Desktop Linux To-Do List
Distributors must solve setup and licensing issues for Linux to be a success on the desktop.
For Linux to become a real competitor to Windows on the desktop, Linux distributors must refine their software installation and management systems. There are some loose ends that need to be tied up and some tricky legal knots to unravel. In this weeks issue, I review the latest Linux distributions from MandrakeSoft and Novells SuSE Linux division. Both applications represent the latest in Linux for the desktop, an area where the open-source operating system is beginning to gain traction.Application scarcity often has been cited as the No. 1 barrier to wider adoption of Linux on the desktop, but the marketas well as the enterprise perception of Linuxis changing. More applications are becoming available all the time, and our recent tests of OpenOffice.org demonstrated that a Linux-compatible application can meet key enterprise productivity needs. However, setting things up on a Linux desktop system isnt always as easy as it should be.
Red Hat has introduced a new desktop offering that includes OpenOffice.org, as well as software from Adobe, Citrix Systems, Macromedia and RealNetworks. To read the full article, click here.
For applications that your distribution does not support or for versions more recent than those shipping for your distribution, you can go to volunteer-run repositories and pull down the packages you need. For example, the Firefox Web browser does not ship with Fedora, but Ive downloaded Firefox RPMs from www.dag.wieers.com/packages.
One way Linux distributors could broaden the range of packages available for their distributions would be to boost support for these volunteer repositoriesproviding tools that would simplify the package creation process and perhaps some financial support.
Things get a lot more complicated when youre dealing with software that isnt open-source.
Key pieces of Linux software, such as those required to view Flash and Java applets on Web pages, are available for download and installation on individual machines. Wider distribution, however, requires separate license agreements.
MandrakeSoft and SuSE Linux have established such agreements, and their respective distributions ship with Java and Flash working out of the box. However, distributions designed to be completely redistributable, such as Fedora Core and Debian, must ship without these and other key applications because of their licensing requirements.
For certain media types, there are no Linux plug-in options at allMicrosofts Windows Media client and Apples QuickTime client come immediately to mind. Its possible to play Windows Media, QuickTime and other media formats using a Linux video player such as Totem or Mplayer. However, because the libraries that enable this playback were developed without necessary licensing agreements, theyre too hot for any Linux distributor to handle.
The point is, users of Linux-based desktopsespecially corporate users of Linux-based desktopscannot just ignore proprietary software. The way in which desktop Linux distributors integrate this software with their offerings will, in large part, determine the fate of desktop Linux.
Senior Analyst Jason Brooks can be reached at jason_brooks@ziffdavis.com.
Check out eWEEK.coms Linux & Open Source Center at http://linux.eweek.com for the latest open-source news, reviews and analysis. Be sure to add our eWEEK.com Linux news feed to your RSS newsreader or My Yahoo page:









