Interview: Xandros and KDE 206
Fabrice Mous writes "The Xandros Desktop OS is known for their intuitive graphical environment that works right out of the box. Their polished desktop product is based on KDE. The
KDE News website had the privilege to talk to Rick Berenstein, Xandros Chairman and CTO and Ming Poon,
Vice President for Software Development about Xandros and their products and the relationship between
Xandros and the KDE project. Without further ado ... enjoy the
interview!"
Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:5, Informative)
Most of it seems to be an exact replica of MS look and feel - the same start button, the task bar, task trays, heck even the colour variations!
Why is this deemed "intuitive" then? Isn't this just another attempt to replicate MS experience on another OS? Or am I missing something?
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, you'll find that the KDE desktop project in general is very much like this. It's always seemed to strike a rather uneasy balance - the look and feel are mainly based on Windows, yet the icons seem to be more Apple like. This is going to be very confusing indeed for a migrating user.
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:4, Insightful)
Or is it that they all accept deep down that MS has an interface that's hard to top?
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2, Informative)
The whole "docking bar" concept comes from Apple. MS copied it for Windows95 and bloated it badly, then the KDE people copied it from MS.
Personally, I prefer the active desktop of fvwm/mwm/blackbox where your menus are wherever you don't have a window and otherwise stay out of the way. It is an older concept than the docking bar, and I consider it superior. So good, in fact, that MicroSoft has finally gotten around to copying it.
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:3, Interesting)
MS wasn't as big always as it is now, so as and when they came out with newer versions they did make things easier and more predictable (thus familiar) - better than any other competitor.
And if MS copying others was so bad, why is OSS copying it now? Where does that leave OSS then?
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
That's got nothing to do with it, if they were to copy the best interface it would be OS X's, not MS's. They copy MS to avoid confusing Joe Sixpack MS user when he gets pushed onto Linux. Personally, my desktop doesn't look like Win or OS X, it's built around popup menus and SuperKaramba and it's better (in my mind at least) than either of the aforementioned.
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:3, Informative)
For instance, if I try to teach two groups of people (one has experience with the QWERTY layout, the others don't know any) touch-typing with Dvorak keyboard layout, the class that is familiar with the QWERTY layout will have a harder time than the class that is seeing a keyboard layout for the first time.
(that's from a mental standpoint, the people who have worked with QWERTY obviously ha
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:4, Interesting)
You just bought a computer, switched it on and you have frienly icons that let you play games, or use your word editor or your spreadsheet or pretty much anything that an average Joe needs.
I personally don't care much about what MS copied and from who. Even with all this copy and paste, they glued it all together successfully enough for new users to come on board without too much fuss.
The only thing that brings a tinge of sadness is the attempts to make a system look like MS interfaces. Sure, it would be familiar and would make a user less scared to migrate, but why not think of a better UI? We all rant about things that MS got wrong and the superiorities of *nix over MS - why not apply all that to UI's as well? Hell, there are already so many things that ppl dont like in the newer version - the whole control panel sucks, the start bar leaves a lot desired and everything takes more clicks now than ever before - why not improve on that? Why not think of say, a 3D inteface?
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
And my gripes with windows never were with the interface :) Although I felt quite comfy when using OsX...
The copying saddens me too. One thing is to copy what they have gotten right (love or hate it, MS has had years of experience with that) wich is one of the premises that has made Linux great: we copy from Unix (Hi darl! :) what is good about unix... but to make the UI look just like Windows? :(
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because most of the time people, when confronted with a different UI, shreak and complain about how they'll never use it because it requires them to learn too many new things.
Change has to be gradual, but familiarity has to be maintained. When I show people Konqueror's split panes, they panic. Over the course of a few days to a few weeks, they learn how to use it somewhat effective
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
It's obvious that if you already know how to type, be it with qwerty, azerty or dvorak, you already know how to USE a keyboard, and using a new layout is a matter of remapping the keys in your mind. You already have (from your post) at least two years of muscle memory on the motions of using a keyboard.
The point would be that, given two persons that somehow have the exact same level of keyboar
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
It's only an "OSS need" in your imagination. There are 100s of OSS desktops. I'm currently using twm (don't ask) and last week I was using enlightenment (also don't ask). Neither looks anything like Windows. You're looking at one of the many OSS desktops, noting similarities to Windows, and generalising that all OSS desktops are clones of Windows. That's
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
Transparent Migration (Score:2, Insightful)
The biggest reason for look-and-feel cloning is to make migration from Windows, with it's 98% control of the desktop market, to Linux as pain free as possible.
