Dvorak on How Microsoft Can Kill Linux 842
gewg_ writes "John C. Dvorak thinks he knows the way Redmond can kill Linux. Basing his premise on the relative dearth of device drivers available for Linux (compared to what is available for Windows), he sees an opportunity for the Borg to embrace and extinguish." From the article: "The immediate usefulness of Linux running under Windows is obvious. You can use all the Windows drivers for all the peripherals that don't run under Linux. Drivers have always been an issue with Linux as PC users have gotten spoiled with Windows driver support. Today's user wants to grab just about anything and not worry about installing it and making it work."
vmware (Score:5, Interesting)
cygwin (Score:4, Informative)
A better way to kill linux. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A better way to kill linux. (Score:5, Funny)
Nahh. When people install linux, they post their stupid questions on usenet and slashdot.
Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:5, Insightful)
He doesn't know the first thing about what he's saying!
Linux as a task under Windows exists!
Linux as a task under Linux exists.
In either instance, the "guest" OS doesn't get a "magic ride" on the hosts's drivers.
He takes an out-of-context comment, and combines it with half-knowlege of the subject and a dollop of wishful thinking.
Whoops! I think I just defined "Visionary"!
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:5, Insightful)
# Linux as a task under Windows exists!
# Linux as a task under Linux exists.
# In either instance, the "guest" OS doesn't get a "magic ride" on the hosts's drivers.
I suspect you didn't actually READ beyond the first paragraph of the article (either that, or you just didn't understand it) nor did any of the people that modded you up.
His comment about running Linux as a task was not his topic, it was simply pointing out an existing project. What he IS talking about is replacing the Linux driver interface with a Windows compatible driver interface that basically allows Linux to use MS drivers. I can't really comment on the feasibility of this, but this is a far cry from running Linux as a task.
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:5, Informative)
The NTFS.sys vcan be loaded as a userspace filesystem, and Aetheros/Broadcom cards have Windows NDIS drvers that have linux wrappers/stubs.
Dvorak is still talking through his hat.
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:4, Insightful)
He's got a point. But, it's also true that shitty third party drivers could be the death of this thing. It would make "MS Linux" look no more reliable than winblows. Ewww.
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:5, Interesting)
Today OSNews was talking about a Dvorak article in which he proclaims that if Microsoft created a Linux-Windows hybrid with the Windows driver layer, you would have instant compatibility with every device under the sun, and MS would take the Linux world by storm.
It's an interesting thought, and it brings up something I've been tossing around in my head for a while.
What if there existed an open standard for an operating system driver API? Such a standard would cover things like how the driver communicated with the kernel, how it was seen by the rest of the operating system, etc. If successful (and sufficiently free of restriction), it might be possible that many different operating systems would support it.
This would truly be one of the holy grails of computing: the device manufacturer would only need to write and maintain a single driver, and everything from Windows to BeOS would be able to use it.
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:3, Insightful)
What if there existed an open standard for an operating system driver API?
You mean, like the current Linux driver API?
Or did you mean to say, "what if Microsoft signed on to an open standard for an operating system driver API?"
By the way, it's clear that John's just being a dumbass. With his logic, OS/2 would have won. It was compatible up and down with Windows, with simple technical additions that made it much more usable and robust. Unfortunately for them, people aren't interested in buying a retread
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:5, Insightful)
It would probably mean that manufacturers would say: Heck, leenooks people want drivers, microsoft wants drivers, let's just write linus drivers, since MS can use their MS-Linux.
That woul dbe the death of the current windows Codebase.
OT: Longhorn will not be released. Microsoft will have collapsed enough by then that they won't be able to support the core dev team.
Fine, don't believe me. Just remember that windows 2003 server is already 2 years old, it is an overkill already.
That, and if you want real enterprise-grade software, you go Linux (free as in Zero Dollars)
For those of you who have a hard time accespting the last statement:
Oracle is the de-facto enterprise database. See http://www.itp.net/news/details.php?id=13678&cate
IBM's newest mainframe, the zSeries, supports Redhat, Suse, and Turbolinux. But no MS Windows. See http://www-1.ibm.com/servers/eserver/zseries/os/ [ibm.com]
Linux on cellphones:
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1765103,00.a
Linux at Merryl Lynch, etc etc etc.
You can't kill linux. Even Linus can't kill Linux. If Linus decided he had had enough of the rat race and decided to spend all his time at home with his wife, Linux would go on withour missing a beat.
