Red Hat Desktop Edition 345
Sivar writes "Red Hat plans to enter the desktop business OS market, The Register reports. Red Hat says that the move is in response to growing frustration with Microsoft which has peaked since the introduction of Microsoft's new licensing scheme. The article states that the desktop offering is due next year and, surprisingly "...the company is considering subscription-based pricing.""
Since noone has noticed... (Score:2, Insightful)
So redhat making their free software available for free-per-year makes perfect sense.
Competitive advantage? (Score:2, Insightful)
Please tell me how with a subscription model, Red Hat is going to have a competitive advantage over Microsoft?
The only way I can see this happening is if the subscriptions are really cheap. But then again, we're talking about competiting not for small offices, but for large offices.
Please tell me how they are going to convince a large company that has invested in Microsoft helpdesk people to switch to Red Hat.
While you're at it, tell me how they're going to save them money from all the proprietary Windows software they're using.
Here's my current list of Windows software I would need replaced in order to maintain productivity - MS Project, MS Visio, Macromedia Dreamweaver, and Macromedia Fireworks.
Not a difficult list (note the general lack of MS Office, since I use OpenOffice), but not easy to overcome. I'm sure there are other people with far more obscure programmes they need.
I like open source and I like Linux. I just had stupid business models.
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:3, Insightful)
You probably wouldn't be the target for this. Many offices use only an office suit, browser, and e-mail on the majority of desktops. You can leave the handful of users who have greater needs running Windows (at least short-term).
RedHat has played this perfectly. They've let others develop desktop until the combination of mature technology and market demand is in their favour. Now they move in and use their considerable name recognition to clean up.
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
Most companies I have worked for can't handle mixed networks, they generally understand windows just enough to keep it running.
And this doesn't even touch on the nice sharing and permissions options MS gives us.
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
You mean ACLs? Yes, Windows has a nice set of file permissions--classically one of its advantages over Linux.
Linux, however, now has an even more robust set of ACLs which come with GRSecurity [grsecurity.net], and let's not forget POSIX ACL's [bestbits.at] which are almost finished.
Linux still has all of its security advantages over NT though, such as not using IIS, Outlook*.*, IE, Commerce Server, MS SQL, et al, all of which have had some big nasties recently. True, so have some Linux/Unix daemons, but far less frequently and you have to wait about half an hout to two days for a fix rather than three weeks to a 18 months on into infinity for a patch from Microsoft.
NT does have advantages, but don't EVEN bring up security if you are trying to defend NT. That's a sure-fire way to discredit the platform.
Thats the flaw in Redhats plan (Score:2)
Redhat only intends to go after the corperate workstation market, while this is fine for the short term, the long term goal should be to sell their Desktop OS in China, South America, Africa and Europe, places where Microsoft has not yet dominated is where Redhat can actually try to become the standard desktop OS.
Sure its good to compete on the business side of things, but dont make the same mistake IBM made with OS2, or that Apple made with MacOS, you have to be flexible enough to battle on both fronts, the business side and the user side, currently Linux looks like it may win over the Business side, but Apple and Microsoft are slowly trying to dominate the user end.
The user market overall is far far bigger than the corperate desktop market and I think redhat should use think both short term and long term, and release a Desktop OS for corperations while also making it easy enough to compete with OSX, this way they can expand their market over in China.
Currently redflag linux a redhat clone is taking over in China, Redhat should be going after that market, the question is how can you profit off of the users? The potential is there, but theres no way to do it? Actually there is.
Make a deal with ISPs to add a $5 a month fee to users bills for the OS, redhat will be responsible for managing their OS, providing updates automatically and transparently etc.
Re:Thats the flaw in Redhats plan (Score:2)
Re:Thats the flaw in Redhats plan (Score:2)
M$ did it smart. They marketed to the end user, the average user, the guy who goes to work every day and expects to find the same computing experience both at work and at home.
BTW, OS/2 Warp3 peaked at 8% of the desktop market. Very briefly.
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
I can hear it now:
"You should use ButtLint instead of project, it doesn't have all the features of project (yet) but you can add any that are missing yourself, while you are at it you can fix a few bugs. I have been using it for over a day. We are just waiting for the next edition which will handle projects with more than 2 people or last over a week.
Fact is that getting Windows programmers to use Linux is going to be at least as hard as getting Mac users to use a PC.
When stuck in traffic it always appears that the other lines of traffic are moving faster. This is because you don't notice when you are moving, you notice when you are stopped and the other lines are moving. O/S hacking is wiredly reversed. You notice when you spend an hour fixing up a problem on an O/S you hate or don't understand too well, but a similar problem on favorite O/S gets written off.
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
Only Game programmers have loyalty to Microsoft and thats because they dont have much choice.
Show a Windows programmer how much easier it is to write code for linux and see how fast they switch
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
Then watch them switch right back when they realize that their market just went from 95% to 3%.
Programming for the Xbox is easier than for the PS2, but PS2 is still more popular. Why? Because there's a bigger market for the games.
So why did programmers stop coding for Dreamcast? (Score:2)
Your theory doesnt hold weight.
Dreamcast had far more market share than PS2, everyone still switched to PS2.
Apple had far more market share than Microsoft, everyone still switched to Microsoft.
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
I have twenty years experience of UNIX, ten years of Linux. I use Visual Studio and C# out of choice.
There are very few people that have used as many programming environments as I have. Most people learn one and stick with it, no matter how utterly crap it is. There are people who still argue the merits of EDLN, EDT line mode and vi. You can show a physicist Java and they will still use FORTRAN.
