Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 7th Aug 2012 11:15 UTC
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Member since:
2011-04-11
"the Taiwan-based Acer might replace the software giant as a partner. '"
Yeah, right. And replace them with what? As long as Linux keeps breaking compatibility with existing apps (courtesy of X.org and PulseAudio), the Linux kernel breaks compatibility with existing drivers every 6 months, and X.org breaks compatibility with graphics cards, Linux doesn't stand a chance on the Desktop.
This is the dark secret of Linux: The dudes behind X.org, PulseAudio and the Linux kernel don't care about what gets broken. And Shuttleworth and the other downstream dudes can't tell upstream "maintain API stability for X years or you are fired" because they don't have control over upstream, as they still haven't managed to make money out of selling support for the desktop. Linux works on servers and supercomputers where everything is headless (no graphics or audio) and hardware is standardized, but Linux doesn't work on the desktop because upstream doesn't get paid by Desktop Linux and don't care about Desktop Linux's needs.
Windows on the other hand maintains API (apps) and ABI/driver model (drivers) stability for at least 6 years. Not perfect IMO, but much better than Linux's six months.
Everytime an OEM talks about "providing alternatives to Windows" it's always a negotiating tactic to get from Microsoft whatever they want that time. It may work for one more year, but eventually Microsoft will stop paying attention.
Edited 2012-08-08 18:47 UTC