Pitfalls and Options For Business-Desktop Linux 346
swhiser writes "Tom Adelstein dispassionately surveys the remaining fixes that will put desktop Linux through in the enterprise. Peer-to-peer networking, functional printing, laptop support, single sign-on to Active Directory and a better Device Manager (with a driver-get mechanism) are among the things companies are asking for. He says, 'The Linux desktop could fail if companies continue to pilot programs and conclude that it's less trouble to buy Microsoft. Everyone loses in that scenario.'" Pre-loaded systems are no longer a pipe dream or an obscurity, though; read on for one reader's mini-survey of Linux systems from large computer vendors.
Acidus writes "I called around today to the big OEMs (Gateway, Dell, HP, IBM) seeing who offered systems with Linux pre-installed, and the results were good. 3 of the 4 offered Linux on workstations. While no one offered Linux preloaded on laptops, Dell has some references nn how to install Linux on their laptops, while IBM has a scattering of docs on their website about installing Linux on systems. The reps at Dell, even though they have a series of Linux workstations, had to ask me what Linux was, and how to spell it. "Is that L-Y-N-I-C-S?""
As long as tech-knownothing PHBs keep making (Score:4, Insightful)
"We are good, but everyone is against us" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:As long as tech-knownothing PHBs keep making (Score:4, Insightful)
Tech know nothing PHBs know something you don't: if it's going to cost 2000 man hours of work at a $30 an hour average to redesign internal systems, templates, and procedures to work on a non-Microsoft system, that more than wipes out the cost of licensing the desktop systems. That doesn't include the cost of the lead up in which you have to test, deploy, and integrate all of your servers and desktops, plus the lost productivity from people needing to be retrained or retraining themselves on the shortcuts to use Linux.
People here act like a platform migration of this scale is simple as flipping a switch, and I think that really highlights how little experience in practical technology the Slashdot collective really has. You can reformat your system at home and install Linux in an hour depending on options and system speed. It's not that simple when you're talking about a business with 20 locations and 5000 workstations to migrate. It's not that simple when you have internal customer service apps to migrate. When you have internal template and procedures to rewrite. When you have to audit your hardware to ensure compatibility and then repurchase anything that might be too much hassle to fiddle with.
Migration to Linux isn't speading like wildfire for the same reason Windows shops don't jump ship to run to the superior UNIX systems even when that's cheaper: it's not as simple as you people think. It's not free. It's not even necessarily cheap. If it's going to cost you $250,000 to migrate and you're only going to be saving an average of $25,000 in license fees and support each year, it will take you ten years just to break even. Linux is not a magic bullet. You people whine and whine like little babies, but I'm willing to put my money where my mouth is that 99% of you only whine because you don't have the slightest clue what you're talking about. And the more you whine about your complete and total lack of knowledge, the more steam you give to other companies to muscle in on place where Linux could be making inroads.
What you need to do, if you really want Linux to succeed that badly, is address its single biggest shortcoming: the difficulty in migrating systems from Windows to Linux. No, it's not your fault that it's so hard. Microsoft intentionally makes it difficult to leave the nest. However, since you keep bitching about it, it IS your problem.
Quit being a whiny little bitch and contribute some code, documentation, consultation, or just shut the hell up. Your whining isn't going to change the fact that Linux just plain isn't a good solution for a lot of shops, but if you'd actually do some freaking work you chould change that.
What you can do (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, shutting the hell up isn't going to help anyone. Speak up. Don't like how a program works? Let the developers know what you want. Feature requests are important. Found a bug? Speak up.
Shutting up only prevents the knowledge from getting to who needs it.
I understand the point of the previous post, but having a dialogue with developers is important. Mailing lists, IRC channels, etc
Re:As long as tech-knownothing PHBs keep making (Score:5, Interesting)
1) Do away with office. Replace office with openoffice the desktops (still windows).
2) Do away with outlook/exchange. Lucky for novell they have groupwise.
3) Set up a CMS system (novell used thei ifolder product) which keeps track of documents the employees create. This trains the employees to go to an abstract location for all their documents rather then "my documents".
4) Set up a desktop distro with open office, groupwise, ifolder and you are done.
It could be done with small gradual steps. Novell has done it, IBM is doing it and neither one of them is a small company.
Re:As long as tech-knownothing PHBs keep making (Score:3, Insightful)
They may be investing more heavily than other companies would for 'dogfooding' reason ('eat our own dog food', etc) They have services and products to sell and need to back up the claims of the products by proving it can be done, first and foremost. How they present accounting matters (if they do) is another issue altogether.
For most companies it's probably still cheaper just to buy
Re:As long as tech-knownothing PHBs keep making (Score:4, Informative)
Yes. If a PHB can use office they can use open office. IF they know how to use outlook then can use groupwise.
"Of course, here we are assuming you're not using Linux as a multi-user server system and are instead running it in as a single-user "desktop" machine system."