Lucky its not aimed at you. (Score:3, Insightful)
Browser
Email
2-3 Corporate Apps
Word Processing
Thats it... You will have some that require spreadsheets, calendaring, and document sharing - but really thats about it.
Making the argument against this type of decision from the point of view of a PowerUser, or Developer is pointless. Yes if all your apps are only available on Windows, it won't work for you. But you are not 90% of all desktop users.
Glad it's not aimed at me (Score:2)
I enjoy being something other than a paper-pusher. But then again, I've encountered other things in the corporate world.
I've worked in a call centre with Windows help files being the primary source of looking up information online. It wasn't a pretty system, but it TRULY was the IT department's call. I know there are also a lot of proprietary systems for retail stores and their retail offices, most of which I've seen run on DOS.
I know lots of departmental assistants and secretaries who have to scan in all kinds of paperwork (idiot-proof one-touch scanning works for them - does it work on Linux) and use FrontPage or FrontPage Express to update web pages for the departments.
Yes, 90% of the people use standard office-suite applications. Unfortunately most of the key support roles with the greatest influence on the purchasing requirements need applications outside that scope. (Oh yeah, project managers DO fall into that role often.)
Re:Lucky its not aimed at you. (Score:2)
Those 2-3 corporate apps are what we need to target with free software. Consultants? Get busy!
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
One day of course there will be Dreamweaver/Linux, but until that day, you can run Dreamweaver under Wine. It works just like in Windows, and gets some additional capabilities as well (like being able to read Linux disks). I believe Dreamweaver has a 4/5 star rating at the moment, so it's not perfectly there yet, but CodeWeavers are working hard on popular apps like these.
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
BUNK!
When you buy XP, what do you get? You get something that will boot your machine (most of the time) and get you on the internet.
Whan you buy a Linux Distro what do you get? Something that will boot your machine, get you on the internet, AND give you all the software you need to write your report, build web pages, run a server (several of them, http, irc, smb, etc.), etc, etc, etc.
AND you only need to BUY IT ONCE. With XP, you have to buy it for every machine that you need it running on. With Linux you buy one copy and put it on as many machines as you want.
It's not the IT folks that need the convincing (as you see I already am), it the Big Wigs that just don't or won't get it. THAT is the hard part to overcome. Trust me. I've been fighting this battle for almost 2 years now.
Re:Competitive advantage? (Score:2)
And quite frankly, after spending time installing/upgrading on a number of boxes, commercial software is just a headache. This app needs a CD key every time, this one needs a special floppy disk, this one needs this, this one needs that, this one needs to be installed before the other one, this version of the upgrade that the website demands you install really breaks the app, this app is only upgradable by a full-price upgrade, etc. It's no fun blowing a weekend because the boss wants this week's latest updates (and it's no fun telling him that, say, upgrades cost $300 a seat on some stuff, especially when he takes out his anger on whoever is closest.)
OTOH (I'll not talk about RH because I'm not the biggest RH fan) if you give me a system that I can upgrade without sitting in front of a box with CD key in hand, and in fact can upgrade overnight while I'm sleeping, I'm all for it.
Too bad those prepress apps just ain't there yet, or I'd ask my boss if I could cram those Macs in the office into the Dumpster.
Re:This is joke (Score:2)
because you aren't a Linux user. You betray your ignorance on
a number of points, but here are some of the most glaring...
> I scan in business cards for quarter page, free form text and
> scanned images for large size ads. What Linux Frankenstein can
> do that?
Uh, one with a scanner? (Yes, there are some really cheap
scanners that only work in Windows, but in terms of other
criteria (quality, speed) they're junk anyway. Presumably,
a Linux user shopping for a scanner would get one that would
work with Linux, same as a Mac user shopping for a scanner
would get one that works with Mac.)
> Word isn't so hot when printing JPEGs smaller than 50k.
Who would use a lossily-compressed format for printing?
The only reason to do such a thing would be to demonstrate
that it looks bad by comparing it to something done right.
> what about formatting the pages? Open Office can't do it
Erhm, I've not had any trouble with such simple tasks as
that. Yes, you do have to set the properties on the image
after you paste it in and drag it to the spot on the page
where you want it, but how exactly is that hard?
> A program guide is a real world task. So is mail merging
> 10,000 letters for a fund raising campaign. Or issuing 1000
> thank you letters in a day to donors. Or a baronial fold
> brochure. Or a three fold brochure.
If you have a problem doing any of these, you need to take
a basic high-school-level computer class. There aren't even
any major differences in _how_ you do any of these from one
OS to the other.
Should work (Score:3, Insightful)
/Janne
This is great news. If redhat does it right. (Score:2)
Theres only a few ways redhat can do this and make it a success. Heres what I hope they do. Offer an OS alternative to OSX, charge subcription fee, use this to generate income, and compete with OSX.
Or they can offer a typical Windows clone like lycoris and we wont get anywhere with being just as good as Windows, at least not anywhere besides the corperate desktop because users need a real reason to switch, they dont care about license fees.
I think Redhat has the chance to generate a ton of money if they do this right, making an desktop OS in the style of OSX which is easier to use than windows while offering the same functionality.
Or Redhat will simply be crushed by the likes of lycoris, OSX, and Windows OS.
Unless Redhat pours some serious $$ into this, and brings home some serious $$ from this, this is going to be a complete failure, the only way to bring home alot of money from this is to build a desktop better than every other desktop, and sell it in the USA, Japan, China, South America, Africa, Europe etc, Because the desktop battle has not yet begun in Asia, Africa or Europe, the battle may be over in the USA but theres 3 other continents to war on, and the only Company for linux which looks like it may dominate is lycoris.
