Linux Predictions For 2025 (betanews.com) 61
BrianFagioli shares a report from BetaNews: As we close out 2024, we Linux enthusiasts are once again looking ahead to what the future holds. While Linux has long been the unsung hero of technology, powering servers, supercomputers, and the cloud, it's also a dominant force in the consumer space, even if many don't realize it. With Android leading the way as the most widely used Linux-based operating system, 2025 is shaping up to be another landmark year for the open source world Here are the predictions mentioned in the article:
- Linux will continue to dominate the enterprise sector
- Linux will further solidify its role in powering cloud infrastructure, with major providers like AWS and Google Cloud relying on it. - Gaming on Linux is set to grow in 2025
- Linux will play a major role in AI development
- Linux's appeal to developers and tech enthusiasts will remain strong
- The open source movement will grow stronger
What additional predictions do you have for Linux in 2025?
- Linux will continue to dominate the enterprise sector
- Linux will further solidify its role in powering cloud infrastructure, with major providers like AWS and Google Cloud relying on it. - Gaming on Linux is set to grow in 2025
- Linux will play a major role in AI development
- Linux's appeal to developers and tech enthusiasts will remain strong
- The open source movement will grow stronger
What additional predictions do you have for Linux in 2025?
Weak (Score:5, Insightful)
Those are some weak-ass predictions. Probably correct, but weak.
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...They might as well predict that water will continue to be wet.
Linux already utterly dominates the enterptise and cloud sectors (except for on-prem Microsoft shops, anyway) and is the only meaningful platform for AI workloads. That's what brings most of the developers to the yard -- it's *big* business now.
But I would quibble about "tech enthusiasts" -- they're incredibly fickle and inevitably chase after the latest shiny dangled in front of them.
As for the "open source movement" -- it's inexorably inte
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But I would quibble about "tech enthusiasts" -- they're incredibly fickle and inevitably chase after the latest shiny dangled in front of them.
By this point, anyone who is truly an OS enthusiast has written their own OS from scratch.
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Re:Weak (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, these are some pretty Captain Obvious level "predictions".
I can also safely "predict" that Apple will also release new iPhones that look an awful lot like the older iPhones in 2025, but that's not exactly a bold prediction.
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I can also safely "predict" that Apple will also release new iPhones that look an awful lot like the older iPhones in 2025, but that's not exactly a bold prediction.
You forgot, "but 1 micron thinner" ...
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Those are some weak-ass predictions. Probably correct, but weak.
Would you have preferred another Year of the Linux Desktop prediction?
Marketing has been drunk and high on clickbait for a while now. Weak is a new coffee bean blend by comparison. Still gets the job done, and is appreciated by many for those rustic subtle hints of realistic.
Re: Weak (Score:1)
Year of rust in Linux. And it'll completely piss you off for reasons completely unrelated to anything technical.
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The thing that irritates me most is that the whole article could be summed up as:
'Linux will keep on rolling, doing what it's been doing for the last 30+ years'
Useless word salad
2025.... (Score:3, Funny)
...will be the year of the Linux desktop.
Oh wait....
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It's been "the year of the linux desktop" for several years in a row now. Unfortunately it's actually "Linux on the Microsoft Desktop".
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Not really. It's more like "Windows in a Linux VM". For anyone with taste, intelligence or an once of prevention in the security space.
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It's been "the year of the linux desktop" for several years in a row now. Unfortunately it's actually "Linux on the Microsoft Desktop".
Yep. WSL is just so dang convenient!
Linux will crack the CAD market (Score:2)
With FreeCAD going to 1.0, Linux will make a major breakout in engineering CAD this coming year. FreeCAD will follow the same trajectory in that space as Blender and Krita in theirs. First they achieve parity with their proprietary rivals, then surpass them.
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Re:Linux will crack the CAD market (Score:5, Interesting)
Hmm. Well... I'm not sure, not yet but maybe it doesn't matter.
OK, FreeCAD user here. And to note, I've never used FreeCAD for a personal project, only work so far.
I first used FreeCAD ages ago nearly a decade ago. I was using OpenSCAD (odd choice, I know, but I had some rather specific requirements around automation and I was making heavy use of minkowski sums to make a minimal case to spec that just fit around all the things it had to contain). Needed to get some injection moulding done and they won't mill off STL files, they basically needed a proper BREP. It also meant that the full automation was no longer needed since the shape was now fixed.
So I went to reach for SolidWorks since I'd used it before, and... well one does not simply buy CAD software. Or even hire it. No, one had to talk to the local rep and tell them your life story, etc etc, only to receive the same quote as anyone else. So I duly booked the meeting... in a few weeks. Left with nothing to do and a burning desire for a BREP based file, so I looked at this FreeCAD thingy. I didn't have a desire to try my luck with Pro/E...
