Desktop Linux Survey Results Published 384
An anonymous reader writes "The Open Source Development Labs has published preliminary results from its desktop Linux survey, which had 3,300 responses. The month-long online survey focused on determining the key issues driving Linux on the desktop, as well as the major barriers to Linux desktop adoption. 'What was most surprising to us was probably the top two reasons given for deploying Linux on the desktop,' OSDL's Principal Analyst Dave Rosenberg said. 'It's not TCO (total cost of ownership), or security, or lack of license fees. It was 'employees requesting Linux (user demand)' and because 'my competitors have successfully deployed Linux,' he added."
Well, there you have it. (Score:5, Funny)
It's because we're all so cool.
Who could have guessed it?
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:5, Insightful)
"Oh wow, I'm running Firefox. On linux! [fifteen seconds pass] Hmmm, maybe I should go download BeOS..."
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:4, Insightful)
Except, of course, that with a Windows install you can... hmmm... you can... there's gotta be something... ah, yes: you can use wordpad and play solitaire. Yes. But, yes, you are right.
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:3)
Note: No, I don't use LFS. You think I'm crazy?!? ;)
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:3, Funny)
I'd draw an olufant over the figer any day!
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:4, Insightful)
Back in the early 90's I worked for a company that was a late adopter of PC technology. At the time they had a mixture of DOS and OS/2 with Wordperfect and Lotus 123 . Email and most apps were on Minis and Mainframes. The assets were old and the users were SCREAMING for Windows/Office. Eventually (1996!) the company began a programme of upgrading the desktops with Windows 95 machines - which was what the users wanted.
Only the users found that Office on Win95 worked Ok at home where they used it for an hour or so but use it for eight hours editing multiple documents and it failed due to memory leaks. Necessarily, the desktop was reasonably well locked down so they could do all the stuff they wanted (i.e. play games and install any application they wanted).So after week or two the users were as unhappy with the "new" Windows 95 as they had been with the old DOS and OS/2 arrangement.
And I can't help but suspect that the same will happen with Linux, it may be cool at home and it may be cool to talk about it when you don't use it anger, but when you find that it hasn't magically transformed your crap job into a world of fun and entertainment, that will be Linux's fault, not becasue you have a crap job.
Re:Well, there you have it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Differently from Windows, a Linux desktop works as well during an hour as during an entire mounth. So, they won't have this problem.
I'd assume the oposite, people at home have a bad time configuring their desktops to fit the usage, and don't have nice games to play. Those problems go away when you have to use the computer to work and there is a support team.
not me (Score:4, Insightful)
That's not quite the same as license fees and security, though those may be the root causes. The license fee itself isn't so bad, but the associated hassle of budget approval and tracking sure is. Lack of security related to break-ins might be tolerated (yuck), but unknown random DRM crud mysteriously destabilizing the machine is harder to accept.
Built for Linux (Score:4, Insightful)
I have had folks getting an Ubuntu CD after having been told "all applications are there", attempting to install these apps on a SuSE distro!
The other thing is multimedia not working exactly as advertised or not working as expected.
With all these problems, getting Linux on the desktop is still a challenge in my case.
Re:Built for Linux (Score:3, Interesting)
Software for Win98 will probably work in XP. This is not the case in Linux. We know this, but average Joe doesn't. I can personally see this as a barrier to desktop linux adoption.
Either way, it has come very far in the last decade and I see it gearing up to be competitive (I use it al
Re:Built for Linux (Score:2)
By the way, I have asked variations of this question a number of times, and never received any particularly useful responses. I do *NOT* want
Re:Built for Linux (Score:5, Informative)
Here are a couple of links :
Servers, desktops etc : http://www.pogolinux.com/ [pogolinux.com]
Laptops ! http://www.emperorlinux.com/ [emperorlinux.com]
The laptops are well-known brands (IBM/Lenovo, Dell etc) with Linux pre-installed and supported, where everything work, including modem, wireless, suspend-to-ram, etc.