Re:This is great news. If redhat does it right. (Score:2)
Downloaded and installed Redhat null after I long stopped using Redhat. Half of hour and I already knew this is going to be the distro I use on my new notebook which I'm waiting to come out.
It seems they poured serious $$ in desktop development. After I've spent some time on gnome to-do and plans. Well Redhat 8.1 is gonna be a killer (no doubt). 8.0 still isn't there for average Joe user (some small issues) but it's miles ahead any distro I know, there's a lack for gnome2 (mostly they are still in gnome 1 stage) apps, although Redhat shows and manages them the same, changed my keyboard to native and look, all kde, gnome1 and gnome2 apps are using it nice, changed look the same.
Redhat distro is the most easy, good looking and made out-of-the-box distro I've ever used. Predefault settings, and everything worked. But for my likes Rh is still easy maintained the old fashion way.
Re:This is great news. If redhat does it right. (Score:2)
Yeah it might be easy, but easier than lycoris? prove it.
Redhat null sounds alright but no ones shown any pictures or anything, Ill wait till i see it.
I think Redhat 8.2 will be the Redhat Desktop linux thats mature enough for end users, this might be a year away.
Hopefully by KDE4 - Gnome 3, they'll have alpha channel and genie effect so they can compete with OSX in terms of quality.
Lastly I hope they figure out a universal way to install programs
"Alternative" doesn't cut it. (Score:2)
To succeed on the desktop, linux has to be able to REPLACE WINDOWS *FOR* WINDOWS USERS.
Replace. Not be an alternative, not be better than, but REPLACE, seamlessly enough that the AVERAGE user doesn't feel pain when they attempt their necessary and favourite functions thru said desktop.
Re:"Alternative" doesn't cut it. (Score:2)
OSX isnt for the PC else it would be dominating.
Funny the Ibook is the best selling laptop.
Re:This is great news. If redhat does it right. (Score:2)
I'm sure they have alot of former Microsoft programmers from the look of their OS.
Do they want to catch Mandrake users? (Score:2, Interesting)
(have a look at: http://www.mandrakesoft.com/company/investors/bsa
This is going to be intetersting to follow... will Red Hat include Mandrake's tuning such as supermount?
Mandrake lacks funding (Score:2)
While Mandrake has a good idea they lack the funding to do what they are trying to do.
Redhat has over 100 million dollars in the bank, more than enough money to launch a desktop OS. All Redhat needs to worry about is marketing, ease of use, and supporting standards, then they should go to governments, schools, libraries, etc in all countries and sell Redhat Linux Desktop Edition.
Redhat should make it as easy to use as OSX, Apple for a long long time survived off of this market alone, this is what Redhat should do.
Re:Do they want to catch Mandrake users? (Score:2)
Tryed null, not anymore. Mandrake has just to big gap to close to come close to what Redhat has done.
ObDebian (Score:3, Insightful)
(sue me, I've got karma to spare)
Re:ObDebian (Score:2)
Then compile the code lazy bast.... (Score:2)
make && make install
a long way to go (Score:4, Insightful)
- stability ? XP is stable enough for the desktop
- security ? XP with no services is secure enough behind a corporate firewall
- CPU efficiency ? When running Office and Outlook as sole applications on a 2GHz PC, you've got to go pretty ballistic to get inefifcient.
- open source ? You really thing any desktop user gives a flying donkey ?
- commandline unix underpinnings ? see 2 remarks above
all that matters is how well users can become at easy with their machine (in their own adorable shitty, messy and totally disorganized way. Remember that a desktop user does NOT WANT to understand his computer. He just wants the computer to adapt to his personal shitty messy and totally disorganized way of organizing things)
I did the test many times and put a linux box in front of a reasonably willing (although reasonably dumb) subject and frankly, they didn't even figure out how to reset their desktop. Linux just doesn't get it when it comes to dumb-ass desktop users.
Re:a long way to go (Score:4, Funny)
security ? XP with no services is secure enough behind a corporate firewall
<sarcasm>Sure, I only run IE, Outlook, Word and MSN messenger, so I have nothing to be afraid of</sarcasm>
18 *unpatched* vulnerabilities in MS IE alone. (Score:2)
That allow Silent delivery and installation of an executable on a target computer,Arbitrary local file/folder deletion,Arbitrary local file reading,HTTPS spoofing - man-in-the-middle attacks,Elevating privileges, running script in the My Computer zone,stack and heap based buffer overflows, Denial Of Service, Overriding filetype handlers on local files,Reading cookies,Detect if a local file exists and read its size/date,Automatically opening IE + Executing attachment,Cross Site Scripting through non-HTTP ports.
Even with full access to the Mozilla source code, over the same time duration, only one single similar vulnerability was discovered in Mozilla. The fix was in the CVS source code within hours of the notifcation and new Mozilla binaries were avaliable within FOUR WORKING DAYS - Not MONTHS in the case of Microsoft's "Trustworthy" efforts.
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
Yep, even better if you unplug it too.
-
I agree (Score:3, Troll)
However I'd say win2k is more stable than XP.
XP lacks in the speed department as in the OS itself is too slow.
XP can be secured by knowledgeable users but its not secure by default, viruses, trojans, hacking through scripts in email, or the browser prevent Xp from being secure enough for the casual user.
Ease of use is the main thing linux needs to improve on, until Linux is as easy to use as OSX its not going to beat Windows.
Being just as easy as Windows is not good enough.
