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Operating Systems Ubuntu Linux IT

Linux Marketshare is Above 2-Percent For Third Month in a Row (omgubuntu.co.uk) 205

For the third month in a row the share of worldwide desktop computer users running Linux has been above two percent -- up from one percent -- according to data from web analytics company Net Market Share. From a OMGUbuntu report: We reported back in July that Linux marketshare had passed two percent for the first time, and that figure remains the highest they've ever reported for Linux, at 2.33 percent. But the share for September 2016 was almost as good at 2.23 percent. It's the third consecutive month that Linux marketshare has been above 2 percent. Those of us who use Linux as our primary desktop computing platform can take a degree of pride in these figures. They do show a clear trend towards Linux, rather than away from it. But we should also remember that statistics, numbers and reporting methods vary between analytics companies and that all figures, however positive, remain open to interpretation and debate.
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Linux Marketshare is Above 2-Percent For Third Month in a Row

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  • by tnok85 ( 1434319 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @03:07PM (#53170741)
    Or will it be 2017?
    • by methano ( 519830 )
      Linux, Desktop of the Future!

      And always will be!
    • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @04:51PM (#53171587) Journal

      85% of devices sold last year ran Linux. The desktop is now in your lap and in your pocket, running Linux. Windows is more popular on systems with IDE drives, PalmOS is most popular on Treo systems, Linux is most popular on supercomputers, Windows is most popular on systems that weigh between 8 and 20 pounds. Linux is most popular.

      Next story / complaint: Linux isn't popular on systems installed by major corporations headquartered in Redmond. Um, okay, but anyway 85% of all new devices run Linux, period.

      • Windows runs on my work laptop, but it spends 100% of its operational time plugged into monitors on a desktop, with VNC and terminal windows open to boxes running Linux somewhere in a datacenter, where I do my work designing things and writing documents.

        So windows is a thin client, back from the early 90s.

        • For many years I spent all my time in "terminal windows open to boxes running Linux". When work gave me a Mac OSX machine, I was surprised how much it was like Linux. The GUI is different, of course, but open a terminal and you have certified Unix. You can ./configure && make && make install whatever you might run on Linux. If your place of employment offers the choice on Windows or Mac, you might like the Mac - even though it's from the same company that makes iOS iTrinkets.

          • My personal laptop is a mac for that reason. I can open a terminal, type make, compile my latex into a document, write C or python unimpeded by the environment, sed and awk to my heart's content, edit with vim and generally use the unix muscle memory I've developed over the past 30 years.

  • OSX (Score:2, Insightful)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 )
    It wouldn't surprise me if this trend continues, as Microsoft doesn't care as much about Windows anymore, and Apple has gone kind of crazy.

    When Microsoft releases Excel for Linux, you'll know that its time has arrived.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by tnok85 ( 1434319 )
      The only thing holding me back from a Linux desktop at home is gaming. Too many games just don't run well enough - even with a beast of a system, can't get 144hz reliably without any glitches. :( I run it in a VM 24/7 though, and do all of my internet browsing and most of my work in it. But Windows has to be on the hardware for me.
      • Steam and multi-platform SDKs like Unity have made some pretty remarkable inroads on Linux gaming these days, much much more so than the Loki days of old.

      • The only thing holding me back from a Linux desktop at home is gaming.

        Gaming is one sticky point for me, but the primary thing keeping me on Windows right now is audio/music production. Ardour is a nice package (although not really comparable to stuff like ProTools) and I really do appreciate the work that's gone into it, but despite the great strides made with packages like dssi-vst and vst-bridge, there are still plenty of VST plugins that don't work properly (or at all). That's assuming you have an
    • Lotus 1-2-3 (Score:4, Funny)

      by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @03:42PM (#53171103)
      Maybe they will release an update of Lotus 1-2-3 for Linux!
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      as Microsoft doesn't care as much about Windows anymore

      Microsoft cares a lot about windows. What they don't care about is what end users think about it.