Re:Built for Linux (Score:2)
Re:Built for Linux (Score:3, Interesting)
It sucks though. Their prices are MORE expensive than if you go to Dell or something. I think you are still paying the windows tax, then a middle man fee.
Re:Built for Linux (Score:3, Informative)
Linux:
IBM/Lenovo ThinkPad T42 [emperorlinux.com]: 1.7GHz, 14" display, 512MB RAM, 40GB disk, CD-RW; $2175.00
Windows:
IBM/Lenovo Thinkpad T42 [ibm.com]: 1.8GHz, 14" display, 512MB RAM, 60GB disk, CD-RW; $1499.00
Quite possibly it's not Emperor's fault, I have a feeling that IBM/Lenovo may not sell ANY ThinkPads without Windows (especially sad considering that IBM ought to be the one place you could get a Linux machine, if anywhere) and thus y
Re:Built for Linux (Score:2)
As for your openoffice dream...I share it with you. I use mostly latex to do my work since I'm in the maths field but I believe that OOo is good enough now with 2.0 and WILL take some market share just like FF has (not enough though since people are too reluctant to change)
Re:Built for Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
In other words, if installation and hardware support where as good as in for example Windows, this wouldn't keep the day to day users away.
Re:Built for Linux (Score:3, Informative)
This week I tried a new version of MEPIS [mepis.org] and everthying worked without any tweaking.
Re:Built for Linux (Score:4, Interesting)
This is a kind of 'me too' post.
I set up my computer as dual boot between WinXP and Mandrake more than a year ago, in hopes of migrating. But I'm still doing about 100% of my work in WinXP. (I have moved to Firefox, Thunderbird, OOo, etc-- but under WinXP).
The stumbling block is that I use a Canon i9900 printer in large format photorealistic mode, and a Wacom graphics tablet in Paint Shop Pro, for a very small percentage of my work, and there are no Linux equivalents. So I'm stuck with one toe in the Windows world. I can move more than 97% of my work to Linux at any time, but I'll have to go to WinXP to print the 11x17" photos and to do some of the photo touch-ups. I spend perhaps 4 hours a month on these activities-- it really is a small but important part of my work.
And it turns out that while I am prepared for the disruptions in habits that would go with a total conversion to Linux, I dread the thought of all the broken habit patterns that would result if I try to straddle both OSs. I don't want to surprise myself by trying to use Linux shortcuts in Windows-- that is the worst kind of interruption; it would definitely make it harder to stay in the creative sweet spot.
I expect that I'm not the only guy around who feels stuck in a slow migration pattern. I expect that there are lots of individuals and small businesses who continue to use Windows because less than 2% of their work requires templates, or macros or something like that which they can't duplicate in Linux (yet)-- and that, combined with realistic concerns about unsupported straddling of both systems, is sufficient to keep them in Windows.
Re:Built for Linux (Score:3, Informative)
Getting the word out is not the problem. The "problem" is that the vast, vast bulk of people neither understand or - more importantly - care about the distinction.
To most people a computer and its OS are logically one and the same. In other words, they perceive computers to be just like every other "appliance" in their lives (and justifiably so, IMHO, end us
Re:Built for Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
Similarly, I think that what Linux needs to be considered desktop ready is being likewise constantly redefined. I mean the guys who were interested in Linux when Slackware was frst released saw "desktop readiness" happen years ago. The trouble is that each such milestone brings Linux to the attention of a larger, less technically adept group who look at the OS and say "Nice ideas, but it's not ready for the desktop..."
Just a random passing thought
Re:Built for Linux (Score:2)
How well would Microsoft's products do if they were evaluated for "desktop readyness" us
Re:Built for Linux (Score:3, Insightful)
Back when I had Windows 3.1, I had only 2MB of memory on that machine. Simply couldn't run it - it was too slow. I stuck with DOS because it was fast, and I couldn't completely see the benefit of a GUI if I couldn't run it.