Besides, imagine trying to sell off the idea of Linux migration to a Fortune 500 company saying that "Oh, yeah, you'll have to retrain all of your staff who will be using the new Linux installation because we feel our WM and Desktop environment is cooler/slicker/13373r than that Window
Re:Transparent Migration (Score:2)
My wife probably has more time on a Linux desktop than half of slashdot readers. She gets frustrated at how "clunky" Windows is when she has to u
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
When you're playing catch-up you need to encourage people to migrate. To do so, you need to make them feel warm and comfy.
Once you have the market share can you really then go off at a tangent and change things. People are more accepting then.
Of course, you could go off in a tangent now, and forever remain a niche OS with patchy hardware support.
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
What is distinctly LESS obvious is how to install programs simply and easily. Attempting such a sisyphean ordeal will no doubt end in scouring the net for dependencies that are dependent on other dependencies that conflict with the dependencie
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
To RPM, DEB, Apt-Get, EMerge, Yum, etc. fanboys: Online software catalogues are still bundling. I can't get commercial software out of the online catalogs, can I? And I certainly can't sell my database tools that way. So please don't even start w
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
It just so happens that I know a thing or two about this. And you CANNOT just double click on the binary. You first have to mark the binary as executable. This is a completely non-obvious step for anyone but technical users. How are users supposed to know that the file is an installer and not a text file? In my software, I add the ".sh" extension to make it look like a
Re:About Software Catalogues, packaging systems, a (Score:2)
Sorry, you're going to have to keep waiting.
I use my own tools as an example (primarily because I've gone through some pains to make a generic installer), but I'm really more concerned with all the non-technical software that Linux *could* have if installs weren't so difficult. Games are an obvious choice, but things like third party video players, commercial office suites,
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:1)
Because Windows Users Won't Stare At It Helplessly (Score:2)
Similar reasoning lies behind KDE, Gnome, etc.
Interface designers do not live and work in a vacuum. The Windows interface exists and establishes the skills and expectations of most computer users. It would be foolish to design a commercial interface that ignores that.
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
The windows thing is for people who are new to it. I keep it for my guest user, as they find it less confusing than my usual setup.
I think some people really don't know how configurable KDE is and are too lazy to click an icon and set it up. Hence all the windows bitching.
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:5, Interesting)
It sure is good to replicate a user's experience of the most widely used OS (if not the most popular), but wouldnt innovation demand doing something that it doesn't already provide? Why not invest the same collective OSS impetus and skill in building a UI? Given the OSS track record, I'm positive such an initiative would not only beat competition, but also come up with an interface that user's will find more easy to use and adapt.
Couple this with the *nix platform, and only then shall we have a wide acceptance and use of the OS that we all so love and promote!
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
In my opinion, this is why KDE are barking up t
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
1) I don't think Xandros is claiming any great "innovation", just superior pa
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
There is innovation. (Score:2)
Yet, we see a recurring theme of desktops that are Windows like. This is "market" driven. The fact is that the vast majority of PC users want
The Humane Environment (Score:4, Interesting)
For another thing, you never have to save anything in The Humane Environment. It autosaves (with undo!) for you.
For another thing, you don't have to start programs in THE. You access your data, and it takes care of starting the program that manipulates the data.
We can do this all, and we can do it long before Longhorn comes out.
Re:The Humane Environment (Score:2)
I understand the point behind document-oriented interfaces and all that, but it is really, extremely annoying when it is shoved down your throat. Like those programs which register themselves for everything under the sun and you have to get them out of the way to use your favourite program.
Some webpages I want to edit in Quanta. Some I want to do in vim. So
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
Heck, while we're dreaming, why not build *two* FOSS desktops?! We could call one "GNOME" and the other "KDE". That would be awesome.