Re:I agree (Score:2)
I run XP on one of my workstations at home, and have been since it's been released. (Use for games, and quicken) . anyway the past 5-10 years that I have been using windows I have never had one of these crazy security issues. I wonder how many people on slashdot have. Using any operating system is like living in a huge city. Sure, it's dangerous.. but keep your nose out of trouble and you shouldn't have any problems. I don't open email attachments from people.. that probably the biggest thing. Unix can be just as dangerous, the irony is it's the users themselves that are their worst enemies. I don't know how many times I Have helped my friend rebuild his redhat box because he did something silly. Ironically he has been using the same windows 98 machine for almost 3 years without a re-install (until a few weeks ago, he finally threw win2k on it)..
Troll?? Please.... (Score:2)
Just because you disagree with a statement doesn't make it the poster a Troll. Moderating like this makes you the Troll, and hopefully Meta-Moderation will see that you no longer have the priviledge of doing so.
Re:a long way to go (Score:3, Insightful)
> reasonably dumb) subject and frankly, they didn't even figure out how to reset their desktop
This has absolutely nothing to do with user-friendlyness, it's merely a case of what people are used to. What normal person would think that to reset your computer you have to click on "Start" and then on "Turn off your computer" to be given the option of "Restart"?
In terms of user-friendlyness for someone who has used neither before I imagine they would be very similar. The three things working for Windows are:
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
This is the thing that should be fixed in all linux distributions, first and foremost. Of course those of us running journaled filesystems (I'm using XFS myself, just for the novelty of it) don't really have this problem; fsck still needs to run at boot for some reason, but it's unlikely to ever encounter an error requiring human intervention.
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
And most people are used to Windows. Inertia will keep them there unless something motivates them to switch. In a business environment, that might be a boss who replaces Windows with Linux. (In my experience, tho, people in that environment go ballistic when the slighest change is made to the stock desktop. Can't imagine what a switch to Linux might provoke -- beyond demands for a week's worth of training.)
For people who buy their own computers and software, and discounting the few with latent geek tendencies, Linux doesn't yet offer a compelling reason to switch.
Depends on your distro then (Score:5, Interesting)
Mandrake 8.0 detected both, installed the correct modules, and both worked perfectly well from the very first boot.
The same applied when I removed the SB Live! and re-enabled the onboard Via audio (Don't ask). Kudzu detected the change, removed the emu10k1 module, and loaded up the via82cxx module.
I see no reason why, if Mandrake can do this, the others (E.g. Redhat and SuSe) can't.
Admittedly, all of this is a bit of a kludge, and as we can see, the results differ across distributions. Maybe someone else [sourceforge.net] can do it better?
Re:Depends on your distro then (Score:2)
Re:Depends on your distro then (Score:2)
Sure, kudzu detected my card and install RedHat's default driver, but not any tool to really use your SBLive card! I mean, if you have Mandrake or Redhat - then look at the mixer - do you see bass & treble? nope. Do you see digital out support? nope. Do you see AC3 support? nope. ALL those features ARE available in the open source driver, but unless the user is willing to compile the CVS version of the driver, compile and install the tools and fiddle with the emu10k1.conf file - you won't get much of your SBLive card! you'll get something just like a crappy ac-97 sound codec features, and the SBLive processor is a damn strong processor with tons of feature, and yet - the RH/MDK driver simply won't let you set it..
Compare this to the SBlive driver which comes with Windows 2k/XP and tell me whats better...
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
I can confirm his experience - the critical timesavers for me were firstly that SuSE 8 supported my inbuilt laptop LAN port whereas Win 2K did not, so I could get going straightaway with downloading KDE updates etc.
Secondly Win2K required numerous reboots to add drivers. And unluckily for me, even more reboots to uninstall problematic updates - i.e. per individual KB fix.
MS are supposed to log every reboot requirement as a bug, but as with security, identifying the problem is not the same as addressing it.
Having said this, my guess is that once Dotnet gets established in the OS, MS will be able to breeze past Linux in the manageability stakes.
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
- security ? XP with no services is secure enough behind a corporate firewall
Hmmm... Instant Messaging... IE... Outlook... Word... Excel... ID10T users installing virus/backdoors. I'm not saying you wouldn't face some of the same issues on a Linux desktop - because you would. But in my opinion on the desktop, security is a wash. You either have intelligent users or you don't.
- CPU efficiency ? When running Office and Outlook as sole applications on a 2GHz PC, you've got to go pretty ballistic to get inefifcient.
Well actually its more like Office, Outlook, Excel, Corporate Apps (TN3270? Java? VB? C? Fat/Thin), IE... Certainly still plenty of power left over at 2GHz. But in most corporate offices I've been in over the past 2 years there are more P2s than P4s. Heh, and even the P4s still dog it on some Java apps.
- open source ? You really thing any desktop user gives a flying donkey ?
No I tend to think that the IT Director footing the bill for OEM pricing of Office; EOL licensing upgrades; and sick subscription pricing for everything MS might give a flying donkey.
- commandline unix underpinnings ? see 2 remarks above
No I don't really see this as an argument either. But it seems to me you just threw it in to give the illusion of a better argument too, so...
Personally I'd hate to see what you attempted to put in front of them. But lets use your example against your argument anyway. MacOS X. Argument over. Opensource on the desktop can work. Red Hat has now seen it work and they are obviously going to try to duplicate Apple's success (much as Apple did after seeing Opensource succeed).
The only way the change will take place is through sheer force of will from corporate executives who believe they can in fact save money from making the change.