No I am not presuming that. Novell has full linux desktops.
"Ease of installation and availability of software is a big one."
This is handled by the IT dept.
"Can the PHB "Hotsync" with their Handspring / Blackberry? "
Yes.
"Can they just download some software and install it themselves"
Yes but they probably should not be allowed to.
"How about their iPod? Their digital camera? Their scanner? The latest and greatest gadget that does who-knows-what?"
At work? Why?
"I'm afraid that even downloading and installing Firefox on a Linux desktop would be too much for a PHB"
Why would it be any harder then windows. Fire up YAST, click on firebird and it installs. That's a lot easier then downloading MS software, unzipping it and then installing it. With YAST you don't even need to hunt it down on some web site.
"Until is it pretty much exactly the same as Microsoft Windows you will have a hard time getting anywhere with a PHB."
Linux is growing at an explosive pace. It's definately not having problems getting anywhere. WHen the growth of linux adoption slows down even a little bit then I'll worry. Until then it's all sheets to the wind and full force ahead.
"Until hardware and software vendors put the same time and money into developing solutions for Linux as well as Microsoft Windows, it just isn't going to get the recognition it deserves"
It's already getting the recognition it deserves. It's growing wildly despite the best efforts of MS and SCO stop it. They can't even seem to slow down a little bit. Tens of millions spent on lawsuits and it did not even slow down the growth of linux by
Honestly what planet do you live on? Are you under some impression that the adoption of linux is slowing down or has stopped? If so where did you get that impression.
Re:As long as tech-knownothing PHBs keep making (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember, All. Microsoft won, not because they're technology was the best, or because of tying contracts. They won because of polish, and commercial developer support.
And Linux has trouble with both of those at the moment (although the polish is getting better).
It's more than money. (Score:4, Interesting)
Politics is a major factor and the numbers can be managed to show any results that you want. Yet in case after case, that exact situation has happened. Again, the numbers can be managed to show whatever someone wants them to show.
Being the new CIO or VP and doing nothing except maintaining the status quo is not going to look good on your resume. That's where the politics come into play. If you aren't already on the most popular system, lots of "problems" will be "found" that can only be "fixed" by migrating to the popular system. If you're on the most popular system, then most managers will not risk their career by championing a migration to a less popular system. Instead, they'll focus on centralizing that which is decentralized and decentralizing that which is centralized. And I did not do that. Incorrect. The actual thought process is more "hmmm... something that might save money, but might fail and cause me to lose my job - nope, I'm not risking my career". Yes it does. I can sit someone down and they can type and print from OpenOffice the same as from MSOffice. Only if the users at the company in question are part of the "some users" group that you mentioned. If they aren't, then there won't be problems. Whatever. Lots of people use it and is seems to work for them. I'll leave out the rest of your ill-informed rant.
In business, it's about politics. That's the fact. The sooner you learn that, the sooner you'll be able to move beyond tech.
Re:As long as tech-knownothing PHBs keep making (Score:3, Interesting)
The decisions have to be made on the basis of the business, not the basis of the technology itself. So I don't blame them for hiring expe
Re:As long as tech-knownothing PHBs keep making (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I'm a PHB (Score:3, Funny)
WiFi support (Score:5, Informative)
"Broader WiFi card support needs to be introduced to Linux. WiFi card support for the large and important group of laptop users hardly exists. The expedient solution here would to use something like Linuxant's DriverLoader which has the elegance of being a single point solution that's applicable to the great majority of user/device scenarios."
This is the single reason that stopped my from installing Linux on my laptop. Until I discovered ndiswrapper [sourceforge.net], that is, which wraps windows wireless drivers...
Now if ndiswrapper worked out of the box, that *would* be a step forward.
Re:WiFi support (Score:3, Informative)
Re:WiFi support (Score:4, Funny)
Don't like your bathroom? Purchase a new house!
Re:WiFi support (Score:2)
(But then we get into the whole binary driver thing and it all goes
Stable driver API (Score:5, Insightful)
As it is now, Linux on the Desktop is only feasible for very specific desktop environments. And on laptops? Power management and wireless networking are not automatic, and with several different hardware versions and with users that roam the world... it's a pain.
Linux is getting there though, but slowly. The support cost for linux on desktops and laptops in corporations today would be too high I fear.
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
You're 100% there on probably 90% of the hardware being sold, and you call it a pipe dream?!
Re:Stable driver API (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, you can find stuff that will work in Linux, but some requires 3rd party drivers (madwifi? how can you support that in a corporation) or binary only drivers (video cards, custom high end storage devices) or you have to use "vi" to configure it.
It has to be easily installed even by Joe Sixpak, else your support costs will skyrocket. IMO, this is the largest stumbling block for Linux Desktops.
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
If the kernel provided such a layer by default, that would surely solve the problem -- because then you would have a standard API layer you make your binary only driver for. There is work going on for this with big-name IT companies behind it, so let's cross our fingers
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
For consumer use, absolutely. For business desktop use, you just don't buy that last 10%. And if you need it, or if your investment in it is too large to write off -- well, that's a good reason to stick with Windows.
