Linux on the desktop - almost there again?

Despite their best attempts, Linux software companies say they are still having a hard time luring average consumers away from the Windows environment -- but that may not necessarily be a bad thing.

Windows still dominates the PC world. About 90 percent of all desktops, laptops and even PDAs are powered by Microsoft, according to reports by Gartner and IDC. Even with all the hoopla last year about Linux progress, the buzz over breaking the Windows stronghold has died down considerably.

When it comes to the enterprise desktop, companies like Novell and Red Hat are making some progress, thanks to open-source projects such as Evolution, Firefox, KDE, GNOME, OpenOffice and Wine. But the companies still report adoption problems in the consumer space.

"We feel like it is a long road for us. It certainly has not a been an overnight shift," David Patrick, vice president and general manager of Novell's Linux, open-source and platforms services group, said during a press briefing at the LinuxWorld Conference and Expo, which is taking place in San Francisco this week.

Novell seems to have made more progress than other companies, with its Suse Linux Professional edition for home users and Novell Linux Desktop for the corporate office.

Patrick said the company has the best success in fixed markets, as with the company's retail win with Ritz Camera and its new education contract with the state of Indiana, both announced on Tuesday.

The company also released its OpenSuse project, which Patrick says will differ from Red Hat's Fedora project in that it will let consumers help identify key open-source projects before they are professionally developed.

Red Hat continues to dismiss any idea that it will offer a consumer version of its Enterprise Desktop Linux product, according to a company representative.

Expert Jeremy White, who wears a double hat as the go-to man at the Desktop Linux Consortium and as the founder and CEO of CodeWeavers, says the biggest roadblock to average-consumer adoption seems to be lack of hardware support, especially for gadgets like MP3 players.

"Last year, there was a lot of smoke but no fire when it came to Linux on the desktop," he said. "It is not the sexy story that it used to be. However, there are some very steady and irreversible trends. There are a lot of customers that tell us that they would adopt Linux in theory, but say, 'Gee, we would use Linux if only if it could run this one application.'"

The other barrier, according to White, seems to be the lack of software support by key manufacturers like Adobe Systems and Macromedia, which are strong supporters of Windows and Apple Computer's Mac OS X but rely more on third-party companies to help their applications run on Linux.

White also suggests that crossover products like AJAX, ThinkFree, VMware and Wine are actually creating a world where Windows and Linux coexist in harmony on the desktop. Such tools allow people to run Windows programs on non-Windows systems.

In some cases, Linux is working to the advantage of corporate buyers who, according to White, are not shy about having employees working on Linux-based operating systems when the Microsoft account managers pay a visit.

"They use it like a leveraging tool, kind of like threatening Microsoft to give them better discounts or lose out on their licensing accounts," White said, but added, "it's still Microsoft's game."

"In some ways," adds Brian Proffitt, editor of LinuxToday.com and co-author of "The Joy of Linux," "Linux on the desktop is almost irrelevant because of the shift towards Web-based applications.

"Linux in the enterprise is where you will see the most work being done these days because companies don't want all of those applications open at the bottom of a Windows tray. Ultimately, it comes down to what you want the Linux desktop to do."

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Talkback 4 comments

    Linux on the Desktop Anonymous -- 10/08/05 (in reply to #120120034)

    Great difficulty,even by experienced computer buffs,in installing programs and the use of terminology such as "mount drives" ect.
    Simplify and it will definately take off.

    ease of use is fine Anonymous -- 11/08/05 (in reply to #120120035)

    You obviously haven't used it lately. Installing programs couldn't be simpler - open the install program from the menu, type the name of the program and click install, it will automatically handle dependencies and won't ask stupid questions like 'click yes to agree to licence' or 'where do you want to install'.
    <br><br>
    A lot of the 'Linux is hard to use' misconceptions come about because there are so many different versions. Some, like Mandriva, Suse and Xandros, focus on making things easy on the desktop user by developing easy configuration tools. Debian focuses on stability and expandability, fedora on having the latest cutting edge technologies, Gentoo and LFS focus on giving the user as much control over the system as possible. With these distros you would probably have to manually add lines to /etc/fstab to mount your Windows partitions for example. They do have some GUI config tools (eg. synaptic in Debian) but easy desktop use is not their main focus. If you used Mandriva, Suse, Xandros or any other good desktop focused distro you'd find you wouldn't have to worry about manually 'mounting drives' and software installation would be as easy as described above.
    <br><br>
    The reasons that Linux hasn't taken off in the destop is that all hardware and software is designed/written for Windows. Why would home users make the effort of switching to a different OS when it means they can't just walk into a store and buy whatever hardware or software they want and have it guaranteed to work under Linux? Why would the business go to all the expense of switching to Linux when they risk incompatabilities with documents exchanged with clients?
    <br><br>
    Fortunately a lot of this is being addressed with much better hardware support in recent distros, openoffice compatability with MS Ofice documents and projects like WINE, crossover office and even VMware, but its still an ongoing effort.

    Installing Linux programs is easy cyber_rigger -- 12/09/05 (in reply to #120120035)

    Take a look at synaptic.<br>
    Installing programs with Linux<br>
    is a simple <b>point and click.</b>
    <br><br>

    http://www.nongnu.org/synaptic/action.html
    <br><br>
    Please stop the FUD.

    The Vlaue proposition John -- 11/08/05

    If the value proposition of linux is to get a better discount from your Microsoft account rep, it says very little to any of value statement Linux might have when it comes to the business world. At least we all know where we stand here...drive a cheaper price

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