Microsoft can't kill linux for the very same reasons.
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:3, Interesting)
This is why for example Sun had/has a hard time including its drivers in open solaris.
A GPL'd program can run on a proprietary OS. No question about it.
But if you want to take a GPL OS like Linux and add proprietary drivers and release it as a product, you're in violation of the GPL and you automatically lose the rights gra
Re:Jesus, What a MORON! (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, that might do well for the x86 architecture, but, Linux runs a many more platorms than that...I've got Linux running on sparc64's, and on PPC, and soon on a couple of old SGI boxes.
I kinda doubt ms-linux would be of much use to the wide world of Linux.
3 yrs after "Come on,Linus,infect the mothership." (Score:3, Funny)
Re: What a MORON! (Score:4, Insightful)
Wow, you're really missing the point.
Microsoft's winning tactic is "embrace and extend": grudgingly accept the winning standard, get LOTS of people to use the MS version, then slowly deviate from that standard. They win by default via customer loyalty; when a large majority of users choose the MS solution, the "standard" becomes whatever MS says it is
In this case, the idea is to play off Linux's biggest weakness: lack of drivers. MS drivers may suck, but at least they exist! (Personally, it was incredibly frustrating to run Knoppix on a once-popular reasonably-capable Gateway laptop and not even have sound because the drivers wouldn't support even the most common sound card - but freakin' Win95 that was on it runs sound fine! ARGH!) By "embracing" Linux via a method heavily dependent on drivers, there would be a boom in Linux - to be specific, MS-Linux. Then, once hooked like crack addicts, upgrades gradually fork away from "real" Linux and toward Windows - exactly what Microsoft did to IBM regarding OS/2. The few hardcore Linux users left are left swinging in the breeze.
Re:vmware (Score:3, Insightful)
Once you get used to a window manager of choice on unix, and begin making use of features such as letting you click in a background window without it coming to the front, and the select, middleclick paste of X11.. Once you get used to this, and the multiple workspaces, and many other features of X11... you find windows totally unuseable and restrictive.
Re:vmware (Score:4, Insightful)
The juxtaposition seems as disingenious as that of the Linux kernel alongside the whole Windows OS.
Running GNU/Linux you've got an embarrassment of choices, and a configuration zoo of libraries to support them, from the spartan minimalism of Ion to the full-tilt boogie of Enlightenment, with KDE and Gnome somewhere in between. So party.
Or just log in to a terminal and get your Emacs on. It really is all good.
-1 Troll (Score:5, Insightful)
Honestly. Why ever link to that joker?
Re:-1 Troll (Score:5, Funny)
DON'T SAY THAT NAME (Score:5, Funny)
Trust me, you'd rather have the guy with the hook rip out your intestines. It would be comparitively merciful.
Re:-1 Troll (Score:5, Funny)
it is critical that we at least one inflammatory troll
Were you going to use a verb in there? I can suggest a few that would work...
Re:-1 Troll (Score:3, Funny)
Stop promoting this douche! (Score:4, Insightful)
He intentionally writes dumb columns in order to (negatively) attract readers.
What would MS-linux have I can't get from (Score:5, Interesting)
Plus, there are quite a few hardware devices that work in Linux and not all versions of Windows, for instance my Kensington SVGA webcam, fine in Linux, not available in Win2k.
Don't click (Score:5, Insightful)
John Dvorak knows the state of Linux drivers versus Windows (or Mac) perfectly well. This is an excellent example of writing something obviously incorrect so you get a huge amount of hits and links from people that (rightly) disagree.
Exactly like the Science Citation Index, actually, but speeded up about 20 times.
Re:Don't click (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Don't click (Score:4, Interesting)
If I plug in my Yepp MP3 player (A USB device), my video camera disappears (IEEE 1394).
I have a Soundblaster PCI 128. I have the XP drivers I DL from the website and the card doesn't work on any of the XP machines, as well as a 98 machine I plugged it into. But it works perfectly fine on my Fedora Linux machine, without any monkey business.
I consider myself a rational person, and to my rational thinking the driver support system for windows is on crack. (that, and/or Dvorak)
Re:Don't click (Score:4, Insightful)
Let me take a peek at my system here and recall my experience attempting to install Linux on it...
1) A7V133 motherboard with onboard Promise IDE RAID.
Promise RAID unsupported. Half my hard drives gone.
2) Asus V7100 Geforce2 MX with TV input/output.
