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By David Becker
Posted on ZDNet News: Apr 30, 2004 11:00:00 AM

You can easily surf the Web and run a spreadsheet on a Linux-powered PC, but good luck if you want to balance your checkbook.

News.context

What's new:
Linux has more fans all the time, but a lack of familiar applications is slowing adoption.

Bottom line:
Major software makers say they're waiting for more Linux users before bothering to adapt their products to open-source--but Linux advocates say the window of opportunity is closing.

For more info:
Track the players

The open-source operating system has yet to attract significant attention from makers of major desktop applications, such as Adobe Systems, Macromedia or Intuit, maker of the popular Quicken personal finance program. This lack of notice is a sticking point even for Linux visionaries such as Bruce Perens.

"I admit it--I still have a Windows machine that I use solely to run Quicken and TurboTax once a year," Perens said.

Software makers, open-source backers and analysts disagree on whether desktop Linux can thrive without applications such as Quicken and Adobe's Photoshop. Some are confident home-grown Linux applications will evolve to meet such needs, while others say Linux

"I admit it--I still have a Windows machine that I use solely to run Quicken and TurboTax once a year."
--Not even Linux guru Bruce Perens can find all the open-source software he needs.
versions of familiar software tools are essential for converting people from Windows.

"If you're used to a product, you want to keep using that product if that's at all possible," said Miguel de Icaza, co-founder of the Ximian Linux desktop project. "In a few cases, I think open source has good equivalents to Windows applications, but people will still prefer what they know."

Seattle electronics consultant Jim Richardson, however, says support from big software developers hasn't affected his enthusiasm for Linux. "I neither miss, nor need, those apps, with the possible exception of Photoshop, and that is a window of opportunity that Adobe is going to lose very soon," he said.

Catch-22, Linux style
Linux applications are a "which came first, chicken or egg" situation for most major application sellers. There's not enough of a user base now to justify development of Linux products, but the absence of familiar applications slows growth of the Linux user base.

Software makers have responded with a variety of experimental moves to gauge interest in the growing Linux market without committing significant resources. Macromedia recently began selling a version of its Flash development tools optimized to work with the Windows-to-Linux emulator Wine. Corel earlier this month began selling a trial Linux version of its WordPerfect productivity software.


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Adobe offers a Linux version of its Adobe Reader software for displaying PDF files and tried out a Linux version of its FrameMaker layout software two years ago. But the company has since backed off on Linux projects, until "customers demand Linux applications and the market is there," according to an Adobe representative.

Don't worry about market share, reply Linux backers, because Linux already has enough applications to cover basic PC needs and ensure steady growth on the desktop. The OpenOffice.org productivity package, Mozilla Web browser and a few other mature, Linux-native applications cover the bases for most users, said Gary Edwards, a Redwood City, Calif., developer and OpenOffice.org contributor.

"The core is already in place with OpenOffice.org and Mozilla.org," Edwards said. "The rest is gravy."

"Eighty percent of the employees are people we classify as the naive user--they can be satisfied with a very small suite of applications, which Linux has covered."
--Bruce Perens on where
Linux is succeeding

Linux supporters expect the desktop version of the operating system to follow a progression similar to Linux for servers. An initially thin roster of server products was bolstered by applications such as the MySQL database program and the Apache Web server, so that Linux penetration rivals or bests Windows' in several important server markets. Market gains for desktop Linux are expected to continue to trail server products, due to factors from user interfaces to application availability, but ultimately the pattern of development is likely to be the same.

The 80-20 rule comes into play with Linux desktop applications. "Eighty percent of the employees are people we classify as the naive user--they can be satisfied with a very small suite of applications, which Linux has covered," Perens said. "We've gotten to the stage where 80 percent of the people in your company can have a Linux desktop in front of them and not get out bent out of shape."

De Icaza said that with sturdy, Linux-native applications covering the basics, the rest of the application pictures consists of "niche markets" that will be addressed more completely as desktop Linux spreads.

Which leaves the question of who will dominate the market for those niche applications. Just about every significant Windows application has a Linux-native counterpart, but the alternatives vary widely in maturity and usability. GIMP (GNU Image Manipulation Program), an open-source graphics program similar to Photoshop, is widely considered to be close to the "good enough" status achieved by OpenOffice and Mozilla. GNUCash may have a way to go, however, before it challenges Intuit's Quicken empire.

The train is leaving
Michael Robertson, CEO of desktop Linux company Lindows, said application makers have less time than they might think to get in step with Linux.

"It's a waiting game for some of these companies, keeping an eye on the installed base, but they can't keep waiting much longer," Robertson said. "The big software vendors have a choice--respond to Linux or wait for pent-up demand to fill that hole, which is already happening. More and more of these Linux applications are approaching the good-enough threshold."

