Hey, desktop Linux fans: Buy a Mac!

COMMENTARY: Let's get something straight right away. I don't mind Linux, and I certainly don't require an operating system to come from Redmond to be acceptable.

Linux can be a great operating system when used for the server tasks that suit it best. Heck, I was even married to a Unix person, and Doug Michels, a Unix pioneer, is one of my best friends.

But it would be just fine with me if the Linux-on-the-desktop people--at least the ones who leave TalkBack responses to my columns on seemingly any topic--would please go away. Read someone else's column. Harass that person for a change.

These desktop Linux people are just like the adherents to any concept that has failed in the marketplace of ideas: They don't know when to let go, and make fools of themselves as a result.

The commercial Linux community, as represented by Red Hat Chairman Bob Young, has come to the conclusion that Linux on the desktop is a non-starter. Further, the controversy and distraction the issue creates takes attention from Linux as a server OS, where it really shines and provides a real alternative to Microsoft products.

Yes, desktop Linux is almost free and doesn't require tithing to Microsoft. But soon the desktop Linux folks won't have the free StarOffice to throw at me as proof of their platform's superiority and zero cost of entry.

According to published reports, Sun Microsystems, which bought the German-built multiplatform productivity suite a few years ago, is going to start charging for versions adapted to non-Sun platforms.

This means Sun has given up on the idea that giving away StarOffice would mess with sales of Microsoft Office. Sun now wants the program to pay its own way. StarOffice is a decent enough suite and is certainly worth the US$50 to $100 Sun is expected to charge for it.

But I wonder how many desktop Linux zealots will be willing to pay for StarOffice? My guess: not many. My perception of these folks--and it's very likely I am describing only a vocal minority, so if this isn't you, I apologise--is that they don't want to spend a cent on software and consider themselves deserving and even superior because they possess the high level of technical skill required to make Linux work.

How you build a vibrant computing platform when nobody is willing to spend money on it escapes me.

Running Linux on servers is different, mostly because the Linux that's available today is clearly capable of doing that job quite well. Server Linux is also becoming something the big systems companies seem to throw in as a way to sell expensive hardware, expensive server applications, and expensive services contracts.

Make no mistake: Linux servers are a cause for concern in Redmond and a source for happiness in data centers worldwide. Desktop Linux, on the other hand, is rapidly being assigned to the trash pile of computing history. Like scientific socialism, it will go down as an idea that sounded good on paper but didn't work in the real world.

If the proponents of desktop Linux are really honest, they will move to a Unix platform that has all the things Linux lacks: a great user interface, a large number of applications, support of a profitable major vendor, an industry guru who's taken extremely seriously, and even the cover of Time magazine.

I'm talking about buying a Macintosh, of course. But running OS X would actually cost these Linux geeks money, and that's something I am not sure any of them are willing to spend. Still, if these people hated all things Microsoft as much as many of them proclaim to, you'd think rallying around Unix-based OS X would be the best way to advance their cause.

But only if they're willing to put some money where their much-too-loud mouths are.

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Talkback 5 comments

    Pitty your "in depth anal ...Anonymous -- 04/03/02

    Pitty your "in depth analysis" managed to miss the point that Star Office is actually built from Open Office.

    A short trip to
    http://www.openoffice.org
    might have been worthwhile before send out an article which doesn't address all of the facts.

    The whole Linux on the desktop is dead stuff is really getting pretty tired. Yes there are people saying it's great while in actual fact not really being all there but please remember 1 year is a long time in S/W development.

    David, what were you saying last year about Linux as a Server OS?

    Seems to me you've changed your tune.

    Why can't people accept that noone has a crystal ball and that while Linux on desktop is maybe an outside chance for wide acceptance it is a possibility but not likely for a few years.

    But I guess flame bait is maybe easier than being accurate.

    Such is journalism.

    Why would anyone use RedHat fo ...Anonymous -- 04/03/02

    Why would anyone use RedHat for desktop use?
    RedHat is a server operating system.

    If David writes about desktop Linux then why does he not write about Mandrake-Linux? Perhaps as secondary choice SuSE.

    I am currently evaluating the third beta of the soon to be released Mandrake 8.2 and it is great for desktop use.

    I guess in a years time David will have changed his mind again, just as he did with Linux on the server.

    What a terrible article! So Li ...Anonymous -- 06/03/02

    What a terrible article! So Linux on the desktop has "failed in the marketplace of ideas". Wrong!!
    "The only folk who hope and still expect it to oust M$ are Linux fanatics." Wrong!
    Some of us professionals are waiting for value and quality in software. Profits are NOT the be-all and end-all in any industry. Infrustructure that is open, low-cost (free), and based on quality engineering will allow this industry to advance rather than flail about as it is still doing.
    How much are they paying you for this sh*t?

    I too am not a huge fan of Lin ...Michael Tibben -- 22/03/02

    I too am not a huge fan of Linux on the desktop, but whoever wrote this article had absolutely no idea what she was talking about.

    The attraction of Linux on the desktop is that it is non proprietry, NOT that it doesn't cost anything.

    The latest versions of KDE + Gnome DO have great user interfaces, a huge number of applications (both proprietry and free), support of vendors (SuSE, Mandrake to name a few), industry gurus (I won't even start on this one), and I can't see the cover of Time magazine being too far off.

    The reason desktop Linux is not taking off is because of one fact. A certain Redmond company has a monopoly. Until this monopoly is broken, things won't change.

    Only if you want a messed up U ...Anonymous -- 29/03/02

    Only if you want a messed up Unix clone. I have no interest in seeing a hacked up copy of Unix, even if it were free. You Mac freaks need to get off your high horse. Computers understand zeros and ones. Unix rocks. Macs don't. Here is the way the major os's rate:
    1. Unix
    2. Linux
    3. Mac
    4. Windows
    Get used to it Jobs.

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