bosker wrote:For about 20 years I've been listening to confident assertions from Linux afficionados that a major breakthrough in Linux share is just around the corner. I even converted my development systems to Linux about 15 years ago in the hope it was true. It isn't.
Around 8 years ago I converted back to Windows development because all the software I delivered had to run on Windows.
Developing on Linux made no sense at all. I no longer support cross platform because there's no viable business there.
A real warrior posts a reply! Greetings brother. A successful Linux based business would be in a niche, much like the Mac used to operate from. Also, as a system administrator, you know that 15 years ago Linux was just too much trouble to use when compared to the better supported alternatives. That's probably no longer true in most areas. Timing is everything, something that I am atrocious with.
I don't see any trend that suggests Linux is gaining ground - I wish it were otherwise, but I'll only consider supporting Linux again if it has a decent market share - 25% would make it interesting. But even Windows 8 hasn't made any significant difference to the overall situation.
Twenty five percent is way too optimistic. Critical mass should be somewhere around 10%, where developers would feel that is too significant a share to ignore.
Maybe netmaestro is right - a single distribution that captures the user-base might have a chance. All the owning organisation has to do is get all the contributing OSS groups on board
But in our way of life, the only sure fire way to get everybody on the same ship would be to pay them in money, so it probably won't happen. (Although a campaign to pay users $10 to install and use a distro for ten days might help.)
So there is the public spirited Linux fringe at one end, the Windows® silent majority occupying the vast center, and the materialistic (and Satanic?) Mac freaks at the other end. Windows® ain't so bad, it could be a lot worse.
Yesterday while looking at my receipt for the Windows® 98 Second Edition @ $179.99, (dated 09/04/01 from Best Buy #447 in Tukwila, WA), it made me think about how slow I usually adopt new technology. At the time, Windows® XP's release was imminent and I figured that Win98SE was about as good as it was going to get.

Now that Windows® 10 is almost here, I've decided to checkout Windows® 7. It is quite a nice experience after the horror that was Vista. Microsoft should have been made to recall that POS.
I can totally understand why the vast majority of people stick with Windows® since it comes on their computers. But nowadays, you have to go somewhat out of your way to get a new machine with Windows® 7, so it puzzles me why the Linux desktop usage hasn't gone up even a teeny bit. All the grandmothers crusing the singles websites don't need much more than basic functionality to run a browser, to Skype, pay a few bills, make the occasional printout, and to play solitaire, and free Linux would fit perfectly. Even if the masses are switching over to tablets, the quoted numbers are for desktops in use, not portable devices.
Bottom line, something tells me that perhaps I shouldn't place too much faith in the validity of those statistics, because 1.6% for something so good and free, considering Windows® 8 and the economy, seems way crazy low.