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You may be an idiot n00b, but I'm a serious n00b and it justwerks for me.It's sure interesting how half the Linux people in this thread say "everyone should switch to Linux - you can still run all your Windows program no problem, bro" and then when it doesn't work the other half say "lol only idiot n00bs would try to run their Windows programs in Linux."
Let's settle this thread once and for all.
View attachment 4526674
I didn't say the consumer market, I said consumer, singular. MSFT doesn't report OEM sales numbers directly, but you can work it out by using the %change numbers and algebra. OEM sales make up about 60% of Windows revenue.
The annual report gives the factors that impacts revenue for OEM sales:
Just because it's not a large % doesn't mean it's not the trunk of the tree. If desktop market share started to drop, I think most analysts would say sell.
I don't expect Linux to ever take off in the home but it really just boils down to how one gets a Linux 'puter. You install some distro to something else... If Linux 'puters were in stores and cheap enough then people would buy them. Would they dethrone Windows? Not remotely, partially because Microsoft has kids using Windows all throughout school and into the workforce which has been a part of Microsoft's business strategy for 30+ years.No, actually, that's exactly what it means. Microsoft is first and foremost an enterprise software company. Virtually every technology decision they make that is bewildering to home consumers is because you're getting dragged along on some technology direction that's being set by enterprise users. (The insane UI decisions are driven by literal trannies who wish they were working at Apple.) The scenario you seem to be imagining, where their entire business is going to collapse if middle-aged women aren't forced to upgrade their decade-old all-in-1 PCs to get Windows 11, doesn't exist.
We really only ever see two ways Linux is commercially successful:
1. Server operating systems like RHEL and SLES
2. Integrated verticals like Chrome OS and Android
It's been over 30 years since Linux launched. If somebody was going to build a successful desktop product out of it and dethrone Windows at Dell or HP, they would have done it already. The fact is that Microsoft is simply much better at satisfying the needs of the desktop market than any challenger who's come at them in decades, and there's no hint of that changing any time soon.
Nobody anywhere complained that smartphones sucked because they didn't run Windows. This argument just doesn't hold any water when we have a recent historical example that so completely refutes it.Microsoft has kids using Windows all throughout school and into the workforce which has been a part of Microsoft's business strategy for 30+ years.
What has Linux ever competitively offered to the desktop end user besides "we're not Microsoft"? In 30 years, has desktop Linux EVER sold itself on any compelling feature or killer app that's relevant to users? I can't think of a single instance of that. It's always "we're Just As Good™", the slogan of the perennial loser also-ran.Not saying Microsoft doesn't have competitive products on offer but when it comes to personal desktops they don't offer anything that exceptional anymore.
The insane UI decisions are driven by literal trannies who wish they were working at Apple.
This is irrelevant. Novel* thing that's designed by a crazy guy hyperfocused on UX is widely adopted by millions even though it's another OS, more at 11 in 2007.Nobody anywhere complained that smartphones sucked because they didn't run Windows. This argument just doesn't hold any water when we have a recent historical example that so completely refutes it.
It's free and does either everything most people do are 90% of it. I've already said my thoughts on this. Nowadays it also is the only mainstream user-friendly OS that doesn't build a dossier on all of its users.What has Linux ever competitively offered to the desktop end user besides "we're not Microsoft"? In 30 years, has desktop Linux EVER sold itself on any compelling feature or killer app that's relevant to users? I can't think of a single instance of that. It's always "we're Just As Good™", the slogan of the perennial loser also-ran.
John Carmack is an open source respecter and enjoyer, by the way.View attachment 4535198
Imagine taking a time machine back to 1993 and trying to convince these guys that men in dresses would soon become the most protected class in the western world and pose an existential threat to the entire tech industry.
It's painfully relevant - I truly don't think you could imagine a more relevant scenario.This is irrelevant. Novel* thing that's designed by a crazy guy hyperfocused on UX is widely adopted by millions even though it's another OS, more at 11 in 2007.
