Looks like bangladeshi journalists are also picking these up.

Cheers,
Imtiaz


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sayeed Rahman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Nov 2, 2007 6:55 PM
Subject: [BANGLA-IT] Why Linux Will Succeed On The Desktop
To: Sayeed Rahman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Why Linux Will Succeed On The Desktop

Former Linux Journal editor Nicholas Petreley argues that the open-source
operating system will break through big time on the client side, especially
if pre-installs increase and the KDE graphical environment is adopted.

By Nicholas Petreley,  InformationWeek
<http://www.informationweek.com/;jsessionid=E2HBUCEJM21CSQSNDLRCKHSCJUNN2JVN>
Nov. 1, 2007
URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=202600158


*[Editor's Note: This article offers a counterpoint and rebuttal to our
earlier article, 7 Reasons Why Linux Won't Succeed On The Desktop
<http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=201807072>
.]*

I believe Linux will become the de-facto standard desktop operating system.
Though it'll take a while for many users to break free from ties to Windows,
there is good reason to believe that this day will come.

Consider that the global community is already beginning to rally behind
standard document formats. In addition, as browsers like
Firefox<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/>gain more market share,
users are less tolerant of Internet Explorer-only
web sites. However, the transition is slow and will continue to be a slow
one. Most people will switch away from Windows only when dollars are on the
line.

*The Perfect Generic Client*

A desktop supports multiple methods of work habits. For example, you can
edit a document with a local word processor like Microsoft Word for Windows,
or you can use Google Docs <http://docs.google.com/>. You need Windows to
run Word, but any operating system with a good browser will handle Google
Docs well. Once you eliminate the problem of migrating to a new document
format, the question becomes, "Why am I paying through the nose for a buggy,
bloated, insecure and buggy Windows?" Put more simply, take away the force
of legacy inertia, and the cheapest, least-problematic desktop becomes the
most desirable.

In the long run, Linux makes the perfect generic client. It is the hub of
free software development, which makes it the focal point for generic, open
computing. As people continue to use Linux as the basis for cell phones,
DVRs (such as TiVo and Dish Network), routers, and other dedicated systems,
it is becoming ubiquitous on just about every platform but the PC. This only
makes it more likely to dominate the PC in the future.

The more Linux becomes the de-facto standard platform for software
development of any kind, the more appealing it becomes as the platform for
personal computing. Any overlap between appliances and PCs saves duplication
of effort. The vast repository of free software available for the asking
makes Linux even more appealing as the basis for development.

Many of the duties Linux must perform on a PC it already performs on
appliances like cell phones. We may never see the era of $100 network
computers, but network computing is advancing, nevertheless, as is evidenced
by the increasing reliance on web-based email and the appearance of network
applications like Google Docs. We owe thanks to AJAX and Java for the rich
client features now available through your PC and/or cell phone browser.

The more we depend on this type of computing, the more invisible operating
systems will become. Most people don't know or care what OS runs their cell
phone. We may always care more about what we run on our PC, but the
distinction between the two will gradually blur. As it does, Linux should be
the best choice, because it is already prevalent on so many devices. Linux
can't succeed as a generic network computing client, only. People will
continue to use their PC as a power workstation, even when it isn't
appropriate. It's the nature of computer users to do so. For this reason,
Linux needs a compelling desktop experience. It already has Compiz Fusion,
but even though 3-D on Linux doesn't require nearly the hardware resources
as Vista, many Linux users still refuse to install
Compiz<http://www.compiz.org/>or turn it off.

The desktop needs a more substantial advance in thinking. The new KDE,
KDE4<http://www.kde.org/announcements/announce-4.0-beta2.php>,
looks promising in this regard. The KDE developers seem intent upon bringing
something new to the desktop experience that isn't just eye-candy. KDE4, or
parts of it, will run on Windows and Mac
OS-X<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/>,
but it will be fully native on Linux, and should benefit Linux more than any
other platform.

KDE4, the proliferation of Linux on appliances, the trend toward generic
network computing, the fact that Linux is free (both as in freedom and as in
"free beer"), and other factors contribute to the inevitable success of
Linux on the desktop. But Linux still needs more. It needs windows of
opportunity to supplant the legacy systems, and it needs to overcome some
important obstacles.

