Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 5th Nov 2009 23:05 UTC
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Member since:
2009-08-26
I don't see anything smart about defending a system that was designed to save space in an era before gigabyte drives even existed. Trying to save bandwidth is also a joke in the age of broadband. The repository system solves problems from the disco age.
As for updates a central repository system also has to nag or update silently.
So what is left? What is the big advantage of the shared library system? Software can be installed automagically? You don't need shared libraries to do that. Software is kept in a secure place? No need for shared libraries there either.
There's nothing elegant about the shared library system. It's more of a hack that creates unneeded interdependencies. Programs still get broken and it requires additional labor to maintain. If you want to talk about wasting resources just think about how much work has gone into people fixing/maintaining the repository system in comparison to OSX/Windows where the users simply run the program without dealing with a middle man.
ISVs hate it because it gives them less independence, among other reasons.
The Apple engineers ditched the shared library system when they made OSX. Were they not smart either?
If you want to defend 70's tech then go ahead, but I'm sick of this attitude by Linux advocates who believe that people who criticize Unix/Linux are stupid. The original Unix design is not the omega of operating systems. Even the people that created it wanted to reform it years later (plan 9).
Edited 2009-11-07 02:18 UTC