Re: Kubuntu 11.04 sucks
Ronnowoy, your posts are now much easier to read, thanks!
All of your quotes are based on the same funamental sources: quoting statistics about retail channel sales, which is worthless, even without MS PR spin. Very few Linux users buy their computers from vendors who preinstall Linux. Most buy them from PC OEMS who preload Windows. They buy computers with Windows installed because the offerings on which Linux were installed were less than desirable and there were fewer options and peripherals available. To make matters worse, the price difference was less than the Microsoft tax. As you no doubt know, MOST PCs that are running Linux were counted as running Windows when they were sold. There is NO accurate count on the number of unique downloads of any particular distro, nor on exactly how many different PCs the same ISO was used to install Linux on. I've used a LiveUSB of Kubuntu to install it on dozens of computers. While many run Linux and Windows in dual boot for various reasons, many like me run Linux as the primary or sole OS.
Even so-called "Linux sites" , and there are many who pretend to be "for" Linux but parrot Microsoft's PR line, but your "how-much-market-share-does-linux-really-have" cite is not an example. It brings up Microsoft's PR statistics:
It goes on to cite a larger percentage:
It is usually something less than 2%. Even though it presents a market share of 5%, which is certainly larger than 2% or less, that particular citation is especially worthless since it places the Mac market share (in 2010 no less!) at under 5%. Independent retail channel statistics, and I leave it to you to Google them, has placed, by actual invoice count, the Apple market share at over 10% for several years.
When Microsoft's PR department isn't sending out PR memos with fictitious market share percentages, it sometimes generates real statistics for its boss, Steve Ballmer. He can't eat his own PR dog food and expect to form useful competitive strategies. I gave you a citation earlier. Did you read it?
I posted that slide in a previous msg. In Feb of 2009 Ballmer identified Microsoft's strongest OS competitor:
I think it is fair to say that Win7 (which is merely WinXP with cosmetic surgery and makeup) has reversed the slide that VISTA created, but the cat is out of the bag, especially with non-corporate users. Corporate users have contracts and policies which embed Microsoft purchases for years. The Dept of Revenue, where I worked, had a 10 year contract with DELL, and by default Microsoft, since DELL shipped Microsoft preinstalled. However, even there Linux crept in.
BTW, Ronnowoy, if you are still into business modeling allow me to recommend SAGE, a powerful math tool that can rival Mathematica in most situations. It includes a link to several videos that describe and demo SAGE. I wish I had access to it when I was in graduate school, but PCs weren't around then.
EDIT: Here is a video specifically about modeling with SAGE.
Ronnowoy, your posts are now much easier to read, thanks!
Originally posted by ronnowoy
Even so-called "Linux sites" , and there are many who pretend to be "for" Linux but parrot Microsoft's PR line, but your "how-much-market-share-does-linux-really-have" cite is not an example. It brings up Microsoft's PR statistics:
According to statistics cited by Microsoft, Linux has only two percent of the market share for desktop environments and twenty percent for servers.
So how much market share does Linux really have? According to website trackers and self-reported surveys, Linux has actually reached almost five percent of the desktop computer operating systems in use. Similarly, while noted as a minority player in the server wars, Linux actually runs nearly seventy-five percent of currently active servers.
When Microsoft's PR department isn't sending out PR memos with fictitious market share percentages, it sometimes generates real statistics for its boss, Steve Ballmer. He can't eat his own PR dog food and expect to form useful competitive strategies. I gave you a citation earlier. Did you read it?
Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer had some interesting things to say yesterday about which companies Microsoft sees as its competitors in the client operating system space. You'd think Apple was their number one competitor - and you'd be wrong. Microsoft sees two other competitors as their primary adversaries.
During a speech for investors, Steve Ballmer showed the following slide to his audience:
During a speech for investors, Steve Ballmer showed the following slide to his audience:
According to Microsoft, Linux is a bigger threat to the company than Apple, placing Linux above Apple in the marketshare figure pie chart thing. "Linux, you could see on the slide, and Apple has certainly increased its share somewhat," Ballmer said. He went on to explain how the company views Apple:
...
In any case, it appears that Linux ... is a larger blip on Microsoft's radar than Apple,
...
In any case, it appears that Linux ... is a larger blip on Microsoft's radar than Apple,
BTW, Ronnowoy, if you are still into business modeling allow me to recommend SAGE, a powerful math tool that can rival Mathematica in most situations. It includes a link to several videos that describe and demo SAGE. I wish I had access to it when I was in graduate school, but PCs weren't around then.
EDIT: Here is a video specifically about modeling with SAGE.
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