Thomas Ryan Gordon Sr wrote:
who do you know in Hawaii that would buy this (a $10,000+ Linux desktop)?
So, do you think people paid close to $500 a month for Outrigger or Pacific Club membership just for the food, which may not be that great anyway?
But seriously, how many times have we given out a Linux computer to a friend or relative, who, after only a few days (if we are lucky), sneaked behind our backs and asked another "computer expert" to delete the Linux partitions that we have so earnestly put together, and then install Windows on "our" PCs?
What I was saying is, perhaps there is the other end of the usership spectrum that we should explore. I know there is such a market here on the island. But before you are able to reach that market, as I mentioned in my original post (but was conveniently ignored), you need to be very good at Linux desktops. At the very minimum, you must be well versed in GRUB, OO.o/MYSQL/Python, various backup options, etc. You should also be good enough to put together your own customized Linux distro. Of course, no one is interested in this hard part.
Now about Sun's Linux. I don't know how many people know this, but until recently Sun has been holding their annual employee conferences in Waikiki, and, as a result, some of us have become quite well acquaited with several Sun execs. A couple of years ago, Scott (McNealy) was adamant that his employees begin switching to StarOffice (from Microsoft Office). Last year, Sun began company-wide migration to Linux desktops. I believe Sun's Linux was based on SuSE 9 (but w/o KDE).
IBM will also begin converting all of its 300,000 or so employees worldwide to Linux desktops. Does that mean that we may soon see an IBM Linux? Things are getting interesting. wayne