No it doesn't make sense, no one jumped ship from desktop operating systems to exclusively use smartphones. Androids are the cheap/diverse smartphone alternative so filled the remainder of the market that Apple doesn't so it makes sense Android would be the popular choice.It's painfully relevant - I truly don't think you could imagine a more relevant scenario.
It proves that billions of users will jump ship (to a Linux kernel-based OS, no less!) if they're given just a handful of compelling reasons to do so, something that desktop Linux has utterly failed to do in its entire history.
I don’t know if this got clarified upthread because this thread is so dense with autism I haven’t cut my way through it yet, but I have a nvidia gpu and it works fine on linux for me. The open source drivers suck ass but the official blob ones *are* compatible with linux, you can just download them.I love that the Linux tards in this very thread are continuously criticizing and ridiculing anyone who thinks it's a bad idea to switch to Linux and claiming they're making unjustifiable "excuses" while you're openly admitting that trying to use an nVidia GPU on Linux is tantamount to running Windows Mobile on an iPhone. nVidia - the company with >75% of the discrete GPU market.
I fail to see how something can be both "mainstream" yet the argument for it's unpopularity is that people are perpetually unaware of it? Also, John Carmack and all the old school id Software guys have my respect, alot of those games were a huge part of my childhood. Even the supreme weirdo John Romero deserves accolades. But Carmack himself historically has had issues with Linux support.This is irrelevant. Novel* thing that's designed by a crazy guy hyperfocused on UX is widely adopted by millions even though it's another OS, more at 11 in 2007.
*Not actually novel
It's free and does either everything most people do are 90% of it. I've already said my thoughts on this. Nowadays it also is the only mainstream user-friendly OS that doesn't build a dossier on all of its users.
Again, the reality is most people just don't know Linux exists or how to find it. Linux is a kernel, it doesn't have multi-billion dollar companies breaking balls to get it in people's homes.
John Carmack is an open source respecter and enjoyer, by the way.
OEM doesn't instantly mean home users. OEMs make most of their sales to businesses and enterprise. $16 billion of their revenue in 2022 came from OEM sales. That specific post I was emphasizing that Microsoft isn't shifting to an android model for Windows to get cloud subscriptions. They price their OEM keys (including those sold to businesses) based on the specs of the machine. That's evidence to me that they've just changed the cash flow for how they expect to directly monetize Windows. Giving windows 11 away isn't proof that windows 11 is moving towards an android model. If MS already expects to be supporting a machine for it's useful life, they aren't losing OEM revenue. If it got home users to buy new devices, it'd help soften the decline of the OEM revenue. A $4 billion decline (that's where we are at now) in OEM revenue is going to affect the share price. Windows 11 still seems to be windows 10 with a shitty UI.No, actually, that's exactly what it means. Microsoft is first and foremost an enterprise software company. Virtually every technology decision they make that is bewildering to home consumers is because you're getting dragged along on some technology direction that's being set by enterprise users. (The insane UI decisions are driven by literal trannies who wish they were working at Apple.) The scenario you seem to be imagining, where their entire business is going to collapse if middle-aged women aren't forced to upgrade their decade-old all-in-1 PCs to get Windows 11, doesn't exist.
To clarify, substantial market share. Linux only gets paid if you contribute code back - it's how you pay for GPL software. When Linux gets paid it becomes more competitive. If China had shifted to Kylin, Linux would have been more competitive in western markets where people actually pay Microsoft. If Microsoft cares about legitimate use in China, they'd have to adopt regional pricing for their business offerings.We really only ever see two ways Linux is commercially successful:
1. Server operating systems like RHEL and SLES
2. Integrated verticals like Chrome OS and Android
Why would Dell or HP do that. They get money from selling keys, and they don't have to support it. Microsoft has also played super nice with them since the anti-trust settlement. It's pretty easy for Windows to satisfy the desktop market if one of the main requirements of the desktop market is Windows compatibility. Linux simply having market share makes windows compatibility less important.It's been over 30 years since Linux launched. If somebody was going to build a successful desktop product out of it and dethrone Windows at Dell or HP, they would have done it already. The fact is that Microsoft is simply much better at satisfying the needs of the desktop market than any challenger who's come at them in decades, and there's no hint of that changing any time soon.
