Archive for the ‘Linux’ Category

Then Conundrum Of Desktop Linux

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

by Drew Brumbaugh

I began dabbling with Linux ten years ago and then made the switch to full-time Ubuntu Linux almost four years ago now. During those ten years there always seemed to be the perennial question: “Will this be the year of Desktop Linux?” This of course refers to Linux making significant inroads into the Microsoft Windows dominated desktop/laptop market. I have my doubts as to whether that will ever really happen.

First of all, let me say that I have become an avid fan of Linux. I’ve always been philosophically attracted to Free Open Source Software (FOSS). The altruistic nature of community development and freedom to fork projects is a beautiful thing. In day to day practical use I love: the lack of mal-ware/virus issues, being able to freely download any extra software I want and an update manager that services the OS and your installed software. The list could go on and on, but that isn’t the point of this article.

The conundrum of desktop Linux lies in the fact that the people that would benefit the most from Linux are those that are least likely to know about it, while the people that are most aware and technically adept are the ones required to maintain a presence in MS Windows.

Let’s begin with the average user. These are the people whose computing needs consist mainly of email, web-browsing and various MS Office like applications. Linux offers all of this as well as stuff like Google Earth, Picasa and Skype. These people could easily accomplish everything they need, do it on mediocre/older hardware and not be troubled with spy-ware and viruses. Long gone are the days where Linux required a serious investment of time and a whole bunch of command line skills.

Then we have the power users. These are the people that require a few niche applications for which no suitable open source alternatives yet exist. Non-linear video editing that rivals the capabilities and usability of Final Cut Pro or Adobe Premiere is one such niche in which Linux has been sadly lagging. Additionally, these “power users” may also be tied to Windows through the software choices of their employers.

However, in the meantime, Linux is gradually surrounding us in other areas. The Apache web-server has powered much of the Internet for quite some time, but recently we’ve seen the introduction of things like the Roku digital video player, the Ooma free home phone service, Google Android and Nokia cell phones. By off-loading some of the more processor intensive computing needs to embedded systems like Roku and Ooma, a good smart phone is fully capable of handling the remaining needs that the average user demands from a normal desktop/laptop computer system.

It doesn’t take much imagination to realize that “docking” a smart phone to an external “terminal” (full-size keyboard and monitor with added video card and Ethernet support) could very soon be the norm. The smart phone will be your working computer that you can take with you wherever you go. You’ll just interface with it differently depending upon your circumstances. If you can envision popping your smart phone into some sort of cradle in your car which docks it to an in dash touch screen and the sound system, then you’ll get an idea of where we could be headed.

So in the end, the year of desktop Linux may never arrive as it was once envisioned. In the brave new world to come, Linux still stands a good shot of becoming the dominant operating system. It just may be that most people won’t know it.

Microsoft acknowledges Linux threat to Windows client

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Microsoft for the first time has named Linux distributors Red Hat and Canonical as competitors to its Windows client business in its annual filing to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The move is an acknowledgment of the first viable competition from Linux to Microsoft’s Windows client business, due mainly to the use of Linux on netbooks, which are rising in prominence as alternatives to full-sized notebooks.

“Netbooks opened Microsoft to the possibility that some other OS could get its grip on the desktop, however briefly,” said Rob Helm, director of research for Directions on Microsoft. “Now it’s alert to that possibility going forward.”

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NEC Pledges WiMAX Software To Moblin Project

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

NEC announced its plans to support the Moblin project at “Wireless Japan 2009,” a three-day expo in Tokyo this week. A computer translation of the announcement suggests that NECs contributions will include Linux drivers for WiMAX radio chipsets.

The NEC chipsets, in turn, will be used in mobile devices and car navigation systems from NEC and its “NEC AccessTechnica” subsidiary. Broadband-connected car navigation systems will deliver significantly more information about local businesses than today’s simple point-of-interest databases, the announcement notes.