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
Jef Raskin says "don't say intuitive" (Score:5, Informative)
-russ
Re:Jef Raskin says "don't say intuitive" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:But you're *not* disagreeing (Score:2)
This isn't usuall a misapplication of the term at all. In most cases, the two terms do coincide. Our intuitions are developed largely though experience. I will have a much better intuitive feel for how something will work if it is similar to other things with which I am familiar. You seem to be trying to make some artificial distincion between "innate" i
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
Phase 1: All Windows w/Windows apps, no FOSS
Phase 2: Windows w/some FOSS (mozilla, gaim, OOo)
Phase 3: Linux w/Windowsish interface w/FOSS and perhaps Wine or similar
Phase 4: Full FOSS desktop with native apps
While I currently have a full FOSS desktop, many people I work with (sys admin) are around a Phase 2.. Its getting close to moving many of them to a phase 3 setup
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
Maybe it is done to make users used to using windows feel more at home with Linux. I just don't see the point. It isn't windows, it won't (natively) run windows apps. If you want your OS to look like windows and you want to run windows apps, then why not just use windows?
What kind of message do distros like this put out to non Linux users? When a non Linux user at
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
I will not knock Xandros, for I think it is a good thing they're out there, and also a good thing any time a Windoze user makes the switch, but the person writing this blurb for
Xandros is not 'polished'. It might be better than XP, but then again most things are. OSS continues to suffe
Re:Why is it "intuitive"? (Score:2)
I've been using Xandros exclusively for almost two years, and I live at my PC.
I think the Xandros idea is to provide a user interface experience that seems comfortable to people who have been using modern graphical user interfaces. They want to ease the transition to Linux for the average users (not just /. geeks), and I think they've done a good job.
Xandros doesn't exactly mimic Windows, but there are a lot of similarities. I think they picked the best elements of Windows and the Mac, and added thei
At (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:At (Score:3, Insightful)
That alone could justifiy the cash for the average user to be able to make the switch.
Not for me or you, possibly, but for the average joe, compatibility is key.
Re:At (Score:2, Insightful)
No, I'm not kidding you. I am talking about people who want to switch because they are fed up with the fact that windows is a piece of shit. Yet, they feel tied to the OS because nothing else will run that ONE app that they have to have. To that person, $90 may be reasonable.
Windows only costs $100.
Plus $X for McAfee
Plus $X for firewall software (or hardware)
Plus $X on beer t
Re:At (Score:3, Insightful)
This applies to Windows HOW?
Re:At (Score:2)
Re:At (Score:2)
Their philosophy seems to be that choice may be good, but something that Just Works is even better.
Re:At (Score:2)
$90 is for the Deluxe edition, with Crossover office and a 350 page user guide
The standard is $40, but doesn't come with Crossover.
How much was a different boxed distro again?
Xandros worth $90? Yes for me. (Score:2)
When I installed Xandros, and did one upgrade / update using Xandros Networks then rebooted I had almost everything on the laptop working perfectly. I could play Tux Racer at full speed, and burn CDs without any trouble. I installed MS Office 2000 and
Xandros (Score:4, Funny)
Stop confusing intuitive with familiar (Score:5, Insightful)
They're merely familiar!
Re:Stop confusing intuitive with familiar (Score:2)
That said, expecting most people to delineate the difference between intuitiveness and familiarity in a PC-based GUI is a grand act of self-delusion. I mean, how many people don't know the basic difference between there, their and they're, as well as how to use them?
As for familiarity, I don't think emulating Windows is a bad idea when your other options are the CLI or a UI standard that doesn't exist amongst Linux vendors.
Re:Stop confusing intuitive with familiar (Score:2)
This is a very popular quote, and while it is valid as a warning against confusing the familiar with the intuitive, it isn't accurate.
As any developmental psychologist, psycholinguist, or cognitive scientist -- not to mention any parent -- could tell you, there are many other things which are intuitive. Speaking and walking to name 2 examples. I don't have time to find you links (I should be working
Re:Stop confusing intuitive with familiar (Score:3, Insightful)
By the same token, there is plenty that is non-intuitive too, so we should steer away from those.
As they say, know thy enemy. That is the rational think to do.... hey wait, this is
Xandros is just Debian with KDE and Codeweavers (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Xandros is just Debian with KDE and Codeweavers (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Xandros is just Debian with KDE and Codeweavers (Score:2)
And you won't have:
The excellent four-click Xandros installer
An autoconfiguration routine that knows almost all PC hardware
The very good Xandros File Manager
Drag and drop CD burning (with Ogg or MP3 encoding if you like) for audio or data CDs
Super easy networking, including automatic primary domain authentication
Etc., etc., etc.
I've been using Xandros for almost two years. Their motto is "It just works" for a good reason
switch users (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:switch users (Score:2)
The only difference is that I don't have to move my hand to the mouse to change
Justin.