      • Not like in the Ballmer days. Windows is only a small part of Microsoft revenue now [computerworld.com].
        • That could have a lot to do with them giving it away. It may be a small part of their revenue but it's a core part of their strategy. e.g. Windows forms a core part of their ever growing hardware division (Surface line), it is forming the basis for their xbox division, and ... just for completeness sake I'll mention the pitiful smartphone attempts. Just because Microsoft has entered a new market where business customers with some serious money are participating (enterprise cloud services) doesn't mean they

          • Just because Microsoft has entered a new market where business customers with some serious money are participating (enterprise cloud services) doesn't mean they can happily move along and let windows die.

            Nah, not yet, but that will happen if things continue going as they are. The trend direction is promising.

    • When Microsoft releases Excel for Linux, you'll know that its time has arrived.

      For many corporate users the big thing that they need is seamless interoperation of email -- what they really mean is the groupware (calendaring, etc) that is wrapped up in a proprietary MAPI protocol. A free solution to MS exchange (all of it, not just the easy bits) that talks to MS desktops and free Linux desktop software that talks to MS exchange is long overdue.

  • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @03:11PM (#53170781) Homepage Journal
    This isn't suprising...I'm using Linux right now and it has been rock solid sta
  • More user friendly (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @03:14PM (#53170809)
    Compared to a few years ago, Linux and the distros are more user friendly, more hardware support (less missing drivers), lots of free software, and many "main" applications have been improved a lot (think Gimp, Libre Office, wine...) . That gives a chance to users to try Linux and see for themselves that it's fast, reliable and has a lot of good open source software. Unfortunately for many demanding games, Windows is still the only alternative.
    • by chipschap ( 1444407 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @03:38PM (#53171069)

      The idea that Linux doesn't have enough software to be usable keeps coming up, and I don't get it.

      Yes, there are things that just won't run on Linux, and in some cases there are no alternatives (particularly the case with verticals like, I don't know, dental records software or running a television studio, and certainly many games). But if you look at a mainstream user, who does web, email, maybe touches up some photos, writes some letters, does some spreadsheets, scans some documents, plays some music, watches some videos --- you get the picture --- everything is there and then some.

      Hardware support out of the box beats Windows as far as I can see. I plug new stuff into Linux and it works. Windows, I've got to install a driver. Yes, there are a few items that won't work with Linux, or require additional software (as is the case with Windows) but they are becoming rarer, and often can be avoided.

      I won't get into "the year of Linux on the desktop" --- that's likely never, given the entrenchment of Windows --- but unusable due to lack of software? That's a generalization that's false a lot more often than true.

      • The people who only do web, e-mail, etc... many are ditching PCs altogether and using their smartphones or tablets. That's why desktop PCs are a declining market (although that's very different from 'dying', which escapes many pundits). Essentially, a significant percentage of number of people don't actually *need* a fully powered computers unless:

        a) They require specialty software. A lot of line of business / internal software runs on Windows stacks, and it makes sense for people to have compatible syst

        • (c) You want a screen at least a large as a 1948 television set.

          (d) You want a keyboard that lets you actually type, as opposed to the experience of poking at a keyboard with a stick attached to your nose.

      • Exactly. I gave an old laptop to a female friend a couple months ago, loaded with Linux Mint KDE edition. I sat down with her, showed her how to do all that stuff on there: web browsing, photo viewing, file management with Dolphin, watching videos with VLC, etc. There was something she wanted to do (I forget now, maybe photo editing) and I showed her how to do it with some free software, and she was surprised as she thought she'd have to buy some software. She hadn't quite wrapped her head around the id

    • by green1 ( 322787 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @03:58PM (#53171225)

      If by "a few years ago" you mean 2 decades, maybe. But really Linux has been more user friendly than Windows for a very long time, with more support for hardware than Windows, and many great applications.

      I stopped using Windows at home in 2000 and haven't looked back, any time I am forced to use it (eg. at work or at a friend's place) I cringe at how much harder it is to do anything on Windows than on Linux.

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        Linux has [...] more support for hardware than Windows

        Granted, with respect to all hardware in existence. But which has more support for hardware sold in Best Buy, Staples, or other major U.S. retail electronics chains in the fourth quarter of 2016? Because that's what the typical home or small office user considering a switch from Windows to X11/Linux is up against.

        • by green1 ( 322787 )

          Because we all know that there is never a case where someone tries to use last year's printer/scanner/etc/etc with this year's windows version, that's never happened....