TV Input unsupported. TV Output unsupported. Guess I'll have to buy a DVD player and throw my DivX collection away
3) S3 Virge PCI running secondary monitor.
Supposedly it's supported, but I never managed to get it to work, and I spent almost a week working on it nightly. No more multi-monitor support.
4) Hercules Gametheater XP 5.1 sound card.
All inputs unsupported. Optical output unsupported. Stereo support only. No support for pass-through of Dolby streams. No support for integrated USB hub functionality. Guess I better sell my speakers, no point in having hardware Dolby decoding for a stereo PCM stream
5) Sidewinder joystick.
Unsupported.
6) Sidewinder gamepads.
Unsupported
7) Innovage Digicam/Webcam.
Unsupported
8) SiPix Digital Camera
Unsupported
I have Debian installed on several different "plain-jane" boxes around the house, and have experimented with Red Hat, Mandrake, Gentoo and TurboLinux among others. I'm not a guru or anything, but I'm not a n00b either.
I use linux on several boxes around the house, and with all the security vulnerabilities cropping up lately I would love to use it on my main box. But the only way that's going to happen is if I buy a new one, because MOST of the hardware in my current machine isn't supported.
Tell me again how great linux driver support is.
My Win2K Advanced Server install supports all my hardware, and it hasn't been down since I switched back from WinXP Pro 3 months ago.
And it's running, among other things, IIS, SQL Server 2000, PostgreSQL 8.x and JBoss 4.0.1. All while sitting in the DMZ, directly connected to the internet, never been hacked.
I'll eventually buy a new main box to do my work and play on. And I'll hopefully stick linux on it. But this machine is very functional for me, and it will likely NEVER be supported by linux to any appreciable level.
Just because you haven't had any trouble with getting your hardware to work doesn't mean there's not a problem for others, y'know.
Re:Don't click (Score:5, Insightful)
Driver support used to be a problem under Linux, but it really hasn't been a problem for quite some time. There are certainly exceptions to that statement, but your blanket statement that Windows has vastly better driver support simply isn't true anymore.
Re:Don't click (Score:3, Insightful)
Linux is a far way from being king of the desktop, but it is one of the most COMPREHENSIVE Free Unixes out there. Don't blame the fact that the rest of the Free Software space doesn't get it on Linux. It's only a kernel. It can only do so much. It's one piece of a very big puzzle, hence the whole GNU/Linux bitchfrenzy.
Re:Don't click (Score:5, Informative)
http://tinyurl.com/4kwgr [tinyurl.com]
Basically, I'm just looking for an easy way to get a +Something Informative.
I disagree completely with Dvorak (Score:5, Insightful)
The first thing I disagree with is his assertion of how useful Linux would be when running under Windows. Is anyone crying for this?
His second assertion that Microsoft could create a flavor of Linux with their driver-base that people would adopt is just as loony. Beyond its quality nature, isn't one of the reasons people switch to Linux to get rid of Microsoft and their business practices and high prices?
Re:I disagree completely with Dvorak (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing I don't get is that he acts like Microsoft owns the drivers. The hardware manufacturers own the drivers. If Linux becomes the dominant OS, hardware manufacturers will write drivers that run directly in Linux. Why would they continue to write drivers that run in HAL when it is just a piece of cruft attached to the real OS?
A pathway to switching (Score:3, Insightful)
If a user run MS-Linux and liked it, then they could make sure their next system had hardware that could run gpl-linux.
And I really doubt microsoft would move down a pathway of familiarizing people with linux.
Re:I disagree completely with Dvorak (Score:3, Informative)
Not exactly... (Score:5, Insightful)
Companies like Intel and ATi are examples of how the hardware manufacturers are realizing that Linux users want to use their hardware too.
John Dvorak: Threat or Menace? (Score:4, Insightful)
The other? Software. There are still some tremendous voids in the software area. There is no equivalent to Visio (yes, I've tried Dia and it's cute, but it's not Visio), and the Gimp isn't Photoshop or even Paint Shop Pro. Linux needs more apps like Firefox, Thunderbird, and OpenOffice that can really bridge the gap, and can offer clear advantages over Windows applications.
They're using the wrong OS to begin with (Score:3, Interesting)
If they want to just install a device and go, then why are they bothering with Windows? Isn't that what Apple OS X is for?
Not *any* device (Score:3, Insightful)
If it is blessed, then it works like magic..