Perens agreed. "If you don't have a really good Linux version of your application, what you're doing is abdicating your market, because someone else is going to develop a compelling open-source application," he said. "And by the time you get there, it'll be too late."

Embracing Linux would also give software makers such as Adobe and Intuit, which have fended off major competitive efforts by Microsoft in the past, insurance if the software giant decides to go after their markets again, Edwards said.

"Adobe has a marketplace of users and potential users," he said. "Microsoft wants that market and will take it, given enough time...That's the threat of working on the Windows platform. The only hope any of these guys have of surviving a Microsoft assault is to work with open-source communities on creating a portable application environment, an “open stack,” and write their applications to that environment instead of to Windows."

Good enough...isn't
While OpenOffice.org and other Linux applications have reached the "good-enough" stage, analysts caution that it's unlikely to be good enough to convince businesses to undergo the expense and labor of migrating to Linux.

"You need to demonstrate a real advantage to get companies to move over to a new desktop," said IDC analyst Al Gillen. "If you don't get a payoff from moving from one platform to another, what's the point?"

"Parity isn't good enough," added Ted Schadler, an analyst at Forrester Research. "It almost doesn't matter if there's a Linux application that's almost as good as a Windows application--it's still not likely to draw attention from the market...It's kind of like the early days of PCs, where you have to reinvent the value proposition from scratch."

Robertson argued that "good enough" is a different proposition, however, in some of the geographic areas in which Linux has the greatest potential. Emerging regional markets, such as Latin America and parts of Asia, are moving to Linux PCs without any Windows experience, so people don't have expectations for how an application should look and behave. "In emerging markets, there's no Photoshop bias because they've never been able to afford to use it," he said.

Safety net
In more developed markets, there are a variety of interim solutions for folks who want to make the jump to Linux but have an application or two they just can't leave behind. Programs such as the Wine emulator and Win4Lin provide an environment for running Windows applications on a Linux PC.

Perens said emulation offers a safety net for companies considering a Linux switch.

"I think the Windows emulation approach is only an interim approach, but it solves an immediate problem," he said. "One of the things people worry about is what happens if we do a desktop migration and then it turns out there's this application we need. That's what Wine is good for."

Desktop Linux also benefits from the ongoing trend to deliver software as a Web-based service, with equal access for any Web browser. Intuit has typified that approach with Web-based applications such as TurboTax and QuickBase, which benefit the company by switching irregular boxed software sales to steady subscription income while at the same time opening products to a wider base of potential customers.

"When you talk about Intuit, I think their intention is to do everything they can to promote using their applications over the Web, and that's great for Linux," Robertson said.

Bring in the fun
But some applications aren't so easy to replicate on Linux. Robertson has said games are one of the biggest holes on the Linux desktop, a situation he doesn't expect to improve as much as become irrelevant as living room consoles take over more of that market.

Chad Smith, a Chattanooga, Tenn.-based Web content manager, disagreed, arguing that people still want to have fun with their PCs.

"Linux needs games," he said. "This may seem trivial, but I don't think it is. Most home users don't buy a computer just to do their homework, write memos and do their taxes. Linux already has plenty of apps out there to allow the playing of DVDs and MP3s. What's really missing is first-class games."

