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Linux

Bryan Lunduke Explains Why Linux Sucks in 2020 (youtu.be) 222

Roblimo once called it "a tradition, not just a speech" -- Bryan Lunduke's annual "Linux Sucks" presentations at various Linux conferences. But before you get too upset, in his 2014 interview with Slashdot Lunduke admitted "I love Linux, I have made my whole life around Linux. I work for Linux companies. I write for Linux magazines, but it really blows..."

This year he's releasing a special YouTube version of Linux Sucks 2020, the first time Lunduke has attempted the talk without a live audience, "And it feels really wicked weird." But he's still trying to get a rise out of his audience. "Follow me on this into Journey Into Graphs and Numbers Land," Lunduke says playfully, pulling up one of his 160 x 90 pixel slides showing current market share for Windows, Mac, and then Linux "You might notice that some platforms have a higher market share than Linux does," he says with a laugh, describing one slide showing Linux as "scooping up the bottom of the barrel at 1.6%..."

"But here's the thing. These numbers have been either consistent, or for Linux, slowly dropping." And then he puts up a graph showing the number of searches for Linux. "If you look back at 2004 -- the year 2004, 16 years ago -- that was the high point in interest in searching for the word Linux (or Linux plus other things). 2006 it was about half that -- so about two years later it had dropped down to about half. Here in 2020 it is so low, not only does it not fill up the first bar of pixels there, it's like only three pixels in. That doesn't happen -- that sort of decline does not happen -- unless the platform sucks. That's just the truth of the matter. That's just how it goes, right?"

And there's also some very specific reasons why Lunduke thinks Linux sucks:
One of his biggest gripes is backwards compatibility:

"I have a piece of software now, and I want to run it five years, 10 years in the future. Why shouldn't I be able to? Part of the beauty of open source is that the source code is available, so it's easier to keep software alive, so software doesn't die when someone stops maintaining it. Except maintaining the software on Linux is becoming such a massive challenge -- it might as well as be closed source, half the time. Because you're just not going to be able to get it to run in any reasonable amount of time, unless you're a developer, and even then it's going to take a lot of headaches, and you're going to break something along the way."

Having expressed the ultimate heresy, he breaks out some examples -- Civilization: Call to Power, Railroad Tycoon 2, and Sim City 3000 -- all games that were ported over to "our beloved Linux platform...

"I own those three boxes... They do not run on any modern Linux system I've tried them on. I managed to get Railroad Tycoon 2 to run after a ton of hard work. And the net result, is that system couldn't run hardly anything else. It was just a disaster. It was an epic disaster. So that means that those games -- unless I want to specifically have a retro Linux PC, with an old version of Linux that never got updated, no repository updates, no distro update, nothing, in order to run them -- they're dead to me. I can't use them. That's what that means."

There's several other gripes. (For example, "I'm not saying Linux is bad because there's committees of people involved. But it is...") Lunduke argues the best free and open source projects "are fiefdoms, ruled over by a singular dictator... Those are the ones that you see the biggest advancement on. You see the best marketing work, you see the best design work, you see the best usability, you see the coolest features, you see just the most laser-focused vision..."

"If all of that bums you out..." Lunduke concludes, "just remember, at least Linux backwards compatibility really sucks. So we've got that going for us."
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Bryan Lunduke Explains Why Linux Sucks in 2020

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  • Systemd (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @03:36PM (#60157136)

    A nice example that too many people that do not understand Unix are part of the Linux community now and are making it worse.

    • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @04:18PM (#60157226) Journal

      > too many people that do not understand Unix

      So much this. There are advantages and disadvantages to the *nix way, but the Unix way is lotsnof small, simple tools that be combined together. For example if you want a sorted list if everything that matches a particular pattern, you use grep | aort. One tool does pattern matching, another does sorting - and only sorting.

      You can easily sort ANYTHING, without any special support for sorting that thing, because "sort" sorts *anything*. All the tools take textual input on stdin and output textual and stdout, so they can be combined any way you want.

