I was reading down through the comments section over at DW today and there was a post which I include here in it's entireity:
http://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?is...110627&mode=67
There was an essay to the same effect only from a different tack in a big PC magazine a few years ago that was suggesting the idea that "the idea of free" becomes moot when the cost of the paid item is so low that it is inconsequential.
That, I think, is one reason why there have also been discussions in various forii and commentary from "the powers that be" that "Linuxdom" should probably forget about the idea of "free" in ANY of it's iterations, in terms of PROMOTING LINUX TO THE MASSES..
And instead come out with something that is SO innovative that the hardware manufacturers would think that they HAVE to have Linux to attract customers.
This leads, tangentially, to a "idea" that has been in my mind for some time and it goes something like this:
"Linux has, basically, got just about everything that can be done, done, (given the constraints of hardware manufacturers and patent items such as flash etc.)...... In other words "Linux" is now in a stage of "nuancing"..... this little tweak, that little tweak... but they are "just tweaks" to the OS....
And....I know this gets boring..... Gnome3 and Unity are different paradigms, they are not "tweaks"."
Rather like the Plasma interface was a paradigm shift..... rather like #! was somewhat of a paradigm shift.
Don't know....just some ideas that have come to mind, but the post by the fellow in Germany really made me think...
Your comments?
woodsmoke
100 • Ubuntu and Gnome 3 (by Deemon on 2011-06-29 06:21:56 GMT from Germany)
I have actually fallen in love with Gnome 3. My problem to day is whether I should dump Ubuntu for Fedora as Gnome 3 is bit slow in Ubuntu 11.04. Maybe, I'd try to install Gnome 3 in Ubuntu 10.04 and see.
Actually, in most parts in the world, MS windows is free. In Europe, if you wait a while, checking the supermarket few days, you can buy a laptop at 30 to 50% less as laptops had become a commodity there.
So, if you buy the laptop at 30% less, you are getting the Windows free.
There is also a way to use OSX in PC comps and laptops. I had used OSX10.6, which is a closed BSD system. Its quite easy to use, and without buying a Mac. Most probably illegal, but that is a relative meaning.
I have actually fallen in love with Gnome 3. My problem to day is whether I should dump Ubuntu for Fedora as Gnome 3 is bit slow in Ubuntu 11.04. Maybe, I'd try to install Gnome 3 in Ubuntu 10.04 and see.
Actually, in most parts in the world, MS windows is free. In Europe, if you wait a while, checking the supermarket few days, you can buy a laptop at 30 to 50% less as laptops had become a commodity there.
So, if you buy the laptop at 30% less, you are getting the Windows free.
There is also a way to use OSX in PC comps and laptops. I had used OSX10.6, which is a closed BSD system. Its quite easy to use, and without buying a Mac. Most probably illegal, but that is a relative meaning.
There was an essay to the same effect only from a different tack in a big PC magazine a few years ago that was suggesting the idea that "the idea of free" becomes moot when the cost of the paid item is so low that it is inconsequential.
That, I think, is one reason why there have also been discussions in various forii and commentary from "the powers that be" that "Linuxdom" should probably forget about the idea of "free" in ANY of it's iterations, in terms of PROMOTING LINUX TO THE MASSES..
And instead come out with something that is SO innovative that the hardware manufacturers would think that they HAVE to have Linux to attract customers.
This leads, tangentially, to a "idea" that has been in my mind for some time and it goes something like this:
"Linux has, basically, got just about everything that can be done, done, (given the constraints of hardware manufacturers and patent items such as flash etc.)...... In other words "Linux" is now in a stage of "nuancing"..... this little tweak, that little tweak... but they are "just tweaks" to the OS....
And....I know this gets boring..... Gnome3 and Unity are different paradigms, they are not "tweaks"."
Rather like the Plasma interface was a paradigm shift..... rather like #! was somewhat of a paradigm shift.
Don't know....just some ideas that have come to mind, but the post by the fellow in Germany really made me think...
Your comments?
woodsmoke
Comment