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
Like on a hotel room I was last week with a special combo USB and Ethernet connector... only worked in Windows. How do you explain that to your CFO that w
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
HUH?? for a company with 60,000 different brands and configurations of machines I would agree with you. We are talkinga bout enterprise and corperate.
I just ordered 100 lattitude D800 laptops. every one of them will be 100% identical so as soon as I configure one to the base line, all other 99 are configured, all I need to do is image from the first. so
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
We're talking about standard drivers and something like Windows XP SP2's "Choose a Wifi" application. Search, point, enter WPA passphrase and off you go. Corporate enterprise installations are not entirely static and predictable.
Corporate users expects the WiFi to just work, whatever the hotspot the user is in.
100% identical? Good luck. (Score:4, Interesting)
Wow - we ordered 2 *on the same day* and they both arrived the same day from the same location. They have different wireless chips inside. One person has wireless under linux, one doesn't.
Here's hoping all *100* of yours are 100% identical down to the internals.
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
On that note, why does he need an MP3 player? Get back to work Joe, or I'm sending out your pink slip.
Slacker.
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
When you bought your 10% piece of hardware, did you even both
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
It has to be easily installed even by Joe Sixpak, else your support costs will skyrocket.
Hmmm.. I like joe as an editor, but installing stuff with the sixpack option is not documented well enough.
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
Yes, the same issues apply to Windows, on an even grea
It's a *nix wide problem though? (Score:2)
Some even require everything built into the kernel. Commercial Unix operating systems are sometimes inferior to Linux (dare I mention SCO's offering).
Re:Stable driver API (Score:2)
Single sign-on to what ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Feel ready to own one or many Tux Stickers [ptaff.ca] ?
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:2)
Why not single-sign-on to OpenLdap ?
Because companies want to use their existing infrastructure? Are you seriously suggesting you can sell linux on the workstation by telling companies to throw away their windows "investment" server side at the same time?
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:2)
AD supposedly supports LDAP. So you LDAP to AD.
I did it with NDS years ago. I assume AD would do it. Then again, MS just introduced salvage to Win2003.-shrug-
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:2)
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:5, Funny)
Gradually migrate desktops to Linux. Make them do sign on and authentication to a Windows server.
End result: Linux on the desktops, Windows as the server.
That way, each platform is being used for what it is best at.
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:2)
Nice sarcasm
My point was, I guess, that telling a company they must replace both parts of their infrastructure in order to use Linux is not the way to market it. Like it or not AD is being used in large companies, in concert with Exchange, ISA, Sharepoint, VPNs and whatever else. Lack of single sign on from workstations can well be a deal breaker, and saying "Oh just migrate your backend too" is not a helpful attritude.
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:2, Insightful)
Is OpenLdap kerberized? (in other words, can you tie Kerberos security to permissions on the retrieval and setting of LDAP attributes?)
(hint: the answer is NO)
And because of this, OpenLdap authentications solutions are NOT secure, as they pass credentials in CLEARTEXT. Yes, you can use certificates but now you've introduced the thorny issues of key distribution.
Microsoft's Active Directory has smartly tied Kerberos and LDAP together, so LDAP queries can be encrypted
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:3, Insightful)
A HOW-TO is even available here:
http://www.bayour.com/LDAPv3-HOWTO.html
Moderators need to only moderate on what they know about. These ones don't.
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:3, Informative)
OpenLDAP fully supports kerberos authentication (and many other types) via Cyrus (and maybe GNU) SASL libraries.
See the OpenLDAP SASL Instructions [openldap.org] that document how to do it.
Re:Single sign-on to what ? (Score:5, Informative)
Er, the answer is YES. I have it working here. You can use the Kerberos tickets to authenticate to OpenLDAP and have ACL's in the LDAP server to define the permissions. It's done trough SASL and it works transparently.
And because of this, OpenLdap authentications solutions are NOT secure, as they pass credentials in CLEARTEXT. Yes, you can use certificates but now you've introduced the thorny issues of key distribution.
Not so. Understand that this is however seperate from the availability of Kerberos. Other methods can be used to pass the crendentials (Digest MD5, etc). Aditionally you can force the use of SSL, so even cleartext passwords are not problematic. You can actually define that the server won't accept cleartext from non-TLS connections.
I use OpenLDAP integrated with Kerberos and both integrated with the authentication and authorization of several different things (including machine logon). I also have a cross-realm trust relation between AD and the Unix LDAP which allows AD users to use their Windows tokens in the Unix environment (user "bar@WINDOWS.NET" assumes "bar@UNIX.NET" identity trough cross-realm). Aditionally, as a last resort for use in non-kerberized apps one can use the password '{KERBEROS}boo@UNIX.NET' or '{KERBEROS}boo@WINDOWS.NET' to make the LDAP server check the user supplied password in the Kerberos server.