          You know how I got my scanner? My parents couldn't use it any more. Not because they didn't want to, but because there are no Windows drivers for it for the current version of windows. It works great on Linux.

          Every single thumb drive you plug in to windows wastes time trying to install drivers, and even moving it to a different USB port seem

          • by tepples ( 727027 )

            tl;dr: Windows for new hardware that doesn't use a generic class driver and Linux for hand-me-downs.

  • They called it Linux instead of GNU/Linux! Stallman's gonna lose his shit again.

    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      In practice, "desktop Linux" implies GNU/Linux and X11/Linux. But given the level of pedantry among some Slashdot users, I personally tend to be more careful lest I run into people who sincerely suggest to use an Android tablet with a keyboard as a close substitute for an X11/Linux laptop.

  • by cfalcon ( 779563 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @03:44PM (#53171117)

    While Windows 10 has been pushed into many computers accidentally on purpose, to many of us, Windows 10 was the final straw for our personal machines. While the awful privacy invasions and security issues of the new OS aren't anywhere close enough to force all, most, or frankly even many users to flee, plenty of Windows users are looking for an out- and those that have use cases that are compatible with Linux have moved (and in smaller numbers are still moving) for that reason.

    So I think we are seeing a Windows 10 bump. Certainly Linux desktop is vastly superior to where it was a few years ago, but that's not normally the sort of thing that pushes for a change. We'll probably see it again in a couple years when Microsoft tightens its coils some more- hopefully the desktop Linux experience will be even better then!

    • to many of us

      Key word there is "us", here on Slashdot.

      By comparison the typical user would happily buy Windows 10 on credit card, install it hold up the credit card pointing their new PC, take a selfy and post it on Facebook for all to see.

      • by cfalcon ( 779563 )

        > By comparison the typical user would ...be completely irrelevant to a 2% marketshare. We are well within the explanatory powers of Windows 10 being a spyware festival of rotten meat. I addressed this in my op with " While the awful privacy invasions and security issues of the new OS aren't anywhere close enough to force all, most, or frankly even many users to flee"....

    • by cb88 ( 1410145 )
      The Linux desktop has declined in quality, and usability... while the range of Linux drivers available has went up. There just isn't even any justification for the sheer bloat present in the current GUI toolkits and libraries.

      Evidence of the decline in usability is the sheer excitement that KDE1 was met with upon it's recent rerelease... sure nearly any Linux desktop properly configured is better than windows 10's interface. But that still doesn't make the modern desktop environments good.

      KDE1 + antialiased
    • Not really.

      Back in the good old days pre 2011 gnome 2 with compiz and init was pretty cool. SystemD and gnome 3 brought me to Windows 7.

      To this day I am still on Windows and run Freebsd as a VM. I do not trust gnu/Linux much as making it not suck is not a priority and the Windows 10 GUI is Paradise over gnome 3 or kde

  • Talk about timing, I'm installing Linux as we speak (Ubuntu). I'm surfing slashdot on my phone while I wait.
  • Yeah, let's look at Linux market share in:

    - smart phones
    - set-top boxes and DVRs
    - point-of-sale terminals
  • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday October 28, 2016 @04:34PM (#53171475)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Could be higher if the hardware was not sold with a mandatory OS (Windows / Mac OS)
    • Could be even higher if the hardware was sold with a mandatory OS (Linux)
      • by eWarz ( 610883 )
        Could be even higher if Linux in it's current form didn't exist. Seriously. The day I can do a clean install on my laptop, have it recognize all my hardware, work the way it's supposed to...and upgrade to the nex release, Linux might stand a chance...until then it will be a wannabe. OH and current rumors actually put Windows 10 WSL ahead of Linux marketshare wise...
  • Huzzah, I say.

  • Right now I develop mostly for Linux. Yet my development desktop is Visual Studio running on windows 10. I know a few developers who use Linux desktop, but the reality is that it would be under 5% of the developers who I know developing on Linux use linux for their desktop.

    Quite simply without Desktop penetration this percentage will always stay low. I don't see this as a problem. Linux to me is a server solution, an embedded solution, a phone solution, but not yet a desktop solution. I suspect that if i

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