10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows

By Jack Wallen, Special to ZDNet Asia
Thursday, May 07, 2009 09:57 AM

perspective Despite the positive buzz generated by Windows 7, it is only a matter of time before Linux takes its rightful place at the top of the operating-system pile.

Microsoft's failings are finally catching up with it and will cause the once-unstoppable juggernaut to cede to Linux. A key event was September 14, 2000, when Microsoft set a tiny snowball rolling with the release of the deeply flawed Windows Me. That snowball has been gaining momentum, despite some ups and downs along the way--XP was an up, for example.

In many respects, the public mood has already shifted against the operating system that was once considered the heart of personal computing. Here are 10 reasons why that shift has taken place:

1. Inconsistent Windows releases
One of the things you can always count on is that you cannot count on new Microsoft operating systems to be reliable.

Let's look at the individual releases:

  • Windows 95: Revolutionized personal computing
  • Windows 98: Attempted to improve on Windows 95, but failed miserably
  • Windows Me: A joke, plain and simple
  • Windows NT: Attempted to bring enterprise-level seriousness to the operating system. Would have succeeded had it not taken Stephen Hawking-like intelligence to get it working
  • Windows XP: Brought life back to the failing Windows operating system; not since Windows 95 had the operating system seemed this simple.
  • Windows Vista: See Windows Me

With this in mind, what do we expect from Windows 7, which is now in the Release Candidate stage? Not much, in my view.

2. Consistent Linux releases
Contrasting with those problems with Windows versions, the various Linux distributions have been far more consistent. Of course, there have been a few dips along the way--Fedora 9 was one of them. But for the most part, the climb for Linux has been steadily upward.

Nearly every Linux distribution has improved with age. And this improvement is not limited to the kernel. Look at how desktops, end-user software, servers, security and admin tools have all improved over time. Once could easily argue that KDE 4 is an example of a sharp decrease in improvement. However, if you look at how quickly KDE 4 has improved from 4.0 to 4.3 you can see nothing but gains. This observation holds true for applications and systems across the board with Linux.

3. Continuing Windows price hikes
Recently, I have had a number of long-time Microsoft administrators asking my advice on solid replacements for Exchange. The reason? Microsoft changed its licensing for Exchange.

Now anyone who logs on to an Exchange server must have a license. You have 100 employees, including administrators, who need to log on to Exchange? Pay up. This charging really starts to mount up when your company has 500-plus Exchange licenses.

The very idea of making such a significant change to licenses is particularly ridiculous given the state of the economy. Companies worldwide are having to scale back. And like ExxonMobil celebrating record profits amid the catastrophe known as Hurricane Katrina, Microsoft creating such a cost barrier while the globe is facing serious recession is reprehensible.

4. Consistent Linux costs
Again, in contrast to the previous point, the cost of open source software licenses has remained the same--zero. When those administrators come to me asking for open source replacements for Exchange, I point them to EGroupware and Open-Xchange. Both are outstanding groupware tools that offer an even larger feature set than their Microsoft equivalent. Both applications are reliable, scalable, secure and free.

The only outlay you will have with either application is for the hardware to install them on. And with both packages, there is no limit to the number of users.

5. Windows hardware incompatibility
Microsoft Vista was a nightmare for hardware compatibility. Not only was Vista incompatible with numerous peripherals, it took supercomputer-level iron to run the operating system.

Clearly, this was a boon to Intel, which stood to make a pretty penny from the operating system. Intel knew some of the public would be shelling out for new hardware, and the new hardware would cost more because it had to be faster to run Vista in all its Aero glory. But even hardware that would run nearly any other operating system very quickly was brought to a slow, grinding halt with Vista.

6. Linux hardware compatibility
Again, in contrast with Windows, Linux continues to advance in hardware compatibility. Take X.Org, for example. Recent developments with this star Linux graphical desktop allow the X Windows server to run without the xorg.conf file used for configuration.

This measure was taken primarily because the system had grown so good at detecting hardware. So long as there was no cheap KVM (keyboard, video, mouse) unit between your monitor and your PC, X.Org would easily find the mode for your display and run X properly. With new distributions, such as Fedora 10, X configuration is becoming a thing of the past.

7. Windows promises
We have all heard the pundits proclaiming Windows 7 will lead to a resurgence of the Microsoft operating system. But I recall that this same prediction was made for nearly every release from Microsoft.