      Searching in a file is exactly the same as searching in a partition is the same as searching bytes on a drive or image, is rhe same as seaeching the output of any other string of commands - grep searches anything and everything. That's all grep does, search whatever you want it to search.

      Some people think systemd is good. Undoubtedly there are some good things about systemd. Maybe systemd is a great thing - for Windows. Whether its good bad or bad, it's definitely not in any way *nix-y. It uses the same design philosophy as Microsoft Office and old versions of Windows. Whatever the advantages of such a philosophy might be, it's the opposite of the Unix philosophy, so it's not a good fit for a Unix-like system.

      • by retchdog ( 1319261 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @04:38PM (#60157306) Journal

        yeah `sort` can sort "anything" as long as it's one data record per row with a fixed number of white-space separated columns, on the local machine, you don't care about performance, and you are sorting by one of the methods supported by your local sort utility.

        if it's not, you're going to (at the very least) be writing your own wrapper around sort anyway, at which point frankly you might as well just use a framework if one exists.

        tl;dr: just because you have an awesome swiss army knife, doesn't mean that you wouldn't benefit from a food processor too.

        • yeah `sort` can sort "anything" as long as it's one data record per row with a fixed number of white-space separated columns, on the local machine, you don't care about performance, and you are sorting by one of the methods supported by your local sort utility.

          The performance of unix sort utility is nothing short of magical.

        • You said:
          > yeah `sort` can sort "anything" as long as it's one data record per row

          Hmm, sounds like a problem.

          Then you said:
          > The unix philosophy" includes an informal standard of piping that around between processes.

          Yep, every tool uses the same record separator, line feed. So it's not a problem.

          Why in the world would you want each tool to randomly select different characters for the exact same meaning, the same purpose - end of record? That's incompatibility for absolutely no gain whatever.

          • Yep, every tool uses the same record separator, line feed. So it's not a problem.

            Why in the world would you want each tool to randomly select different characters for the exact same meaning, the same purpose - end of record?

            One needs to distinguish the line feed that separates records from line feeds within a field. For the twelve years that I worked in data interchange for online toy retailers, this was quite common especially in long description fields.

      • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @05:20PM (#60157446)

        There are advantages and disadvantages to the *nix way, but the Unix way is lotsnof small, simple tools that be combined together.

        A classic double edged sword that should not be present in an init system. You shouldn't have to have an init system that fires hundreds of custom written scripts, each different, each dropping PID files because the parent system is too dumb to track what processes are running, kick off multiple additional daemons each which manage hardware event based software changes and other daemons to handle network related launching of service, all of which have no idea what software is or isn't running any any given time because this patchwork of gangrenous shit literally can't do the one thing it's meant to: track which services are running.

        There's a place for lots of simple individual tools, and there's a place for a large too that does the job properly. The other example is the GUI, and the same debate in Xfree vs Wayland. Lots of tools sounds good until you realise you have 100x the latency from all these patchwork tools talking to each other than if you just had one program vertically integrated and simple. Sure I can't pipe the output of GLXGears frame by frame to my printer anymore like I could in xfree86 thanks to it being just a bunch of simple tools, but then let's face it even if I could ...

        • by Bongo ( 13261 )

          Yeah, in a way, "lots of little tools" is not the core meaning or philosophy. The true meaning is closer to, a system I can adapt and reorganise in new ways to solve my problems, and if it turns out to be a surprising way, then all the more satisfying.

          This is why old Apple Mac OS 9 was such a joke for tech in the enterprise... you couldn't reconfigure it to anything novel, its philosophy was much more towards being an easy appliance. And why its best stuff was things like HyperCard.

          This is why adding real s

        • by nagora ( 177841 )

          A classic double edged sword that should not be present in an init system. You shouldn't have to have an init system that fires hundreds of custom written scripts, each different, each dropping PID files because the parent system is too dumb to track what processes are running, kick off multiple additional daemons each which manage hardware event based software changes and other daemons to handle network related launching of service, all of which have no idea what software is or isn't running any any given time because this patchwork of gangrenous shit literally can't do the one thing it's meant to: track which services are running.