We've been running Linux for quite a while now (Score:5, Interesting)
We use NIS so that workstations are completely interchangable. Had an EE harddrive meltdown, grabbed a spare machine, ran the kickstart, and the user logged back in via NIS within 15 minutes with no data loss! Could have had him backup instantly if he wanted to go to a spare office.
I can't believe how much easier workstation admin is now that we use Linux.
Re:We've been running Linux for quite a while now (Score:2)
Re:We've been running Linux for quite a while now (Score:2)
IMHO. Both are messy substitutes for Directory integration. Your applications should be installed on the server, and save data to the server. Any information they require that's user based needs to come from the directory schema.
Home directories mount from the file server.
No more workstation specific info, and no more passing 'crap' around to all the workstations.
See Netware and Pegasus Mail fo
Re:We've been running Linux for quite a while now (Score:3, Interesting)
roaming profiles (Score:2, Interesting)
don't be like us, plan ahead for time & cost of support.
NIS+NFS vs AD? Not a chance (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry, there's no way.
Now, maybe it's more resistant to spyware and virii, but it's not more secure.
Just run:
$ ypcat passwd|jack
to find out how insecure you are!
If you were running Kerberos, OpenLDAP and NFSv4
HP has a Linux laptop (Score:5, Informative)
Risk aversion (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Risk aversion (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Risk aversion (Score:2)
Good point. An alternative to a rewards for the positive benefits for deploying Linux on the desktop is punishment for sticking with something that is not working or causing problems. Security concerns with Win
Re:Risk aversion (Score:4, Insightful)
Domino (Score:4, Insightful)
Cut Dell some slack! (Score:3, Interesting)
If someone called you up and asked you to spell some random word in Hindi I bet you'd mess up too.
As for the first topic, it should be no shock to any one that linux needs a whole shitload of stuff, Samba and others are great projects, and provide a lot of the desired functionality, but getting them installed and set up and "playing nice" with your Windows network can be a real bitch.
I mean, who here has jumped through the hoops of adding a linux server to an AD domain? Compare to adding a Windows server to an AD domain. Now imagine Betty McOfficeGirl trying to follow some written instructions to set up her fancy new linux desktop. Not all offices have a team of IT guys swarming around taking care of everything. Most people are on their own.
Linux needs to fight this battle in the small businesses of the world. They got a toe in the door as far as POS machines and kiosks, that type of thing. But linux needs to be running on the PC in the back office of every mom and pop grocery store or restaurant or doctors office, etc...
Everytime I criticize linux I get modded down and shouted at by morons for being a MS "fanboy" or "astroturfer". It's all obvious to anyone who cares to look, though.
Frankly, I don't think linux can do it (replace windows). I don't think linux will do it. I don't think we should be trying to shoehorn Windows compatibility into a Unix clone. Linux' strength comes from its Unix roots, and I think it should stay close to them, and stay focused on conquering the backend.
I see something like ReactOS developing into the horse to bet on.
To me, a Windows killer is something you install over some guys copy of Windows, and they never even notice that some of the icons are in different spots, or the Windows logo is replaced with something new. Everything works as it always did, albeit with all the transparency a GPL'ed project gives us.
Just my 0.02. I really don't think linux could ever replace Windows any more than a tractor trailer could replace a honda civic. All those regular non-mechanical folk don't want to drive a tractor trailer, and don't want to learn.
Re:Cut Dell some slack! (Score:3, Insightful)
Once again ... Why bother. (Score:2, Interesting)
Once native OOO comes out next year, OSX will be the `switch` platform I am recommending to all my friends relatives colleagues...
Regarding Linux, OOO 2.0 is again a main switching point. OOO 1.1.n is still too limited to be useful for power users to switch.
Another HUGE blocking poi
Re:Once again ... Why bother. (Score:2)
Hardware Failure (Score:3, Insightful)
Replacing an x86 processor: $100-200
Competition in the x86 component market: priceless
Replacing a logic board: $200-500
Replacing a slow as shit G4 processor: $200-500
Having shiny buttons: goddamn expensive
Linux is where the two shall meet. Open platform hardware running open source software. In a few years, for FREE, I'm sure at least one distro will have it down. Fedore is damn close already. And at the price of a CD-R or DVD-R, I'm sure there will be a lot of takers.
And
This is backasswards (Score:5, Insightful)
The way Linux will make inroads on the corporate desktop is not by some big push to get it over the top, but by steady, incremental improvement. Not to mention any names (lest I be accused of flamebaiting) but targeted super-projects will not work.
Reacting to the perceived needs of corporate users is fine, but that's not a good fit for the Open Source way. You need someone who has enough pull with a developer to get a single feature or bug worked on. In the early stages of a project, that person is the developer or people he knows personally, with the circle expanding outward as the project grows.