Windows Vista was going to revolutionize the way the user interfaced with the computer. Vista was going to be the operating system you would never notice. Instead, Vista refused to take a back seat. And Windows Me was going to take Windows 98 and make it far simpler for the average user. What did it really do? Remove nearly every functioning system in the operating system, leaving little more than a browser and an e-mail client.

The public has finally reached such a level of apathy with Microsoft that most people are probably unaware of an impending launch. The media can continue to push Windows 7, but many people will continue to use XP until Microsoft pries it from their cold, dead fingers. And of course no-one really knows when Windows 7 will land.

8. Linux transparency
The next release of any Linux distribution is never shrouded in mystery. Because of the nature of open source, the release candidates are always available to the public--not on a limited basis--and the timeline is always made available.

Any user can know exactly when a feature-freeze happens for a release of any distribution. And all Linux distributions work under the full-disclosure model. Because of this fact, there is little false advertising going on with Linux. And you will never hear of a distribution claiming that its next release will revolutionize computing.

If you go to the Fedora Project Wiki, you can view all the proposed and accepted features that will be included in the next release. You can also view the completed release schedule, where you will see that Fedora 11 has a final release of May 26, 2009. Such dates are fairly firm and almost always on target.

9. Feature comparison
Let's compare the feature lists of Windows 7 and Fedora 11.

  • Windows 7: OS X-like docking; multi-touch screen; mapping application similar to Google Earth; hypervisor virtualization; location-aware apps; user-access control improvements; sidebar removal
  • Fedora 11: Boot time of 20 seconds; Btrfs file system; better C++ support; Cups PolicyKit integration; DNS security; ext4 default file system; fingerprint reader integration; Ibus input method replaces Scim to overcome limitations; Gnome 2.26; KDE 4.2; Windows cross-compiler inclusion

Looking at those features, both lists look impressive. But the Fedora 11 features are added to an already outstanding operating system. Microsoft is proclaiming multi-touch to be the biggest improvement, but it does not improve the operating system, and it also requires new hardware.

10. Hardware requirements
Microsoft says Windows 7 will run on any hardware that would run Vista--and even on slightly less powerful hardware. Slightly less powerful? What exactly does that mean? Well, Windows 7 will have no luck in the netbook market. And since XP is dying, the netbook market will be owned by Linux.

Netbooks are not gaining enough power to run anything from Windows but the watered-down version of XP. Netbooks are not going anywhere, and home and corporate consumers have limits to how many hardware upgrades they will make to fulfill an operating system's needs. As to Fedora 10, the minimum system requirements look like something from the mid-1990s.

Jack Wallen was a key player in the introduction of Linux to the original TechRepublic. Beginning with Red Hat 4.2 and a mighty soap box, Jack had found his escape from Windows. It was around Red Hat 6.0 that Jack landed in the hallowed halls of TechRepublic. This article was first published on TechRepublic.com, ZDNet Asia's sister site.


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Talkback 49 comments

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows - or will it?
A significant disincentive to a transfer to Linux by the general user is the the lack of some very useful applications. A glaring example is the following:
I want to make the transition from Windows to Ubuntu for my front-line machine which is used for a small business and many other purposes. While many applications can be duplicated or bettered within Ubuntu, the only available clipboard managers (such as Parcelite and Glipper) are very primitive.
For many years I have been using "M8 multi clipboard" and find this to be pretty well indispensible for many of my activities. I emailed the author, John Turnbull, but sadly he appears to have no intention of producing a version for Linux, of which he seems quite dismissive. It does not even seem to have Wine compatibility. I feel strongly that a comparable application is an urgent candidate for development by the Linux community.
Posted by Peter Kinnon on Thursday, May 07 2009 05:24 PM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows - or will it?
Clipboard managers: try klipper. It's (technically) part of kubuntu as it's a KDE app but should work fine with gnome. I prefer it over anything available for gnome.
Posted by Rizwan Rafique on Friday, May 08 2009 04:51 PM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows - or will it?
I think that comment is a great example of how far Linux has come. I don't doubt how important the multi clipboard is for this person, but I don't think that it would be a show stopper for many others. The point is, that people are no longer saying that Linux doesn't have a good mail client, or browser, or word processor etc.
Posted by Full name: on Friday, May 08 2009 04:54 PM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows - or will it?
I have tried and tried to use Linux - no luck yet. Why? Because essential applications have either not yet been adapted to native operation in Linux or because there is no "equivalent" application that is actually equivalent. Yes, I know I could use Wine to get pure Windows apps to run but hey, what's the point of that? I still need a legal copy of Windows so I end up with a more complex system than if I had just stayed with Windows. That doesn't feel like a victory to me.

For example - just last week I was working with a colleague on a document that I had created using a standard Word feature that has been around almost forever - sections. But when my colleague opened and re-saved the document in OpenOffice Writer it removed all the "sections" formatting which forced me to reformat the document. Yes, he did it all with free software but the time we lost due to this incompatibility was not free at all. OpenOffice Writer also continues to have problems, though smaller these days, displaying graphics to match their display in Word.

Also as regards OpenOffice - most PowerPoint animations do not survive the transition to Impress - a compatibility problem large enough to drive yet another nail into the OpenOffice coffin.

And while I recognize that GIMP is an amazingly powerful tool, can a Photoshop user maximize productivity on it? No way, too many differences between them force a re-learning curve that simply isn't justified.

Plus, consider how well Adobe integrates Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and Dreamweaver using Adobe Bridge - there is nothing even close in the Linux world.

I have no disagreement with Peter Kinnon's comments about missing utilities such as clipboard managers but the absence of truly compatible mass use applications such as Microsoft Office and Adobe's Creative Suite are an even more powerful argument that Linux is a complete non-starter for enterprise implementation. These apps dominate the desktop world, for Linux to achieve significant penetration it absolutely must have truly equivalent offerings or the originals must be ported to Linux.

One last thought - the fact that Linux is free is really not very important at the desktop level. Yes, I know I could be burned at the stake for such talk but it is true. Think about it and be realistic - virtually all PCs come with an OS installed and the manufacturer's cost for that OS is quite small relative to the entire PC.

Plus, despite the high cost of a Windows upgrade, the average home user just doesn't care which OS is running as long as his apps run. That's why we still see machines with Windows ME, Windows 98, and un-updated copies of Windows XP. They only care when some app they want to run balks - then they might upgrade.

In the enterprise desktop arena cost matters but compatibility and productivity matter even more. And, as cited above, too many of the essential business apps still do not have a truly compatible equivalent on Linux.

One man's opinion.
Posted by Jay Stevans on Saturday, May 09 2009 12:44 AM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows - or will it?
"For example - just last week I was working with a colleague on a document that I had created using a standard Word feature that has been around almost forever - sections."

Word documents are not standard.

"Also as regards OpenOffice - most PowerPoint animations do not survive the transition to Impress - a compatibility problem large enough to drive yet another nail into the OpenOffice coffin."

PowerPoint animations are not standard.
Posted by anonymous on Monday, May 11 2009 11:39 PM

RE: RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows - or will it?
In my experience a lot of Word and Powerpoint functions don't transition from one version of MS Office to another version of MS Office, even on the same platform, ie Windows. What is one supposed to do, stick with MS Office XP forever? Usually the functionality involved contributes nothing anyway.
Posted by anonymous on Wednesday, May 13 2009 03:11 AM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows - or will it?
"legal copy of Windows" ? Why? I thought wine was for running standalone windows applications, not the operating system.
Posted by Thia Zol on Tuesday, May 12 2009 03:35 AM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows - or will it?
2 reasons why the transition will not take place. --- FUD and Inertia
FUD, is Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt. Management is afraid to introduce something new. Uncertainty, unless there can be a phased conversion in a department, say 5 percent every week, it won't happen. Doubt means that the management has listened to Microsoft salesmen, who preach that they cannot live without MS.

Inertia -- We have been doing it this way since 1999, and we know it well, why change. If we amortize the costs of software out over 5 years, it is less then 1 dollar per week per employee, and we have MS support (whatever that is).
Posted by Leslie Satenstein on Sunday, May 10 2009 02:11 AM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Most computer users area *really* application users. Folks don't need a Turing complete universal machine to do what they need to do. Apple is building that, I'm no fan of their hardware, but for the masses who want it to "just work" will turn to Apple product and eventually realize they don't need a computer at all.
Netbooks (still computers I know) smart-phones and media-devices will satisfy most of the applications. Then MS will have to survive on professional work that can't practically be reduced to a appliance. Considering what have now it will be slim pickings.
Posted by anonymous on Thursday, May 07 2009 10:15 PM

Linux oust Windows? REALLY???
Linux may be low-maintenance, it may run on just about anything. It may have some excellent features for an excellent price. It may be wonderfully stable and delighfully fast. The problem? Ask any average-Joe consumer anything about Linux and you will probably hear something like, "What's Linux?" Linux doesn't have the brand awareness that it needs to overthrow a juggernaught like the Windows brand. Not to mention, most of Vista's problems have all but disappeared. Drivers have been rewritten for compatibility, harware has been seriously beefed up, and Windows is compatible with just about everything--Linux isn't. Microsoft surely will release something for the netbook market (the only market linux is even seen in) before the complete phase-out of XP. I have Windows 7 RC installed on my laptop as I type right now--no driver isssues, no performance issues, nothing. And lets not forget--Linux may run on a system with specs straight from the mid-90s, but it also looks like something straight from the mid-90s. Just take a trip to your local Best Buy and you'll see that people like their electronics to be "pretty," and if Windows 7 has one thing, it is a gorgeous interface. Linux? Not so much.
Posted by Josh on Thursday, May 07 2009 11:19 PM

RE: Linux oust Windows? REALLY???
Linux from the 90's? Wake up!
Se Xorg with Compiz
www.youtube.com...
Posted by Rickard on Friday, May 08 2009 03:12 PM

RE: Linux oust Windows? REALLY???
Windows is compatible with just about everything? Just another pawn brainwashed into paying for something that is specifically designed to only work with windows. Wake up dude - see Ubuntu 9.04 -
Posted by Matthew on Friday, May 08 2009 06:35 PM

RE: Linux oust Windows? REALLY???
Yes, it is happenning, maybe not as fast as one might hope - if one really cares about things like computer infections and all the other nasties. There are indeed a lot of uneducated users out there, who will be slow to change. There probably always will be. But the trend is clear, and the core of satisfied users is growing steadily. As to your point about the 'Gorgeous interface', Josh, I have to disagree, respectfully. Young friends with seriously enhanced Vista and W7 installations have been in awe of the desktop on my old Celeron laptop with Intel integrated graphics. All it takes is Compiz-Fusion and some time - or Evolution, or KDE4 depends on your taste.... Maybe Windows 8 will have these abilities but the MS dinosaur is moving more slowly now, and it never did move that fast.
Posted by BEN M on Monday, May 11 2009 04:40 PM

RE: Linux oust Windows? REALLY???
Josh, u clearly havent given Linux enough of a test drive. From KDE4 to Gnome 2.2x to Enlightenment to Fluxbox and others Linux has a wide choice of looks and feels in the form of window managers/desktop GUIs. Your choice with Windows ? Actually its one thing only : explorer, the same thing you had a choice of in the Nineties...95 actually. Each one of the above-mentioned user interfaces come packed with good looking icons, toolbars and panels as well as each being easily skinnable and themed, and whats more all that eye candy still runs on the not-so-super hardware. So get yr facts together before you critisize. And ALL the Linux options are faster to respond, dont throw error messages and pointless bubble comments at you all the time, or crash whenever they feel like and take your documents with them. In fact KDE apps are asked "to save their documents" before shutting after a crash, so even the apps crash with a dignity and grace foreign to Windows....
Posted by Wayne Twine on Monday, May 11 2009 05:25 PM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
This article is wishful thinking, unfortunately. You underestimate Microsoft's hold on the market. It will take far more than releasing a crappy product to give Linux entrance to the market.

There are some major areas where Linux is lacking:
- In store sales. You can only buy Windows/Mac. Period. No matter how crap Windows is, people don't have the option to buy a Linux system, so if they can't, they won't. Windows wins.
- Commercial Application support: Again, a customer goes to the store. They can only buy Windows/Mac software products. Tax software, video editing, games, etc. Why would they buy a Linux system, if it's even more incompatible than a Mac?

The average user is stuck in the monopoly. Microsoft could release worse and worse versions of Windows forever and still destroy Linux in terms of marketshare.
Posted by Dave K on Thursday, May 07 2009 11:36 PM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
you are very very wrong about that point, you don't unserstand the global market, goto china and india hp websites or dells website, you will be surpise they only sell linux, so the crap you state windows will destory the Linux Marketshare is not vaild in the two largest population in the world, You are simply blind from the US market, the china is mass developing apond linux because they see furture in linux from freedom thus getting rid of pirating problems, YOUR COMMENTS IS NOT VAILD FOR TWO LARGEST POPULATION COUNTRY IN THE WORLD
Posted by pete on Friday, May 08 2009 08:30 AM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
My dear, I don't care neither about china or inidiania, but here in Europe (Germany) 100% of all computers sold in CompShops/MediaMarket/Comtech/... where ever, are WINDOWS and Mac ONLY! At our University of Würzburg (Bayern) - 90% Windows 10% Mac. I'm runing Arch for fun at home - great system, I love it.. but I need Adobe creative Suite (not only Photoshop), mind Mananger, endNote/Reference Manager, etc etc. And again, sorry, but nobody cares abour your two largest populations, keep yur populations to yourself, may be you need a little bit of birth control??? Or may be you invent your own operation sistem???
Posted by Randy Cassada on Saturday, May 09 2009 06:28 AM

RE: RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Nice idea! These indian (or indianian, as you wrote) crackpots should sit intheir indiania, and not mess around!
Posted by anonymous on Saturday, May 09 2009 06:36 AM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
It's not a wishful thinking it's really only a matter of of time, you watch and see, microsoft over the year will have no foothole in china and india, thus reducing huge amount of profit for Mircrosoft, over time Linux in China and india will surpass Windows in Many ways because they are willing to develop on Linux, i see great potential in Linux, Good luck Microsoft with the US market when Linux becomes really really powerful OS since so many is deveopling on it, good luck Microsoft on trying to win against Linux
Posted by pete on Friday, May 08 2009 08:44 AM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Uh, did I just read that people in China dont use Windows? I have to disagree. I have done two reports on how the majority of users in China use windows for their personal computers. Granted that around 80% of the software is pirated. As far as Linux beating Microsoft out of the water, I have to disagree. Like earlier comments posted, Microsoft owns a large percentage of the market share today. Almost every major company in the US uses Microsoft. Some companies user Linux, yes, but it is for storage and nothing more. Because there is no Linux image being put out to the general public there will be no general sales. Take guitar hero the game for example. There were numerous music games released years before, even some with guitars as controllers, and they never took hold. Its all about marketing to the consumers. Plus you have to consider that most people in the general population are not IT geeks like us. They dont go out and work on computers every day and do not know every detail. Anyone who has taken a college level marketing class would realize this. Linux might make a dent in Microsofts sales but it would take around 20 years for Linux to take over the majority of the market.
Posted by Ryan on Friday, May 08 2009 11:35 PM

RE: RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Well, here in Europe during the last 8 years I had 4 chineese PhD students inbiochemistry. One was great, one was OK, the last two - forget. All of them were running exclusively Windows, and none of them had any glimpse of Linux (not that I care - we are using APPILCATIONS, and NOT OS, STUPID!!!!!!)
Posted by Randy Cassada on Saturday, May 09 2009 06:42 AM

RE: RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
you are so blind, 20 years in china????? no need "Because there is no Linux image being put out to the general public there will be no general sales." you are very wrong, why they can simply sell of Linux and the user install Pirated copy of windows themselves, company will make more profit selling of Linux than selling of a real copy of windows, you and walk around china computer stores, for you are just as blind as the rest of people who love Microsoft
Posted by pete he on Saturday, May 09 2009 08:21 AM

RE: RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Mr Ryan you don't have a dam idea that china does want to get rid of pirating problems, do you have any idea your comment does not support in any way that will support the china government to overcome this problem. by developing on Linux will suppress this issues and get out US control, do you not see Microsoft USA owned???? do you not see that China want to pull as far apart from America in many ways. this is not only OS war it's involves political and government issues, do you see that china needs to move on??????? Linux does not need to make a huge public display to move forward, the government is already pushing it forward.

Do you see TCP/IP having a huge display to state they need it?????????????????? sorry but you don't see this fact as being a critical point of driving force, thus your point comes to invalid in the case of china Market, you have no idea what is china government behind to the scene to drive this out
Posted by pete he on Saturday, May 09 2009 08:54 AM

Hardware requirements
just this week i have tried to give a boost to a 10 year old compaq laptop, and while i must admit i havn't tried fedora, i doubt it would run well on a mid 90's machine, at least not doing what most people expect it to do.
it will however run much faster then xp if it's only for web surfing (that's what i wanted it for).
Posted by Alon Horn on Friday, May 08 2009 02:19 AM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
All a person has to do is use Linux one time and they will never go back to Windoze. Guaranteed!

RT
www.privacy-web.net.tc
Posted by Jo Jitty on Friday, May 08 2009 06:23 AM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
I have dual boot with Windows 7 and Linux, testing both. I'm still confused why some people say Linux is better. I'm giving an honest chance to Linux to win my love, but....... it's like dating your best friend, safe but boring.
Posted by Tommi Po on Friday, May 08 2009 08:05 AM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
it's like dating your best friend, safe but boring.
Why? which distro is it try PCLINUXOS 2009, Mandriva Spring, Opensuse 11.1 You will never fill safe but boring. All has better feature than Win 7
Posted by Chirag Shah on Friday, May 08 2009 11:23 PM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
I've tried Linux and have had a nightmarish time with it. Its compatibility (or lack thereof) with wireless connectors is absolutely atrocious. Until it improves its driver support, I'm not going back.
Posted by Marcus Bradley on Friday, May 08 2009 08:37 AM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Boy you don't like to read or something, wireless compatbility is zero problem, even with broadcom wireless adapter, their is a "patch" for every thing... just google it...
Posted by anonymous on Friday, May 08 2009 04:56 PM

RE: RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
why should I google? I am paying for opetration system to perform expected way! That's my money, that's why it ois on M$ and Apple!
Posted by Randy Cassada on Saturday, May 09 2009 06:55 AM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Wireless support has improved by leaps and bounds in the past three Ubuntu releases.
Posted by Peter on Friday, May 08 2009 09:40 PM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
You are either an astroturfer for M$ or you are relating experiences from 4-5 years ago. Download Ubunuto 9.04 and try that,... I bet you have no wireless problems... Unless they are related to your router and not your computer...
Posted by anonymous on Friday, May 08 2009 09:55 PM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Don't mean to sound like a windows fanboy at all, but I don't think you are really giving an honest comparison... Have you even tried the Windows 7 beta/RC?

Because, if you have, then you will know there are many other features that are significantly more important than the ones you have listed.

Jump lists for instance, now that I am using them, I don't really wish to think of not using them. And the ability to create "Libraries" makes organisation so much easier.

"but it does not improve the operating system, and it also requires new hardware." I cannot begin to think of how untrue this is... you clearly are going by the presumption that newer windows = higher hardware requirement. The fact is simple: Windows 7 has had MAJOR os improvements, so much in fact that it will run on pre-vista hardware... faster than xp... I don't know what planet your from... but to me.. thats an improvement...
Posted by Justin on Friday, May 08 2009 06:45 AM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Justin: I feel the same way. I've been playing around with Windows 7 for a few hours, and already I'm impressed by it. I've managed to get it working on an old laptop of mine, too, and have had nothing but incredible performance. It's great on resources, it's responsive, it's reliable.

I'm actually excited about this release. To say that there's a considerable amount of apathy for Windows 7 is grossly inaccurate.
Posted by Marcus Bradley on Friday, May 08 2009 08:39 AM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Is anyone else sick the hell to death of this "Linux will" - "windows will" debate? People arguing with each other. One from the underdog with seemingly little chance. The other from the top dog, destined to die? Who gives a right royal crap? Windows is what it is. The stupid of for the mass stupid market. If you don't like it. Don't use it. On the contrary, if you like Linux,use it. Put your time effort and energy into helping advance open source. Not bagging windows and MS. It's tired and frankly boring.
Posted by anonymous on Friday, May 08 2009 02:36 PM

Good ole' Jack
Oh wow. An article by Jack Wallen, a known Linux troll who is so hardcore he got a tattoo of "Tux" on his arm. No joke. What's this? He says that Linux is going to beat Windows? Gee, we haven't heard that before in the last 10 years. I'm sure he won't be biased either.