          I don't buy your premise - which is that there's nothing between an init system that has no idea what's going on and a monolithic system daemon - written by idiots - that represents a single point of failure.

          And there's no real basis for claiming that any software on a linux system doesn't know what's currently running, whether the init process or any other.

          There's a place for lots of simple individual tools, and there's a place for a large too that does the job properly. The other example is the GUI, and the same debate in Xfree vs Wayland. Lots of tools sounds good until you realise you have 100x the latency from all these patchwork tools talking to each other than if you just had one program vertically integrated and simple. Sure I can't pipe the output of GLXGears frame by frame to my printer anymore like I could in xfree86 thanks to it being just a bunch of simple tools, but then let's face it even if I could ...

          Again, you're setting up a strawman. Lots of tools sounds good when you need them. A vertically integrated system that can't let me open a remote appli

        • There are advantages and disadvantages to the *nix way, but the Unix way is lotsnof small, simple tools that be combined together.

          A classic double edged sword that should not be present in an init system. You shouldn't have to have an init system that fires hundreds of custom written scripts, each different, each dropping PID files because the parent system is too dumb to track what processes are running, kick off multiple additional daemons each which manage hardware event based software changes and other daemons to handle network related launching of service, all of which have no idea what software is or isn't running any any given time because this patchwork of gangrenous shit literally can't do the one thing it's meant to: track which services are running.

          You make some good points. However it's very easy to modernise the init system without all the shortcomings of systemd, though. Take, for example, Solaris' SMF (Service Management Facility). Uses the same concept as systemd to launch registered services, tracks processes, tracks startup milestones and service dependencies. However, it does it in a neat, clean and open way, that is easy to debug and diagnose issues. Log files are in text format. It does one thing (init system) and does it well. Perfec

      • For example if you want a sorted list if everything that matches a particular pattern, you use grep | aort.

        Surely you meant grep | cav?

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        You can easily sort ANYTHING

        Except structured data formats like JSON and XML. In fact you can't really sort anything except text files with certain character sets and one data item per line.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      A nice example that too many people that do not understand Unix are part of the Linux community now and are making it worse.

      If desktop users need to have any significant interaction with the init system that's already a failure in itself. By all means if you want to talk sysadmins and such but then it seems to me Linux is doing quite well in the server space particularly all the SaaS bits as spinning up and down Windows instances is a licensing nightmare. If Microsoft delivers on WSL2 with GUI support & GPU acceleration I think a lot of people will skip the barebones Linux install completely.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Cipheron ( 4934805 )

        Come one, the future of Linux is to narrow down the user-base to the 2 people who are elite enough to use it and are also the maintainers of the code.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by vadim_t ( 324782 )

      This is technology, not religion. Worship doesn't belong in tech, and advancement shouldn't be restrained by blind adherence to tradition.

      I don't care one bit if it's Unix Philosophy adherent or not. What matters is whether it works (it does), and whether it allows me to get stuff done faster (also does).

      • Re:Systemd (Score:5, Interesting)

        by hey! ( 33014 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @05:51PM (#60157530) Homepage Journal

        Except it is kinda like religion. Scratch that, it's *exactly* like religion.

        When systemd came along suddenly everything I'd known for decades about how the system boots up and manages services was obsolete. That kinda sucked, but I got used to it and life went on more or less as before. But as with any religious dispute I was surrounded by people vehemently insisting that by golly I *was* better off/worse off, I simply didn't *understand* that I'd been through a life-changing transformation/trauma as the case may be.

        But this was not my first rodeo. I started off with Unix v7, and almost immediately the world split into East Coast (System III) and West Coast (BSD) Unix. Then Linux came along with a suite of GNU utilities and it wasn't really one or the other, which was annoying, but ultimately *that did not matter*.