Totally agree.Lets take it there... (Score:2)
I don't care if its KDE or Gnome but somebody's going to have to bite the bullet and make a look and work and feel Windows clone and the GUIs for the applications have to be look and work and feel Windows clones too.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
* When you buy Windows (any windows) you get a decent package of fonts which looks really great. So far Red Hat gives you a really shitty pack of fonts, which looks really bad in non latin-1 packages. If Red Hat wants to get into the desktop - they need to license some fonts, which I hardly see them doing so.
* Easiness of software install - the last thing a man wants is to mess with dependencies! up2date installation is nice, but only if you install something from the Red Hat packages. Got an RPMS from somewhere else? good luck with dependencies nightmore!
* Hardware support - a corporate doesn't give a flying fuck if NVidia releases binary only drivers or not, same for ATI, same for Matrox, same for 3DLabs. As of today - Red Hat only supports those open source drivers which means you'll have less-then-well drivers, no dual screen support, and barely 3D - that needs to be change! Almost everything in Red Hat is hard to setup for a user which came from Windows! have you tried to setup DMA on RedHat? dual screen? modem? scanner? webcam? these are NIGHTMARE settings for newbie in RH Linux!
Another prime example - Sound Blaster live card which I'm sure lots of people here have it. The RedHat package barely gives you stereo support! no bass/treble, no AC3, no digital channel support and those ARE open source drivers!
In short - Red Hat got a LONG way to go to make something which even compared to the easiness of Windows 95! Mandrake right now is much more friendly on the desktop then any version of Red Hat (IMHO).
As for Microsoft - I'm pretty sure few people there are heaving a big laugh from RH move..
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
Null version has international fonts, beutifully rendered, render chooser and complete intenational set of fonts. At least for language I'm using.
"In short - Red Hat got a LONG way to go to make something which even compared to the easiness of Windows 95! Mandrake right now is much more friendly on the desktop then any version of Red Hat (IMHO)."
In shorter - test the null beta. I've tested 9beta4.mdk and rh.7.3.94.null, guess what mdk has a long way to go. 9.0 just isn't competitor to rhnull
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
With NULL, RedHat has "mixed" KDE components into GNOME, added a new theme so all GNOME & KDE components looks the same, and instead of Konqueror and KMail on KDE panel - you're getting evolution and Mozilla. Why? ask Red Hat.
In terms of better hardware support, not much news there. Sure, some more graphics cards are added to kudzu, Xconfigurator has gone (now it's "redhat-config-xfree") but the same issue remains - if your vendor gives a binary only driver - then you'll have to manually get it install it..
GUI is mature now (Score:2)
- Where the start menu is (click on the K-button).
- Where their e-mail program is (the icon with the E and a letter, kmail)
- Where the desktop office suite is (StarOffice 5.2 and OpenOffice.org 1.0)
Only very few users I told more information, like showing them konqueror and explaining them about not to worry about viruses etc. All users managed to use it successfully and effectively.
The result was, that the Linux desktop TCO, including user education and productivity stuff is far lower than Windows.
In the long run it even improves: Windows users typically call their hotline if they receive pdf files or zip files because they don't have software to display it. And if they want to create pdf files they have to buy extra software.
When users have to find their own files, Linux is a great thing for system administrators. The concept of home directory actually works on Linux, and with symbolic links, their home directory is all they have to care about.
And then there are crashes and users getting a new PC. On Windows, your laptop registry is deleted, which severely impacts user productivity after getting the new PC. On Linux, you just restore the configuration files from the backup after you reinstalled on a new harddisk, and the user is fully productive from day 1 with the new PC.
This increases the user productivity stability. So the real reason to switch to Linux is to lower cost and increase the availability of user productivity.
Re:GUI is mature now (Score:2)
Ah, the ambiguity of a home directory... my parents can't grasp it, even on MacOSX. They both have a login, so when they click mail.app in their dock, they have their own settings. However, often my dad gets a mail with a photo of a grandchild, he can't transfer it to mum. I tried to explain the concept of drop boxes, but they just get utterly frustrated after 10secs. They don't WANT to understand it. They just want it to work the way they have it inside their heads :
'why can't I just put it on the desktop for her to see ? ? ?'...
'because your desktop is not her desktop dad'....
'whaddayamean ? there's only one desktop isn't there ?'
'sigh'
trust me, the average user is far dumbder than you can possibly imagine, and (which is worse!) far more reluctant to change and learning.
Re:GUI is mature now (Score:2)
Must have something to do with users being dumb.
Re:GUI is mature now (Score:2)
partially. The issue is that I don't want to run over to my parents' house every time a settings adjustment needs to be done (I have my own family to educate). My oldies need a computer that doesn't need a tech coming along with it in the box !
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
Actually you are wrong. On the home user desktop maybe, but we're talking corporates here. To IT administrators, things like cost, stability, security, CPU efficiency, open source and unix underpinnings do in fact matter a great deal.
Especially the open source thing of course, as it means "no lockin" - virtually every IT using company today has been bitten on the backside by this, so that's a major win.
As an aside where do you see companies with 2ghz chips that just run Office? Most company machines I've seen are fairly low end by todays standard.
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
Administering Windows PCs sucks. There are a host of problems that just can't be solved by reading the frickin' manual or searching the web. It's closed source--no one knows how it works. So it's just back-up, reinstall; back-up, reinstall.
Reinstall Windows, reinstall Internet Explorer, reinstall the service pack again after you install software XYZ. I probably spend half my time at work staring at an InstallShield wizard (or reading a book while it's sliding along.)
With Linux, there are people out there who know why you are getting the problem you are getting and can tell you how to fix it without reinstalling the entire damn machine. I'm very new to Linux, but I find the whole process of debugging and fixing problems much more rewarding. With Windows, maintenance is more witchcraft than anything else.
