Linked by David Adams on Mon 24th Aug 2009 09:21 UTC
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RE[8]: Best chance for sane *nix GUI: Chrome OS
by mlankton on Wed 26th Aug 2009 12:04
in reply to "RE[7]: Best chance for sane *nix GUI: Chrome OS"
Nothing is wrong with a new system, except that it's unnecessary. I'd much rather a company direct its employees to work on something missing, like improving existing toolkits, adding points of integration between components of the desktop, and so forth, rather than have them reinvent the wheel. They have to add in all the nice polish that makes the user experience great anyway, so why not do that with existing things under open licenses so that we all benefit? Isn't that sort of the point?
That is a very good point that I hadn't considered.




Member since:
2005-11-02
If Chrome does better than Linux in general it will be because of its integration and polish and, as you say, contacts with OEMs. Google could get that using existing toolkits and X. If they don't it's their loss, spending a lot of time and effort that they probably don't need to (but isn't it neat?)
Look also at SkyOS and Syllable for systems not even using GNU userland but using the Linux kernel. They don't use X either, but they could. Their pleasant environment is due to having a single vision for how things are put together.
Nothing is wrong with a new system, except that it's unnecessary. I'd much rather a company direct its employees to work on something missing, like improving existing toolkits, adding points of integration between components of the desktop, and so forth, rather than have them reinvent the wheel. They have to add in all the nice polish that makes the user experience great anyway, so why not do that with existing things under open licenses so that we all benefit? Isn't that sort of the point?
Additionally, a proprietary graphics layer helps no one. If Google contributes to X and existing toolkits then we all benefit even if their product flops. If they release their own closed-source toolkit and graphics layer and it succeeds, that's bad because less free software is in use. If it fails that's bad because a lot of effort was wasted and the community can't pick up the good bits.
Of all the things that have gotten slower over time X is not one of them (quite the opposite). You can still get that blazing fast speed today if you shut down a lot of the handy but not essential background services and limit yourself to the kind of bare bones window manager you had in 1996.