Linked by David Adams on Wed 6th Aug 2008 15:32 UTC
IBM After 10 years of supporting Linux, IBM continues to challenge Microsoft on multiple fronts and aims to push Linux even further into the enterprise. While IBM has competed and partnered with Microsoft over the last two decades, the Microsoft-free PC effort is perhaps its most direct assault yet. "The idea of Microsoft-free personal computing has been in the air for a while," Inna Kuznetsova, director of Linux at IBM, told InternetNews.com. "We're just partnering with Linux distribution vendors and hardware vendors to make it happen."
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ichi
Member since:
2007-03-06

Right. Mark Shuttleworth must be suffering from that too:


Considering he was comparing Linux desktop with OSX and not Windows, I wouldn't diagnose him that fast.

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jbauer Member since:
2005-07-06

Considering he was comparing Linux desktop with OSX and not Windows, I wouldn't diagnose him that fast.

No, he wasn't. Not only was his answer completely generic, but the question was clear:

What do you see as the main obstacles holding back the success of the Linux desktop


Besides, there are things you just don't say when you are the leader of a Linux distribution. Saying OS X is better in public is allowed. Admitting Windows is too is not. It's bad for business, and they guy knows that ;-)

Edited 2008-08-07 07:46 UTC

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ichi Member since:
2007-03-06

No, he wasn't. Not only was his answer completely generic, but the question was clear:

"What do you see as the main obstacles holding back the success of the Linux desktop


Besides, there are things you just don't say when you are the leader of a Linux distribution. Saying OS X is better in public is allowed. Admitting Windows is too is not. It's bad for business, and they guy knows that ;-)
"

He did talk about the rise on OSX marketshare compared to that of linux.
Since Windows marketshare is falling there's little point in comparing trends besides who's eating that pie and why, and we all know already how Windows got to entrench itself up there anyway.

Regarding what's said by a "leader", didn't RedHat state years ago that home users would be better off with windows?

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