Re:They're using the wrong OS to begin with (Score:5, Interesting)
Under FC3 I plug it in, the computer automatically recognises an Ipod has been plugged in and makes the folder /media/iPod I type yum install gtkpod and I have a working iPod in under 2 minutes.
Over on Windows - and I'm not sure if this is the same on an Apple - it took about fifteen minutes of copying software from CD, signing up online, agreeing to several licenses, entering the serial number at least two times in different places...
I've had similar experiences with a Samsung laser printer that 'just worked' on linux but took an age to install on windows.
While I'll admit not everything is supported under Linux, of the stuff that is it seems a heck of a lot easier o get it running than with Windows.
Re:They're using the wrong OS to begin with (Score:3, Insightful)
Uh, what? Serial number?
Well, so you know, on a Mac you just plug in the iPod and iTunes asks if you want to associate the iPod with the current library, click yes and it feeds the iPod.
You have to agree to iTunes license the first time you use iTunes, just lik
Re:They're using the wrong OS to begin with (Score:3, Interesting)
Okay, so it was only two things, why bother with the list. Methinks your 15 minute adventure was due to either your slow typing or a slow CD-Rom drive. Did you count the time it took you to figure out that 'gtkpod' was the correct/best software to install under Fedora?
I like OSS as much as the next guy (unless the next guy is RMS), but the incorrect Windows to L
So, let me get this straight... (Score:5, Insightful)
If that were true, why hasn't Windows gone away?
Dvorak thinks that open-source developers will stop working on their stuff if they perceive it as benefitting Microsoft. I say this is obviously not true; there are many, many projects now that run on Windows (like Firefox, just to pick one major example), and their developers don't seem the least bit deterred by running on Windows.
Qwerty on how Linux can Kill Microsoft... (Score:3, Funny)
Doubtful (Score:3, Interesting)
Windows drivers on Linux (Score:5, Informative)
M.
Re:Windows drivers on Linux (Score:3, Insightful)
Ndiswrapper gets pretty much as close as you can get. You don't have to edit anything. Just tell it where the driver is, and it does the rest.
You have to do the same thing in Windows. You always have.
On the other hand, there are versions of Linux that CAN automagically figure out what device is needed for most devices and load it for you. I'd venture that there are even more of these automagical devices for linux than there are fo
"Secret Project" my ass (Score:4, Insightful)
Its called Cooperative Linux, and has been around for quite some time.
www.colinux.org [colinux.org]
Yet, suspiciously, the Linux kernel running on my laptop hasn't spontaneously died. Hmm. This Dvorak chap is quite the retard.
Dvorak's a big windbag (Score:3, Informative)
Has Dvorak ever run Linux? (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Linux device drivers are a big problem
and
2) Putting Windows PnP in Linux would be an easy task
I have a problem with #1 because, well, I haven't had a problem with device drivers for years. The first thing I do with a new computer (and I've gone through 5, from Dell and HP, in the last few years) is reformat, install Windows, and then install Linux. Guess which one is easier to install? Guess which one requires special driver disks and arcane "press-F8-at-the-right-time-during-the-install" crazieness to get things working? That's right: windows. With Linux, stick the CD in, click a few buttons, and done.
The problem with #2 should be obvious to everyone: one of the main tasks of an OS is to manage devices. Look at the code in the kernel that does this. Sure, there's other important stuff (vfs, memory management, process management, etc), but if you count the lines, the heaviest piece of the OS is device driver management. Ripping this out and sticking in Redmonds garbage would be disastrous.
Now, user-mode linux is a different beast. Even virtualizing the hardware could get things to work correctly under Dvorak's scheme without so much effort. But what he suggests is not only ludicrous, its outright silly, and really illustrates how out of touch he is with how technology works.
RTFA - nothing to see here... (Score:5, Interesting)
If MS developed an "MS Linux" as described, it would be one of many distributions. Even if it became "the dominant" one (the only good use for which would be to use the Windows drivers for devices Linux lacks driver support for), then stops supporting drivers for their own flavor of Linux... ummm... hmmm... what would happen? Oh -
Dvorak suggests that this somehow magically kills *all* of the different flavors of Linux. (Not *nix, he mentions only Linux).
He also alludes to some heretofore unknown, undiscovered-but-for-M$-lawyers hole in the GPL that would somehow allow M$ to pry Linux from the hands of the community into its control.