*Linux's 'Window' Of Opportunity*

Both the successes and failures of Microsoft provide a substantial window of
opportunity for Linux to seize a significant desktop market share. It is
painful, especially at the enterprise level, to switch desktop operating
systems, so any legacy system like Windows will always have a huge
advantage. But Microsoft has made so many blunders in recent times that one
must credit Microsoft itself for encouraging users to seek an alternative
desktop operating system. Windows was already a notoriously insecure
operating system, but Microsoft has compounded the problem with the
expensive, buggy, incomplete, complex license-burdened, DRM-encumbered,
hardware-challenged, frequently updated without your permission Vista.

As noted earlier, people are most likely to switch to a new operating system
when dollars are on the line. Microsoft would be wise to continue supporting
the "good enough" Windows XP, since any move to force people to upgrade to
Vista could create the "dollars on the line" scenario. The risk of adjusting
to a new operating system becomes much more palatable when it saves you the
cost of upgrading to a desktop you know you won't like.

Perhaps the most significant Microsoft failure was its flubbed attempt to
use SCO as a proxy to create fear, uncertainty and doubt about Linux. Those
who backed SCO are now eating crow. This makes it far less likely for
high-profile analysts to make the same mistake, now that Microsoft is
attacking Linux directly by claiming Linux violates its software patents.

Microsoft began a catch-22 strategy when it released Windows 95. On the one
hand, it successfully leveraged its unique advantage in building 32-bit
Windows applications to eliminate virtually all competition in mainstream
desktop applications. The catch is that Microsoft has left itself without
friends. For example, if Lotus Smartsuite and WordPerfect Office were still
thriving competition for Microsoft Office, it would be all but impossible
for Linux to break into the desktop market. Companies would be content to
collect their Windows applications revenue. There would be no incentive to
support another desktop platform. Unfortunately for Microsoft, this isn't a
mistake it can undo easily. Microsoft can't afford to give away a
significant portion of its Office market share just to try to regain some
loyalty for the Windows platform. Now that the damage is done, companies are
more inclined to support platforms where the playing field is level, hence
this opportunity for Linux and other desktop operating systems.

But while Microsoft made it nearly impossible for competition to make money
on mainstream desktop applications for Windows, Linux does not necessarily
restore that opportunity. The best mainstream applications for Linux are
free, open-source applications. While many companies are beginning to
recognize the superiority of free software, most still haven't figure out
how to make money on it - at least, they realize they can't make money the
same way they did in the old market.

Another problem with these Microsoft-driven windows of opportunity is that
they simply make it easier for any alternative operating system to gain
desktop market share, not necessarily Linux. Mac OS-X, can reap the benefits
from these opportunities, and probably already has. Linux may have the edge
in the long-term, but in the short-term, it's going to take some additional
changes for Linux to exploit these opportunities. Linux will have to
overcome some significant obstacles.

*Obstacle: More Preloaded Linux Systems Are Needed*

It is the personal experience of many users of both Windows and Linux that
Linux is far easier to install than Windows when Linux recognizes the
hardware properly during installation. Obviously, Linux can be a bear to
install when it has trouble recognizing hardware, but then so can Windows.

One could argue that Linux installers are doing a better job of recognizing
hardware these days. It's irrelevant. The easiest installation is the one
you don't have to perform. This is the reason why so many people believe,
true or not, that Linux is harder to install than Windows. They have to
install Linux. They don't have to install Windows. They get Windows on their
PC when they buy it. Mac OS-X has the advantage here. Buy a Mac, and you've
got your desktop operating system installed for you.

The way past this obstacle is obvious. Get Linux pre-loaded on PCs and Linux
users won't have to deal with installation woes. Ubuntu and
Dell<http://www.dell.com/content/topics/segtopic.aspx/ubuntu?c=us&cs=19&l=en&s=dhs>partnered
up to pre-load Linux. That's a great start, but it's only a start.
Linux will need much broader support in pre-loads to be successful on the
desktop.