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Handicapped accessibility
Linux has no running speech recognition with command and control such as is provided by one proprietary program that runs on Windows only. So who takes care of those with RMS?... (Read the rest)
Posted by: susancragin@... Posted on: 08/31/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Linux still a way to go.  keith.sloan | 04/30/04
You are not the target market  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
You hit some of the Reason I still run Windows 2K  voska | 04/30/04
You are exactly right, consumers will be the last to switch.  DonnieBoy | 04/30/04
Disagree  paman57@... | 05/03/04
Re: Linux Still has a way to go  dougN | 05/03/04
Good enough...is  issthatso | 04/30/04
Business first, Then home  SC-man | 04/30/04
Exactly...  prime21 | 04/30/04
The future looks bright with FREEdom  Xunil_Sierutuf | 04/30/04
Don't you wish!  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
Being the rich means hiring the best PR people you can!  Xunil_Sierutuf | 04/30/04
Robber barons are people, too.  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
"Good Enough" has ben good enough for Microsoft.  casbo | 04/30/04
Good Enough was good enough  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
did ya hear about the new marketing campaign - open an account and get a PC  oldskool | 04/30/04
Where did you get that?  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
Not to mention...  ShadeTree | 04/30/04
What Games?  voska | 04/30/04
XP is pushing me to Linux  voska | 04/30/04
Thank you  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
And yuo clim to know something about Windows???  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
I don't have turn off Wizards in Linux  voska | 04/30/04
Wizards  PA-ITGuy | 04/30/04
Yeah, uhh, ooooooookay...   | 04/30/04
Yes, some will not switch until there are more apps.  DonnieBoy | 05/01/04
White men can't jump  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
True, but....  NemesisNL | 04/30/04
Don't speak too soon  doctormoriarty | 04/30/04
Who's gonna pay?  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
Companies still train employees  doctormoriarty | 04/30/04
Really?  Linux User 147560 | 04/30/04
Training?  NemesisNL | 05/01/04
Message has been deleted.   | 04/30/04
IBM. HP, Intel, AMD, Sun and others can jump & CAN MARKET  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
J.M. you win the spot on prize of the day  Squawkbox | 04/30/04
Actually, B. Gates had squat to do with mainframe downfall  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
Correction (of somebody)  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
Your conclusion is correct  IT_User | 04/30/04
check your facts ... Gates did little to make PC buisness ready  oldskool | 04/30/04
Oh yeah - one more thing, MS was an APPLE vendor  oldskool | 04/30/04
You guys forgot CPM, ConCurrent DOS..  zackszoo | 04/30/04
Gates Quote  SC-man | 04/30/04
Where did you see that?  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
Try this  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
tried it  eLurker | 04/30/04
Don't look now  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
You guys are arguing past one another  IT_User | 04/30/04
Thanks  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
Right attack, wrong target  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
False statement  NemesisNL | 05/01/04
They are NOT marketing end user systems!  balsover | 04/30/04
Whoever is telling you about business  IT_User | 04/30/04
re: huge retraining costs...  ryusen | 04/30/04
Before you can plug a hole, you have to build...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
As if Windows is a proper container  Grimm Reaper | 04/30/04
Which is it that you hate?  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
Message has been deleted.  Xunil_Sierutuf | 04/30/04
Huh  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
Violated the rules..  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Gotcha  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
LOL, well you didn't deny the Bill G. blowup doll  Xunil_Sierutuf | 04/30/04
plugging holes  eLurker | 04/30/04
see now that was funny .)  ryusen | 04/30/04
We need enought apps to get a critical mass.  DonnieBoy | 04/30/04
And only after that will I switch  zijiang | 04/30/04
Yes, consumers will be the last to switch.  DonnieBoy | 04/30/04
Bruce - Dump your Windows box  Eggs Ackley_z | 04/30/04
Don't give people what they want - tell them they're stupid!  archerjoe | 04/30/04
Better yet:  wploger | 04/30/04
Accountant  SC-man | 04/30/04
cost/benifit?  ryusen | 04/30/04
IE only  Just Me_z | 04/30/04
Switch the User Agent  Yagotta B. Kidding | 04/30/04
Plugging the Linux holes  Loverock Davidson | 04/30/04
Flimsy argument  Michael Kelly | 04/30/04
Confused- Quicken on Windows???  wploger | 04/30/04
Get on board...  Chad_z | 04/30/04
Another Reason NOT TO BUY LINUX  RobertoSalazar | 04/30/04
All right Roberto...  wploger | 04/30/04
Your visionary, McBride, just went blind....  Spam-ZD | 04/30/04
Go to bed and no internet for you!  trojanhorse | 04/30/04
Who uses cheques anymore?  voska | 04/30/04
missing the point  dabrooks | 04/30/04
Probably a losing battle  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
You're right.  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
can't comment  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
Support by forum  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
Support by forum  Spam-ZD | 04/30/04
"Facts" to fit  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
What A Load That Was  nikoli | 04/30/04
reread  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
Smart custodial engineers  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
Yeah Okay  mudfoot | 05/02/04
d be much happier if Linux would try to find its own path  wploger | 04/30/04
Why do they have to FOLLOW anyone?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Answer: It just makes sense  voska | 04/30/04
Ease of Use is good  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
Be more specific.  Spam-ZD | 04/30/04
Get Real Spam Man  nikoli | 04/30/04
Get Real Spam Man  nikoli | 04/30/04
Not really...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Think that's what he's suggesting?  IT_User | 04/30/04
