{"id":74,"date":"2009-01-31T16:21:05","date_gmt":"2009-01-31T23:21:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.computerjourney.com\/blog\/?p=74"},"modified":"2009-01-31T16:39:08","modified_gmt":"2009-01-31T23:39:08","slug":"lets-talk-os","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.computerjourney.com\/blog\/lets-talk-os\/","title":{"rendered":"Let&#8217;s Talk OS"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>One of the great things about this time and age is the variety of products available to us as consumers.\u00a0 From the perspective of Operating Systems, or OS&#8217;s, the spolight has been pointed at Microsoft and Windows for the longest time.\u00a0 Though the majority of computer users still use some form of Windows, the evolution of the competition has allowed for two powerful competitors to get some major attention: OSX and Ubuntu Linux.\u00a0 Click to read more&#8230;<\/p>\n<p><!--more-->Let&#8217;s start out with Apple&#8217;s offering.\u00a0 OSX has done some great things that can be seen reflected in their growing market share and duplicated functionality in Windows Vista and the upcoming Windows 7.\u00a0 Its focus is on ease of use throughout the whole system.\u00a0 Whether you are installing a program, connecting to a network, installing a printer, or browsing the web, OSX tries to keep as much of the technical muck underneath so that the user never has to deal with it (like they often do with Windows).\u00a0 Its simplicity of use is best exemplified by the long-running stint of using single button mouses and click pads.\u00a0 It&#8217;s almost as if Apple is saying &#8220;Why use a two button mouse on that system when you can do the same stuff on ours with just one?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Though I am not a frequent user of OSX, I have spent some time on a Mac before and I can see what the appeal is to many people.\u00a0 Coming from a PC upbringing, finding your way around a Mac takes some initial &#8220;unlearning.&#8221;\u00a0 What makes sense on Windows is completely backwards to a Machead.\u00a0 Apple products focus on user intuition because it makes the most sense for someone who has had little prior experience using a computer.<\/p>\n<p>Apple also provides some extremely nice looking aesthetics to their system with the flashy looking <a title=\"Toolbars\" href=\"\/basics\/organization\/toolbars.html\">toolbar<\/a>, window animations, and 3D icons (Windows Vista has some awfully similar looking features).\u00a0 They have a style and class that has claimed the attention of many consumers and turned them into extremely loyal fans.\u00a0 Some could liken it to a cult where the word of Steve Jobs is the gospel.\u00a0 Either way, it&#8217;s impossible to ignore the effect that Apple is having on the market and the growing popularity of their products.<\/p>\n<p>The second major Windows competitor is just one of a hundred or so different flavors of an operating system called Linux.\u00a0 For a long time, Linux was an OS for real tech junkies.\u00a0 These are people who still love the command line (because they can do things a lot faster without a mouse), love developing software to share with others for free, and actively seek to weaken Microsoft&#8217;s hold on computer software.\u00a0 With the rise of Ubuntu, everything changed.<\/p>\n<p>When I mentioned that there are over a hundred different versions (or &#8220;flavors&#8221;) of Linux, I wasn&#8217;t joking.\u00a0 Check out <a title=\"Linux Distributions\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/List_of_Linux_distributions\" target=\"_blank\">this list<\/a> on Wikipedia.\u00a0 The thing about all of these different distributions is they all have their roots with the original version created by Linus Torvalds.\u00a0 He had some deep philosophies about what an operating system should do\u00a0 and should be for its users.\u00a0 With those beliefs he gathered a large following of software developers who shared his ideals.\u00a0 That group has continued to grow and spread as it evolved into open source projects headed by <a title=\"Sourceforge\" href=\"http:\/\/www.sourceforge.net\" target=\"_blank\">Sourceforge<\/a> that now creates freely available software for everyone that isn&#8217;t strictly limited to just operating systems.<\/p>\n<p>Linux really hit the limelight when it was first included as an option to be pre-installed when you bought a new Dell computer.\u00a0 The flavor that was chosen was Ubuntu because it was very graphical (like Windows and OSX) as well as much easier to use than traditional versions of Linux.\u00a0 You didn&#8217;t have to compile source code into running binaries, you just had to download the installer and the operating system did the rest.\u00a0 The ease of use was enough to bring it into the mainstream, and the cost savings delivered to the consumer (because Linux is usually free or very cheap when licensed) made it very appealing.<\/p>\n<p>Today, we see Linux on a lot of systems beyond just standard computers.\u00a0 Linux is on almost all netbooks sold, is the basis for OSX (that&#8217;s right, Apple made their own version of Linux), and is the guts of Google&#8217;s mobile OS: Android.\u00a0 Someday, it is very likely that Linux might become as popular as OSX and Windows because it will be cheaper, just as capable, and just as easy to use as the other systems.\u00a0 Only time will tell.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to providing consumers with more choices for what to run on their computers, by stepping up as legitimate alternatives to Microsoft&#8217;s dominating OS, these other systems have helped push Microsoft to improve it&#8217;s products and keep up with the innovations introduced by its competitors.\u00a0 It&#8217;s just like when the iPhone first came out.\u00a0 Tons of people flocked to AT&amp;T to get their hands on Apple&#8217;s creation.\u00a0 When the rest of the phone manufacturers saw the success of the product they changed gears on their strategies and immediately started creating similar functioning and styled devices themselves.\u00a0 Competition in the marketplace helps consumers get better products because they flock toward whatever is the most impressive technologies, and that forces everyone else to keep up or go obsolete.\u00a0 Let&#8217;s hope the fight between these three operating systems continues to generate great benefits for all computer users.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>One of the great things about this time and age is the variety of products available to us as consumers.\u00a0 From the perspective of Operating Systems, or OS&#8217;s, the spolight has been pointed at Microsoft and Windows for the longest time.\u00a0 Though the majority of computer users still use some form of Windows, the evolution 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