*Obstacle: KDE Must Replace GNOME As Linux's Preferred GUI*

GNOME <http://www.gnome.org/> is the default graphical desktop environment
for Red Hat Linux <http://www.redhat.com/>, Ubuntu <http://www.ubuntu.com/>,
SUSE <http://www.novell.com/linux/>, and others. GNOME may not be keeping
Linux off the desktop, but it is not selling desktop Linux, either. GNOME
can't seem to make up its mind if it's for novice users or hard-core
hackers. It would be different if GNOME, like KDE, attempted to serve both
types of users. Instead, the GNOME approach to being user-friendly is to
make it impossible (or all but impossible) to perform anything but the most
basic operations. If you really want to do something GNOME doesn't want you
to do, you have to get down and dirty and edit the GNOME registry or other
configuration files. GNOME developers reason that you can keep users out of
trouble and avoid confusing them if you eliminate all but the most simple
features. Even Linus Torvalds questioned the wisdom of this design strategy,
writing in a mailing-list email two years ago: "If you think your [GNOME]
users are idiots, only idiots will use
it<https://lists.linux-foundation.org/pipermail/desktop_architects/2005-December/000390.html>"


One could argue that GNOME gets it right because the most popular Linux
distributions use it by default. That might hold water if Linux desktop
market share was growing rapidly thanks to these distributions. The pitiful
desktop market share of Linux would argue otherwise. These distributions are
popular, but they're popular among those who are already familiar with
Linux, the segment to which GNOME is more likely to appeal. GNOME is
attractive to some seasoned Linux users because it one of the few complete
desktop environments that is more lightweight than KDE, which makes GNOME
more appropriate for use on servers. The limitations in GNOME are also
unobtrusive to someone who knows how to get around them; someone who is
unafraid of the GNOME registry or the command-line.

What must be done to remove this obstacle? Red Hat endorsed GNOME due to
licensing issues which arguably were resolved long ago. SUSE favors GNOME
because one of the early GNOME developers practically runs the company.
Heaven only knows why Ubuntu defaults to GNOME (though you can download and
install Kubuntu <http://www.kubuntu.org/>, which defaults to KDE). But if
these distributions want to contribute to the expansion of Linux on the
desktop, they need to adopt and promote KDE as the default desktop and/or
pressure the GNOME developers to abandon their brain-dead development
philosophy. This is especially true of Ubuntu, which leads the way in
getting Linux pre-installed on popular brands like Dell. Linux desktop
market share will probably grow regardless, but it will grow faster with the
more popular distributions backing a sane graphical desktop.

*Open Document Formats Will Drive Adoption*

Linux has a dual-legacy to unseat. Windows and Microsoft Office are
practically synonymous, and there is no Microsoft Office or fully compatible
suite for Linux. Either users must make the switch to open document formats,
or Linux applications must support perfect imports of Microsoft Office
files. The ideal solution would be to migrate to open formats, but the
market will decide.

This obstacle isn't nearly as insurmountable as it seems. One should recall
that WordPerfect once virtually owned the word processing market, yet people
still found a way to migrate to Microsoft Office. Microsoft will make any
transition from Microsoft Office a difficult one, but it is still possible.
The appeal of open document formats is undeniable. It has to make more sense
than the nearly one-way trip people took to Microsoft Office. A move to open
document formats is a move toward guaranteed compatibility in the future.

*The Bottom Line*

Despite the obstacles involved, there is good reason to be optimistic about
Linux on the desktop. This author has been using desktop Linux almost
exclusively since the mid-90s, although it required a lot more computer
savvy back then than it does now.

There is one additional factor that cannot be overstated. To anyone who
truly knows what free software means, they know that "free" as in liberty is
the greatest strength of Linux. However, one cannot deny the power of "free"
as in "free beer." Microsoft applied this power to make Internet Explorer
the most popular browser in the world. Netscape faded away because the
company was unable to compete against free as in beer. Firefox has only been
able to fight back because it, too, is free as in beer. Of the three top
competitors on the desktop, Windows, Mac OS-X, and Linux, only one of them
is free as in beer. That will go along way toward making it the de-facto
standard on the desktop.

=================
What's good for Bangladesh is good for BANGLA IT. Serving your need to know.

"Innovation distinguishes a leader from a follower" - Steve Jobs

Sayeed Rahman
Founder BANGLA IT
http://www.banglait.org
http://www.linkedin.com/in/sayeedrahman

 


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