Anyhoo. It was basic, janky, crashy (though I will engage in fisticuffs with anyone who claims SolidWorks is not) and slow, but I had my injection mould cadded up and send to the manufacturer before the meeting with the rep (which I duly cancelled). That was nice, I didn't have a handy Windows machine anyway.
Fast forward to a few months ago. I needed to make a thing. At least OnShape exists now and doesn't require me to dual boot (my 4090 workstation runs linux), and even offers to sell licenses for money! But it's pricey (but not outrageous), and I only needed to to a thing, and I didn't want to learn a whole new CAD package and FreeCAD is right there and I've heard good things about 1.0...
So here I am with the "one thing" having almost infinitely expanded. The new FreeCAD is way, way, way better than it used to be. It's not as good (still) as the big boys, but the scope of what it can do effectively has grown hugely. This means it's now a reasonable choice for a much wider range of projects than previously. I'm aware of the limitations, but they're not biting hard right now: I'm doing prototyping with rapid iterations so it's not like I need to CAD up a detailed wiring cabinet or anything to be handed over. There's no one to hand it over to and anyway it would be wasted time because each instance is currently being built once.
I'm not sure I see it surpassing the major players for a while (though they're not all equal either) for big projects, but it's now a firm competitor on the lower end.
EDA however is apparently there. Last time (same as my FreeCAD foray), I used EagleCAD which was good. It got bought by AutoDesk, enshitiffied and turned into SAAS. Everyone now says KiCAD is way better, so when I need a board made (soon I expect), I will take the plunge and learn KiCAD.
So for electronics CAD, it has surpassed major proprietary rivals, for mechanical it's a way off, but it doesn't need to not be for being entirely fine for quite a lot of things you might need to do.
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EDA however is apparently there. Last time (same as my FreeCAD foray), I used EagleCAD which was good. It got bought by AutoDesk, enshitiffied and turned into SAAS. Everyone now says KiCAD is way better, so when I need a board made (soon I expect), I will take the plunge and learn KiCAD.
Way back in the day I had some experience with PCAD and either UltiBoard or Pads, I forget which. In 2011 I started using KiCAD and have used it off and on since, although it's been five years since I last used it. But even then it was very complete, mostly logical and intuitive. I shipped off Gerber files for 4-layer boards to a couple of PCB fabs with zero back-and-forth - the boards corresponded perfectly with the design.
I can't speak about how good or how well integrated their simulation stuff is. But o
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I shipped off Gerber files for 4-layer boards to a couple of PCB fabs with zero back-and-forth - the boards corresponded perfectly with the design.
Some memories there! The board manufacturer, a subcontractor of the main manufacturer decided to put a small empty margin around the board, basically cutting away some of the specified copper. This cut the width of a track connecting the programming header down to about a hair. Miraculously only 5% of the boards failed. I only figured that out after days of hair-
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Linux already dominates the engineering CAD market. That doesn't make the CAD software any less expensive, though.
The real question (Score:2)
>"What additional predictions do you have for Linux in 2025?"
Those predictions are hardly insightful predictions, they are just well-known trends that have continued for many years. Except they left off industrial/embedded/controllers, which it has also dominated forever.
The real question is Linux on the home and business desktop.
My prediction is that as Microsoft continues to push artificial hardware "requirements", trying to force people to replace perfectly good computers, and irritate users with clo
2025 will be the year of Linux on the Desktop (Score:1)
Hahaha. Just kidding.
Re: 2025 will be the year of Linux on the Desktop (Score:3)
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Re: 2025 will be the year of Linux on the Desktop (Score:2)
I'm in the other side, sadly. I used to be able to not boot on windows to game, but 2024 had been the opposite, with me nearly never boring into Linux.
Gaming on Linux has gotten better, but gnu/linux as an OS seems to be getting worse and worse. Early in 2024, I decided to finally ditch my EOL'd kubuntu and install something fresh.
I tried debian, it was absolutely awful, bad performance, and I couldn't even install virtualbox even after trying the 3 official methods.
Then Arch, the boot and shutdown always h
Year of the Systemd Desktop 2035 (Score:1)
I'm sure they'll have the bugs worked out of Wayland by then, and the new GNU/Systemd distros will finally support cutting-edge features like "three finger swipe on touchpad", "hibernate", and "bluetooth".
hahahhaa (Score:2)
Looks like I offended systemd lovers and GNOME lovers there. Why do all two of them have modpoints here?
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I have scraped wayland for Xwindows, the performance was just "WAY" off
Linux devs flooding NVD with junk CVEs (Score:1)
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No more years, we already won (Score:2)
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KDE's web browser tech is integrated into Windows 11's UI....
And it (KHTML) is the parent of Apple's Webkit, and the grandparent of Chrome's Blink.
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Yeah just sad KDE did nothing with its Konqueror webbrowser, but all others did something with it and won.
wat (Score:2)
"with Android continuing to dominate mobile gaming, Linux offers gamers a unified ecosystem across devices"
Uh what? Android games aren't Linux games. They're Android games. Yes, Android has many commonalities with desktop Linux, and someone who understands Unix can understand and navigate the Linux underpinnings of Android no problem. But no, Android apps aren't Linux apps. You have to run a whole Android system with its own kernel under Linux to get even shaky and inconsistent compatibility.
