Is Apple on the way out?

commentary A headline like that is bound to draw the ire of the Macintosh faithful. After all, since Microsoft, which can marshal its forces and target competitors at will with lethal precision, hasn't finished-off Apple after all these years (and I'm not saying that this was necessarily a Redmond goal), how on earth can an operating system like Linux spell trouble for Apple?

After putting down the Mac last year because of a failed attempt to try the switch (incompatibility with my company's virtual private network was the culprit), I'm giving it another try and can report that -- thanks to the recent Panther OS (I was on Jaguar before) -- I've been nearly Windows-free for long enough to say the switch is technically possible for most people (more on that later).

For any technology to finish off the Mac -- and by the Mac, I mean OS X -- it will have to wipe out demand for the desktop version of OS X. Apple has some very cool OS X-based servers, but they haven't been key to Apple's survival. Apple's desktop devotees have played a critical role in helping the company achieve some success with a blend of desktop and notebook systems and entertainment solutions. Judging by the toll that Linux has taken on Windows on the server side, it only stands to reason that it could do similar damage to other desktop encampments.

However, rattling the foundations of desktop Windows and Mac OS X (aka: Unix) will prove far more challenging for Linux than undermining the server versions of the two operating systems. Although it plays a role, ease-of-everything (use, software installation, management, etc.) is hardly the factor in a server operating system's success that it is for desktop operating systems. In fact, the many hardcore server administrators would just as soon do away with a lot of the ease-of-anything frills in return for a mean, lean, simple, command-prompt driven Web, database, email, directory or database application server. Compared to Windows, the way Linux can be deconstructed and reconstructed in a way that allows server administrators to achieve the perfect balance between bloat and function for whatever itch needs scratching is a winner. Compared to Unix, in which such a balance can also be struck, cost has been Linux's primary driver.

My own "datacentre" has two Linux-based servers running in it -- one as a Web server, and the other as a database server. Both are old Pentium IIs with a little extra memory. In the name of performance and simplicity, I haven't taken the time to strip them of their unnecessary fat (I'm not an expert at this) such as unnecessary daemons and other processes that load at boot time. I know that they could lose about 70 percent of their "weight." Since these are machines that were long ago donated to the recycling heap, the cost of this part of my datacentre has been near zero (not counting my time).

In the desktop world, end-users, small businesses, and even large corporations are willing to spend extra for ease-of-everything and take the requisite bloat (the GUI, printer and file sharing utilities, scripting hosts, power management, auto-configuring wireless networks, multimedia facilities, etc.) that comes along with it. But not too much extra. As evidenced by Apple's lack of traction on the desktop -- where it leads on ease of a lot of things (but not everything) -- the majority of users are satisfied with less than OS X.

Today, even the most reputable and recommended distributions of desktop Linux, such as Gentoo and Xandros, are not the no-brainers that OS X and Windows -- in that order -- are. However, it's only a matter of time before desktop Linux follows precisely the same path as server Linux did when it worked its way from the pockets of early adopters and risk takers into gaining the widespread affection of server administrators.

The target for desktop Linux is simple: OS X. All desktop Linux must do is aspire to be what OS X is. If it can do that, it will not only upset the "Applecart", it will also give desktop Windows a serious run as well. The number one issue working against OS X on the desktop today is cost. We're willing pay extra for an easy to use, shrink-wrapped bundle of hardware and software, but OS X in combination with Apple's hardware exceeds the budget for a majority of users. Many today would argue that it's not cost, but rather that they're walled into Windows because of compatibility issues. Indeed, for some, that walled garden is difficult to extract themselves from. For example, I'm still trying to figure out what I'm going to do about some custom developed Visual Basic applications that I left behind in my move to a Mac.

But, the majority of users -- people who use their PCs to browse the Web, do e-mail, and run Office -- are not nearly as walled in as they think they are. For example, prior to my attempt to run solely on OS X, consider my environment: Windows XP, Outlook, Exchange Server, Internet Explorer, a virtual private network based on Microsoft's VPN technology (PPTP), Microsoft Office, and one Visual Basic application. You can't get much more "Microsoft" than this.

