Saturday July 20 2002, @12:25PM (#3923017) Homepage
    He, or actually his ego, died when the number of KDE installs eclipsed the number of Enlightenment installs, which happened when most Linux distros made KDE the default Desktop.

    The Linux desktop success does not depend on how many "Grandmas and Grandpas" adopt it! Linux on the desktop is succeeding, and increasingly so, because corporations are switching to it enmass. And, as the stockmarket continues to tank, they'll be avoiding the unnecessary expense of License 6 and hardware upgrades by increasing their use of Linux through out their entire corporate structure. OpenOffice has been the catalyst that triggered the decisions around the globe to make the switch.

    The paradigm shift is NOW in high gear! IT departments that were once staunch MS shops now openly criticize Microsoft and its various schemes to make money off their backs and at the expense of their security and privacy, and have begun deploying Linux in more than just server rooms.

    While Microsoft's illegal monopoly activities, along with their theft of software and demographic data, continue unchecked because of a compliant Bush DOJ, so does their corporate greed and arrogance. People have had enough. They've seen through the PR and FUD. They've connected the dots leading from abusive EULAs to loss of supposedly 'unalienable' rights, and they don't like it.

    The only thing remaining for the people to see is that the accounting principles used by Enron and WorldCom CEOs were not invented by Enron but borrowed from Microsoft. The NASDAQ will show even bigger losses when Microsoft is forced to subtract programmer payrolls from their profits and not hide them as future stock options. The following URL contains a prophetic analysis, made in 1999, of today's stockmarket situation.

    http://www.billparish.com/msftfraudfacts.html

    "Microsoft is granting excessive amounts of stock options that are allowing the company to understate its costs. You might ask yourself, what would happen to Microsoft's stock price if the public suddenly realized that they lost $10 billion in 1999 rather than earning the reported $7.8 billion? If 80 percent of its stock value or roughly $400 billion is the result of a pyramid scheme, one might also ask what kind of effect this could have on the retirement system. It is also important to note that this is a relatively new situation that did not occur before 1995. Microsoft has always been a highly valued stock and that might have been justified prior to 1995.

    This situation is not about stock valuation, product quality or whether or not Microsoft has monopoly power in its markets. Nor is it part of a pro or anti-Microsoft movement. This situation is instead a shining example of financial fraud and corruption enabled by bad government policy. If not quickly and aggressively addressed, we will all be losers as credibility in our financial markets is destroyed.

    Bill Gates has quitely been unloading MS stock at the rate of $500 million per month for several months, begining just before the Enron debacle became public -- talk about your insiders trading! Other MS executivers are probably doing the same.

    Truely, the end of Microsoft is near, and the stockmarket decline will certainly hasten it!

  • Typical Rasterman (Score:3, Interesting)

    by philovivero (321158) on Saturday July 20 2002, @03:44PM (#3923840) Homepage Journal
    Probably not many of you have been in one-on-one conversations with Rasterman. I have.

    Back in the day, when FVWM'95 was the state-of-the-art, I got into contact with him because he was doing something new and cool.

    I recommended that he not just create a WM, but a desktop environment. I was willing to help him do it. He obviously was good at making the widgets and all, but didn't have anything to help apps communicate with one another.

    He was uninterested. The future, he figured, was in the WM.

    It doesn't surprise me that since not too many are very interested in his WM (Sawfish and KWM are far more oft-used) -- that he thinks Linux desktop is dead and has no future.

    He still doesn't get it.

    But never mind. He's a techie. His genius doesn't lie in predicting the future of Linux, it lies in creating cool assembly-tweaked embedded whatsit solutions (as you can tell, where my genius *DOESN'T* lie). Let him be, but for god's sake, don't ask him the future of Linux.

    You'll get the same drivel I got from him back in the 90's.
    • Re:Erm. (Score:2, Insightful)

      Furthermore, this guy is totally blind to anything outside his little world.

      He says that Linux's only future as anything other than a server is embedded apps, and he just happens to be working for an embedded company right now.

      He also openly admits that he will break E so that it will not run with Gnome 2.

      I'd say this guy is just bitter that the Linux world left him behind.
    • Re:Fact it (Score:2, Interesting)

      I think people (myself included) have lately been missing the best thing about Linux, et al.

      It's fun.

      _Just for the Fun_ was the title of Linus' book on doing the kernel.

      Yeah, Windows has won. In another two years, Microsoft will completely own the Internet, you'll have to use IE to buy anything online, and Linux will be reduced to the same level of amateur ham radio.

      It'll still be fun, though.