Erik
The users are only part of the picture (Score:2)
The amount of effort required to keep this up to the mark is tremendous, hardware replacement, software installs and upgrades, support etc.This is where the major amount of cost arises and where the TCO bites. If an organisation can use a desktop that is easier to maintain then they have a major win.
Remember also that the majority of desktops in an organisation this size will not be running Office, they will be running counter-top applications in front offices or communicating with backend databases. Many of the applications that these desktops use will be browser based, so all they need is a kiosk-like UI. They don't need all the bells and whistles of XP or Windows 2000.
Re:a long way to go (Score:2)
In 5 minutes, the most dense users will figure it out. They'll even be able to easilly change their background, themes, etc.
Not technical reasons for the shift (Score:2)
So if Red Hat against odds is successful in selling the desktop, Microsoft only have themselves to thanks for losing their monopoly.
MS business desktop is more than just the OS (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll bet RedHat is going to sell this as an alternative to the frustrating patchwork of programs required to administer a network of 50-250 PC's, because that's always been a MS weakness. MS has decent tools like SMS, but they require so much knowledge & work that they don't really pay off until you've got a bare minimum of 100 PC's.
Not that desktop Linux rollouts won't have a learning curve, of course.
Re:MS business desktop is more than just the OS (Score:2)
Administration tools?
ssh over X11 client calling desktop control panels. webmin. name it, there's plenty of them
automated administration of network with 50-250 clients?
service nfs share mounted on every desktop with a simple restoring deamon to please your likes?
firewall on clients? firestarter is gonna be included in future gnome releases
service pack distribution client?
up2date in cron set to your local intranet ftp folder, with up2date deamon running on server
antivirus?
that is an option
why an SMS option? if you're admin that knows what he needs, you can simply make your own, took me two days to finish and dispatch over all of my networks. now I update my own and remote lients restore all info they need and update them self
defining "Ease of use" (Score:2)
For a corporation, a different side of ease of use is ease of licensing and purchasing. Maybe in a post LicenseV6 world Microsoft will have made this "easier", but in the transition there's a heck of a lot of turmoil, and their products have just become more "difficult" to use. That has nothing to do with the software itself, just the legal and purchasing implications.
Aren't they already on the desktop? (Score:2, Interesting)
The announcement suggests therefore that they've decided to do something different about their approach to the desktop market, but doesn't exactly make it clear what, apart from hinting that they might be mixing in some proprietary software with it (such as Star Office 6). Any ideas?
Whats missing from linux is quality (Score:3, Interesting)
Linux has functionality, all it needs is the quality of say OSX.
Functionality is fine but to beat Windows you have to look professional, nautilus is the most professional looking interface to work with so far, Redhat should fund development of nautilus, bring back Wozniak or whatever his name is who built Nautilus, and finish what they started.
Already exists, few care (Score:3, Insightful)
MS demands subscriptions, people get upset, they don't want to have to upgrade.
Debian has free subscriptions, there is no mass exodus to the world of Debian/Linux
Redhat offers subscriptions, yippie skippie, the world will move to Linux. uhh why?
Re:Already exists, few care (Score:2)
Oh great, a free subscription for some uber-geek to tell people to RTFM newbie! There is no mass exodous to debian because its installer and community is not newbie friendly. Finally no company is going to install debian on their servers, especially when support consists of a google groups search.
Who do you buy Debian from? (Score:2)
They might have bought Debian from Corel, but Corel dropped out before Microsoft created a demand by changing their license.
Re:Already exists, few care (Score:2)
Why use debian?
The big difference (Score:5, Insightful)
It makes an amazing amount of sense to me. Since redhat is primarily selling support, this way they can offer it for cheaper, because they're not locked in to providing it indeterminately for each copy they move, only for as long as the person really needs it and is willing to pay for it.
That being said, I have my doubts how sucessful it will be. But good luck to them.
Re:Business-logic (Score:2)
Since their best interest is to obtain more customers, business logic would dictate that a quality product is an advantage, as is lowering support costs to some degree. However realize that businesses have shown their willingness to pay a lot of money for software support, so the support doesn't have to be dirt-cheap to remain competitive. And the business market is really where it's at; nobody is going to make money selling software support to home users.
It could work (Score:5, Insightful)
1. GUI and fonts that are an integrated part of the OS, not 3rd party stuff slapped on top. I laugh every time I hear somebody complain that a particular Linux program has "crappy fonts". This should be part of the OS and application independent -- if stupid Microsoft can do it, then certainly "smart" Linux programmers can too.
2. Partner with major software vendors to create Linux versions of their software (Photoshop, etc.).
I've got a lot of time and effort invested in learning a dozen different programs -- none of which are available in native Linux versions.
3. Partner with hardware vendors to develop Linux drivers. I'd love to switch to Linux, but after weeks of searching the Internet, I've discovered that there is no way to use my scanner, or the TV output of my video card with Linux. However, I can go to the manufacturer's websites for both these products and download Windows drivers.
Re:It could work (Score:5, Insightful)
1. GUI
Amen, brother. I fear and loath Microsoft but for gods sake Linux needs help in this area. One of the biggest obstacles toward getting this done is surely the flat out denial found in the Linux community. The idea that Linux is even "pretty close" is ludicrous. Having menus and close-window widgets don't even get you in the ball park IMO.