Since I'm dead without a connection to our corporate network, OS X 10.3's (Panther) provision of a solid PPTP client matches Windows XP provision of the same. Regarding access to my Exchange Server, OS X's built-in mail client is capable of natively accessing Exchange Server. It works fine. I tried it. Unfortunately, iCal, OS X's built-in calendaring program, won't connect to Exchange Server for calendaring. But, all is not lost. You can spend £400 to have the benefits of Microsoft Office 2003 Professional for Windows that includes the Outlook mail and calendaring client. With OS X, you can spend the same £400 for Office 2004 for OS X that includes the Exchange-compatible Entourage mail and calendaring client (which, with its project-oriented functionality, some might consider to be superior to Outlook).

What about Internet Explorer? As it turns out, Safari, Apple's built-in Web browser, doesn't work with the open source-based WordPress blog authoring system that we use as well as IE does. I had similar problems with Opera. WordPress has been my only problem so far, and to overcome the problem I will download Mozilla.org's Firefox because I've been told by almost everybody that it solves the problem. Other than that, Safari has been great. This leaves me with one outstanding problem -- my Visual Basic application that relies on Outlook's programmable classes. But this isn't a problem that most people have and I'm now looking into redoing the application in Java. OS X is not only a great system for running a Java virtual machine, it's supposedly a great system for developing Java applications (more on that in another column).

What else about OS X is a factor in my decision? Aside from the 100 percent freely included XCode integrated development environment (IDE), I'm loving at least two other built-in features to OS X.

First is the built-in support for the Common Unix Printing System (CUPS). Right now, I use one of my Linux boxes as a print server and printing to it from Windows has not been without its problems. Linux includes a technology called SAMBA for Windows-based file and printer sharing, but it's tricky to configure and use. With OS X's support for CUPS, sharing the Linux printer was a no-brainer. This made me especially happy since the printer is an HP Deskjet 5550 photo printer and iPhoto (OS X's built-in photo editing and management application) allows me to generate some nice output without running out and buying PhotoShop.

Second is OS X's built in support for X Windows. There are some GUI-based apps such as Ethereal that I like to run on my Linux boxes. Accessing them remotely with Windows was impossible without buying an expensive X Server. Thanks to OS X's built-in X Server that problem goes away.

Apart from my VB application, one question remains. Now that I've switched, would I recommend that others do it? For me, and I suspect others, the answer comes down to a question of acquisition cost and hardware. I say "acquisition cost" because I have heard that over the long run Macs -- with zero-configuration focused technologies like Rendezvous -- have proven themselves to have a lower total cost of ownership than Windows-based systems. I say this with the major caveat that I haven't seen any recently published studies that take into account recent improvements in the manageability of both OS X and Windows. Many would argue that just the security situation alone is enough to paint OS X in positive TCO light (rest assured that if OS X were as big a target as Windows, it would have its share of problems). Assuming that each has their strengths and weaknesses from a TCO perspective and that their TCO nets out to be the same (a conservative assumption in an attempt at an apples-to-apples comparison), we have to look at the hardware.

Today, you can go to an Apple store (on-line or soon to be in a town near you), and if you need a mobile system, you have a choice among eight units from Apple. That by itself is a problem. Hundreds of Windows notebooks come in all sizes and shapes, with all sorts of keyboards and pointing devices, and with vary degrees of performance and durability. I'm getting used to the touchpad on the PowerBook, but I sorely miss my IBM ThinkPad's TrackPoint pointing stick because my fingers don't have to travel as much from the "home keys" (over which touch-typists' fingers like to hover) to change the mouse pointer's position. Though performance is important to me, I'm not sure that I need everything the G4's processor has to offer. If, for example, Apple had several tiers of performance from which to choose the way Intel-based vendors like IBM, HP, and Dell do, that might be nice. It doesn't and I understand the reasons why.

I'm working with the 12-inch PowerBook G4 and though it's lighter than it's 15 and 17-inch siblings, the display is too small for looking at large documents or wanting to scan lots of email messages. At bare minimum, I'd recommend a 14-inch display (standard on the £899 iBook) or, even better, a 15-inch display, (standard on the £1,399 PowerBook).