Same situation with Linux for a lot of people. Only in this case it's because the OS is "different" and they don't want "different" - they want "the same but different". They want "free Windows." So because Linux isn't Windows, they continue to pay through the nose in mone
Re:Built for Linux (Score:2)
It wasn't just chess, either. Look at Eliza, for instance, which was designed as a turing test candidate (and still fools people to this day). The original Zork adventure was an exercise in AI but no one ever regarded Infocom as an AI house. It seems like knowing how the trick is done takes away the mag
Re:Built for Linux (Score:2)
If Granny has never changed the wallpaper on her screen, she should probably stay away from slackware or gentoo, I don't ever see the 'puter being a toaster, to many variables.
Re:Built for Linux (Score:2)
Here you are only considering one part of the car market. Other parts include companies buying cars and issuing them to employees (known as "company cars") together with companies buying
Automatix (Score:3, Informative)
Since I'm running mostly KDE-applications and didn't hear of it before too late, I didn't use this. So I've followed the various HOWTOs for installing proprietary codecs and compiled kmplayer (which is The best player for Linux right now, do yourself a big favour and forget all others), installed Real Player for Linux (found a utility that converted the install-binary into a deb II
Re:Built for Linux (Score:2)
Linux for the people (Score:3, Insightful)
For mass consumption, this is the biggest problem I have seen. The people I know who are not technically inclined will stay away from Linux for the time being for this very reason. When they buy a sparling new ipod and the installation cd doesn't set everything up for them they end up thinking Linux is either a) crap or b) for nerds with too much spare time on their hands.
This is, of course, in large part due to vendors not giving a toss about Linux. With it's ever increasing popularity (especially in the corporate world) I don't think this situation will last very long.
Re:Linux for the people (Score:4, Informative)
For mass consumption, this is the biggest problem I have seen.
I may just have been lucky, but I have found in recent distribution that driver support (including for USB devices) has been excellent. A recent Ubuntu install was the first time I have ever installed an OS which fully detected and installed all my hardware - video, sound system, wireless network, USB etc. with no prompting from me at all. On the same machine, Windows requires additional drivers. I have always found Windows network printing to be far more problematic.
Re:Linux for the people (Score:4, Informative)
I've not found anything easier for IPP, LPR or Raw (Socket/9100) printing than a simple CUPS install with a nice frontend as provided by EITHER KDE or Gnome. It even auto-searches the network for port9100 - something Windows is yet to do.
Drivers for "toy" printers can be a pain, but even without vendor support (which I'll plug that we have) any PostScript device is a breeze and PCL devices are only marginally more complicated.
A few months ago I tried to gauge our end user Linux adoption by the number of support enquiries I was asked to assist with (assuming our technicians/first level support couldn't handle Linux) and thought that perhaps there's not so much out there. Then I find out that there's a LOT more than I originally assumed and it just never makes it to me as an enquiry since it "just works". Enquiries about other systems (Windows, MacOS and AS/400 especially) aren't uncommon (especially Windows broken excuse for printer sharing in relation to permissions and device settings causing MANY headaches)
That's just my take on it from an inside perspective of one of the supposed "key areas for improvement". Maybe these users just aren't savvy enough on printing in general, and it's not the OS that's the problem at all (it'd be interesting to give them a Windows environment and check out what printing issues they have...)
Re:Linux for the people (Score:2)
Usually if a printer doesn't work correctly in windows, the printer manufacturer get blamed, it's their hardware and drivers, if it doesn't work in Linux it's linux's blame.
Re:Linux for the people (Score:2)
Re:Linux for the people (Score:3, Interesting)
Excuse me please: (Score:2)
actually (Score:5, Funny)
Re:actually (Score:2)
"Its not what you get with linux - its what you don't get. Spyware, viruses, IE updates that break things unexpectely, Ads on your desktop and in your word processing software, I could go on and on and on...."
tax software (Score:5, Interesting)
If this software were availed, it'd significantly boost the status of Linux getting looked at seriously on the desktop. I would not want to spend any money on the so called tax software again.
Re:tax software (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:tax software (Score:4, Informative)
I used it last year for my income tax and it worked a treat. I kept my accounts on excel, followed the wizard (which took about 3 hours, but you could save halfway through) and it calculated my return instantly.