2. Partner with major software vendors to create Linux versions of their software
Interesting idea. But I'm sure they would ask "what's in it for us?" The small installed base of Linux coupled with the fact that most of its current users seem willing - no delighted - to put up with the likes of GIMP make sales projections seem pretty grim. Do GIMP users use it because it's the only thing there is or because it's free or because they believe free alternatives to commercial products are the wave of the future and are doing it for political reasons? The answer might matter a lot to Adobe.
3. Partner with hardware vendors to develop Linux drivers.
Again I would ask what's in it for them? How would you sell such an idea? The almost non-existant installed base on the desktop, virtually no OEM licensing, users who are using Linux are disproportionately using it on old hardware...
I wish Redhat the best of luck. I want them to succeed. Someone has to, otherwise Linux will forever remain a geek toy and a server OS and that would be a shame.
Re:It could work (Score:2)
Good luck convincing the community to put solid development effort behind this. Good luck finding desingers willing to put up with the elitist crap many OSS projects are inundated with. I can speak from experience as a designer on an OSS project and I find it frustrating, to say the least, trying to get simple points across about proper GUI design, and I don't just mean the eye candy, though this is important to the general acceptance of the application or OS.
2. Partner with major software vendors...
Eveery now and then a Linux troll strolls into the Adobe Photoshop forums and asks why Adobe doesn't develop a version of Photoshop for Linux. Every time the same general answers pop up. Standards in the Windowing environment need to be established, font support needs to be standardized at the OS level period and the userbase needs to grow on the desktop. Sometimes it's the Photoshop developers answering these questions themselves and sometimes it's those of us who have heard the answers enough times we just jump the gun and spare the developers the effort required to answer the questions once more.
3. You need to give hardware developers a financial reason why they should help you out. Good will doesn't pay their employees.
Re:It could work (Score:3, Insightful)
What makes your vision of the desktop so right, where everyone else just got it wrong?
MS also figured out how to have multiple default routes, and seperate "TEMP" folders for each user. Unfortunately, the 'smart' Linux programmers haven't been able to do that yet.
Its not there yet BS .. (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure Desktop Linux does not have all the apps, sure there isn't a huge 100% following from hardware vendors.. But I would have to argue that there has yet been a distro that has really focused on bringing desktop linux to the corporation.
Sure there is Mandrake, Lycoris, etc..etc.. and they are getting better by the day
If Red Hat pushed the marketing to get desktop linux deployed in corporations and in larger numbers so the community had some real case studies to push, then you will start to see increased demand for Desktop Linux for lots of other uses as well..
Its all a matter of marketshare
My prediction is it will be here sooner than many of you think
Consider Microsoft's 'Migration' Strategy (Score:3, Interesting)
But they take some convincing.
Remember how Microsoft made it easy for
WordPerfect users to defect to Word.
Compatability. And do not do it subtly.
Take the top 5 Windows applications.
Office. Visio. DreamWeaver. MSIE. Etc.
Provide straight alternatives.
Make them cheaper and better.
And people will come...
The key is this: business have no loyalties.
Only interests.
RedHat can do this but they need to aim higher
than the operating system.
It's about service not product (Score:3, Informative)
It's about product DISTRIBUTION, SERVICE AND SUPPORT. It's about UPGRADES, PACKAGING AND BUGFIX. It's about NOTIFICATION, PROCESS AND BIDDING.
Can You Dig It, Can You Dig It? Caaaannn Yooooouuu Diiiig Iiiiiiiit.
The Best Place to Start. (Score:2, Insightful)
Subscribe...hmmm (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope RH isn't as unfocused as /. (Score:2, Insightful)
They offered this nice little thing called migration compatibility . the only product microsoft EVER created from scratch was windows, and even that claim is dubious. their business strategy was to purchase established products, give them a microsoft-esque look, spice the functionality up a bit, and offer it to the public (now pay attention here) WITH MIGRATION CAPABILITIES ALREADY IN PLACE. want to move your documents from wordperfect to word? no problem. how about migrating email from eudora to outlook? gotcha covered. that's where microsoft wraps your underwear around your ankles and gives it to you rotten.
and you know what? it's only gonna continue. it's like screwing a gorilla... you ain't gonna stop till the gorilla stops.
so, what's the solution? first of all, don't offer an alternative to microsoft, offer a migration. you might also consider actually using some of microsoft's products. how about this? i see all of these posts talking about working with major vendors on making their software work on linux... well, the one vendor i KNOW all you fascist, self-mutilating slashdotters (and by god you are, don't even try to deny it) are overlooking is microsoft. why not try and convince them to work on linux functionality? with the whole court thing going on (email me sometime to find out how much BS and how anti-democratic it is), they've got a vested interest in making other products at least viable enough so that they can claim that they're not monopolizing the market. take that and run with it.
you know who you guys remind me of? all the people who are hanging around bitching that racism/sexism/any other -ism you want is still rampant and that there's no equalization of opportunity when all they really want is for the government to hold everyone else down so they can walk on them. fuck that! if you want to operate based upon the lowest common denominator, go right ahead, but i'll be damned if i'm gonna work on it, and you'll just keep getting trampled on by those with the ambition and the capability.
nuff said
What the enterprise needs... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:What the enterprise needs... (Score:2)
the hypocrisy (Score:2)
Fonts? (Score:2, Insightful)
I know that quality fonts are difficult to create. What is the prospect for linux getting screen fonts of Windows quality?
Here's a Test... (Score:2)
1. Using any application, create and save a new file.
2. Using any other application, find that file.
Sad to say, I've found that many people cannot do that. (A surprising number don't know what "application" means.)
Now, that doesn't mean they're any less intelligent than the rest of us. it just means that Windows allows them to successfully go about their business with no awareness of things like file systems, directories, etc.