Re:switch users (Score:2)
The only intuitive interface is the nipple (Score:5, Funny)
-- attributed to Bruce Edigar
konqi (Score:3, Interesting)
I just do not get it (Score:5, Insightful)
I use OS X and I love it, but I also love mu Suse and I have always thought that a good GUI (ahem...not like windows) could launch linux into the stratosphere. Why spend time and effort "creating" a GUI that is already in use???
C'mon, don't waste your talents for another second!
Re:I just do not get it (Score:1)
Re:I just do not get it (Score:2)
Re:I just do not get it (Score:2)
There's an MS power toy that you can download that provides multi-desktop functionality; I don't have a linnk to hand, but it's somewhere on microsoft.com.
applets on the taskbar
That's true, although in a sense the clock is an applet; I agree that you can't add your own, though, and I'm not sure if it's possible to write a true applet to go in there. You can certainly put an icon in there to offer some kind of status readout (or similar) and a shortcut menu to furt
Re:I just do not get it (Score:2)
The longhorn sidebar supports applets just fine. That's its whole reason for existing in fact.
Re:I just do not get it (Score:3, Informative)
General Acceptance and ease of use for people new to Linux? If a corporation could easily just drop this into place, without having significant training to their end-users, this could be conceived as a Godsend. I'm not suggesting that Linux needs to conform or try to take over the entire desktop market, but for the majority of linux users who would LIKE to see Linux run in their workspace (officially), this is definetly the way to go. Hook-em then wow
Re:I just do not get it (Score:2)
For one because however quirky they are still better than what Linux offers.
As well, we would be better off first fully catching up to Windows/MacOS and then striking off on a better path. That way OSSers get to benefit from somebody else's efforts, just like Microsoft learned from others.
C'mon, don't waste your talents for another second!
Actually what you have is a severe case of NIH syndrome.
Re:I just do not get it (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I just do not get it (Score:2)
Why is 3D superior? If Microsoft adds 3D, what next?
eesh, not this again (Score:3, Funny)
Dreadful Interview (Score:3, Interesting)
Okay so maybe they just sent a list of questions and published the list of answers they were sent back, but they really should have tried to integrate this stuff into a decent flow. It reads very badly.
Re:Dreadful Interview (Score:2)
I think most tech journalists consider an interview to be a list of questions that you e-mail to someone. Then you print their answers with the questions. Of course that's not really an interview at all but an outline for an article that you want someone else to write. Unfortunately, the idea goes almost unquestioned in tech news outlets *cough*Slashdot*cough*.
Something I've noticed with techies: They're very demanding about getting technical things right and go to great lengths to be accurate. They're mo
NT Domain Authentication? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:NT Domain Authentication? (Score:4, Informative)
Thanks to Samba [samba.org], which has been around since long before Correl first released the linux distro which would become Xandros, any distro can authenticate to an NT domain, also to an Active Directory domain. It can also act as an NT domain controller, but not an Active Directory domain controller. Xandros probably just has some slick tool to configure it. Red Hat has a slick config tool for it in Fedora and in Enterprise. I'd have to assume that Suse and Mandrake has a slick config tool for it too. It's certainly possible that Xandros uses something else, but it's not a feature unique to that distro.
Re:NT Domain Authentication? (Score:2)
Xandros 1.0 (late 2002) would interface to a Windows network easier than a Windows box would. They removed automatic primary domain controller authentication when they created Xandros 2.0, launched early 2004. You can still authenticate, but it's a brief manual operation. They retargeted the standard version of Xandros at home users and moved automatic authentication to their newly launched business version, essentially creating home and business versions of Xandros, much as Windows XP has Home and Pro
I use Xandros (Score:3, Informative)
It's true to say that it might be confusing for a new user. As always, when switching from an OS you've used for years you will find things difficult if you're not used to Linux.
I personally have had few problems with it. It detected my monitor, LAN card, all my hardware. Something even Redhate failed to manage.
Of course, it's not FreeBSD. But hey, it's a start...
Re:I use Xandros (Score:2)
Microsoft BOB (Score:2, Funny)
You're all missing the point !! (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe you are all just trolling, because I find it hard to believe that you haven't seen the desktop numbers (or at least heard about them). Almost everyone uses Windows on the desktop, except a few who use the Mac (with MS's full blessing).