They also offer company tax and PAYE filling software, which is used far more than they ever expected - the assumption was that people would want to use a 'real' application. It turned out that nobody was tighter than an accountant and when faced with the option of shelling out for tax software or using a free, and very usable (if not quite as powerful) alternative they jumped at the web app.
Re:tax software (Score:2, Interesting)
In the United States the tax prep software industry bought legislation making it illegal for the government to directly provide such a service. Makes me so proud to be an american when I know how vastly superior our government is by
Re:tax software (Score:2)
Online tax software from big companies exists (Score:3, Informative)
TurboTax Online comes out in January [turbotax.com]. Firefox support remains to be seen, obviously, but I'm not overly concerned, given FF's now-relatively-high market share.
I've been using H&R Block Online [slashdot.org] under Linux for the last four years. Works flawlessly in firefox. They even keep a hot copy your records for three years - a feature I've used a few times now, and I don't need to worry about backing them up, losing the CD, etc. Tinfoil hat wearers need
Re:tax software (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, there is no reason why someone couldn't port their tax software to Linux. Or you could probably run it under Wine. Considering
sigh* (Score:4, Funny)
How representative was the sample? (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, 54% of the respondents use, or are considering, Ubantu? With only 19% for Red Hat, with another 26% for Fedora, for a total of 45%? Could that possibly be representative?
And the second most important application is "Digital Camera/Video?"
Re:How representative was the sample? (Score:2)
They mention this in the full report under the section 'Statistical Anomalies'. "The survey had more exposure in certain distribution communities..."
And the second most important application is "Digital Camera/Video?"
Actually, the question that this answer comes from is "What mobile device support is required to meet
Re:How representative was the sample? (Score:3, Interesting)
I suspect, therefore, that the survey included respondants from countries other than the US.
Bob
Re:How representative was the sample? (Score:2)
--
Evan
Re:How representative was the sample? (Score:2)
Sure ever try to develope product brouchures without a digital camera? Last time my oldish digital camera just worked in Linux, I'm curious to try it now, the switch to udev has caused some weirdness on my Linux system running Arch Linux.
Re:How representative was the sample? (Score:2)
The worst thing you can do is create a self-selected survey, and use the res
The State of Linux Desktop (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, if i take a look of latest gnome, but especially latest KDE, i can tell you, boy, this a fucking marvellous piece of UI, compared with was before. And all the small bits of integration with hardware are getting close to be a commodity, and not a luxury. I know, i didn't give back to much back to the community, but i am lurking from time to time in frenode's IRC channels, helping some poor beginners. Although, i think while the user friendliness of KDE(or gnome) has skyrocketed, there are still many hacks needed to make the user get the max out of what is offered. The weakest point and also the strongest point of FOSS is this somehow fractured and all over the world decentralised development of software. We should never abandon it, even if that would hurt the potential user ( i am not saying customer, because we talk about distribution and not commercialization).
That being said, I applaud again the efforts of all developers, that keep us with the vision of a Linux Desktop.
Re:The State of Linux Desktop (Score:2)
OS X on my PowerBook is the most pleasant computing exp
Full results in PDF (Score:3, Informative)
Cabbage Patch Linux (Score:3, Interesting)
2) Invite news media to the opening.
3) Pay group of people to go charging into the store to fight over the Linux CDs.
4) Profi... oh wait. They're free. And you have to pay those people. Soooo
Pagemaker? What year is it? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Pagemaker? What year is it? (Score:2)
I want Pagemaker, cos I have a ton of work I did for clients with it that I dont want to lose, and I hate booting a Win box just for that.
However, I am a FreeBSD user, and I want a FreeBSD version of Pagemaker. (And Photoshop) And I would pay $100 for either. And thats FreeBSD on UltraSparc I don't use Dell boxes.
Re:Pagemaker? What year is it? (Score:2)
Scribus exists for some time now, and still, it was only a few months ago that I heard about it, and only 3 weeks ago that I installed it. And I was absolutely amazed at its quality (and standard support, even the latest pdf specs, including embedded script support!). What OSDL needs is a central place where all the great apps likely to be needed in an enterprise/office envir
Top reasons (Score:2, Insightful)
Hmmm...
