User community is slowly loosing its faith in Windows. Windows XP
wins the heart of many people but Microsoft’s other products in OS
range aren’t doing that well. Windows 7 is a buzz these days but many
people from open source community feels that it will again be old wine
in a new bottle. Community is feeling that Linux will be on top in OS
community in near future. I know Window’s Fan will be shocked after
reading this. So, how and why windows is loosing ground to Linux? Read
on
1: Inconsistent Windows releases
One of the things you can always count on from Microsoft is that you
can’t count on its new operating systems to be reliable. Let’s take a
look at the individual releases:
- Windows 95: revolutionized personal computing.
- Windows 98: attempted to improve on Windows 95; failed miserably.
- Windows Me: a joke, plain and simple.
- Windows NT: attempted to bring enterprise-level seriousness to the
operating system; would have succeeded had it not taken Steven
Hawking-like intelligence to get it working.
- Windows XP: brought life back to the failing Windows operating
system. It hadn’t been since Windows 95 that the operating system was
this simple.
- Windows Vista: see Windows Me.
With this in mind, what do we expect from Windows 7? Myself, not much.
2: Consistent Linux releases
Converse to number 1, you have the far more consistent releases of
the various Linux distributions. Yes, there have been a few dips along
the way (Fedora 9 being one of them). But for the most part, the climb
for Linux has been steadily upward. Nearly every Linux distribution has
improved with age. And this improvement isn’t limited to the kernel.
Look at how desktops, end-user software, servers, security, admin
tools, etc, have all improved over time. One could easily argue that
KDE 4 is an example of a sharp decrease in improvement. However, if you
look at how quickly KDE 4 has improved from 4.0 to 4.3 you can see
nothing but gains. This holds true with applications and systems across
the board with Linux.
3. Continuing Windows price hikes
Recently, I have had a number of long-time Microsoft administrators
asking my advice on solid replacements for Exchange. The reason?
Microsoft changed its licensing for Exchange to a per-user seat. Now
anyone who logs on to an Exchange server must have a license. You have
100 employees (including administrators) who need to log on to
Exchange? Pony up! This gets serious when your company starts having to
cough up the money for 500+ Exchange licenses. The very idea that
Microsoft would make such a bold change to licenses is made even more
ridiculous considering the current state of the economy. Companies
worldwide are having to scale back. And like Exxon Mobile celebrating
record profits amid the catastrophe known as Hurricane Katrina,
Microsoft creating such a cost barrier while the globe is facing
serious recession is irresponsible and reprehensible.
4. Stable Linux “prices”
Converse to number 3, the prices of open-source software licenses
have remained the same — $0.00. When those administrators come to me
asking for open source replacements for Exchange I point them to
eGroupware and Open-X-Change. Both are outstanding groupware tools that
offer an even larger feature set than their Microsoft equivalent. Both
are reliable, scalable, secure and free. The only cost you will have
with either is the hardware they are installed upon. And with both
packages, there is no limit to the amount of users that can be set up.
One user, 1,000 users — it’s all good with open source software.
5: Windows hardware incompatibility
Microsoft Vista was a nightmare when it came to hardware
compatibility. Not only was Vista incompatible with numerous
peripherals, it took supercomputer-level iron to run the operating
system! Sure this was a boon to Intel, which stood to make a pretty
shiny penny. Intel knew a good amount of the public would be shelling
out for new hardware, and the new hardware would cost more because it
had to be faster to run Vista in all its Aero glory. But even hardware
that would run nearly any other OS with lightening-fast speed was
brought to a slow, grinding halt with Vista.
6: Linux hardware compatibility
Converse to number 5, Linux continues to advance in the category of
hardware compatibility. Take Xorg, for example. Recent developments
with the star of Linux’ graphical desktops have the X Windows server
running sans xorg.conf. This was done primarily because the system had
grown so good at detecting hardware. And so long as there wasn’t a
cheap KVM between your monitor and your PC, Xorg would easily find the
mode for your display and run X properly. With new distributions (such
as Fedora 10), X configuration is becoming a thing of the past. Most
other pieces of hardware are finding the same level of recognition.