I italicized "mainstream" since I agree, desktop Linux is not mainstream and likely never will be. I'm aware of some of Carmack's older thoughts on Linux, though nothing from the past decade where I think a lot, particularly regarding graphics and gaming, has changed that may have softened him up a bit. I know he has supported official linux ports for a long time.I fail to see how something can be both "mainstream" yet the argument for it's unpopularity is that people are perpetually unaware of it? Also, John Carmack and all the old school id Software guys have my respect, alot of those games were a huge part of my childhood. Even the supreme weirdo John Romero deserves accolades. But Carmack himself historically has had issues with Linux support.
In related news, Microsoft is finally, no really, they mean it this time for sure probably, officially ending Internet Explorer support across all browsers.
With hindsight I think I misunderstood Matt Damon's point about smartphones as referring to when they were initially taking off in the mid-late 2000s and how people had no problems "switching." People nowadays are increasingly shifting to 100% smartphone use, though I still think that plays into Linux's favor, people can figure out new GUI-based systems they just need to throw away the notion that all desktops have to be Windows-like similar to how Apple's renaissance had people using Mac which is different in nearly every way.The baby boomers in my personal life all switched entirely to smartphones/tablets. The advent of a portable touchscreen made everything so much easier on them.
With hindsight I think I misunderstood Matt Damon's point about smartphones as referring to when they were initially taking off in the mid-late 2000s and how people had no problems "switching." People nowadays are increasingly shifting to 100% smartphone use, though I still think that plays into Linux's favor, people can figure out new GUI-based systems they just need to throw away the notion that all desktops have to be Windows-like similar to how Apple's renaissance had people using Mac which is different in nearly every way.
People are trained on the desktop experience they grow up with and that's the hardest thing to shake in my opinion.
Most of those files have to be explicitly set to self-execute by the user. There's usually a checkbox in the file properties or you can use the terminal because you're a h4rdc0re 1337 ha><or.I’ve downloaded assorted programs where the actual executable, the icon I double click to start the program, sometimes just won’t run, and it’ll try to open in a text editor or whatever.
Because Linux is disastrously unstandardized between distros and new versions of libraries regularly break backward compatibility even from one version of a distro to the next. There are so many versions because they have to be compatible with so many different target configurations. It's one of the core, foundational problems with bringing serious commercial development into desktop Linux - even dedicated Linux lovers say this, so it's not just me bashing.And another thing: Why are there different builds for different versions of Linux?
Flatpaks bundle libraries with the executable, rather than using the system's libraries in an attempt to deal with the aforementioned problem. Snaps and AppImages and probably others I can't remember work according to a similar principle.What is a Flatpak package?
That's the development cycle for Ubuntu. Every 6 months they put out a new version that has support for about 9 months. These version are meant to be a sort of testing bed for their next long term support distro which tends to have updates for 4 years.And Ubuntu has five versions, all 64-bit, but they're for different versions raging from a 2018 version through 2022? Why are those separate? I understand Windows 95 and modern Windows builds needing to be distinct, but five different builds across four years of Ubuntu? What on Earth?
First off, your file manager needs to recognize that it's an executable. On Windows that happens with the file ending ".exe", on Linux it happens with the file permission. So if your file manager tries to open it as a text file, you need to set it to be executable.Okay so, since there’s a number of Linux dudes ITT, let me ask you a question that I’ve genuinely wondered for a long time: what exactly is the deal with Linux executables?
I’ve downloaded assorted programs where the actual executable, the icon I double click to start the program, sometimes just won’t run, and it’ll try to open in a text editor or whatever.
This is one of my biggest frustrations with Linux. There's no doubt that the package manager is convenient when it has what you want, but when it doesn't (and that's pretty often when you're trying to install anything interesting) you're often left in this hellish no-man's-land of manually tracking down particular deprecated versions of fifty dependencies and even compiling shit from source.And all of that is managed by your distribution's package manager (so look there first before downloading random shit off some website).