Companies with perceived needs for a Linux desktop can sponsor development of those needs. Sure, the rest of us can try to guess what to create based on surveys and hearsay, but it's way better for the people close to the problem to come up with the solution.
The best way to promote Linux on the desktop is with apps. If a killer app appears, people will adopt Linux and be motivated to fix whatever perceived flaws they find.
Are you sure about that? (Score:2, Insightful)
And Microsoft loses...how?
Some Insightful, Some Not So Insightful (Score:5, Informative)
Fact: Linux just doesn't have a Net Neighbourhood/Places GUI. There is nothing that requires Linux (or BSD) to have to have a domain controller. In the past week, I've provided support in online forums where the problem is stated that on Windows they can't see the other Windows box - because they are using Network Places, which relies on NetBIOS and can take up to 45 min for a computer to show up in. This is the reality of the userbase - GUI.
Myth: Printing sucks
Fact: No argument - it sucks. No central tie-in into the system so all programs use the same printing config. I shouldn't have to setup CUPS, and then setup each and every program I want to use to use CUPS.
Myth: Laptop support is non-existant
Fact: There's sites dedicated to it; as long as the hardware is available, for the most part there is no trouble booting linux on a laptop. Rather, the article says that there's just not enough wifi support in laptops...
Myth: No Terminal Services client
Fact: rdesktop worked fine for years now
There's other issues, but those are the most visible. Not to say the article isn't overall wrong in it's assertion - that in order for Linux to get to the point where drivers are listed with hardware along with Windows, the hobbyist programmer mantra of "it works for me, so fsck you" keep stagnating Linux where it is today - where it's been for the last couple of years ever since "this will be the year of the Linux desktop...No, THIS will be..."
It's not acceptable to have to install 3+ programs in sequence to get an app to work - bundle the bloody stuff already, quit being lazy. Funny from the crowd who chastizes closed source about how bad their software design is...
Re:Some Insightful, Some Not So Insightful (Score:2, Insightful)
Fact: Linux just doesn't have a Net Neighbourhood/Places GUI. There is nothing that requires Linux (or BSD) to have to have a domain controller
It's all about single sign-on and "zero configuration". Sure you can manually configure user lists in 900 linux machines, or you could set up a seperate LDAP for linux and have AD for windows, and manually sync them. But thats not what businesses want. That's twice as much time to add a user in their minds.
As for th
Re:Some Insightful, Some Not So Insightful (Score:2, Insightful)
Fact: rdesktop worked fine for years now
stratjakt commented:
TFA is talking about a client, not a server. We need to be able to start a windows terminal session from a linux desktop.
I can tell you that I couldn't use linux on my desktop box at work for this very reason, I regulary have to connect to clients machines via Terminal Services, or PCAnywhere.
I may have some techie cred in our office, but I have no say in what OS our clients want to run, and I can't tell the
Re:Some Insightful, Some Not So Insightful (Score:3, Informative)
is the man an idiot? (Score:2)
why do you think that we lock out the ability for you to share folders on your machine in the domain wide settings??
Gee, that's all we need is something that makes it easier for a Virus to spread.
the author has some interesting points but most are examples of someone writing an article about something he knows nothing about.
I admit that some things are slightly laking, but some of what he talks about exist (sorry, but
Re:is the man an idiot? (Score:4, Insightful)
I have to diagree with you. Getting linux in the the business is all about conversion. You can't change peoples minds overnight. You can't expect a company to throw out their entire infrastructure just to save a few bucks on desktops, especially when that infrastructure is already paid for, and it's working for their needs.
These are the types of statements that simply fool the "i'm a geek, and everybody else is stupid" crowd into thinking they now know more about a subject then they really do.
Device Manager (Score:2)
In my specific case I do not want to talk to
I want to talk to a Modem and tell it to Dial 123-456 at 9600 Baud 8N1
using GSM network transperency. I want the driver to know how the modem should accomplish this. He also mentions printing, it's a similar issue AFAIK.
It's just an example, but a stable uniform interface and API on a higher level would make life much easier for a lot of independent soft
no they don't (Score:2)
Microsoft certainly doesn't lose. And how do the companies lose? They just did a pilot study on cost effectiveness and determined Microsoft was the answer. If Linux was cheaper and better for them as a company, they certainly would have switched.
WHY? (Score:4, Interesting)
WHY???? Show me ONE big corporation which needs to play movies on the users desktops!
Re:WHY? (Score:2, Interesting)
Sure, these could be converted into another format. But that is just another line item that needs to be done to switch to Linux. Once the "Things we need to spend money on because they don
Re:WHY? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:WHY? (Score:3, Funny)
More than a smattering of IBM pages (Score:2)
See also IBM Products Certified for use with Linux: http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/MIGR-4
OS X Meets Criteria, But Not Solution (Score:5, Informative)
So, taking a page from both Apple and Microsoft's business handbook, what can the Linux community "steal" from Microsoft and Apple to make Linux a stronger enterprise player?
