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Do I want people to use #Linux? Yes.

But I'm also very aware of how much of a support network is needed if you are going to be using any particular software. Even companies with $$ to spend fail frequently by focusing on their software and not enough on their socialware.

#Windows problems: Like a friend who eats a terrible truck stop sandwich, the problem isn't my friend, it's the regulations that allow poisonous food to exist in the first place. For now: #sympathy.

linuxmom.net/@vkc/112640037474…

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Martin Owens

it happens with every OS unless you pay for support?

Neither Windows nor Mac OS will guide your through troubleshooting anything except for whatever you may find on their support sites, which usually ends up being either a wiki or a forum with lots of answers that don’t match your case.

My experience: its usually easy to find the solution for a problem in Linux forums than in Mac OS or Windows ones

Also my experience: the solution in Linux tends to be more complicated

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mastodon - Link to source
Juank Prada Art

I meant to say, between windows’, Mac’s and Linux’s wikis I usually find the information clearer and more easily digestible in Linux’s wikis.

Regarding more people adopting Linux, I think ISVs need to start targeting the platform more.

As much as I love free software alternatives (and use them professionally as much as possible), there is a gap between the available software in Linux and what the current industry is demanding

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mastodon - Link to source
Juank Prada Art

I’m not sure if I would call it political but rather ethical, but I think I get what you mean.

And about ISV I think Steam and the gaming industry are doing it arguably ok. Not necessarily in the most ethical way but doing it nonetheless, right?

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Juank Prada Art

right , but hardly the core of their business and their platform is free software/open source. So they are building a whole private led software business on top of a free platform (Linux) without adhering to the Free Software ideals. They do contribute as you say. So in the rethoric of Free Software ecosystem, is private software acceptable as long as it contributes something to the free software ecosystem? 🤔

Why Valve is succeeding while Microsoft is not?

in reply to Martin Owens

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friendica (DFRN) - Link to source
eshep
Sorry if my point was a bit ambiguous. I only meant that for widespread linux adoption by the general public, it needs to be a single thing. Something those who are unfamiliar with linux can see as "linux". Linux the way linux should be (morally at least), is not something most people want, or can easily understand. Most people want to know what that thing is before they decide they want it. To those who don't use it, it apears as more of a hobby, than something they would use in production.