I like his comment:

"Now comes the one sentence I told you about, explaining why Linux is nowhere to be 
found on your average end-user non-geek desktop: The worldwide established standard 
data format for exchanging word processing documents is Microsoft Word files, and no 
Linux distribution I know of comes with an open source program that can handle them."

What a load of garbage, so lets imagine a world with MS Word support in linux, the 
majority of computer users (i.e. the non-technical non-geek types) who can't deal with 
installing windows let alone installing linux will flock in droves.... I don't think 
so.

jeremyb.
 
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: 2002/05/02 Thu PM 12:12:53 GMT+12:00
> To: CLUG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Why Linux isn't on the desktop yet
> 
> Great Article...and so true....  Who owns your data??  You or the vendor 
> of your proprietary data format??
> 
> http://www.linuxandmain.com/tech/robformats.html
> 
> 
>   Why Linux isn't on the desktop yet
> 
> 
>         By Rob Landley <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> The answer to the title of this article is a single sentence, but you'll 
> have to read the whole article to understand it. The Linux community has 
> an amazing blind spot, and I'd like to rant about it a bit.
> 
> I keep bumping into programmers who think some program or other is 
> needed to change the world. They're wrong. "Linux just needs this one 
> program and then we'll be ready!" they cry. I generally want to slap 
> these people until they snap out of it (which is kind of hard to do 
> through an internet connection). They are making a fundamentally wrong 
> assumption. It's not about programs. It's about data.
> 
> Let me repeat that. Data formats are important. Programs are not.
> 
> Remainder of article at above link.
> 
> 
> 
Great Article...and so true....  Who owns your data??  You or the vendor of your proprietary data format??

http://www.linuxandmain.com/tech/robformats.html

Why Linux isn't on the desktop yet

By Rob Landley

The answer to the title of this article is a single sentence, but you'll have to read the whole article to understand it. The Linux community has an amazing blind spot, and I'd like to rant about it a bit.

I keep bumping into programmers who think some program or other is needed to change the world. They're wrong. "Linux just needs this one program and then we'll be ready!" they cry. I generally want to slap these people until they snap out of it (which is kind of hard to do through an internet connection). They are making a fundamentally wrong assumption. It's not about programs. It's about data.

Let me repeat that. Data formats are important. Programs are not.

Remainder of article at above link.

Reply via email to