So, yes, desktop Linux has a way to go.
Re:Oh dear! (Score:2)
Re:Oh dear! (Score:2)
Yeah, in the 5% of cases were the update server isn't unavailable due to "extremely heavy traffic".
But perhaps you can set it to auto-reconnect, I've not looked into it that much.
Re:Oh dear! (Score:2)
you've got up2date server deamon for clients on network. update server and all clients will have a fast connection and no connection lost
Re:Linux isn't ready for many companies. (Score:5, Insightful)
Well now, if your wallet is empty, and you want to continue your business, people get inventive. Linux is the lumber and wood lying around (for free) to make it happen.
The claim that all my tools, spreadsheets, documents are in ms office format, and thus i can't switch overnight is true. But company's should really focus on platform independant formats instead.
number 1 rule was/is still , never have your computing stuff tied into a single ICT company/supplier. Many company's still alive today took the wise decision in the past to just buy the custom made package including its source code. In such a position no software company in the world can stall your business.
Robert
Re:Linux isn't ready for many companies. (Score:2)
You're right in general, but wrong in specifics. OpenOffice can read and write Office format
The reason I still need to keep a Mac around is PageMaker.
Re: Linux isn't ready for many companies. (Score:2)
> Many large companys can't change that easily. My employer has many custom programs, and excel sheets that just won't work on anything else.
And sadly, many bosses will use that logic to justify digging themselves even deeper into the pit. But where will they be in 10 years, when Microsoft is really desperate for cash?
Re:This is hilarious (Score:2)
Redhat gives, and offers support subscription if you want it.
So, basically YES, you've got it right.
MS EVIL! BILL GATES SUXXORS! FIGHT THE DMCA!
Good for Red Hat! Hooray open source! I can't wait to sign up!
Re:Desktop Linux (Score:3, Funny)
Agreed, users should not be setting things up.
> I don't expect to see package names when I try to update, instead of samba I better see "Windows Network Emulator Update" and it better check my existing packages for me and tell me if I should do it or not but give me check boxes if I click advanced.
You are a USER, you do not need to be doing the updating, this is a work machine after all. (or did you miss that bit?)
> Get rid of the this initialized that initialized etc messages because if I see those I'm afraid already, if I'm afraid I'm not going to figure out even what I could have.
Indeed a desktop linux should not be verbose.
> Make copy and paste work cross application, I select it, I copy it, damnit any text box I should be able to right click paste.
Easy if the applications use the same interface! Even in windows you could write your application not to use the standard windows clipboard. Not that it works half the time anyway, I check my credit card staement online i select and copy into say excel it uses the damn web formatting etc etc, a lot of the time you save time by pasteing into notepad first, ARGGHHH that pisses me off.
>Add the current directory to the path.
NO. a. very silly b. as a user you should not be running your own programs anyway.
> When I put a cd in, it should autorun, I don't understand the concept of executables and filetypes.
you are a worker you do not need to install stuff, your cd drive is there merely to play audio cds and hold your coffee.
> Give a graphical utility to add new hardware. I better not ever find out I have a kernel or worse have to do something with it... kernel sounds like a scary thing.
That is the problem of the computer support department, please contact them.
> Re-Organize the menu's on the toolbar, you give me too many options.
I do not know what you are using, and you certainly arn't using this unreleased dekstop distro, please try and make valid points.
> When I install it, likewise, give me LESS than 20 things to pick and make sure they aren't named GCombust, how about CD-RECORDING. On the other hand get more specific than "Desktop Publishing" give me sub-options like "Word Clone" not a description box... show me that as the option, maybe mention the package name in fine print at the bottom of the description box.
Did we not already cover this? YOU DON'T INSTALL.
> When removing programs I don't want to see package names either, across the board, I never want to have to see package names to feel like I'm "l33t".
And you certainly do not remove programs, are youi trying to get fired?
> Stick in a dos emulator... but make it transparent, I put in the program, type it's name, and bam it just runs, I never know the difference. same with windows emulation.
So you can avoid using the company approved packages no doubt? The company decides what you use and sees emulation as un-necacery.
> expect all graphical installation without knowing a single IRQ, NETWORK ADDRESS, IO PORT, OR ANYTHING ELSE ABOUT MY HARDWARE of these:
And the company expects you to use your machine and shut up.
> HD, I plug in a preformatted drive, it shows up somewhere consistant.
Please leave the hardware alone.
> Digital Camera, Scanner, printer, 5 printers, 2 scanners, usb keyboard, new mouse, sound card, WINMODEM, floppy, etc
Not your problem.
> Home network, connection sharing, invisible connectivity to my windows network and printers without knowing anything because I used a wizard there too, connection sharing of dialup, static, whatever.
Again, not your problem.
>All of these things should be as easy to change and install later as they when the OS is installed. If I stick a new video card in, I better not have to run a command line configuration utility to set it up.
Ditto.
> Firewall, make a checkbox with an automatic learning mode, if I want more than that, I can edit a text file.
The firewall is the companies responsibility whether you like it or not.
> Users... that sounds a lil edgy but dont' ask my real name otherwise I'll think your sending it to MS.
Nothing to see here.
Anyway the point here was that this is a corperate desktop replacement. This way when linux makes it to the home desktop you will already know quite a bit having used it at work, this is how windows got there too mostly remeber.
Make It So Easy You Can Downsize the IT staff (Score:2)
Re:it's an uphill struggle (Score:2)
As for Windows, most folks don't set anything up. They just use whatever the IT department pushed out to them.