Seen that (Score:3, Insightful)
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And yet, after 30 years of working in both operating systems AND many more, I've had the most problems with drivers and cross-compatability in Windows over any other operating system. ... that's ALPHA. You don't do that if you want stability.
I think the article's straw-man assertion just doesn't hold up in the real world.
If you run an alpha-release of one of the main distros, maybe, but
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This has been my experience as well. I have bought an assortment of hardware including two scanners and one printer because they were no longer supported by the current version of Windows. What's more, in literally every case, the hardware spoke a protocol that was still used by newer hardware which had driver support. Some of it probably could have been made to work via inf file hacking, while some of it might have required driver hacking — which is harder these days due to signed drivers, so you hav
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Linux as an OS doesn't exist, that's true.
But Windows as an OS doesn't exist, either. It's a long series of different OSes with varying compatibility. They kept changing the way it works, which is reasonable, but also changing the way things are done, and not subtly.
And also, not intelligently; In Windows 8 they tried to make the system touch-friendly, but they left tons of interfaces with no updated replacement so it wasn't realistic to depend on touch. Windows 10 was a great refinement, but Windows 11 jac
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Over 95% of 32bit software made since 1995 works in Windows 11 64 flawlessly.
[citation needed]
"Give us source code and we will compile it! Oh, wait, we don't even have enough maintainers to include your open source software." A lie on top of a lie.
So to be clear, your argument is that since Linux distributions don't include every piece of software in them, which is not a thing which Windows has ever done, it's less backwards compatible than Windows?
That's why Windows will never be replaced on the desktop. People run to love old applications.
Linux runs more of my old Windows programs that I want to run than modern Windows does.
Linux will be the reason why Microsoft .. (Score:2)
.. will keep the loopholes in Windows 11 wide open and gaping. .. even for older Hardware .. and on older out of support Macintel iMacs, Books, Pros ..
"Shares a report"? (Score:2)
BrianFagioli shares a report from BetaNews:
Might be worth noting that he is the author of the BetaNews article itself, not a random person who happened to think it was neat and shared it.
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I don't see anything wrong with someone submitting their relevant article to Slashdot. In fact, I'd prefer the author have their name in the open on the submission, versus the dumb "an anonymous reader shares..." posts - as if it's not blazingly obvious who "anonymous" is.
Linux will continue to dominate the enterprise (Score:2)
The moment Apple announces they will make an enterprise OS is when these journalists and pundits will do an about-face on their unshakeable belief in Linux.
I don't think Apple could actually have a chance, but if they even dipped their toes into the industry we'd see a total media circus around it.
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Early in the millennium, Apple tried getting into the enterprise market with the Xserve [wikipedia.org] and Xserve RAID [wikipedia.org]. It was actually decent hardware (especially the RAID), but it didn't gain enough traction for Apple to stick with it.
I knew a couple admins who connected Xserve RAIDs to Red Hat Linux servers - overall they were quite happy with them. The Xserve as a standalone server, though, didn't really offer much that Linux couldn't handle equally as well (or better, in many cases).
I will note that these products we
Linux will remain insignificant in the desktop (Score:2)
And that's a good thing for those of us who use it in the desktop. First, that aberration that is Gnome 3.* will continue spinning its wheels. Second, the bad guys will carry on focusing on Windows. Third, it will still be possible to use non-Windows-ized Linux distributions.
The fact that Linux will not make it big in the desktop is a blessing for some of us.
My predictions. (Score:2)
Some of these are snarky, but frankly those responsible deserve it.
1. Documentation, particularly of Linux kernel internals and filesystems, will remain poor, leading to many re-invented wheels and a sustained naivety about why things work or don't.
2. Application developers will remain incompetent in testing, resulting in a defect density between 10x and 100x that of the kernel. This will result in an increasing number of embarrassing failures that nobody will take responsibility for because they regard it
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6. Linus Torvalds is foreign, a proponent of freedom, and thus the natural opponent of the corporate donors to Trump. Expect him to be amongst those Trump expels.
Or... Trump will fork his own distro, probably named Trump Linux, sell it for $1,000 in a gold box, w/o support, *and* people will buy it.
Well, of course I know one. (Score:2)
It's going to be the year of the Linux desktop!
AI is going to transform open source (Score:2)
My prediction (Score:2)
When Redmond goes ahead with their " Windows Recall " feature, that will do more to push
users towards considering a Linux environment than anything else in modern history.
Linux is far from perfect, but when given the choice between it and the Redmond AI Overlord
watching, listening and recording every single keystroke I make, I will take the Linux route
without hesitation.
Technically, I'm already there since my home server is running Linux and my secondary
desktop is running Mint. I'll just have to give up my