        As my aging brain gets fuller and fuller, I'm more sympathetic than I used to be to the angry reaction of people confronted with what they see as pointless change. They ask, why the hell do people have to keep changing things that were working perfectly well? But from experience, I know the answer: it's just what people do. Someone making efforts to improve things, only to be surprised by a vehement philosophical backlash is the most Unix thing imaginable.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by vadim_t ( 324782 )

          If you think SysV works great, you've just not dealt with it and its pitfalls enough. Many of those just got incorporated into "stuff an Unix admin is supposed to know", such as the dirty hacks and workarounds SysV often involves, and how to deal with them.

          The reason why systemd took over so suddenly is because the people who dealt with that every day were the people building distributions: people who worked on dozens of startup scripts and bumped into those issues quite often, and whose job it was to figur

          • by hey! ( 33014 )

            I am agnostic on this. I *assume* systemd is much better for some people, otherwise all the major distros wouldn't have gone that way. The alternative would be to believe there was some kind of conspiracy.

            But the problem you state notwithstanding, is a clean-sheet reimagining of so many things really the *only* way to deal with those, or is it the most *interesting* way?

            Still, it's not really that hard to live with, not that anyone has a choice. You just occasionally have to remind yourself "it doesn't wor

            • by vadim_t ( 324782 )

              I would say systemd was a case of looking at the problem from scratch, and in light of the current state of technology rather than what was there in the 60s. Patching up SysV was already done and not really making anybody happy.

              For instance systemd was made to be completely unapologetically Linux centric, taking advantage of cool features Linux has, but which weren't getting a lot of use, and making them a requirement, which ensured systemd users could count on those things being there and reliably take adv

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              What always strikes me in these debates about systemd is that despite it apparently being so awful no-one has come up with anything better. Distro maintainers and a lot of users voted with their feet and switched to systemd and despite Pottering being a bit of an ass no-one has managed to do any better than he has.

        • They ask, why the hell do people have to keep changing things that were working perfectly well? But from experience, I know the answer: it's just what people do.

          Well you really have to think of it like evolution. People experiment and make changes. Some changes are really useful. Some are innocuous. Some create problems. Mostly the changes aren't all good or all bad, but there are trade-offs. The thing you think it best may not always be the thing that wins out, but you're not going to get progress without change.

        • They ask, why the hell do people have to keep changing things that were working perfectly well? But from experience, I know the answer: it's just what people do.

          Fundamentally this is the question asked by everyone of every new technology, but you took away the completely wrong answer. People almost never do change for changes sake. They fill a need or address a shortcoming. That may not be *your* need, but it is one none the less.

          The first car on the market was slower than the horse and everyone criticised them for it.
          My Unix history doesn't go back far enough to understand the split or why it happened, but something people don't seem to realise is that the change

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      A nice example

      Yeah a great example of attempted forward progress actually getting somewhere, rather than the 10 other sysvinit replacements that failed to live up to the task. I guess the Unix way is putting up with a 20 year old system held together by bandaids because you're too afraid of change.

      Tell me, can I still send the output of X frame by frame to a printer? Because well that's just how flexible and outright mindfucked good old Xfree is.

      • Tell me, can I still send the output of X frame by frame to a printer? Because well that's just how flexible and outright mindfucked good old Xfree is.

        Eh, what?

        I don't recall X ever being able to do that. And being able to incidentally assemble silly stuff with tools isn't an example of something being bad. I mean if the only argument for something that's not X is that you can't do certain things, that's a pretty poor argument.

    • I'm a linguist, and it took me about 8 tries to parse your sentence. Can you re-write it in English? Here's what I *think* you're saying:

      Too many people who do [did?] not understand Unix are now part of the Linux community and are making Linux worse [by their contributions? coding? ideas?]. This [post? situation? author?] is a good example of this problem.

      I'm also not clear what you mean by "Unix". I don't think you mean the pre-Linux OS, I think you mean Master Foo's Unix Nature.

      Anyway, three pounds of

    • Given that systemd is now firmly embedded in Linux, its turned into Windows anyway.

