Linked by Anton Klotz on Mon 19th Feb 2007 17:52 UTC
OSNews, Generic OSes After MacOSX and Linux start to become viable alternatives to Windows on the desktop, more and more applications are developed to be cross- platform; all potential users can run them on their platform of choice. In the following article I will discuss different ways of creating a cross-platform application and their (dis)advantages for the user.
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RE[4]: what ?
by Adam S on Mon 19th Feb 2007 21:43 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: what ?"
Adam S
Member since:
2005-04-01

Linux didn't reach critical mass before Kernel 2.4


I would argue that Linux was mostly usable as a server with 2.2. And I would guess that it's a safe assumption that Linux is most widely deployed as a server, not a desktop. So while I get your point, i think that Linux did what Linux does best even back then.

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