A second place follower is okay though?  tic swayback | 04/30/04
It's really about commoditization, but you deny that, Micro$hill.  dicktaurus@... | 04/30/04
Why do they have to FOLLOW anyone?  Spam-ZD | 04/30/04
What a silly and useless post.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Wow, you mean you had no adequate response to Spam-ZD, huh?  dicktaurus@... | 04/30/04
Maybe, but you post is just plain useless  Spam-ZD | 04/30/04
Didn't use the word follow...  wploger | 04/30/04
I agree with you.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
You're missing very large market segments  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
The double edged sword!  George Mitchell | 04/30/04
One problem  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
On moving ahead  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
I don't quite agree...  Linux_Developer | 04/30/04
short term thinking  zijiang | 04/30/04
George, you forget patents.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Adobe faces bigger obstacles  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
Bigger PDF problem: it reeks  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
You're not using it correctly  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
Partly affirm  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
Here's a recent example  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
MS hopes to survive on patents?  Spam-ZD | 04/30/04
Head, meet the sand...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
A dose of reality  IT_User | 04/30/04
You aren't looking at the real picture.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
And just who are the contributors?  IT_User | 04/30/04
So they can't copy it...  Linux User 147560 | 04/30/04
Patents are a double edged sword ...  George Mitchell | 04/30/04
Agree and disagree  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
Re: Agree and disagree  George Mitchell | 04/30/04
New Advertising Slogan  zijiang | 04/30/04
I ask an honest question.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Ok  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
I can think of dozens of things...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Good list, but pc vs. dedicated device?  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
Who knows really...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
You lost me.  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
Could it be we need...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Deep Thought; or, all the world's a peripheral  Anton Philidor | 04/30/04
Keep it simple  quietLee | 04/30/04
Thats why  RedHat9User | 04/30/04
Off the top of my head...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Good ideas  Michael Kelly | 04/30/04
Chicken and egg argument is a fact of life.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Interesting points  voska | 04/30/04
Suggestions lead to the very sins of which he questions.  John Le'Brecage | 04/30/04
And where can I buy them?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/02/04
Re: I ask an honest question.  mbraincell@... | 04/30/04
Glad to know I'm not the only one asking.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Proprietary software is not the only place for innovation.  B.O.F.H. | 05/01/04
Not true:  wploger | 04/30/04
From the beginning  PA-ITGuy | 04/30/04
Honest question  Rick_K | 05/03/04
As honest an answer I can give  Michael Kelly | 04/30/04
The "bricks" have been there for years.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Unfortunately...  Michael Kelly | 04/30/04
Has a second rate, "me too" product ever worked?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
You helped prove my point on that reply  Michael Kelly | 04/30/04
Is that really true?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Reply to No Axe  Michael Kelly | 04/30/04
Yes...  wploger | 04/30/04
And here I thought you had something to say.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
You're making his point for him  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
Huh? What are you talking about?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
OSS doesn't necessarily mean no name brand  Michael Kelly | 04/30/04
Paying for quality  tic swayback | 04/30/04
Because I don't agree it's the case at all.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Regardless  tic swayback | 04/30/04
tic  pschroeder@... | 04/30/04
tic, features, functions, and applications.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/01/04
To Ax; Perception  tic swayback | 05/02/04
To further make the point.  Rick_K | 05/03/04
You mean MS-DOS?  Yagotta B. Kidding | 04/30/04
And what has that to do with the topic?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
You asked  Yagotta B. Kidding | 04/30/04
Brand name !=  Linux User 147560 | 04/30/04
windows has become the generic OS.  B.O.F.H. | 05/02/04
You need the plans, too  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
Is Mozilla OSS?  IT_User | 04/30/04
I suspect that you are slightly confused.  B.O.F.H. | 04/30/04
Yes and No  tic swayback | 04/30/04
Let's face it.  Yen_z | 04/30/04
So why is MS Office the NUMBER 1 seller for Macs?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
A possible reason  Michael Kelly | 04/30/04
Nope...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Because  j.m.galvin | 04/30/04
Obvious  tic swayback | 04/30/04
Obvious, its the best out there.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/30/04
Wrong again there bitty  Rick_K | 05/03/04
Simple...  wploger | 04/30/04
But what have you now?  StorageGuru | 04/30/04
Xbox  tic swayback | 04/30/04
IBM Right?  nikoli | 05/01/04
IBM makes the G5 chip.  Rick_K | 05/03/04
almost right...  jimk_z | 04/30/04
Insurance ?  mbraincell@... | 04/30/04
no Games on Linux PERFECT!  jkerr | 04/30/04
Quicken  mabricen | 04/30/04
Stomping of the little feet....  quietLee | 04/30/04
LOL, You are soooo right  nikoli | 04/30/04
Re: #4  PA-ITGuy | 05/01/04
NEXT, BeOS, OS2, Linux..Next  jimk_z | 04/30/04
Eventually  CobraA1 | 04/30/04
Message has been deleted.  trojanhorse | 04/30/04
Message has been deleted.  trojanhorse | 04/30/04
Why?  PA-ITGuy | 05/01/04
Get some games on Linux then Bravo  FilledOut | 05/04/04
Handicapped accessibility  susancragin@... | 08/31/04

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