I could go on, but you get the picture. The premium cost of Apple hardware hurts and OS X only runs (practically) on Apple hardware. Let me remind you that none of this is really about whether you should switch to OS X or not. It's about what happens when desktop Linux reaches that point where it provides an experience that meets or beats the one that that sets the standard for *ix-based desktop operating systems: OS X. When it does -- and I don't doubt that it will -- Apple will be in a real pickle because of the hardware 'problem'. Users will have significantly more hardware options for running desktop Linux and the likelihood that they'll find something to meet their needs in terms of cost and form factor will be excellent. There will no doubt be companies that make systems that look every bit and run every bit like a PowerBook (or whatever Apple is selling at the time). They just won't be PowerBooks and will cost significantly less.

Doubters will point to Apple's time-tested ability to innovate in a way that has kept its operating system and user interface ahead of Windows since the dawn of PC-time. But to not have faith in Microsoft is one thing. To not have faith in the highly motivated open-source movement and all those behind it (Red Hat, SuSE, Sun, etc.) to bring desktop Linux up to speed is misguided. They're the underdog. Never underestimate the underdog.

The question then becomes, what will happen when that day arrives? Will Apple have built such a large entertainment business that it might be willing to let the systems business die on the vine? Or, will it finally cough up an Intel-based version of OS X? Or, as I fantasised in a recent column, is there some crazy mixed up world where Apple ends up merging with another Unix server specialist like Sun with the end result being a magical blend of GNU/Linux, OS X, and Solaris that's compatible with AMD and Intel, that's light years ahead of any other desktop *ix on the market, that provides a killer platform for running and developing Java, and that affords the Apple technology a re-entrance into the corporate market through Sun's customer base. Even I have to admit that the idea is crazy. But, in response to my column, my email suggests that there are people who will get in whatever line they have to in order to get access to such a technology.

Stranger things have happened.

Talkback 13 comments

    I think you missed the point o ...Anonymous -- 14/10/04

    I think you missed the point on a few counts. Is Apple trying to get high market share? Is it trying to be everything to everyone? One could say that BMW is on the way out because Ford have much cheaper cars that move people around, just like BMW. There are different computers for different markets. That has to be good.

    As for your X windows, you can use cygwin-x to see X windows on MS Windows boxes. You can use The Gimp instead of photoshop to touch up photos. Both are free and open source (and excellent, IMHO).

    You've hit the nut on the head ...Anonymous -- 14/10/04

    You've hit the nut on the head. Linux is free, except for the _futzing_ that goes with it. In a corporate world, that is not a desirable thing. Time and consistency are worth real dollars.

    I quote you "the cost of this part of my datacentre has been near zero (not counting my time)."

    How much time did you spend to set up your "free" datacentre?

    Add that to specialist training in Linux (or more futzing as you learn to become an expert yourself), and the cost-benefit anylysis still is unbalanced against Linux.

    The OS X user interface has the benefit of migration from a reliable, well known path that Apple developed. I do think that the convergance of Linux and OS X may happen fairly soon, and Apple Computer will become a software based company.

    Is Apple on the way out? Yes if it continues to tread the proprietary path for much longer.

    PS. Boring, but eye catching headline after the spate of "Is Microsoft on the way out" in recent press!

    By the time "desktop" ...Anonymous -- 15/10/04

    By the time "desktop" Linux reaches the same level as OS X, I seriously doubt you'll be able to adequately run it on a castoff Intel box which right now is probably Linux's biggest advantage.

    Why were the rest of the comme ...Anonymous -- 15/10/04

    Why were the rest of the comments removed. Can't stand the heat?

    You said: ----For example, I'm ...Anonymous -- 15/10/04

    You said:
    ----For example, I'm still trying to figure out what I'm going to do about some custom developed Visual Basic applications that I left behind in my move to a Mac----

    There is an easy way: http://www.realsoftware.com

    I have bought RealBasic 5.5 for MacOS X for doing a little programming. From that time, I tried and managed to convert two VisualBasic applications to REALbasic with the same functionality rather easily.
    REALbasic compiles apps for Mac, Win and Linux binaries.