      I guess the issue is really that nobody cares about the platform any more. Its all web, or tech that runs on it. The days when you said "is there a version for mac, or Linux" are well over, today its all on all platforms and most of them are mobile anyway.

  • by destinyland ( 578448 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @03:41PM (#60157150)
    Here's a write-up of the whole talk [thenewstack.io].

    His last reason is just that "Linux people are dumb" -- calling out that time in 2017 when a presenter on the "Year of the Linux Desktop" did the whole presentation from his Mac!
  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @04:10PM (#60157210)

    These days if you have a bit of software that doesn't run on the OS version you have it is simple enough to fire up a VM that runs the required version and run the application in that.

    I have a CentOS box that is hosting I think about 4 different OSes. One of them is an early Windows/NT. The dozen or so VMs on that system are all running the legacy of a business that closed down years ago but occasionally someone wants to get into the applications. The Windows/NT box runs some obscure licensing server I forget the name of but the CAD software and accounting software the company used needs it.

    If sucky Linux can handle all that what scenario are we looking at that it can't?

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @04:10PM (#60157212)

    And why should I care about his opinion regarding Linux, one way or the other?

    As far as I can tell, he mainly seems to be known for this particular annual presentation...

    • As far as I can tell, he mainly seems to be known for this particular annual presentation...

      Ah, the old "famous for being famous" sort of person. It's good to know that Linux is keeping up with the Kardashians.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

      And why should I care about his opinion regarding Linux, one way or the other?

      Because you're engaging in an ad hominem fallacy rather than addressing any of the substance of his argument.

      As far as I can tell...

      You're paying attention to the wrong thing.

      • Because you're engaging in an ad hominem fallacy rather than addressing any of the substance of his argument.

        If I had to spend time dissecting every random person's opinion on every random topic, I'd have no time for anything else.

        Give me a reason why this person's opinion on Linux is worth listening to any more than that of any other single one of the 7+ billion people on this planet. There doesn't appear to be one.

        • by Sebby ( 238625 )

          Give me a reason why this person's opinion on Linux is worth listening to any more than that of any other single one of the 7+ billion people on this planet. There doesn't appear to be one.

          Agreed.

          Linus Torvalds... I know.

          Bruce Perens.... I know.

          This guy...... *shrugs*

        • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

          Give me a reason why this person's opinion on Linux is worth listening to any more than that of any other single one of the 7+ billion people on this planet. There doesn't appear to be one.

          He's got a Slashdot article and you're the guy repeatedly commenting under it while doing everything possible to avoid the substance of his complaints, or even the substance of the summary.

          But tell me about your precious time...

  • Good thing that doesn't happen on Windows. *cough*DOSbox*cough*Compatibility modes*cough*

  • It's not linux the OS that suck, it's the Desktop GUI's like Gnome 3, Unity ect that driven people like me away over the years.

    I'm a fan and awlays will be of Gnome 2, but will I install a linux distro using Gnome 3?

    Hell no. I'ld rather continue using Windows Xp/Windows7 than that pile-of-shit called Gnome 3.

    • Agree about Gnome 3. That is why I stopped using Ubuntu. I was hugely disapointed.

      I'm happy enough using MATE.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Gnome 3 is doing an invaluable service to Linux, by making sure that Linux in the desktop will keep spinning its wheels - which implies that the bad guys will not devote any efforts to developing malware for desktop Linux. We should be thankful to the Gnome 3 management and developers.
    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      You are not forced to use gnome3, there are several widely available alternatives and even more niche ones.

      Windows users are much worse off, with all the enforced changes between 7->8->8.1->10 etc...

      It's quite telling that you say you'd rather use windows xp/7 than gnome 3, this implies that you don't like the later windows interfaces any more than you like gnome 3.

  • (Note, I use it on several systems, quite happily, with some glaring exceptions)

    Linux claims to be superiour to other OSes, yet slavishly copy the UI of a certain other mainstream OS.

    Stop that, stop trying to Xerox that other OS, you claim your different, show me.

