           
Why Linux?
Glad you asked! Linux
is commonly known as a server operating system or an operating system
for advanced users. Can a non-pro use it, and why should he or she do
so?
While Linux did begin
its life as a server operating system and an
operating system for advanced users, Linux has made significant progress
in a most key area: its graphical user interface.
Linux now has a very
easy to use interface for both the Windows and Mac crowd. The desktop
looks, acts and feels incredibly familiar, as do applications such word
processors, spreadsheets and photo editors.
Here are a few reasons
to use Linux:
FUNCTIONALITY
Linux comes with many tools you normally must buy separately if you run
Windows or Mac, including a full featured office suite (amazingly similar
to Microsoft Office) and a complete software development kit that is comparable
to Visual C++.
STABILITY
Linux is a very stable operating system. Linux systems don't crash often,
and don't need to be rebooted for anything other than upgrading the operating
system itself.
(ALMOST) NO VIRUSES
Linux is not prone to viruses. Because of how Linux handles data, a virus
cannot overwrite system files or append itself to applications unless
you are working as the "root" user. Linux has no registry or
DLL files, so Windows viruses have no effect on Linux at all.
PRICE
Linux is available for download for free. You have the option of buying
Linux CD sets at a very low price. But the two or three core disks, with
thousands of applications and tools, are there for the taking. And these
are "crippled" versions. They have the same files as the CDs
in the store box.
OPEN SOURCE
Linux is completely Open Source, meaning programmers around the world
have access to its "source code", which is code programmers
can read and modify. While this may not affect you as an end user directly,
it affects you indirectly because this means that Linux and its tools
and apps are under continuous, shared development. And updates to the
operating system and all the other software is a snap.
INDEPENDENCE
If the maintainers of traditional proprietary software (such as Windows
or Microsoft Office) stop working on it, or choose to ignore your problems,
you're on your own. Nobody can help you. DOS users remember a great program
called Q&A. Once the company that developed Q&A went out of business,
another company bought this marvelous app and then let it die. If someone
stops maintaining a Linux software application, someone steps in and continues
the work. The software is not "company owned" and controlled,
and so won't become a Q&A.
SPEED of development
Due to the its open source nature, many programmers from all around the
world work on Linux, causing it to develop and mature much faster than
other software.
FLEXIBILITY
If you need a feature in an application (or the operating system itself),
you don't need to turn to the maker of the application to get it in -
any
programmer can do it for you!
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Linux
News and Notes
By Egan Orion,
from The Inquirer:
Tuesday 27 May 2003, 06:54
STEVE BALLMER, the Vole's whirling,
sweat-machine monkey-boy CEO, seems to have struck out in Munich. That
is the third-largest cityscape in Germany, gentle readers. As such, it's
a major loss for Microsoft.
The story goes that Ballmer
interrupted his skiing vacation to drop into Munich and offer them a 90%
discount on Microsoft's software, countering that city's Linux and Free/Open
Source Software (FOSS) procurement.
It would seem that Ballmer's
"generous" offer will not be successful.
According to Heise (for those
who read German) and also Babelfish (for all of those who can decipher
Germlish), Munich seems set to select SuSE Linux and OpenOffice for all
its 14,000 desktop systems, rather than continue to pay off the Vole.
The "network effect"
of Munich city government converting to Open Office will likely lead to
a tidal wave of defections from Microsoft's software in many government,
academic and commercial offices all over Germany.
And there might be repercussions
from this in the EU governmental Courts regarding Microsoft attempt to
exercise their monopolistic practices.
There's also the interesting
footnote that Ballmer sold off 40 million shares of Microsoft stocks,
right about the same time he left Munich.
Ballmer should have stayed
on Swiss slopes and broken a leg instead.
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