Getting things from the Apple side isn't very hard since its resources come from the FreeBSD world, which is open source. Samba works great in OS X, which means stronger integration in Linux is needed to match OS X's performance, which I suspect does nothing particularly special.
Same is true for AD authentication. Mac OS X uses a plug-in its Directory Services that understands this LDAP-variant...surely this is something that would work in Linux, or does it lack a refined mechanism for handling multiple directory services as OS X?
Ximian already provides Exchange compatibility in its mail product, and Exchange 2000 works with IMAP provided that Outlook Web Access (WebDAV) is running. Special features of Exchange (and its Outlook client) may be missing, but Mac users are still missing features from Entourage, the successor to the Outlook client on Mac OS X, so this is not quite the biggie. Linux/Intel users can run VMware (as Mac users would run Virtual PC) to use the actual Outlook client if needed.
The Microsoft Office component is a toughie. Mac OS users have a genuine Office client. Microsoft knows that holding back creation of a Linux client would sap power from its enterprise drive.
No easy answers in this, really. I think, however, that Linux could use a central business owner, although I know its nature makes that impossible. But wait--isn't that what Apple's doing with OS X by licensing or using BSD components?
What if a company licensed a Linux distro and took the reins to make a Linux-compatible OS with the same functionality, but also the "one-click" simplicity, application strength, and security that Mac OS X enjoys in its Mach/BSD fusion?
Of course, we know that this appears to have been done, with Red Hat, et al. But has it really been done well?
Database access (Score:3, Insightful)
When I have documented the business case to move off windows to Linux, we always run into the lack of a comparable application within the Linux/OSS community. Staroffice had it on its previous version, but that is gone now. The OpenOffice folks seem to be working on it, but it is not yet ready. The Boss looks at my suggestion of MySQL and sees lottsa money and time spent converting and training. The use of various JDBC and ODBC drivers make a conversation technically feasible, but I suspect that many in the small and medium sized corporate world need a one-to-one application capable of natively sucking in those .mdb files and running with them. If that was there, we'd start converting to a Linux desktop this afternoon.
It is surprising that the Consultingtimes ( article [consultingtimes.com] literally does not mention databases.
The biggest threat (Score:2)
Linux on the other hand thrives in the thin client environment. When you deploy thin client all of these arguments about patch management, usability, control, software installation all melt away. I run 200 desktops from a single server and
Without MS Access-like functionality... (Score:5, Insightful)
Linux has awesome DB engines readily available - unquestionably - but that power is not accessible to your average office cube dweller. That is the genius of Access; simple DB applications are easy, while amazingly complex ones are still possible, given patience and time. And that is how many of the more complex Access apps are developed; more functionality is added over time, as needs change and applications a tested against daily experience. This is easily done, because - Access is easy. Get that right, and a whole new class of businesses could come over to Linux. Without it, I think trying to sell Linux into the small business venue is just pissing into the wind.
One other area where Linux falls down is input methods for other languages. For instance, try entering Korean in a Linux system set up for English, using Open Office. Good luck trying. Ami (the app that is supposed to enable Korean input) doesn't even begin to work. You end up having to hand-insert each character from a font table, which is numbingly slow. It is awfully hard to share Linux in this direction or that when you can't get the thing out of its English entry state. I have not had occassion to try to enter Chinese yet, but I don't look forward to it based on my experiences with Korean. Windows, on the other hand, "just works."
Don't get me wrong. I'm a huge Linux fan, but these things have been brick-wall problems for my companies (three of them.) I think other business owners have very likely run into the same issues.
Re:Without MS Access-like functionality... (Score:3, Insightful)
And this is the problem. It's easy to get something going with Access, but then you have people setting up databases who have ZERO concept of how
Re:Without MS Access-like functionality... (Score:3, Insightful)
You may not like having to come after sloppy work, or trivial work, or even broken work. However, the bottom line isn't what you like. It is what the small business owner/operator likes.
I would also point out that making/keeping things difficult
Bullshit. (Score:3, Interesting)
These teams, knowing their stuff, would not touch Access with a 10 metre pole.
As for small companies, they are carving their own obsolescence: I used to porvide support for dentists. While the Access solutions they had normally gave uncountable headhaches, Linus or UNI
Re:Bullshit. (Score:3, Insightful)
For the record, we've been using Access for many years here at my first company and the databases are still working fine. I wrote them; I do actually know what I'm doing to some degree (I write custom PostgreSQL and MySQL applications under Linux, in fact) and perhaps that has a little something to do with it. I have per
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:5, Insightful)
Cost of licensing? Upward compatibility? Freedom of choice? Hardware requirements? Ability to customize workspace? Freedom from Microsoft inspections, like the ones MS has forced on city buereaucrats before? Better security?
Do I need to continue? I can...
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:5, Informative)
- keep fighting terrorism
- losing indivdual freedoms
- stop thinking
For christ sakes... just because something isn't point click and done doesn't make it any less viable.
