18th Nov, 2009

Linux on the Desktop

In 1997, I was a Linux zealot who loved to tinker with software. Now I’m an overworked pragmatist. I still love Linux, but for different reasons. Last week, I heard a meme* pop up that Linux was dead on the desktop (specifically for web entrepreneurs). So I wanted to give the opposite take–Linux is a great, pragmatic choice for your desktop.

Improved Hardware Support
I’ve been installing Linux without trouble on desktops for over ten years. The real problem was with laptops. In 2004, it took me six months to get wireless working on my laptop. In 2007 I bought a laptop from System76 that had Linux pre-installed. Even suspend and hibernate worked. That was much better, but they only have a limited selection of re-branded Asus models. On Monday, I bought a new laptop from a big blue box store, installed Ubuntu, and everything just worked.

The Cloud
It’s funny that we’d even be having a desktop operating system discussion given how many core apps moved into the cloud. I use Firefox, GMail, a slew of apps from 37signals, and a SSH shell connected to a different server. That experience is the same on any operating system.

Sun Virtual Box
I never got Wine or VMWare to work on Linux. It was just a bit too much configuration. But recently I tried Sun’s Virtual Box and it does a great job. When I looked at the proprietary apps I run, I found that most of them are for Windows. My accountant prefers the Windows version of Quickbooks. I sometimes have to test IE bugs in Windows. Netflix streaming used to be Windows-only. All of these apps work fine in the Virtual Box virtual instance of Windows. I even sync my iPhone from iTunes running in the virtual instance.

Same as Your Server
I had an OSX laptop and basically liked it. But I got tired of fighting library dependencies on two different platforms. By running Linux on my laptop, I can have an identical environment to my production servers.

Dying Religions
I’m not religious about Linux anymore. I think that helps. I can run a virtual instance of Windows without feeling like I’m cheating. I got sucked into Linux because it was a free playground at a time when I had free time. It shaped my problem solving strategies and mindset. Now I want to have a access to the command line and Unix tools. But some (most) software was built for Windows. Now with Virtual Box and a little bit of personal maturity, I don’t have to choose one over the other. I use both.

Price
I bought a 17inch Dell Studio laptop with a dual processor, 500GB HD, and 4GB of RAM for $770. The equivalent MacBook Pro costs $2500.


* At the Business of Software conference, Paul Graham gave a talk covering 21 trends he’s seen while running YCombinator. He may have been talking about Linux on the desktop not being a relevant business opportunity, but his anecdotal data was about web entrepreneurs moving to OSX.

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