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Enterprise Linux desktops are for real - are you? | Enterprise Linux desktops are for real - are you? |
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| Monday, 10 April 2006 | |
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Also see By Con Zymaris An expert in deploying open source throughout the enterprise tells us how to wean ourselves off the Microsoft drug forever.
I've been tracking desktop Linux uptake for around a decade. In that time, the platform has moved from an environment suited only to the technorati and those well versed in Unix windowing systems, to something which now has the polish and familiarity for the mainstream. In fact, desktop Linux has matured so well that you could deploy it in a greenfields scenario, i.e, one where there were no computers used previously, and the users would take to it as quickly as they would acclimatise to Windows. That doesn't mean that migrating to Linux is a quick or painless process, however. Unfortunately, Windows is an extremely difficult platform to move away from. This has nothing to do with the qualities or inherent capabilities of Linux mind you. Migrating from Windows to the Mac would be about as painful. And the Mac is considered to be the most polished and easiest to use of desktops.
No, the reason that
migrating away from Windows is so hard, is due to the incredible extent
of vendor lock-in that Windows has engendered. Here's why.
With
few exceptions, most of that software you buy for your Windows PC is in
reality only available on Windows. Certainly, almost all of the
Microsoft-published software is only available for Windows. Microsoft
makes it a point of not supporting platforms which it considers a
competitive threat. This means that when it comes time to move to an
alternative platform, say Linux, you're stuck, because so many of your
acquired applications are Windows-centric. Same goes for your
peripherals with Windows-only drivers.
Once in place, it is
very difficult to re-write an application so that it doesn't just run
on one platform, in this case Windows. We've seen this tactic occur
time and again in the computer space. Why? Because proprietary vendors
love it. The more software published specifically for their platform,
the more users will be locked into that platform, the higher their
licencing rent to you, the user, can be.
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