1. Windows Network Neighborhood visibility and UNIX/Linux visibility in the same panel.
XANDROS 2.0, Lindows, Lycoris, MEPIS
2. Active Directory password management which includes single sign-on and password expiration policies.
Novell Evolution embraces mail, calendar and address book standards to ease data sharing.
Supported mail protocols include IMAP, POP, SMTP and Authenticated SMTP, as well as Microsoft Exchange 2000 and 2003. Novell GroupWise support is currently in our development branch.
3. Interoperability with Exchange 5.5 and Exchange 2000.
See above
4. Font compatibility with Microsoft Office and Openoffice.org and/or StarOffice.
Crossover
5. Windows Terminal Server clients using RDP out of the box for home grown applications and special Windows applications.
Xandros, Lycoris, SUSE, RedHat... or just install VNC...
6. Ability to click on a file in a Windows or Samba share and initiate the associated application.
Fille association is not a roadblock. Simply a minor configuration issue.
7. Device management for hardware compatibility.
XANDROS 2.0, Lindows, Lycoris, MEPIS, RedHat, Suse
8. Compatible Windows Media player Codecs.
Crossover, MPlayer, XINE
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:2)
Novell Evolution embraces mail, calendar and address book standards to ease data sharing.
I think part of the issue is also the actual logging-on to the computer. You know, having your computer log-on authenticate to active directory. Yeah, I know you can do it, but it never turns out as easy as telling it, in the setup process, to authenticate to a Windows server. Frankly, even when I've gotten it work
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:2, Insightful)
For one, not wanting to have your business rely on a single supplier, especially a criminal monopolist. Also better security and lower TCO.
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:2)
Evolution Connector [novell.com] (formerly Ximian Connector) was recently GPL'd.
I have no problems using TTF fonts should I want to.
I'm not quite sure what this is supposed to mean, but there are several distributions that offer very good hardware
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:2, Informative)
1) Use smb:// in Nautilus.
2) Dump Active Directory and use something that's a bit more cross-platform. There's plenty of LDAP-compatible stuff out there, and Novell will sell you a drop-in solution for single signon. If you do it right, you get single signon across Windows, Linux, Solaris and HPUX.
3) Evolution Connector.
4) Just set OOo to use the MS TT fonts.
5) Terminal Server Client or rdesktop (I'm guessing they mean a RDP client here).
6) Nautilus can ha
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:4, Insightful)
Check. It's called Samba.
2. Active Directory password management which includes single sign-on and password expiration policies.
Check. It's called Samba with Winbind. Though it could do with being better integrated with most distributions.
3. Interoperability with Exchange 5.5 and Exchange 2000.
http://www.novell.com/products/connector/ [novell.com]
4. Font compatibility with Microsoft Office and Openoffice.org and/or StarOffice.
TrueType fonts work fine for me. Though again, a well-designed installation program would be nice.
5. Windows Terminal Server clients using RDP out of the box for home grown applications and special Windows applications.
http://www.whitepost.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/rdp.png [blueyonder.co.uk]
6. Ability to click on a file in a Windows or Samba share and initiate the associated application.
Have they used Konqueror lately?
http://www.whitepost.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/useprog
7. Device management for hardware compatibility.
One already exists, it just doesn't (yet) integrate to the point whereby it can install drivers automatically.
http://www.whitepost.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/infocen
8. Compatible Windows Media player Codecs.
Which ones? Xine supports most:
http://xinehq.de/index.php/features [xinehq.de]
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, when looking at the above list, I can't help but be frustrated. The majority of those things are already available. Let's go down the list item by item:
Windows Network Neighborhood visibility and UNIX/Linux visibility in the same panel.
Huh? What are these people using, FVWM? With Samba it's easy to set up a Windows network on a Linux box that can be viewed on both GNOME and KDE. In the same place as Windows shares. GNOME (and probably KDE, not sure) can even display different manual networks, such as FTP servers in its network place.
Active Directory password management which includes single sign-on and password expiration policies.
Can't comment on this, I'm not familiar with Active Directory.
Interoperability with Exchange 5.5 and Exchange 2000.
Am I completely crazy, or can't Ximian Connector & Evolution already do this?
Font compatibility with Microsoft Office and Openoffice.org and/or StarOffice.
Again, I ask the same question -- "huh?" -- if you want to use the Microsoft core fonts, install them! It's not that hard. It's not a fault of OpenOffice.org or StarOffice, it's just a case of the fonts that come on a Linux distro by default -- there's not Arial, Times New Roman, etc. because those are Microsoft fonts and Linux distributors can't distribute them. Might I ask a daring question: why don't Windows users install the Bitstream Vera fonts? I find it annoying that "Microsoft Office" doesn't have compatibility with "OpenOffice.org" (even though the office suites are not the problem in the first place).
Windows Terminal Server clients using RDP out of the box for home grown applications and special Windows applications.