I RTFA'd twice, but John, you lost me on this. I can only guess you were looking for more hits to your column website from
A little tale for you (Score:5, Interesting)
Windows XP took around 15 mins to install, with a couple of reboots. I then installed my nvidia drivers. Rebooted. I then installed my firewall. Rebooted. I then installed the drivers for the cisco aironet card. Rebooted. I then installed the drivers for my Delta-Audio 1010LT soundcard. Rebooted. I spent over an hour installing all the drivers I needed to make my system *functional*.
Suse took ~20-25 mins to install with all the software I wanted. When I logged in, everything just worked...
People say they use windows because it just works. Bull. It's just that people have been conditioned to accept that installing drivers is not part of the installation process.
There may be more drivers available for windows, but I'll stick with the linux way of doing things and buy cautiously.
effect of the GPL (Score:5, Informative)
"Well, except for the fact that Microsoft would be unable to produce such a product without allowing the other vendors access to the driver code as part of the open-source Linux license arrangement (GPL)."
If the device drivers are not derived from any GPL code (and as they is currently proprietary, presumably they are not GPL derived), then Microsoft can make a version of Linux which uses the drivers. The modified linux is based on GPL code (i.e. the base linux kernal) and the modified linux is based on propietary code (device drivers).
GPL does not require that copyright holder of the original software to agree to anything (in respect of the original software). Only the author of the derived software (in respect of the derived work) agrees to license the software under the GPL.
This artical is simply FUD.
Proprietary device drivers which work under linux today.
Moreover: The majority of device drivers in MS Windows are not even owned by microsoft at all, but belong to the companies which manufacture the respective devices, and licensed to Microsoft.
Re:effect of the GPL (Score:3, Insightful)
Funny. I agree that he's wrong for a different version, but it's a different different reason.
Let's face it, nobody looks at Windows and says to themselves "wow, great driver support." [Note: maybe they should, because Win95 single-handedly forced hardware manufacturers to stop making up their own rules and actually design their hw/drivers around standardized specifications, but I digress...]
Plus, going forward, it's pretty clear that (until that NdisWrapper thingy makes it into the stock Linux kerne
Drivers (Score:3, Insightful)
My favorite two bookshops have web based terminals that allow a user to search for a book and not bug the employees. One is unable to get out of these screens and into Windows, but one can tell by the sound, cursors, and occasional reboots that they are really win machines running underneath.
All of this reminds me of those days in the 1980's when everyone was putting Apple ][ based end user terminals in their shops, but the app or utility that was being served was pretty trivial. When the Apple clones came out (like Franklin and their ilk) the expensive Apple hardware started going away. (You could tell on those machines because there were ways to crash the system or "break" into basic and see whose hardware it was.
My guess is that ultimately on web based terminals and other mainframe terminal services, that there's a huge market of machines that are being sold on price alone. As long as there are "some" varieties of cheap hardware that run with Linux, I can't see this ever becoming a lock-in... price is just too important for some people. To those markets, it's the lucrative OS that will fall out of fashion in favor of the cheap and functional alternative.
Never gonna happen (Score:5, Insightful)
Look how Microsoft very rarely mentions Linux, and barely mentions OS X at all (if ever). Microsoft's voice is heard by so many pointy-haired bosses that to talk about someone or release a product based around them is to give free advertising. Granted, they make an Office for Mac, but you'd never know it if you weren't a Mac user.
scambled, as usual (Score:3, Interesting)
Funny how it only really works that way on Linux and OSX, in my experience. Dvorak's facts clash with reality, as usual...
How Linux can kill Windows... (Score:4, Interesting)
Tell us, o mighty tech oracle... (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, MS-Linux? W(hy)TF would I use that? The reason people use Linux is usually to get away from Windows and it's diseases. Why would I run Linux as a subjugated app under an inferior kernel design on a server? To enhance security? Ha!
Dvorak says "MS Linux would quickly become the dominant linux distribution." He pulled that right out of his arse. Does he think that many people would actually buy Linux from Microsoft when it's available for FREE elsewhere?
John C. Dvorak--I think you over estimate MS's position to dominate a market that's based on not being Microsoft.
Suicidal cannibal development (Score:3, Informative)
I haven't heard logic like that since Metallica sued their own fans.
MS is a closed company making closed products. The only way they can 'kill' Linux is to:
1) Be safer, faster more stable
2) Cheaper
3) Easier to manage
They already lost on 1 & 2 but they are winning on 3.
To be fair though there are whole categories of drivers that Linux does not do a great job with. Like Wacom tablets. The official Linux driver is source code you get from sourceforge and build it yourself. Lots of sound cards don't work, etc..
