Desktop Linux: That dog will mount
The Linux desktop reminds us of a dog humping a table leg. It's both fun and disturbing to watch, but ultimately there's very little payoff from the exercise.
Linux advocates, however, refuse to quit hoping that the leg humping will evolve into something spectacular. So we find yet another desktop panel discussion taking place at this year's LinuxWorld conference in San Francisco.
Dell and Ubuntu have taken strides toward blunting the Linux desktop criticism dished out by skeptics. The companies have an arrangement to pre-load Canonical's version of Linux on select notebooks and PCs. Lenovo this week responded in kind, saying it will plant Novell's SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10 on ThinkPads in the fourth quarter.
Canonical's work strikes us as the major thing to have altered the Linux desktop scene in the last couple of years. The company's efforts around making Linux easier to use have succeeded. More importantly, perhaps, Canonical has revitalized the entire Linux desktop question with its own enthusiasm and that generated by loyal followers.
Also: Linuxworld: Open-source software is becoming big business
And: GPL3 to dominate LinuxWorld
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