Perhaps "Employees requesting Linux" and "My competitors have successfully deployed Linux" were rated as top reasons because these were the things that got companies looking at Linux, rather than them being a final deciding factor?
Or perhaps competitors successfully deploying Linux is seen as including decreased TCO etc. And employees' requests could certainly be based on these things (especially if they are generally IT workers, which I suspect is likely).
In order to resolve these issues, the
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Gamers (Score:5, Informative)
I would like to think that one day wine will actually be better at running Windows software than Windows itself is. This is possible because while Microsoft is intentionaly breaking compatability between releases, wine is being developed to run programs from any Windows version. Often programs actually run faster in wine as well, since the linux kernel generally manages things better.
Re:Gamers (Score:2)
Have you seen Windows code? or you are getting this from the bottom of your ass?, Comeon, dont say something just to sound clever... you do not sound clever.
Often programs actually run faster in wine as well, since the linux kernel generally manages things better.
Ofter, actually, generally. So, I c
Re:Gamers (Score:2)
Like I said, 'I would like to think that...'. Do I really need to explain myself? I have no idea if it will ever happen, but I think it's possible. And yes Microsoft really does intentionally break compatability between releases, and especially with their competitors. There's plenty of software that doesn't run in later versions of Windows. Think Win
Re:Gamers (Score:4, Informative)
Any evidence for that claim?
There's plenty of software that doesn't run in later versions of Windows.
Name some. I've only hit one program for a post-3.11 Windows version, either 9x or NT line, that won't run under XP. Hell, most DOS programs still run.
Think Windows 3.11 software
That's over a decade old. Even if they are breaking compatibility with it, I really don't think you can fault them for it.
Windows 98 software and even Windows NT software
Like I said, name some, because I've only ever run across one. (Hasbro's Clue. And a pretty poorly programmed piece of software too. Didn't even run quite right for me in its intended version of Windows.)
Re:Gamers (Score:2, Insightful)
Any evidence for that claim?
Didn't the XP SP2 break compatability with a significant amount of software? I know our company waited as long as possible to deploy it because the SP had such a bad reputation. I also remember people reporting that their computers were not working correctly after the 'upgrade'.
Anecdotal evidence, sure, but it's evidence I'm certain that most enterprise IT folk
Re:Gamers (Score:2)
Check out Cedega (Score:3, Informative)
Costs $15, but well worth it. Also, there are more native Linux games than you might think. Check out http://www.icculus.org/ [icculus.org] , http://www.linuxgames.com/ [linuxgames.com] http://www.happypenguin.org/ [happypenguin.org] , http://www.linuxgamepublishing.com/ [linuxgamepublishing.com] , http://www.tuxgames.com/ [tuxgames.com] , http://games.linux.sk/ [linux.sk] , http://games.linux.sk/ [linux.sk] , http://www.linux-games.com/ [linux-games.com] , http://www.linux-gamers.net/ [linux-gamers.net] ... Of course for me gaming is just gravy, Linux is my ideal OS for actually getting work done. But I find that games run m
Re:Gamers (Score:4, Insightful)
What's this?
I can think of very few systems that have been around as long as DOS/Windows and have better backwards compatibility. I can think of only one Windows program that runs on an earlier version but not XP. About the ONLY thing that MS has done to break compatibility is prevent direct hardware access (e.g. for sound cards) in old DOS programs.
Only system I know that's better (though I'm sure there are plenty more, but still a minority) about keeping backwards compatibility is IBM mainframes. What may be the best common mainframes in the world (IBM z/Series) still runs stuff made to run on the s/390 architecture.
I wasn't impressed with Wine and Transgaming... (Score:2)
Re:Gamers (Score:4, Insightful)
In a corporate set-up? "Our employees demanded games so we installed Linux..."