Mmm... 3 day old OSNews story. (Score:3, Insightful)
Dvorak is right about as often as it rains lava in New York.
Somebody who's been predicting the death of the Macintosh since TCP/IP stacks were still third-party user-installed add-ons thinks he knows where computing is going? The only thing separating him from a blathering retard in a homeless shelter is that whoever's paying him is even less cluefull than he is.
Does he even understand why people use Linux? (Score:3, Insightful)
Problems with Dvorak's Article: (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's put aside for a moment the fact that a major focus on Linux development would be disastrous for Microsoft (It would essentially encourage a mass migration from Windows servers), Dvorak makes some ridiculous blind leaps in assuming that an MS driver layer would [a] Become dominant (based upon what? Microsoft's proven ability to write superior code?) and [b] even if MS succeeded, that their success would cause the entire Linux world to pack up and go elsewhere.
Is Dvorak's supposition that all Linux development is driven merely by the desire to "not" give Microsoft any more cash? Funny, I thought it was to build a stable, faster, and open-sourced OS.
Developing yet another commercial add-on, hardly negates Linux's core mission and value. It would however negate the mission and core value of Windows Servers.
I say go for it Microsoft. Let's see who wins.
That's Too Much Work! (Score:3, Insightful)
Even if the MS Linux distribution were no better than any other, people would still buy it and/or support contracts preferentially over any other. Most people always play it safe. MS could still support Windows if they wanted to, or they could gradually phase it out. If they play nice, they could cut their development costs by leveraging the vast open source development community. So far, IBM has been able to embrace Linux and open source without killing their business, I think Microsoft can do the same. Developers didn't abandon Linux when IBM and Novell joined the party and I doubt they will if Microsoft joined in too. Indeed, a lot of Windows developers would be pulled along too. The question is whether Microsoft is brave enough to let go of the Windows security blanket.
Consistently right (Score:3, Funny)
Dvorak can be a Weirdo (Score:3, Insightful)
Linux Drivers (Score:3, Insightful)
Point 1: If Microsoft were to get into the business of writing drivers for Linux, how would that differ (aside from licensing) from purchasing commercial drivers or downloading free drivers? More importantly, how would this kill Linux? As he pointed out, commercial software already runs under Linux without any GPL implications. The community buys this software when it must, but usually develops around it.
Point 2: I have had fewer driver problems with Linux than Windows. Windows actually seems to sometimes generate driver problems, by seeking out a very specific driver where a generic one will do fine. A good example would be the USB port on my EPIA MII-12000 motherboard. It's USB 2.0. Linux sees that it is USB 2.0, and runs it as such. 'nuf sed. Windows, on the other hand, requires that I use the driver that came with the mobo (which is not inherently a problem) and no other. Not that this is a problem, but why?
Voluteers stoping to volunteer? (Score:3, Informative)
Have this man ever voluteered for anything is his whole small life? Does he knows the pleasure of doing something that can make our world a better place?
Volunteering as a free software developer is a pleasure, so developers WILL NEVER stop working on Linux. And suppose that they will, it's a very good chance for the popularity of Hurd (still incipient), and others free software OSes.
As told before: FUD. But I'll add one more commentary. This man has shown, again, that he can't see beyond his own nose, he's simply unable to understand the point of view of others and think about how they would act, how they feel about things that they praise so much.
He simply didn't have the effort to look for solutions similar to the "secret-projet-that-will-kill-linux" that actually runs on windows and is free. It's a mistery how this man can be a columnist so respected.
Of course there are many good things to be said about this man. But I'll let it to other opportunity.
All the apps of Linux, the stability of Windows (Score:3, Funny)
(Why is the Slashdot subject line limited to so few characters?)
Responsibility of the manufacturer or OS? (Score:3, Interesting)
On the one hand, you have the market force that would make HW manufacturers want to provide quality drivers to the three OSes. On the other, you have the OS companies that want to support many drivers.
3 Problems (Score:4, Interesting)
1) Windows Drivers Suck. They are often buggy, and bring the system down. I don't want my Linux system dependant on buggy Windows drivers. I'm happy with my linux system as is (yes, you have to do some research to make sure what you buy is compatible. That's life--- Be an educated consumer).
2) Inane amount of difficult involved. The Windows driver model is VERY different from the Linux driver model. I'm not a sure a 'hybrid' is possible without a great deal of work/new code. Do you really want a Linux where MS wrote 1/3 of the Kernel?
