Spotlight | Reviews | Current Issue | Newsletter | Subscribe | Contact |
Departments

Partner Links
Website builder
WinWeb OnlineOffice
Shopping and price comparison with product reviews at dooyoo.co.uk

user friendly

CeBIT 2010 CFP

Linux Magazine is offering free booths for the CeBIT 2010 computer fair to selected open source projects. Apply Now!

  linux-magazine.com » Issues » 2006 » 68 » WHY NOT?  

Print this page. Recommend
Slashdot it! Delicious Share on Facebook Tweet! Digg

WHY NOT?

Author(s): Joe Casad

Dear Linux Magazine Reader,

Our cover story this month on the competing desktop technologies

Xgl and AIGLX highlights yet another example of the rivalries at play in the ever-changing world of open source. But at least these fledglings get along better than many others in the nest. There is something about the GPL that helps rivals get along. Beneath all the com-plications (some personal and some technical) is the realization that, if your code is better, I’d be crazy not to use it, and if my code is better, you’d be crazy not to use it. Of course, problems always arise around this issue of what you mean by “better.” You’ll learn lots more about Xgl and AIGLX later in this issue. For now, I’ll return to another rivalry that has been in the news recently. I used this space two months ago to give my opinion on the quality of the rhetoric that has recently passed between the supporters of KDE and Gnome. (To summarize, my position is: everyone should just choose the desktop they like and quit screaming about the desktop they don’t like.) Of course, a few loud voices sound like a revolution. The greater portion of Gnome and KDE users share my sense that there is no very good reason for trashing someone else’s desktop. Still, since I made a point of singling out the controversy, I should also shine some light on a more positive development.


Read full article as PDF »


Comments


Print this page. Recommend
Slashdot it! Delicious Share on Facebook Tweet! Digg
Related Articles
DESKTOP DISCO
PROGRAM TRAY Trayer
LIFE IN 3D OpenGL and the Linux desktop
QUICK STARTER Start programs simply by name
ASK KLAUS!
DESKTOP FRIEND Desktop searching with Beagle on KDE
Rikki's Open Source Exchange

Stop by Rikki's Open Source Exchange for dispatches from the world of women in open source.

Rikki Kite examines the experience of women across the spectrum of open source –
the people, projects, organizations, events, articles, issues, and news.

more...

 

In the US and Canada, Linux Magazine is known as Linux Pro Magazine.
Entire contents © 2009 [Linux New Media USA, LLC]
Linux New Media web sites:
North America: [Linux Pro Magazine]
UK/Worldwide: [Linux Magazine]
Germany: [Linux-Magazin] [LinuxUser] [EasyLinux] [Linux-Community] [Linux Technical Review]
Eastern Europe: [Linux Magazine Poland] [Linux Community Poland] [Open Source DVD Poland]
International: [Linux Magazine Brazil] [EasyLinux Brazil] [Linux Magazine Spanish]
Corporate: [Linux New Media AG]