    • Claiming that Linux copies of the UI of another OS is nonsensical. Linux has a dozen or so different well-maintained UIs. If most people happen to choose one that looks like a popular OS they're familiar with, that's up to them. If you slavishly choose what other people are choosing instead of what you want, that's on you.

  • In short, if you're a web dev and still wonder why Linux "sucks" to so many people, just ask yourself how you feel about Drupal (something I've worked with for a decade now and still have a love/hate relationship with). That's probably how most people feel about Linux. You can swap out Drupal below with Linux down below when describing it:

    * If you get Drupal, you're thinking, "Drupal is a great, powerful tool to do anything I want." And you don't quite understand the hate for it. For those who don't speak D

    • I forgot to say, that's why Drupal/Linux sucks.

      Does it suck to you the enthusiast? No. But it does to everyone else that doesn't share your feelings about it.

    • What is a Drupal? Is that your native state when you forget to take your viagra?

  • Linux... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JasterBobaMereel ( 1102861 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @04:46PM (#60157332)

    ..Only runs on phones, supercomputers, internet servers, SpaceX rockets, raspberry Pi, and a few desktops ...
    Unix runs on most of the other phones, and all Macs

    Desktops still run Windows ... or so I am told ...

  • by walterbyrd ( 182728 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @04:57PM (#60157370)

    I ran FreeBSD for a while. There is a lot to like. But I got tired of not being able to use the newer versions of application. Also, don't like not having a dropbox client. Also, FreeBSD does not work well with many OSes. FreeBSD barely works with NTFS.

  • It's amazing how he keeps ignoring the most important [altervista.org] issues over and over. His talk has long lost any significance and it almost sounds like a joke as he believes Open Source/Linux is superior to any proprietary software out there.
  • by nyet ( 19118 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @05:12PM (#60157418) Homepage

    1) Snap
    2) Docker

  • by misnohmer ( 1636461 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @06:02PM (#60157550)

    A while back I was following a discussion about where should Linux have the "close app", "X" button in the GUI window, on top right like Windows, or top left, like Mac OS. After the poll it ended up being something like 56% wanted it on the right, 44% on the left, so someone suggested a that a fair compromise would be to put 16% to the right of the center. The suggestion was made partly as a joke, but it perfectly illustrated the "everyone must have a voice" spirit of community development I have seen in a number design-by-comity projects - they often end up being great compromises, which nobody actually wants, like the X button on the center of the window example (which of course didn't happen, but there are other similar decisions made out there, or in some cases 2 polar opposite visions make 50% decisions each, resulting in a complete mess).

    Democracy is a very poor and inefficient leadership model. Winston Churchill once said "the best argument against democracy is a 10 minute conversation with an average voter". He also followed it up by saying that unfortunately it's the best system we know. This is true for leading nations, however in software, there is no moral dilemma about having dictatorships - the one who pays your paycheck can decide what you should implement and how. Dictatorships are very efficient, and we can see high profile success stories such as Steve Jobs, or Elon Musk, or Bill Gates - someone driving a strong vision helps get there faster, without compromises, and without never-ending discussions on how something should be done, because there are 50 million ways to do the same thing and considering them all takes an immense amount of time and in the end there are still many alternatives left with about equal value, but you can't get everyone to agree on one. A good dictator leader can cut through all that crap, and make decisions quickly. Of course the large drawback of this model is that the product is only as good as the dictator, so if the dictator sucks, the product sucks, but if the dictator makes good enough decisions 80%+ of the time, the product ends up with a consistent vision and is developed significantly more efficiently than a design-by-comity. The biggest problems is that there aren't that many good dictators out there, but this is why for example Windows, which costs money, beats out free Linux on the desktop in terms of market share - you'd think free would win, yet it does not.

    To wrap this up, notice that there are a number of commercial products based on Linux out there, which are a lot more successful in terms of grabbing market share in their category than Linux by itself is. Those commercial products often have clear dictator style leadership, which may not be 100% right, but provides consistent vision, eliminates a lot of inefficiencies, and it makes sure that less than glamorous jobs that most people don't want to do for free (like thorough, methodical QA) get done.