Again, excuse my ignorance, but ... what's wrong with VNC? Why not switch to an open solution?
Ability to click on a file in a Windows or Samba share and initiate the associated application.
I don't agree that that's the problem: KDE (and GNOME maybe, I'm not sure though) can open the desired application just like normal but it does it in an undesirable way, IMHO -- it doesn't open the file from where it is, it copies it to your home directory and opens it from there. I think that that should be improved.
Device management for hardware compatibility.
That's very vague. Do they mean a GUI? If so, what's wrong with distro-specific hardware GUIs such as YaST (which is very good IMHO). A universal distro-independent solution is not a good idea, as is exemplified by LinuxConf. If you want a GUI for hardware management, pick a distro that has one.
Compatible Windows Media player Codecs.
That's the dumbest one yet, and the answer's right here: http://www.mplayerhq.hu/ [mplayerhq.hu]
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:2)
VNC is designed solely for accessing a console. Windows Remote Desktop allows multiple users to have sessions with a Windows Server (or a Windows XP client, although only 1 user on the console or Remote desktop at a time), while the console is locked.
Re:Just keep using Windows (Score:5, Insightful)
backward compatibility.
again:
backward compatibility.
backward compatibility.
backward compatibility.
got it ? it may not be important to you, but some big companies have _decades_ of data stored in their systems, some of this data only accessible through aged proprietary apps written in clipper, cobol, VB 3.0, whatever (some of those only exists in binary form. sources are long gone)... heck, once i went to a stock brokerage office and they had an access 2.0 running under OS/2 (by M$ recomendation) because access 2.0 was the only thing their PBX supported, and they had by force of law to record every phone call, internal or external.
it's easy for me or you to ditch windoze from our home machines because we don't have such worries. most of our valuable data are stored in open formats or easy-to-break proprietary ones and in small volume. now try to imagine GE. GM. Siemens. Toyota. Citibank. US gov.
i'm old enough to remember the reluctance of compnies in migrating from DOS to windows 3.0, or moving away from wordperfect. it only happend when M$ word/excell became stable enough, with reasonably good WP/Lotus 123 converters. that was between 10-12 years ago.
now that linux is starting to mature as a desktop environment, companies can start evaluating it. but since IT people in big enterprises abhors sudden and traumatic changes (it can cost them mora than millions, it can cost billions if something goes terribly wrong), they'll firts demmand a high level of compatibility. then as old applications are phased out, compatibility becomes a seccondary issue.
a friend o'mine recently said me he was stuck with windows in his small company (he's owner and only empoyee) because of some old clipper apps. then i showed him flagship and sugested that he could run the DOS binaries in dosEMU while adapting them to compile under flagship. he did that and is pretty happy. he knew about linux desktop but delayed the move because of 10 yr old clipper apps. and he's only one. now imagine GE's 300.000 employees...
Re:VPN (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course, if the OpenVPN client for Windows worked better (no friggin WinPcrap dependencies), and the architecture on both sides better supported dynamic "road warrior" scenarios, it could render the whole issue moot.
Re:Single sigon (Score:2)
Single sign-on means you enter your password once per session, not that you enter the same password 15 times during the day.
In other words, it's the full Kerberos thing, including support for Kerberos auth in all the preferable mail clients, web browsers, network browsers (not j
Interface (Score:2, Funny)
Are 26 letters in the alphabet too much? (Score:3, Interesting)
People who don't understand the CLI don't realize that it's actually a programming language file, but you only get to see one line at a time (default file size is 500 lines) - you can change that, you can search, edit, switch to multi-line mode, write little scripts, change the copyright year notices on all of your webpages on Ja
Re:Are 26 letters in the alphabet too much? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Wuh? (Score:3, Insightful)
You're right, Windows Workgroup networking utterly sucks. I ccontinually wonder how something so successful and so mature can still be so hideously unreliab
Re:Wuh? (Score:5, Interesting)
The way things go with Linux is that things start out unsupported. Then they get flawed support. After a bunch of development, the right solution is made, but it requires a lot of configuration to set everything up. Then it comes preconfigured and everything just works.
(When I started using Linux, in '96, in order to get X working, you had to write a mode line with the timings you wanted to get things just right. Then X started coming with mode lines for all the nice modes. Now you don't need mode lines at all; the server will come up with the right information itself. Imagine my surprised when my new X server, with nothing in the config file other than my monitor's capabilities (old monitor; new monitors report their own capabilities), instead of coming up in 1280x1024, came up in 2048x1536 because that's what it could do.)
Today you have to tell CUPS what your printer is. But tomorrow, you won't because the software will read
The article is thinking in the microsoft way about getting drivers. Why should you have to click on an unsupported device in order to get a driver for it? Just try to use it and it should fetch (or build, or just load) a driver. If it doesn't know what the device is, it should use a cddb-like system to report the lack of support, and let users who get it working report what they did.