The purpose of the Xandros distribution is to appeal to Windows users. It is supposed to be intuitive to Windows users, not Linux users. 'Lock-in' really exists and it is really important: it is very difficult to switch to another OS if you've only ever used Windows. It's not a matter of which is better, it's a question of familiarity.
I personally would like to see more Windows users using Linux (in any form), and I would especially like to see a small dent made in the MS monopolies so I'm glad to see Xandros working on this.
Now, if you want to slag Xandros, there are lots of better ways to do this. Most importantly to me, they don't seem to contribute much back. People are attacking Red Hat a lot these days, but take a loook at the amount that Red Hat contributes to important OSS projects (eg. GCC). Xandros does not. But that is their right - they are not breaking the GPL or anything (to the best of my knowledge). By the way, Dream Weavers (which is included in Xandros and shares some ownership) is also an excellent contributor (to Wine).
It also seems to me that their product is way over priced, but I guess I don't know what their strategy is.
"works right out of the box", my left nut... (Score:2, Informative)
What a pain in the ass. Naturally, after all that the modem in the laptop didn't work (driver version was too old), neit
Nice graphics (Score:2)
I don't know how this thing actually works in practice, but if the quality of their graphics is an indication, I'm optimistic. I had a quick look at the screenshots and my immediate reaction was "at last a linux GUI that doesn't hurt my eyes".
great quote (Score:2, Funny)
Xandros has issues - but it works for me (Score:5, Interesting)
I moved one of my machines to Xandros 2.0 last December. It was my first machine to move from Windows 2000. I hadn't switched until then for a few reasons:
1) While I can figure out technical things, I want some basis of familiarity to start with. Most Linux operating systems are completely foreign. I had previously installed Debian once, but I had no idea what to do to make my sound work, and no real way to find out without wasting weeks of my free time on my own, or going to a newsgroup to get unhelpful advice.
2) I had been very nervous about making an -insecure- Linux box. Back in college I had a SGI workstation with Irix. I learned a good bit about the OS, and even reinstalled it once from scratch. I didn't learn until it was too late, however, that buried somewhere back in section 6 chapter 7 page 35 of the documentation was a list of default accounts with no passwords! The machine was exploited. I waited until Xandros 2.0 so I would have a Linux operating system with the simplicity of Debian updates to keep it secure.
Xandros 2.0 has worked very well for me. A few accomplishments:
1) In four years, my wife and I have not been able to get Windows networking to function on our six computers. Her second machine could see my second machine in the workgroup, while my second machine could see her primary machine. None of them could see anything else, even though they were all in the same workgroup and even attached to the same hub, with all of them set up the same way. We used FTP to transfer files, and moved the printer cable manually. With Xandros, I set up a fileserver with (almost) a right-click and "share this folder". Amazingly, even now when the machines can't see each other, they ALL see the server. Samba does a better job of Windows networking that Windows does!
2) I have an old HP scanner. The HP driver for it blue-screens Windows 2k on boot, and they never provided an updated driver. I haven't used it in two years because of this. When I used Xandros Networks to install their scanner program (Kooka) and then plugged in my USB scanner, it just -worked-. (The first day.)
3) I have several Windows applications running well in Xandros with Crossover Office, including Excel (didn't like OO.o), tax software, GURPS character creator, etc. This helps build hope that I could leave Windows entirely one day.
Now, that said, there are some things that have gone wrong:
1) That Samba share worked great for all the Windows users, who could great and modify files in the shared directory with ease (when I had permissions set correctly in the graphical dialogs). To get my user on the Xandros machine to be able to also create and modify files at the same time, I had to dig through the Xandros support site and the Samba online docs to find the right setting to make in a config file.
2) The mouse in Xandros was "sticky". The cursor wouldn't move until I had moved the mouse a certain amount, and then it "jumped". This made it VERY hard to do things like resize columns in Excel. The fix was adding a "resolution" line to the pointer's configuration, which again I had to go to support forums to find. I have no idea why this wasn't configurable from the control center.
3) After using my scanner the first day, two days later it completely didn't work. Again, after digging around on support sites, I found the solution - it was a permissions problem. (Why did I have permission the first day but not on later days? I have no idea.) Anyway, it works fine again now, and I was even able to help some other folks who had the same problem.