    • It's not central leadership which results in a larger market share for windows...
      By that reckoning, everyone should be using macs because there is a consistent dictator controlling both the hardware and software to make a coherent experience.

      What makes commercial products successful is the fact they have a marketing budget and sales team, linux has neither of these things. Linux does well in areas where the people making the decisions are technically literate and will do their own research rather than being swayed by a sales pitch.

      What keeps windows around is inertia and lock-in...
      People don't like change, even if that change is for the better.
      People hate change even more the longer those benefits take to show.
      The cost of replacing windows is high and immediate due to lock-in, most companies don't care far enough ahead to consider long term savings.
      People are often not aware that alternatives exist.

      People in east germany would join a multi year waiting list to buy a trabant, people in west germany could choose between vw, audi, bmw, mercedes and many other brands and have a superior vehicle available to them quickly. Once germany reunified and east germans gained access to the same choice their west german counterparts had, very few people chose to buy trabant anymore and many people abandoned them by the roadside.

      People don't choose windows, they're stuck with it.

  • Having expressed the ultimate heresy, he breaks out some examples -- Civilization: Call to Power, Railroad Tycoon 2, and Sim City 3000 -- all games that were ported over to "our beloved Linux platform..

    I have mission-critical LAMP applications that were developed in the mid 90's that still run today without modification or dicking around of any sort.

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      I think this rather random YMMV is one of the things I find so frustrating. Some stuff ports with zero problem, other stuff is unportable. The more dependencies a project has, the greater the chance that at least one of them will be in that later category. Granted, there is usually SOME way to update things so they will work, but that requires developer time. I can think of a bunch of services in our infrastructure that I had to oversee shutting down completely because they depended on older versions o
  • by lorinc ( 2470890 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @06:04PM (#60157560) Homepage Journal

    You should watch the last 10 minutes of the talk, I think it's spot on.

    TL; DW: The Linux community has become a corporate controlled committee of people who don't use Linux and dislike ideas. The evidences of that are kinda compelling, especially in the last 5 years.

    • I wish i had mod points.

      It is, in my opinion, the worst part. The community had been infiltrated by hateful people who act as mobs. They don't agree to disagree, they hate the people who do not share their morals and want to kill them by banishing them from Open Source and their own jobs. It is a cancer. And it is not only about politics.

  • by Joe2020 ( 6760092 ) on Sunday June 07, 2020 @07:17PM (#60157712)

    ... and licks my fingers over every line of code I put in!

  • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

    I have a boxed copy of Civilization: Call to Power although i've not tried running it lately... This game was released for linux in 1999, they also made windows, beos and macos versions of it.

    Windows games of a similar vintage often have problems running too, and macos games aren't going to run at all due to a completely different OS and processor architecture...
    There are posts online of people having trouble running CIV:CTP on windows 7 too, for example:
    https://www.gog.com/forum/gene... [gog.com]
    With one user sugges

    • This sounds like a job for containers. Theoretically someone could put together a pretty short Dockerfile that lets people run it reliably on all the Linux distros. I don't know if it is a reasonable substitute, but Call to Power II is open source. I'm not sure how close CTP2 is to CIV:CTP

  • I code (after a fashion), and I've got linux on an old laptop for my kid, as it runs faster than windows, but installing software is usually horrendous. It's the command line argument again. Here's the ideal: Go to a website, click on the software you want, it downloads and then you run it, and it installs. How is this so hard to achieve? In many ways *nix is better than windows, but this puts even me off a bit, not because it's technically scary but because often installing something comes with a list of 1
  • by phaserbanks ( 1977290 ) on Monday June 08, 2020 @11:48AM (#60159980)

    The Linux learning curve is too steep to be practical for most people. Unless you are an expert programmer, everything takes longer and is more frustrating in Linux, because it is not user friendly.

    File under r/obvious

You know you've landed gear-up when it takes full power to taxi.

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