Originally posted by birdie
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What Are The Biggest Problems With Linux?
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Originally posted by plonoma View PostAs a developer:
I miss stable api's.
Good drivers
A lot of distribution specifics that form problems.
Lack of software delivery especially considering file formats and file system.
Concerning the file system < seriously people, learn to organize things better! (Gobolinux)
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Originally posted by finalzone View PostBiggest mistake is to think Linux as a whole. Next time, talk about a distribution. Debian/RHEL, with its conservative approach, still has older API parts.
My advice: Work on creating an infrastructure that makes it trivial to support future hardware features in the future.
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Originally posted by cyring View PostJust refresh your mind that the popular Android jvm runs on top of Linux
Android has as much in common with desktop Linux as Firefox has in common with IE (they both use a couple popular FOSS libraries like SQLite internally, but 99% of the code is completely different).
Also, Android is not a jvm. It's an OS. Dalvik is the VM component of Android.
One of the first & may be the first OS used in the Internet servers.
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Originally posted by gamerk2 View PostTo be fair, unlike Linux, Windows has been very hesitant to drop support for older parts of the OS and older API's. At the end of the day, Microsoft leaves implementation to the developer, rather then forcing it upon them..
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Originally posted by kraftman View PostAnd that's Windows is damn vulnerable. It's not a mystery there are security holes from a DOS era! This makes your APIs and ABIs bunch of crap.
You're simply dumb. What's Linux missing are just games and some software. That's all. Games are coming and there's more and more software as well. Like I said before Valve proved you wrong.
Note: The majority of the market uses Direct X.
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Originally posted by VinzC View PostWhile it relies upon noble principles (have more people discover GNU/Linux and make them compare it with other systems), the roots of GNU/Linux might fade away and dissolve into the mass effect because, IMHO, most people are interested in a machine that just works. They don't care about the philosophy behind. Nor do they care about choices and freedom. Nor do they care about learning their system. They don't care about their rights being limited or not being able to fully control their system. Bringing a GNU/Linux desktop to that user base is ?dangerous? to me as it might result in being tainted with values that it was once against.
These people should be educated (i.e. informed and convinced about the goods of it) prior to using our favourite system.
I see A Lot of "Selfish" in here(in almost all the posts I mean). "I want a user to learn all about the roots. Oh, that grandpa should not use the internet on Linux, he has first to read the assembly code if it's there!", "I want all the distributions to use old, crappy technology cause I am so nostalgic", "I want Linux to not evolve cause I love the terminal and ugly and featureless stuff", "I don't give a sh** about programmers, I want all the distributions to use GTK and 1 standard for everything even if that standard is faulty by design for the current hardware and ecosystem and needs a replacement".
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Originally posted by plonoma View PostBloat is not a problem. Having a few hundred megabytes of libraries on a large HDD or SSD is really not so bad if it means you can run old and new programs.
I've read all the comments and a lot of people don't have any idea of how the market works, and that you should not block developers to use their favorite development platform to make for you great applications. "We should not use anything, we should be primitive and have only 1 standard" that's not possible, that's called evolution when a new option appears, you can't make 1 standard that will solve all the problems at once. Hardware evolves and the ecosystem changes and the initial standards(and not only) are by design not compatible with the new things.
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Originally posted by bwat47 View PostThe two overall biggest issues with linux IMO:
1. Drivers. Yes, its gotten far better than it used to be, but hardware support under linux is still far from the ideal.
2. Fragmentation. Choice is one of the biggest strengths of linux, but also ends up being one of the biggest weaknesses. There seem to be too many pointless forks and/or duplication of work. (for a good example look at the video editor situation. New ones popping up constantly, no great ones).
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Originally posted by garegin View Postthe stable API has high costs. that is library bloat. for one thing, only a monumental idiot would run an app that is not actively maintained. and besides, you can't count on backwards compatibility. quickbooks written in 2004 did not work for vista that came out in 2006. i think the osx's minimal approach to backwards compatibility is the best balance between "running 3.1 apps on windows 8" and constant breakage.
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