WiMAX is a trade organization maintaining standards around IEEE 802.16 wireless technology. WiMAX technology was originated by Intel about eight years ago, and currently seems poised on the brink of widespread adoption.

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The Wide-Open Career Landscape of FOSS Tech Support

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

The growing popularity of free open source software (FOSS) is a sure sign that consumers and software developers alike are becoming more disenchanted with costly proprietary products. However, the promise of free software can be tarnished when software packages need configuration help and that help proves hard to find. When users have to wade through dozens of forum messages seeking a solution, the FOSS philosophy can turn into a turn-off.

As free software use grows in business, so will the demand for qualified tech help. The demand for open source support specialists is growing at a tremendous rate, according to Kim Weins, senior vice president of products and marketing at OpenLogic.

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Linux Sucks

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

Linux is gaining momentum and people are starting to switch over to this computer operating system. I have been using GNU/Linux for years and would like to warn you about it. My consciousness wouldn’t allow me not to speak out about the OS. Linux is a free operating system that anyone can download and use.

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Linux the Clear Winner in Google OS News

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Most of you have seen the news today from Google formally announcing their Chrome Operating System for netbooks using Intel x86 and ARM chips. The is painted as a classic “clash of the titans” between Google and Microsoft, with Google finally directly assaulting Microsoft’s top cash business. (They have already opened the war against Microsoft’s other cash cow, Office, with Google Docs.) While this is a great story, I prefer to frame at as David vs Goliath with the little OS that could, Linux, as the foundation of this announcement, as well as the other operating systems challenging Windows.

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Why Google Chrome OS matters already, on Day 1

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

The most important single fact you need to keep in mind is that everyone who uses a computer already knows Google, and most of them trust it. Only PC power users know about Linux and are numbered in millions compared to the hundreds of millions who know Windows.

Here’s how it will work in Chrome OS. When you launch an application on the Web, say Google Docs, Chrome will use Google Gears to not only provide the ability to do work offline, but also to cache your online data in the open-source lightweight DBMS Sqlite. As a user, you’ll never see any of this. You’ll just find yourself doing most of your work in the Chrome browser interface.

Once Google has this working really well, you may not even be able to tell when you’re on the net and when you’re not. I’m told off the record by Google engineers that the goal is to make the desktop invisible. You’ll be spending 99% of your time in the browser.

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Why Ubuntu has become the flag bearer for Linux

Monday, July 6th, 2009

It’s easy to argue that Ubuntu’s success is because there’s an unlimited supply of investment from its super-rich parent company, Canonical. But Linux isn’t like any ordinary software stack.

People aren’t forced to use it, and we can all choose something else at no extra cost. Ubuntu has to be doing something right. Ubuntu’s biggest, and earliest, success has been in marketing itself. It’s become a recognisable brand, not only in the Linux community, but in the wider non-technical world.

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Winning war won’t secure peace for open source

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Over the past few months I have experienced the eerie sensation that no one is fighting us any more. Not only are audiences polite, enthusiastic and well informed at conferences, they are almost all using free software already.

What happened to the critics? Even the neo-proprietarists, Microsoft and–most surprising of all–the government go out of their way to pay lip service to open source software these days.

And therein lies the problem. What Gandhi failed to mention is that it is not inevitable that you win as soon as they stop fighting you. Put another way, advocacy needs to evolve once the argument is won.

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London Stock Exchange to abandon failed Windows platform

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

TradElect runs on HP ProLiant servers running, in turn, Windows Server 2003. The TradElect software itself is a custom blend of C# and .NET programs, which was created by Microsoft and Accenture, the global consulting firm. On the back-end, it relied on Microsoft SQL Server 2000. Its goal was to maintain sub-ten millisecond response times, real-time system speeds, for stock trades.

It never, ever came close to achieving these performance goals. Worse still, the LSE’s competition, such as its main rival Chi-X with its MarketPrizm trading platform software, was able to deliver that level of performance and in general it was running rings about TradElect. Three guesses what MarketPrizm runs on and the first two don’t count. The answer is Linux.

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