Novell hopes its next desktop will leapfrog Windows

Novell on Thursday unveiled the features that will be available in the next version of its Linux desktop product -- SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop -- which the company claims will be more usable than any other desktop product on the market.

"We have made a big investment taking the Linux desktop past everybody. The usability work we've done is not to reinvent Windows, but to reinvent a better desktop," Greg Mancusi-Ungaro, Novell's director of marketing for Linux and open source, told ZDNet Australia sister site ZDNet UK on Wednesday.

"When Microsoft Vista ships it will catch up to us in a number of areas, but we'll enjoy six months where Novell's Linux desktop is in the lead," he said.

The SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED), which will be available later this year, is a "big change for Linux" as it is now suitable for all enterprise users, according to Mancusi-Ungaro.

"Up until now the Linux desktop has primarily been deployed in specialised circumstances -- as a fixed-function workstation or as a transactional desktop," he said. "Now, for first time, we can tell you with confidence that it can be deployed for general office workers."

Important new features in SLED include an animated user interface and integrated desktop search.

Other features that Novell is touting in the product include the addition of support for Microsoft Excel Macros and Pivot Tables in OpenOffice.org, and full support for all standard network and printing protocols, allowing plug-and-play functionality for cameras, USB drives, personal music players and printers.

The animated GUI takes advantage of the XGL graphics software, which Novell made available to the open-source community last month. The GUI makes the Linux desktop more usable, for example, by providing visual cues to users when they minimise windows, according to Mancusi-Ungaro.

"When users minimise windows to the panel at the bottom of the screen they will see it move there rather than vanish, so users are more aware of where they have put something," he said.

As for desktop search, although the Beagle tool is already available in SuSE Linux Professional 9.3, this is the first time that Novell is offering seven years' support around the product.

Novell carried out hundreds of usability tests and shot almost 1,500 hours of user-interaction video to aid the design of SLED. It claimed that each feature of the product has been "rigorously tested and refined for usability to ensure the best possible performance in a business environment." The results of the usability tests can be viewed on Novell's Better Desktop Web site.

Ingrid Marson of ZDNet UK reported from New York. For more coverage from ZDNet UK, click here.

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Talkback 2 comments

    Drugs John -- 13/03/06 (in reply to #120130883)

    Share the drugs man, once you come back down you will see reality...not a bloody chance of leapfrogging Windows

    Part of what you say is true! Rex Alfie Lee -- 13/03/06 (in reply to #120130884)

    Funny, I had a friend the other day who balked at using Linux. I asked him how much experience he'd had & he said that he'd had a fair amount in the past. I actually don't know what that means but what I do know is that the Linux experience is so seldom experienced that nobody or almost that many have actually looked at Linux on-screen. So partly you are right; Linux won't be surpassing Windows for a while unless of course there is a huge push to show off the brilliance that is Linux, especially SuSE.

    From a desktop perspective Linux has almost always been better than Windows. The choices have been around because of UNIX & so the picture experience leaves Windows desparately needing help. Using Linux is really simple but we need people to install it automatically on the sale computer item or to install it when someone wants to get rid of their old box & get a new one. This way they can actually get to try it on.

    In some ways Linux lags behind Windows; eg a decent hardware installer program that can search for appropriate software, install it or deny the capability to install it because the software is not available. If possible though to install the Windows hardware drivers would be fine if the system could be automatically set to do this.

    From almost every other direction you can look at Linux leaves Windows stalling in the breeze. The software for business is continually updating & most software today that if written in Java will run on Linux without too much tweaking. Even C++ stuff doesn't require too much modification, rather compiling for Linux & a few different settings & directory maintenance which could be included as an automatic dependency check.

    Please promote Linux more, show it off to your friends & offer to put it on the desktops of their old computers & encourage them to keep it & try it out rather than just getting a new one & throwing the old one away. They may see the light; especially when they get to see how beautiful the Linux desktop is compared with Windows crappy covering.

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