Seriously, lots of windows-using kids have been hooked by the games on my Linux laptop, and my wife and I often play frozen-bubble. Nothing wrong with the games available on linux. Multiperson shooters and jaw-dropping graphics do not good games make, and people who insist on those will likely as not buy a PS or Xbox or whatever (the markets for game consoles is way bigger than the PC market). 3D acceleration works fine with linux on most systems; as linux gains popularity, game writers will likely target linux, but I hardly see why linux developers should develop games.
Re:Gamers (Score:2)
I have to wait till my roommate goes to bed before I can get a dose of Civ IV.
Re:Gamers (Score:2, Interesting)
I'll tell you why I stopped using WinXP even though I have been playing PC games for 20 years now... The 2 factors that drove me away from XP are:
- I was completely fed up of CONSTANTLY maintaining the Anti-virus/spyware/malware software up-to-date, and STILL get a dozen of so of them every month - I have an computer illiterate family :'(
- IMHO, the quality of PC Games has dropped substantially in the past , oh say 5 years. I used to play PC gam
Re:Gamers (Score:2, Interesting)
Some of them still are. I have done zero hours of actual work this week because of a certain newly-released game [2kgames.com] :-)
It's like music, or films, or just about any other creatively-based industry. 90% of the stuff produced is mass-market plasticised sugar-coated crap, but there's always that 10% left over that makes the whole process worthwhile - of course, my 10% might not be
Re:Gamers (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Gamers (Score:2)
Well, the source and the Internet of course.
Email?!? (Score:3, Insightful)
No encryption (unless you have a degree in IT), no authentication (because people are tight, and nobody out side of IT knows what PGP is), poor support for attachments (MIME is a hack) and no enforcable equivalent to recorded delivery.
That's before we start to think about the mess that is HTML encoded mails.
I could live without security, but I'm really suprised that corporations can.
We've been using email for over 10 years now, and it hasn't progressed at all and I don't believe for a moment that this is a 'if its not broke...' situation.
If the FOSS community could establish a new email protocol that transparnetly added real support for attachments, security and formatting and it was adopted quickly by Thunderbird, Evolution and Mail.app (I'm a Mac zealot so I want it too) the next version of Exchange would support it too. In the mean time, Redhat, Suse and Ubuntu could be peddling Linux as the next big thing in email - something that might get the attention of CEOs who's only realy contact with a computer is email.
Re:Email?!? (Score:4, Insightful)
PGP on linux is as easy as it is possible to get effective email encryption/authentication. It's really well integrated into every email client I've seen. But for encryption authentication to be meaningful the user has to generate keys, and that's the part you're probably thinking is too hard for the average user. But there's really no way to make it simpler without defeating the object entirely.
Re:Email?!? (Score:2, Insightful)
Not likely. There are two ways a standard can achieve wide adoption. One is if Microsoft pushes it (you'll ruin all chance of that if it has any association with the GPL). The other is if it's already had wide adoptio
Re:Email?!? (Score:2)
Because it's the most widely used and most practical application of the Internet.
Public-key encryption is inherently difficult, it's not going to be made any easier by changing email protocols. There are very user-friendly PGP interfaces available already, the problem is getting people to use
Penguin powered for ages (Score:5, Insightful)
Many clients have said that it is not that much of a change for them and that they wonder what all the fuss was about?
I personally have actually found myself lost trying to do even trivial tasks on a friend's borrowed Windows machine that I wouldn't have to think twice about using my own laptop running Linux... I have started carrying LiveCD's just so this doesn't become more of an issue. The tools that come standard on many Linux distro's are far superior to those available to other OS's. It's a no brainer for me...
---
Simulated Sig
Re:Penguin powered for ages (Score:3, Insightful)
One more option. Windows boxes with Open Source software running. If there are 8 things the box must do, and one of them is available only for Windows (find a good driver for a big CNC milling machine for Linux... and a CAD/CAM software to go with it), use free software wherever it fits. OOo instead of MS Office. Firefox, Thunderbird, Gimp, Inkscape... and if needed, Cygwin
Bandwagon (Score:4, Funny)
So, in other words, Linux was installed not for business or technical reasons but because the next guy has it so we should have it too and people are talking about it so we should get one and so on.