    Try it! You 'll be amased! :)

    http://www.eweek.com/article2/ ...Anonymous -- 15/10/04

    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1675775,00.asp

    say it all much better, than i could

    is ZDNET on the way out? blah, ...Anonymous -- 15/10/04

    is ZDNET on the way out?

    blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

    your wrote: <<In fact, t ...Anonymous -- 15/10/04

    your wrote:
    <<In fact, the many hardcore server administrators would just assume do away with a lot of the ease-of-anything frills in return for a mean, lean, simple, command-prompt driven Web, database, email, directory or database application server.>>

    Ummm, unless I am mistaken, you meant " would just as soon," not "just assume." I understand how, in the heat of writing an article, an error like this can be made. But where are the editors? Aren't there proofreaders? I am no grammar wonk, just a graphic artist who appreciates good writing. I expect errors of this type on blogs and hobbyist sites, but not on ZDNet. You guys should be setting the standards. Better luck next time

    There's some considerable conf ...Anonymous -- 18/10/04

    There's some considerable confusion as to what's required for desktops and what is required for servers. As a desktop system Apple OS/X, Linux and Windows are all excellent. For servers, you don't need the bloat of GUI's, fonts, etc and the associated daemons and utilities. If you want to administer a server, use the command line or WebMin. That way you have less openings for attacks and a lean mean system that gets the job done.

    As for junked systems. I don't bother. I buy brand new, whitebox systems without CDROMS, floppies, expensive graphics cards and fancy USB, FireWire I/O. Just CPU, RAM, NICs and HardDrives. What do I get? Enterprise strength services at a fraction of the cost of using IBM, HP, Sun servers.

    You might want to look at real ...Anonymous -- 25/10/04

    You might want to look at realbasic. It will allow you to develop on PC or Mac, and compile to OS X, MAC OS 8/9, PC (98 and upwards) or Linux. All off the one code base, and no "framework" or "runtime" to install. www.realbasic.com. I've played with the trial and i like what I see. I believe there is a VB -> realbasic converter included too.

    Just go back to basics - what ...Anonymous -- 25/10/04

    Just go back to basics - what is needed to get the job done in my/our circumstances? I use Windows at work and have a bunch of happy IT support folk to keep the machine oiled. At home there are three of us, all networked to two printers (wireless for two, hard-wired for the other), we access the Internet via Cable broadband, have a variety of interests and no IT support staff.

    On the road my Laptop must connect with the Internet, projectors and LANs of all kind (wired, wireless, UNIX, Windows or Mac-based. We made the choices based on our corporate and family needs and are (generally) happy consumers. We're delighted to have a choice or two.

    Evolution takes time, look fro ...Anonymous -- 26/10/04

    Evolution takes time, look from 30,000 feet, Apple's servers are just being introduced to the enterprise, They are the foot in the door that apple will need to become a major player. Machine replacement cycles are fast in the server closet and the machines are expensive. Apple's hardware is world class and cheap. True IT professionals are more platform agnostic if it runs what they need. Did you know that Apple rules in server management software in a Linux environment, Unix too and there are a lot of shops still running Unix and a growing Linux world. Intel has been faltering and IBM is the muscle behind Apple's boxes. I share the desktop hardware concerns, always have, an OS X limited version for Intel should be offered. Maybe this Cherry OS emulator is really an avenue as well. Time will tell but you err in equating Red Hat, SuSe and the like with the voracious open source development appetite, they are for profit and marketshare, open source is for quality software, Apple is for quality computing, neither desire world domination. I guess that's why the business press just can't get it on this stuff.

Add your opinion

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Brad Howarth The key Topik is always money
    One of the big problems of the internet is that is practically impossible to keep up-to-date on preferred topics. You can limit your sources, but this can mean missing a lot of valuable data.
  • Array Do we need the legislative blackmail?
    Virtually everyone in the telecommunications industry has their say in the Senate Standing Committee's public hearing into the pending legislation to split up Telstra, in this week's Twisted Wire podcast.
  • Array Give Tax a break for a Change
    Considering the circumstances the Australian Taxation Office's (ATO) Change Program has been operating in over the last few years, it really hasn't been going too badly.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured