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Software | Windows 10 Pro 22H2 |
So, this should have been a response in a different thread, but these thoughts came to me a ways after reading it, and I can't find said thread now. One participant was quite adamant that the broader adoption of Linux was contingent on unification of distributions; if not universally, then at least of the leading few. The argument is that Windows and OS X can build momentum because the UI and UX are very consistent across versions and releases, while there are dozens of well-developed Linux distributions and nearly as many desktop environments, and it's too confusing for Joe Public.
There's merit to that argument, but it's not as strong as it seems on the surface, IMO. One of Linux's great strengths is in modularity. You can build the surface in almost any way you like but the bones are broadly the same. Jumping to Mint is pretty easy even if you learned on Kubuntu, and that's true of nearly all the well-developed distros. (I started on Red Hat in '99 or so, and wended my way through several others before landing on Gentoo. Then I decided that games were more important than Linux, and have been living in Winland for the last decade and a half.)
Unifying desktop Linux would also destroy one of Linux's other great strengths: Flexibility. If you don't like how the Windows UI works, it's either time to download a bunch of unofficial and possibly dodgy hacks, or live with the continually decreasing customization Microsoft sees fit to grant us. If there's not a Linux-compatible desktop environment that suits you, you must want something really niche.
Another comment made was how Linux advocates have been predicting that Linux will overtake Windows on desktop within 10 years for the past 30 years. Now, I don't recall whether I ever said or believed that, but there was a point in time where I sure wanted that to happen. But a funny thing happened in the past two decades: Consumer Windows got good. XP changed everything. When first experiencing Linux, I kept thinking to myself, "Now this is how an OS should behave." Nigh-eternal stability. A truly useful command line. Genuinely attractive desktop environments. Robust automated software management*. Microsoft solved stability and command line with XP (well, with NT 4.0 and 2K, but those weren't rolled out to consumers). Attractiveness is harder to judge, but Vista looked reasonably nice, IMO. And by W7, auto update had been vastly improved, and was nigh-solved with 10. I can probably count the number of W10 drivers I've needed to manually install on my fingers without running short of digits.
Desktop Linux can seem as to not present as compelling a case as it used to, despite improving drastically, because it's biggest competitor has improved to an arguably even greater degree. What it does retain is openness, flexibility, and freedom from built-in advertising and whatever other incitements MS includes toward its SaaS products. I've been content on W10. Modern Windows is genuinely a stunning technological achievement. With the ever-declining user/consumer-friendliness of Windows, though, Linux and I will be having a serious conversation when W10 reaches end-of-support.
There's merit to that argument, but it's not as strong as it seems on the surface, IMO. One of Linux's great strengths is in modularity. You can build the surface in almost any way you like but the bones are broadly the same. Jumping to Mint is pretty easy even if you learned on Kubuntu, and that's true of nearly all the well-developed distros. (I started on Red Hat in '99 or so, and wended my way through several others before landing on Gentoo. Then I decided that games were more important than Linux, and have been living in Winland for the last decade and a half.)
Unifying desktop Linux would also destroy one of Linux's other great strengths: Flexibility. If you don't like how the Windows UI works, it's either time to download a bunch of unofficial and possibly dodgy hacks, or live with the continually decreasing customization Microsoft sees fit to grant us. If there's not a Linux-compatible desktop environment that suits you, you must want something really niche.
Another comment made was how Linux advocates have been predicting that Linux will overtake Windows on desktop within 10 years for the past 30 years. Now, I don't recall whether I ever said or believed that, but there was a point in time where I sure wanted that to happen. But a funny thing happened in the past two decades: Consumer Windows got good. XP changed everything. When first experiencing Linux, I kept thinking to myself, "Now this is how an OS should behave." Nigh-eternal stability. A truly useful command line. Genuinely attractive desktop environments. Robust automated software management*. Microsoft solved stability and command line with XP (well, with NT 4.0 and 2K, but those weren't rolled out to consumers). Attractiveness is harder to judge, but Vista looked reasonably nice, IMO. And by W7, auto update had been vastly improved, and was nigh-solved with 10. I can probably count the number of W10 drivers I've needed to manually install on my fingers without running short of digits.
Desktop Linux can seem as to not present as compelling a case as it used to, despite improving drastically, because it's biggest competitor has improved to an arguably even greater degree. What it does retain is openness, flexibility, and freedom from built-in advertising and whatever other incitements MS includes toward its SaaS products. I've been content on W10. Modern Windows is genuinely a stunning technological achievement. With the ever-declining user/consumer-friendliness of Windows, though, Linux and I will be having a serious conversation when W10 reaches end-of-support.