Especially if that portion is closed source? Who knows what bugs/exploits will lurk there. No Thanks!
3) The Linux driver model is superior. I can take my harddisk out of my desktop (with ACPI on), and drop it into a desktop with a different processor, different network cards, different motherboard chipset (with ACPI off), different graphics card, and it'll boot. On SuSE, SaX2 will run automagically, press enter a couple times, and *Poof* you're up and running.
Try this on Windows. Blue Screen, almost certainly.
Does the Windows Driver Model permit dynamically loaded drivers? I think not.
Does the Windows Driver Model require a reboot on each driver installation/upgrade? Depends on the device, but usually.
Does the Windows Driver Model support having thousands of drivers installed simultaneously, and dynamically loading the necessary ones on demand?
I think not.
No thank you. MS-Linux will only draw people from Windows, not Linux.
Once you go to the pain of making sure ALL your hardware is Linux compatible (i.e. working drivers are out there), the Linux driver model is preferable to the clunky windows driver model.
Yes, I know there are reasons the Windows driver model is the way it is. Mainly backwards compatability. But rational != excuse.
Linux is better, and I like it that way.
Nice Philosophy (Score:3, Insightful)
He claims developers would stop developing because MS would benefit from open source projects. Umm, if I developed a killer app, and I didn't want it to run on MS-Linux, I'd stick a compile-time flag in there. Set the flag for "MS-Linux" support. How many MS-Linux users (people who want many things to work out of the box and probably want to separate themselves from the running parts) would take the time to set the flag? Bingo. Linux-Killer Killer.
Seems unlikely (Score:3, Interesting)
GPL would be quite a problem for MS here. Binary driivers are OK IFF they use nothing but a subset of the functions exported to modules. Other useful functions are exported only to modules that declare themselves to be GPL. No promises are made that any particular function will or will not remain available to non-GPL drivers.
The more interesting Windows drivers would be the third party ones for brand new hardware. MS doesn't own those, so if they want them to work in Linux, they'll have to come up with a full translation layer under the GPL. Native GPL drivers (by avoiding extra layers of bogosity and being open for improvement) will always be superior under Linux. For that matter, they tend to be superior to the Windows driver under Windows.
As for availability, I find that a recent Linux kernel is MORE likely than Windows to come with the needed driver. This is especially important for network drivers where you can't just go download it if you need it. The last example I saw was for the BCM5701 network controller. That is a fairly common builtin Gig ethernet chip (especially for AMD chipsets) that Linux has supported out of the box for quite a while.
No said yet (Score:3, Interesting)
Windows NT, by most accounts, was a solid OS design, partitioning and securing different parts of the system from on another. But it was fast enough to beat the competition on every benchmark, so Microsoft made the fatal decision to move the video driver into the protected kernel space. Thereby, damaging the OS stability.
They would expect to do the same to Linux. Play games and take shortcuts with the system stability, so that a fault in one system would bring the whole computer down. If they ever did try such a monstrosity, I think most user would totally reject such flotsam.
Dvorak has absolutely NO credibility (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not trolling here. It's a serious question. The guy is the quintessential know-nothing tech writer who seems to have figured out how to thrive by writing utter hogwash.
Seriously. Name one thing in the last five years he's actually gotten right.
out of it as usual (Score:3, Insightful)
colinux.org [colinux.org]
That said, there is no way Linux under Windows would be practical with all the overhead involved.
It's very practical, actually.
If Microsoft actually produced an MS-Linux that was the standard Linux attached to the driver layer of Windows, giving users full Plug and Play (PnP) support of all their peripherals, nobody would buy any other Linux on the market
From first hand experience, I can tell you that this is not a really pleasant solution because it doesn't fix the things that are so wrong with Windows: lack of security, poor package and installer management, lousy system management interfaces, and a bad UI.
The long-term implications of such a scenario, I believe, would be essentially to kill Linux. Microsoft's MS-Linux would quickly become the dominant Linux and the company would begin to profit from all the open-source development work that would go into Linux.
First of all, Dvorak's premise is wrong: Linux has enormous numbers of drivers. Hardware "just works" under Linux when it requires cumbersome and flaky driver installations under Windows.
But let's assume the premise were right. So, people have pure Linux PCs and MS-Linux PCs. Well, that means more commercial Linux usage and the ability of software vendors to standardize on the Linux APIs. The consequence? Cutting the cost of shipping Windows out of a PC becomes a more and more attractive proposition and hardware vendors would ship more and more Linux-only PCs.
