| Getting Started with Linux - Lesson 19 |
|---|
Graphic User Interfaces with Linux
Some preliminary commentary and perspective
As much as I like Linux and think that it is the best operating system out
there today, most people who use computers equate Microsoft with computing. In
particular, the only computing environment that most PC users have ever seen
comes in the successive versions of their flagship operating system Windows(tm).
However, computer scientists and people who have an interest in computers
beyond the mere end-user stage know that graphic user interfaces or desktop environments
like Windows really represent the look and feel of the computer experience, but
not the experience itself. Windows has become famous for essentially blurring
the reality of what a computer really does. That is to say that Microsoft
Windows, especially since the release of Windows 95, has masked any trace of
the traditional "black" computer screen experience. It was still there - you
just couldn't see it unless you purposely looked for it.
Bill Gates, chairman of the Microsoft Corporation once stated that: "Linux is
1960's technology with a new development model". What does he mean by
this? I think basically that he bet his whole company on the assumption that
people didn't want to see the traditional black screen and the command prompt
anymore. The sales of Windows 95 proved that with a good marketing campaign he
was able to sell the idea that people didn't want it and people
responded. Then Linux started to gain in popularity and be noticed
by a certain segment of the public around 1998-99. The problem was that Linux
offered the black screen and the graphic user interface as a separate package.
Bill Gates had already established that this was a no-no and so Linux gets
chalked up as "retrograde".
Now it's 2002 and Linux still offers the black screen and graphic user
interface separately. But then again, a lot has happened since 1998. For one,
IBM has spent 1 billion US dollars on Linux and essentially gotten its
investment back. Linux's market share continues to rise. It still pales in comparison
with Microsoft's desktop popularity - so much so that as most everyone knows,
Microsoft was convicted of being a monopoly in restraint of trade. Then again,
in 2000 and 2001 successive email viruses and worms crippled Windows-based IT
departments and brought scores of corporate networks to a grinding halt. Why?
Because we're in a new world of connectivity. Bill Gates' comment
about Linux may be turned back now upon his own company. If you asked your
average Linux enthusiast what he or she thinks of Windows, you might get this
reply: "Windows is pre-Internet technology with a slick new marketing
campaign". Microsoft spends most of its days now fighting security brush fires
because in blurring the difference between the operating system and the graphic
user interface it sacrificed security for ease of use. Windows
development model was conceived before everybody's computers where connected to
each other and it continues to reflect that. Linux, however, was born on the
Internet and grew up with it. Unfortunately, more complaints about Linux's
perceived lack of user friendliness outnumber complaints about Windows being
essentially a Maginot Line
solution for secure computing. Hopefully in this
lesson on graphic user interfaces under Linux, you'll get a good idea how the
balance between user friendliness and security is a good one with our favorite OS.
[Next]
|