Who signs this idiot's paycheck?
Posted by Yonah on Friday, May 08 2009 03:54 PM

RE: Good ole' Jack
Straw man argument, huh?!?!? Attack the messenger not the message?!?!? By the way, I don't know of anyone with a Windoze tatoo... Wonder why that is... Tatoo needle got the blue screen of death while it was warming up???
Posted by anonymous on Friday, May 08 2009 10:04 PM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
i truly think Linux will oust Windows, but no one can tell the true future. but i tell you now Linux is on the wining edge and Microsoft must think a killer strategies to defeat Linux, at this point i don't see any way that Microsoft can do so, Linux is taking up a huge Market in china and India and many other Europe country's, US is behind the Blind, they don't see the whole scope of expansion of Linux. a company does not need a fancy graphic that does not increase Productivity, it does not matter how great Windows is been developed if it does not increase the overall productivity it will fail, Windows 7 does not come close to improve huge productivity.

On the Home Desktop end Windows will have trouble in pirating, Microsoft will have no chance to combat this problem, if if they did fully combat this problem, i can assure you Microsoft will face a huge problem and find that people is moving away from Windows faster than ever before. Will Microsoft make their product free???? NEVER 1 year maybe, but what does it truly solve????? nothing, Microsoft can not stop Pirating, Pirating is Microsoft best friend to increase population using Windows, but now it's worse enemies.
Microsoft will face huge decrease in profit throughout these few years.

Microsoft will face china and India Linux Market Increase as research has shown a 22% increase in Linux in China in one year, that's huge, giving Linux another few years, Microsoft will be facing the ground in despair, don't be fool by the US market stating Microsoft is fine, i can tell you now, Microsoft is in despair and don't know what to do.

i don't care how much money does Microsoft have. if Microsoft don't come up a Overwhelming Strategies they will fail.

Linux is expanding in rapid rate in many country's and people are willing to develop on Linux, China see to need to move to Linux and doing so in very fast rate, they also training, setting up training ground in a very fast rate and developing Linux in very fast rate.

Good luck Microsoft, you got a heck of a fight a head of you, i don't think you will win, if you don't think of a overwhelming strategies
Posted by pete He on Friday, May 08 2009 07:02 PM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Ok but who do you think decides in a company what to buy? The managers and owners. And do you really think that all the managers of companies are geeks who have a ton of linux comps at home and play around with open source software? No. Like I stated earlier, people will only buy what they can see. And in this current market there is no Linux for the general consumer.
Posted by Ryan on Friday, May 08 2009 11:49 PM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
There is another side to "people will only buy what they can see" and that's people won't buy what's hurting/killing their business.
Posted by Richard Chapman on Friday, May 08 2009 11:59 PM

RE: RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
as i have said US market will still be going strong in Windows Market, but not china and Linux, yes Linux is sold to general users In china, they are sell heaps of it, goto china visit the computers stores and large sellers most of them will be selling Linux, why?????????????
because it's free, because it's free they don't have to care about braking the pirating laws.
When they sell of Linux 99% of people in china used pirated copies of windows, thus the user can just install windows themselves if they don't like Linux, thus meaning Microsoft got nothing in the General Consumer. Linux will get stronger and stronger by the day in China and India and other third countrys
Posted by pete he on Saturday, May 09 2009 07:35 AM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
point: gpl and other self-preserving licenses will discourage development
point: you can't make use of that which you are not aware
point: I already bought $500 in windows software, and have a functional windows box, why fix what ain't broke?
point: linux geeks are way too hardcore to be taken seriously (a tux tattoo? really? why?)
point: linux is unfriendly (read learning curve/re-learning curve/un-learning curve, the user know windows, mold to what he knows, don't make him mold to what you think should be)
point: wireless + linux = nogo. don't tell me patch, I don't want a patch, I want to plug it in and surf; I damn sure don't want ndiswrapper
point: there's already a main-stream *nix (read mac OS X)
point: windows admin cost < linux admin cost
point: openoffice < ms office, gimp < adobe cs, etc. greater features != greater software. happier users == better software.

