I saw an article with this subject line some time ago. I'm not sure if Juan's post is a reposting of that article or his own opinion....

Juan Alberto Cirez wrote:
As a desktop (or even a netbook), on the other hand, GNU/Linux simply BLOWS...and SUCKS. It is incompatible with most (new) hardware (i.e, out-of-the-box, plug & play). For anyone without a good working knowledge of computer science, GNU/Linux present a myriad of problems; least of which is the lack of support for the applications and peripherals the average user is accustomed to using. To them, let's face it, GNU/Linux is just plain different.

First, try a different distro. Red Hat, Ubuntu, Suse, etc. all seem to have good hardware support out of the box in the past couple years. For newer hardware even. Basing an opinion that "linux sucks" on a single distribution (as seems to be implied in this paragraph) seems rather wrong to me, and somewhat narrow minded. Instead that opinion should be "Distro X sucks and blows in my experience"

Second. If I buy a brand new computer with the latest hardware, even Windows does not run with this until I find and download the needed drivers. So this is no different than any other OS. When the new version of Windows comes out, there is always a year or so where Windows drivers for existing hardware are updated and there always seems to be a few devices missing from that conversion. Again, no different than any other OS.

Application support is what it is. If you can't find a FOSS version of an application you need to use (AutoCad, Visio, etc.) then you didn't do your homework before installing Linux and probably should be using Windows. On the other hand, the mythical "average user" usually only needs basic word processing, and Internet type applications. In this case ANY OS is suitable. (which begs the question why install one that costs so much, and is notorious for viruses, bad security, and a constant expense of cash to keep up to date with the OS and apps - when you can get the functionality you need for no cost AND with better security)

Richard Shim, an analyst with IDC, a market research company stated: "...Many users found that the universe of applications compatible with Windows was much larger than those with [GNU/Linux].”. This statement (again, for the average user not familiar with apt-get; Slackware's swaret and the rest) is surprisingly true. If the idea behind the GNU/Linux Desktop was to capture the average user; then it has failed. Miserably. Take the Netbook Market for example: GNU/Linux’s market share on these devices has dramatically declined. In 2008, about 24.5 percent of netbooks shipped with an GNU/Linux operating system, estimates IDC. This year, it’s expected to plunge to 4.5 percent, and in 2010 only 3 percent of all netbooks will run a GNU/Linux-based OS.

I seem to recall that IDC is sometimes a Microsoft "shill". (THough I might be remembering the wrong publisher in this case). Regardless, using the example of the netbooks to make a case that Linux sucks is ironic. The popularity of the netbooks exploded with the first generation - which all ran Linux. Then MS woke up and got in the game and applied their various techniques they routinely apply to the desktop /laptop market. At that point the netbooks began running Windows more often than Linux - which has NOTHING to do with customer choice. You can't "choose" if you don't have any other option. (try finding a Linux netbook in Future Shop, BestBuy, etc. these days).

Quoting statistics of sales is also a very limited view. "80% of all statistics are made up" so the saying goes. The percentages shown are usually very selective in what is included. For instance Linux market share is often quoted in terms of sales. In reality, most people who run Linux don't buy it - they just download/install it. So by default the sales of Linux will ALWAYS be less than the sales of Windows/MacOS because you cannot just "download/install" these apps. So the statistics for market share are alway biased to the "traditional" OS's.


So, having rebutted the arguments presented (kinda/sorta), let me say this.

- Linux is NOT Windows
- If you don't like Linux don't use it.
- Who said Linux has to compete with anybody?
- Everyone is entitled to an opinion. (though I prefer the well thought out opinions based on fact and experience, rather than hand-me-down opinions gleaned by reading an article)

While people moan and complain that Linux doesn't meet their needs (without ever trying it, in a lot of cases), I'll continue to get my work done on Linux with less hassle and expense.

My thoughts.

Shawn

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