Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 28th Aug 2012 20:46 UTC
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RE[4]: I dont think this will happen this time either
by Valhalla on Thu 30th Aug 2012 07:15
in reply to "RE[3]: I dont think this will happen this time either"
I'm not talking about just video drivers.
What drivers are you talking about then, specifically?
It's hard to say which factor sunk Linux on the desktop the most but the middle finger to hardware manufacturers didn't help.
Again what is this problem with hardware compability you are claiming exists?
As for winning I don't see how locked down Android devices with drivers useless to other devices is a win.
What does the extremely limited amount of drivers in Android have to do with Linux open source driver availability at large (which is fantastic)?
But that's what Linus wanted and he didn't care if Windows kept the desktop market.
Drivers are not holding Linux back, it could have every driver in existance and there still wouldn't be any real incentive for the average computer user to leave Windows on the desktop.
Not even Apple which has done massive advertising and product placement (apple logo visible in every laptop in every tv show), shiny design, being hip, has been able to make a real dent in Microsoft's desktop dominance. And they certainly have no driver problems either given that they only support their own very meagre hardware spectrum.




Member since:
2012-06-22
Hah, what bullshit, Linux has gained very little on the desktop but that has nothing to do with lack of proprietary video drivers.
I'm not talking about just video drivers.
The userspace api came out in 2007 which was way too late.
It's hard to say which factor sunk Linux on the desktop the most but the middle finger to hardware manufacturers didn't help. Linux needed to be amicable to third parties of all types when there was more demand for an alternative. As for winning I don't see how locked down Android devices with drivers useless to other devices is a win. Linux easily could have taken more share if it wasn't the stubborn open source nerd's OS. But that's what Linus wanted and he didn't care if Windows kept the desktop market.