Linux is all grown up! Finally it is behaving in the marketplace the way real money behaves -- soon, CIOs everywhere will be propounding their 'Linux strategy' and writing articles in trade rags about 'how a switch to Linux allowed us to give our clients a competitive edge'. Heck, they already are! Then in 10 years, we'll be reading about how 'evaluating Linux alternatives forms a major part of our strategy for cutting the soaring costs of server farms' and so on and the cycle will go on.
Yay!
SuSe is king of the Office Desktop (Score:2)
Re:SuSe is king of the Office Desktop (Score:2)
--
Evan
Summary (Score:3, Insightful)
In other terms: PRODUCTIVITY
(I'm not surprized)
I can tell you straight up (Score:2)
hmm 86% need Macromedia Flash support (Score:3, Informative)
Sadly, macromedia is sitting on their hands when it comes to supporting Flash on computer that use 64 bit processors.
Basically, if you have an AMD 64 running linux in 64 bit mode, you can't see flash on websites.
Number Crunching for Linux Deployment (Score:3, Interesting)
$189 per seat vs. $50 per seat for the Codeweaver's Plugin
Microsoft Office = Same price regardless
($700 + $35 per CAL) x 2 = $1750 vs. $0 and $0 CAL's for Server
($700 + $35 per CAL) x 1 = $1050 vs $0 and $0 for CAL's for mail server
That's well in excess of $4000 in savings. The employer wisely chose to invest this in training and sent a couple of his people off to class. This cost him about $2000 for the both of them at a local community college. He then had those two train the rest of the staff. After some initial pain, he's enjoyed a $2000 savings just in his first year on the software alone.
What's not included in this is that they will be able to use the same hardware for at least one additional year. Had they upgraded their operating systems to the current Microsoft releases, they would have had to upgrade their server hardware as well. Some of their workstations would also have required new hardware. Another expense that's not included in this is not having to purchase antivirus or anitspyware products for the workstations. Since 99%+ of these things are Microsoft-targeted, they simply fail to execute in a Linux environment.
2 cents,
Queen B
Summarized top 10 reasons for switching to Linux (Score:3, Insightful)
2) Competitors are using it
3) Corporate direction (?)
4) Source code
5) Vendor independence
6) Manageability
7) Total Cost of Ownership
8) Unhappy with existing OS
9) Reduce licensing costs
10) Security
The grid they gave with the results was a little hard to read, so I tried to make a top 10 ranking out of it. I just figured this using a simple average rank, treating N/A as 8, so it's not as accurate/meaningful as it could be. The top 3 make no sense to me, but they may have just consistently scored in the top 5, whereas some issues are either very important or entirely unimportant.
Re:Why not to chose GNOME !!! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Which Linux Desktop? There are several (Score:3, Insightful)
Right now I'm running KDE, and of the applications I have open, half were written in GTK+ and the other half in Qt, plus a Java application written with SWT and a Windows application running under Crossover Office.
If I didn't know a thing or two about Linux and about these programs I wouldn't have any idea that some of them are "KDE" applications and others are "GNOME" applications. All of these applications pretty
Re:Which Linux Desktop? There are several (Score:2)
I have never understood people insisting on Linux Look & Feel to copy Windows Look & Feel pixel precise if possible, since I've never had much touble finding my way through a menu structure for example, as long as it has some logical connections (e.g. I don't care whether "print" is under "file" or "tools"). I've seen people aghast at OOo because it ain't Word... Guess what, I don't notice the differences, because I think in functions (
Re:Which Linux Desktop? There are several (Score:2)
There is the misconcept
Re:Which Linux Desktop? There are several (Score:2)
Re:jesus h. fucking christ, same old shit on slash (Score:2, Informative)
Who is "we"? IBM, Novell, Red Hat? It's not david v. goliath anymore. Many very large corporations want to humble Microsoft. Being able to leverage its OS is a serious advantage these corporations would rather it didn't have.
just because you can bang out some obscure computer code, or deal with archaic unix-like systems, doesn't mean you're qualified to make business decisions, no
Re:Personality (Score:2)