Linux Desktop Summit Re: [SGVLUG] Hello from San Diego
Dustin Laurence
dustin at laurences.net
Wed Apr 26 18:41:15 PDT 2006
On Wed, Apr 26, 2006 at 06:14:27PM -0700, John Riehl wrote:
> The EXPECTATION level of my users (yes, they are rocket scientists) is
> that it should work as well in linux as it does in windows. On windows,
> you install the os, you install the drivers, and it works as you would
> expect.
My friend, they are not *real* rocket scientists. Real rocket
scientists never started using Microsoft Windows in the first place.
<Dustin isn't kidding here, but he weeps for the state of science in
this country anyway>
> >In general I think laptop support is a *totally* different
> >beast than desktop. I think we're much closer on the desktop than this
> >thread would suggest, but definitely not with laptops. I spent a *lot*
> >of time researching hardware support before I bought this one.
>
>
> You know, I can agree with this. The issues that I brought up were
> laptop issues.
You didn't say that. That changes everything.
> There were some stats out from 2004, i think, that said that corporate
> america was buying more laptops than desktops. I see that in my
> environment. most people going with a laptop to use as the real
> desktop, and a beefy desktop to use as a computational machine.
Yes, and of course it's an issue for Linux; we don't want to be
leapfrogged and end up being the master of ground that is no longer
valuable. OTOH people are using embedded devices for things they used
to use a general-purpose computer for, and we're doing well in that
space. So it isn't clear who is leapfrogging whom.
Frankly, I think we'll win, but the US will be the last fortress to
fall. Too much investment in Microsoft and "it's a US company." We're
going to win elsewhere first, among people who can't afford the "windows
tax", those with no prior expectations about how a computer works, among
those who are too small a language/whatever group for MS to support but
can get Linux support just fine, and those who are afraid to be
dependent on a US company.
We're catching up now, and we still have a billion hackers to recruit.
Ultimately we're gonna bury them, even if it's rougher here inside the
Iron Curtain for a while. :-)
Dustin, wondering how long before people don't recognize cold-war
references anymore.
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: not available
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 189 bytes
Desc: not available
Url : http://www.sgvlug.net/pipermail/sgvlug/attachments/20060426/10a6a919/attachment.bin
More information about the SGVLUG
mailing list