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Twenty Years of Linux according to Linus Torvalds (zdnet.com)
64 points by Garbage on April 14, 2011 | hide | past | favorite | 7 comments



Long time desktop Linux user here. I used Linux on the desktop in the late 90s when the only usable GUI apps were Netscape 4.7, Xemacs and terminal windows and there were some half-baked Windows95 like window managers. I got a heck of a lot of real work done on that config though.

The darkest day for Linux was when Windows 2000 came out. It was a Windows that didn't crash, had good networking and performed pretty well. A lot of people I knew who had been using Linux up to that point switched back.

I think with Android and Ubuntu over the last few years there's been a new dawn and Linux has caught back up as a end-user OS. For instance, I needed to scan a document and I was prepared for the hours of fiddling that I thought was probably necessary to get this to work with my Canon scanner/printer/copier. I used Simple Scan, it worked perfectly the first time I used it without reading the manual and with no configuration and it saved to a multi-page PDF. Mind=Blown!


Big deal with GNOME and Ubuntu for me is the six month release cycle. I know every half year I will get a new version with lots of fixes and improvements.

This kind of expectability lacks from almost all other desktop OSs


When I first wanted to try Linux on my laptop, it took an age just to find a distro that could recognise the display. A few weeks ago I bought some new wireless hardware, and it took longer to get it installed on Windows than it did on Linux. 95% of my time is spent on Linux now, and there are only a few programs (Flash Develop) that I need Windows for.

I don't think it will ever be the year of the Linux desktop, but that certainly doesn't make it a failure like the wonderful comments on that article would suggest.


"October 5th 2001, when 0.02, the first public release was made?"

Uhh....


I only became a user some day in 1999/2000, but still it's impressive how Linux has changed and developed since then. I literarily could see void bubbles above people's head when talking about Linux. if only they would have known that there mobile is running on Linux in 2010 ...


SJVN: Looking ahead, any thoughts on where Linux will be at 40?

LT: Bah. I don’t plan that far ahead. I can barely keep my calendar for the next week in mind. I really have no idea.

So true. At work they want us to set all of our goals for 2011. I don't even know what I want to do tomorrow.


Wow those comments are really something. I'm lovin' it.




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