Microsoft only needs that one driver element to be proprietary for the plan to succeed.
The flaw in that argument is that it is not Microsoft that is creating the drivers, it is the hardware vendors. Anything Microsoft does to make Linux more popular or credible will mean more Linux drivers from hardware vendors.
Re:Where'd the last story go? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Where'd the last story go? (Score:2)
Re:WHAT!? (Score:2)
Dammit!
Confused... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Confused... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Confused... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Confused... (Score:3, Interesting)
What makes Xandros buggy? Isn't it all the same basic sets of open source code that's so much more secure and stable than anything Microsoft produces?
Re:Confused... (Score:3, Insightful)
What makes Xandros buggy? Isn't it all the same basic sets of open source code that's so much more secure and stable than anything Microsoft produces?
An unsafe and a safe house can be built from exactly the same bricks, it's the way you arrange those bricks.
All the best open software is tested to hell and back through lots of release candidates etc.. If a distro chooses to use these development versions of software or doesn't test the combination of software they are using throughly (essentially making
Re:Confused... (Score:3, Informative)
SuSE has given out free
Re:Confused... (Score:3, Insightful)
I've also been running Debian Testing on a G4 tower (works flawlessly) and a homebuilt AMD tower (works flawlessly except for FireWire and MIDI); until last night, neither had ever crashed.
Then last night, for no reason I
Re:Confused... (Score:3, Informative)
I've run Xandros 2.0 Deluxe at home for about a year now, it has crashed 4-5 times, and only when my cat gets behind the CPU. I don't know exactly what the connection is, but I suspect it is not software related.
Re:Confused... (Score:4, Insightful)
Just remember, a calm and cool zealot will convert more than the raging fanboy.
Re:Confused... (Score:5, Insightful)
Everyone talks about the "death" of Linux that, or Microsoft "crushing" Linux. They may someday crush Redhat and SuSE and others, but they're never going to stop this "geek (r)evolution" from continuing to unfold. The only thing that could do that is something just as free and better.
Re:Confused... (Score:4, Insightful)
I've never had anywhere near the stability problems on Windows as I have on Linux. I can see it being more stable without any sort of GUI interface, but really, I never, ever, ever have any Windows problems.
Of course, you could chalk all that up to a: knowing what I'm doing on Windows and b: not _really_ knowing what I'm doing on Linux. Sure, I've installed Gentoo countless times, so I know stuff somewhat, but I'm nowhere near as experienced as I am with Windows.
But I ramble
Re:Confused... (Score:3, Insightful)
Gentoo is known for causing lots of trouble (it seems they don't do much regress-testing at all) so it's really no surprise your gnome is locking up.
Have you checked the version numbers on the countless gnome components? Chance are that some of them are bleeding edge beta or testing versions.
If you're just on linux fo
Re:WHAT!? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the SAME GUY who went through tirade after temper-tantrum-touting-tirade about how he was eviling being targeted as an Apple hater meanwhile spewing out vitriolic fodder on how Apple will die (all within the confines of an OBJECTIVE viewpoint, of course
Dvorak's not a credible source. Case closed.
Re:WHAT!? (Score:5, Interesting)
The Macintosh uses an experimental pointing device called a "mouse". There is no evidence that people want to use these things.
- John C. Dvorak, SF Examiner, Feb. 1984.
Re:WHAT!? (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft Tech Support vs. Psychic Friends Network: Which Provides Better Support for Microsoft Products? [netscrap.com]
Re:Boring day? (Score:2)
Re:Boring day? (Score:5, Insightful)
Dvorak, on the other hand, knows better. He knows that if he calls the iBook 300 "girly" or says that Linux-on-Windows will put Red Hat, Debian, and Gentoo out of business, people will rush to the web site to read his rubbish, and then comment on it it forums, link to it on blogs and slash sites, and go to great lengths to alert the world about how wrong he is... all of which gets his site hits, and makes his publisher very happy with him. He's laughing all the way to the bank, because his goal is not to be seen as insightful, but simply to be seen.
Re:There is one small problem... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why anyone reads him is beyond me. (Score:3, Insightful)
I personally think he's idiotic merely to get people talking about his column. E.g., "Did you hear what Dvorak said about Linux and Windows' drivers?! He's a fucking moron!"
That way he gets people linking to his column, checking out his column, etc, which makes his readership look larger than it really is.
I seriously doubt if Dvorak really believes shit like this.