now, discuss :)
Posted by Chris on Saturday, May 09 2009 02:20 AM

RE: 10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
point: Windows EULA and other self-preserving licenses will discourage development point: you can't make use of that which you are not aware point: I already bought $500 in Linux software, and have a functional Linux box, why fix what ain't broke? point: Windows geeks are way too hardcore to be taken seriously (a Bill tattoo? really? why?) point: Windows is unfriendly (read learning curve/re-learning curve/un-learning curve, the user know Linux, mold to what he knows, don't make him mold to what you think should be) point: wireless + Windows = nogo. don't tell me patch, I don't want a patch, I want to plug it in and surf; I damn sure don't want to hunt point: there's already a main-stream Win* (read XP) point: Linux admin cost < Windows admin cost point: MS Office < OpenOffice, gimp > adobe cs, etc. greater features = greater software. happier users == better software. now, discuss :) I couldn't have said it better yourself!
Posted by Richard Chapman on Saturday, May 09 2009 11:07 AM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
I have had every MS operating system published up to XP. I have also spent so much time fixing them I would probably be a rich man had I spent that time working at what I do for a living instead of learning to build and repair computers. I have reinstalled 98SE so many times I memorized the reg number (on both copies) Three or four months ago I assembled a tower out of spare parts left over from upgrades. Took it to a local shop and had Ubuntu installed on it. There is a learning curb but not bad at all. This week I built a new machine for my home office, downloaded the new Ubuntu and installed it. So much easier than a windows install I was amazed. Not one driver update was needed, not a single outside disk was used and everything on the machine works perfectly and required only one restart. Also note it took around 30 minutes to install and be surfing the web, fully functional . In my home and in my business the penguin has already won hands down. In my 3 - 4 months with Linux I have only had 1 crash as compared to 1 or 2 a day with microsoft, and thats on a good day. Bye bye Bill and feel fortunate I´m not suing you for lost productivity. I may still see a lawyer about that.
Posted by MS Free Bob on Saturday, May 09 2009 06:23 AM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
While I will admit that the list of features in Fedora 11 look good. There is something else to keep in mind. Before Windows 7 hits the market, Fedora 12 will be out. Then while Microsoft goes to sleep for the next 3 years preparing for "Windows 8". Fedora 13, 14, 15, 16, etc, etc, will be out and surpassing Windows 7 and perhaps even Windows 8.

Right now Microsoft's development model is killing them.
Posted by FredW on Sunday, May 10 2009 04:35 AM

5 reasons why Linux won't oust Windows
1. Support tax (hidden support costs)
2. Fragmentation
3. Fanatical element among users
4. Patent issues
5. Copyright issues
Posted by Anonymous Insider on Sunday, May 10 2009 11:21 AM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
I am just starting to look at switching to Linux. What I am most concerned about is the need to get to technically involved just to get started. I simply do not have the time or desire to traverse a steep learning curve.

Looking at Fraeture Comparisons, Point #9 really put me off. The description of Windows 7 is in English; wheras the description of Fedora 11 is in some computereze that is totally incomprehensible to me at this time.

If I need to understand what you wrote about the (positive) features of Feroda 11 as a prerequisite to getting started with Linux, I'll stay with Windows XP.
Posted by Tom Fama on Tuesday, May 12 2009 08:08 PM

10 reasons why Linux will oust Windows
Yeah, Windows is a epic fail, ever. To 2006, i was forced to use windows, every time i formated my computer, someone put XP back, horrible. I'm still a student, i had horrible eXPeriences with windows XP, and vista, then se7en RC2, all failed. I never saw a difference between NT3.X and NT6.X, is the same thing, microsoft don't changed a thing on the kernell, and Linux, we have more drivers, less bugs, more speed peer Kernel actualization. I'm worried, why at school, the tech want to install vista and Celeron D on each computer "glup"...
Posted by anonymous on Saturday, August 08 2009 10:05 AM

My Sister loves GNU/Linux(Mint 7 actually)
My sister recently bought a new PC with Canon Mp140 scanner-printer-copier. And everything works out of the box..Awesome..I also loaded (dual boot)an illegal copy of Windows XP SP2..fearing the printer/scanner issues...but she is yet to boot into Windows..and havent yet felt the need..!!The codecs
are a big issue to beginners and they dont get it why mp3 or their fav video files wont play out of the box..so ppl take it believe that GNU/Linux "can't play mp3" rather than "won't play mp3/proprietory format"
Posted by Jayadev on Monday, October 19 2009 09:08 AM

A look at the Terminal Services Manager in Windows Server 2008

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Terminal Services Manager has been around for a while, but Microsoft made some changes to the utility in Windows Server 2008. Here's what you'll find.


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This is with great pleasure that this "little corner of the Web" is resuming activities through another member of the (now famous ;-)) Beijing Linux User Group (BLUG) doing the..... by Fred Muller

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