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Ulteo Shows Linux-Windows Crossover Potential 70

An anonymous reader writes "With Wubi and now the Ulteo Virtual Desktop, we're starting to see examples of the potential 'cross-over' appeal of Linux to Windows users. Ulteo gets a nice look from Channelweb, which writes, 'Considering that this is not even a version 1 beta, we have high hopes for Ulteo Virtual Desktop. It allows Linux novices to dip their toes into the water without any fear, and lets Linux pros use their favorite applications when they are forced to be in a Windows environment.' This also seems to play into comments by Mark Shuttleworth, who has said the Ubuntu community may want to think about how it can start appealing to Windows users."
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Ulteo Shows Linux-Windows Crossover Potential

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  • by russlar ( 1122455 ) on Thursday May 29, 2008 @12:19PM (#23587653)

    if you want them to start using Open Office and Firefox, burn a bunch of Disks and nice labels and start a campaign on 'back to school' periods when everyone is shopping for their kids and college students and stand outside that Mac Store or the BestBuy handing out OpenOffice and Firefox CD's.
    Outstanding idea!

    But if you really want to help open-source projects, do this with CD's purchased from Mozilla and OpenOffice.org. That way, the products get the public awareness, and the developers of the products get the funding they need to continue developing them.
  • by MachoBidniz ( 1297761 ) on Thursday May 29, 2008 @12:30PM (#23587831)

    There is a KDE clone for Windows already? Can you post a link? .... In any case, I would appreciate a link.
    http://windows.kde.org/ [kde.org]
  • Been done (Score:3, Informative)

    by Nazlfrag ( 1035012 ) on Thursday May 29, 2008 @12:38PM (#23587981) Journal
    It's always handy to have a DSL install on your USB stick. Linux on windows has been done, it's just much more preferable to use wine on linux and never look back.
  • by argent ( 18001 ) <peter@@@slashdot...2006...taronga...com> on Thursday May 29, 2008 @12:40PM (#23588021) Homepage Journal
    I know it isn't the norm to compliment Windows, but Windows has been solid since 2k (minus Vista).

    Well, I spent 20 years as a network administrator, and while the NT-derived Windows has been pretty solid, it's never reached the point where I can say the only time I've had to reboot is to upgrade software, nor have I been able to treat the Windows desktops I've supported as cavalierly as UNIX. And, too, the deep security issues in Win32 haven't been seriously addressed yet.

    In my new job attempting to remove Outlook and downgrade it to something that wasn't infested with the Vista cult broke my computer so badly I had to get it reimaged. Not only shouldn't this be rocket science, but I'm metaphorically a rocket scientist and it's still too hard.

    I've seen this at home, too: my daughter's Windows 2000 desktop had to be reinstalled every six months because she broke something. She's gone about 3 years on her Mac mini without incident.
  • by TheRealMindChild ( 743925 ) on Thursday May 29, 2008 @12:51PM (#23588175) Homepage Journal
    It shouldn't. I agree. But I couldn't say Windows never locked up... I listed the only things that I knew to do so.

    Prioritizing IO context is pretty tricky stuff. Even linux has recently had drama with the scheduler being replaced and augmented to no end.

    Also, try/catch is to catch something that is throw()'n. A hardware exception requires SEH, which is expensive.
  • by radarsat1 ( 786772 ) on Thursday May 29, 2008 @12:59PM (#23588341) Homepage
    While I think this is sorta cool, I find their choice of applications a little odd. Here's the list from their web page:

    • Firefox (Flash & Java): runs on Windows
    • OpenOffice.org: runs on Windows
    • KPdf: Probably will run on Windows when KDE4 is out?
    • Kopete: Same as above?
    • Skype: Runs on Windows
    • Thunderbird + Enigmail: runs on Windows
    • Gimp and Digikam: Gimp runs on Windows
    • Inkscape: runs on Windows
    • Scribus: runs on Windows


    So.. granted, I personally think many of these applications run better and more naturally on Linux, but still it's kind of funny to see this list. (Not sure what will happen with the KDE applications.)

    If they wanted to show off Linux applications that don't have Windows ports they might have chosen maybe "KOffice", or "Gnumeric", or "Evolution". I dunno.
  • by josath ( 460165 ) on Thursday May 29, 2008 @01:27PM (#23588819) Homepage
    I've been using andLinux for a while now, it's great for running linux apps under windows. Essentially it's a patched linux kernel that actually runs at the same time as the windows kernel, with a small manager which gives time to both windows and linux. Since it's not virtualized, performance is great. Display is done by running Xming, a win32 X11 server in rootless mode, which then connects over the virtual network to the linux host.

    colinux itself is very user-unfriendly, but andLinux has a nice simple installer and launcher that lets you launch linux apps as if they were native windows ones. It's based off of an Ubuntu distro, so you can use apt-get and run pretty much any linux app. A few things don't work that well such as fast paced games, playing videos with mplayer etc, due to running over X11 over sockets with zero acceleration. But any standard desktop app should work fine.

    From their site, Ulteo is also based on colinux, and it appears they go even further than andLinux in making it very userfriendly. But with userfriendlyness often comes with a lack of control, so if you are a linux power-user I'd highly recommend andLinux. It's great to be able to pull up a Konsole instead of having to use the lame windows command prompt (or the sucky cygwin stuff). The only thing that's really missing is being able to launch windows apps from a linux script, but that doesn't come up too often.

interlard - vt., to intersperse; diversify -- Webster's New World Dictionary Of The American Language

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