7: Windows promises
I wanted to save this for last, but seeing as how it is number 7…
We’ve all heard the pundits proclaiming Windows 7 will be the
resurrection of the Microsoft operating system. But I recall this same
proclamation with nearly every release from Redmond. Windows Vista was
going to revolutionise the way the user interfaced with the computer.
Vista was going to be the operating system you would never notice.
Instead, Vista refused to NOT let you notice. And Windows Me was going
to take Windows 98 and make it far more simple for the average user.
What did it really do? Remove nearly every actual functioning system in
the operating system, leaving little more than a browser and an email
client.
Everyone is always fond of saying the next Windows release will
redefine the personal computer. But the public has finally reached such
a point of apathy for Microsoft’s up and coming, the majority doesn’t
even realise something new is coming out. The media can continue to
push Windows 7, but the public will continue using XP until Microsoft
pries it from its cold, dead fingers. And, of course, no one really
knows when Windows 7 will land. How many dates Microsoft announces vs.
how many dates change will probably be a 1:1 ratio.
8: Linux transparency
Converse to 7… The next release of any Linux distribution is never
shrouded in mystery. Because of the nature of open source, the release
candidates are always available to the public (and not on a limited
basis), and the timeline is always made available. Any user can know
exactly when a feature-freeze happens for a release of any
distribution. And all Linux distributions work under the “full
disclosure” model. Because of this, there is little false advertising
going on with Linux. And unlike with Microsoft, you will never hear of
a distribution claiming that its next release will revolutionise
computing. If you go to the Fedora Project Wiki, you can view all the
proposed and accepted features that will be included in the next
release. You can also view the completed release schedule, where you
will see that Fedora 11 has set an alpha release of 3 February 2009, a
beta release of 24 March 2009, and a final release of 26 May 2009.
These dates are fairly firm and almost always on target.
9: Feature comparison
Let’s compare the feature lists of Windows 7 and Fedora 11.
- Windows 7: OS X-like Doc, multi-touch screen,
mapping application similar to Google Earth, Hyper-Visor
virtualisation, location-aware apps, User Access Control improvements,
Sidebar removal.
- Fedora 11: 20-second boot time, btrfs file system,
Better C++ support, Cups PolicyKit integration, DNS Security (DNS
SECurity), ext4 default file system, fingerprint reader integration,
IBUS input method replaces SCIM (to overcome limitations), GNOME 2.26,
KDE 4.2, Windows cross-compiler inclusion.
If you look at those features in and of themselves, you could easily
argue that either one could be the more impressive list (depends upon
your bias). But understand that the Fedora 11 features are added on an
already outstanding operating system, whereas the Windows 7 features
are being added to a lesser operating system. And what Microsoft is
proclaiming to be the biggest improvement (multi-touch) doesn’t
actually improve the operating system and also requires, surprise, new
hardware! To get the most out of Fedora 11, you’ll be good to go with
what you already have.
10: Hardware requirements
Vista-lite? Out of the mouths of Microsoft comes the proclamation
that Windows 7 will run on any hardware that would run Vista and even
slightly less powerful hardware. Slightly less powerful? What exactly
does that mean? Well for one, Windows 7 will have no luck in the
netbook market. And since XP is dying, the netbook market will be owned
by Linux. Netbooks are not gaining enough power to run anything from
Windows but the watered-down version of XP. Netbooks are not going
anywhere, and consumers (both home and corporate) have their limits on
how many hardware upgrades they will make to fulfil an operating
systems’ needs. As of Fedora 10, the minimum system requirements look
like something out of the mid ’90s.
In your opinion, has the court of public opinion already condemned
Microsoft to failure or will Windows 7 pull Microsoft out of the muck
and mire created by Vista? Will Linux continue its climb above
Microsoft? If you’ve got any thoughts, comments or suggestions for
things we could add, leave a comment!