In summary - Xandros 2.0 has a market. Maybe it's not a market for most Slashdot readers who work in IT or are in college or high school and grew up with Linux and PCs. But it has a market for this electrical engi
Which begs the question... (Score:2, Insightful)
As a Xandros user... (Score:5, Informative)
1. On every PC we've installed it on (about 10 in our company) it just worked, with the exception of a notebook that had some CD hardware problems.
2. It installs smoothly and gives you a good set of applications without overloading the UI.
3. It has an excellent one-click GUI update manager that is based on apt and is compatible with it.
4. The Xandros File Manager really _is good_. Whatever file you have, you click and the 'right' thing happens. Want to burn some files to CD? Selected them, right click and select "Burn to CD"... Want to unpack a zip file? Right click, choose "Unpack". and so on.
5. It is stable.
Overall Xandros gives you the feeling that you are driving a luxury car. Smooth, highly polished, and incredible attention to detail.
6. It is Debian: want to add something? Find the sources, unpack, build, install.
Now the poor points:
1. Slow release cycle, annoying if you're a thrill seeker. With one release a year, Xandros gives you reliability over performance and gadgets.
2. Not free. You can't just copy it and share it. I believe Xandros is preparing a free version.
3. The Windows support is flaky and not something you should bet on. It's better just to migrate to Linux/portable applications such as OOo over time (it took me about 6 months to migrate, switching one application at a time: office, media players, browsing, streaming, agendas, and finally email.)
I've tried many different distros, but I'm not willing to spend much time installing, or learning the details. It has to work quickly and smoothly. That's what Xandros does.
I bought Xandros (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm mixed about it. I wanted an easy desktop but I also want to be able to config "some stuff". Like, I wanted to be able to upgrade kernals, or upgrade to kde 3.2 etc, which I couldn't.
I suppose it wasn't really aimed at me, but for the average windows user it is fantastic. Amazing hardware support (minus USB) easy installation, looks great (you CAN have Gnome in it, it's a matter of "apt-get install gdm" and "apt-get install gnome-desktop") also th
Writing as somebody who's making the switch (Score:4, Informative)
I'd tried Linux every year or so, but the installation process kept turning me away. I couldn't find a distro that worked out of the box with my IBM Thinkpad T21 (strange video card running 1400x1050, and integrated 3com Hurricane ethernet card that isn't supported anymore.) This time, I decided I was going to make the switch no matter what.
Over the course of two weekends, I tried every distro I could find and had nothing but problems. My video card setup was particularly problematic: I just wanted dual head video with one video card, two flat panels. Most distributions just stubbornly refused to work out of the box. I contacted a lot of Linux users in my area via IRC, and nobody had the time (even though I was offering great money) to come set it up for me.
Out of desperation, I shelled out $90 for the downloadable version of Xandros, figuring that since it came with Crossover Office, it'd probably be worth the money.
Wow. It was. Among other things, Xandros detected the ATI video card out of the box, eventually got dual head video working, and the user interface is pretty straightforward. It still couldn't handle the onboard Ethernet on the Thinkpad, but I've given up on that laptop by now.
Here's the punch line: users leaving Windows don't care about the window manager. They don't care whether it's Gnome or KDE. We want an easy transition, and we're willing to pay good money for it. We don't want a *BETTER* user interface - if we did, we'd buy Macs. We just want to do the same things we're doing more, but more reliably and more securely. People who argue about whether Xandros is copying Windows are missing the point. They got my $90. If I could do it all over again, the only thing I would have done is bought Xandros earlier in the process.
Re:Writing as somebody who's making the switch (Score:2)
Attention Qt License FUDsters: (Score:3, Interesting)
When we started the Corel LINUX project back in March of 1999, GNOME/GTK was there so we actually reviewed both GNOME and KDE to make sure we used the right desktop environment to start. We had a very short and aggressive cycle and the simplicity of KDE/Qt won again. Looking back, we never regretted about not supporting GNOME at all. Most of us came from OS/2 PM or Windows GUI development or freshly from a new object oriented technology called Java back then. MFC was a big life saver when it came out in Windows in developing GUI apps. Java was even better where everything was simple and made perfect sense. There was no way any of us would like to go back in time and program in something (GNOME/GTK) that was even more awkward than programming in pre-MFC days where we had to deal with the Win32 C API only. KDE/Qt was just like Java where everything (well most of the time anyway) made sense.
We have also seen a lot of poor arguments made on Qt where it cost money if you want to develop a commercial closed source application. Usually people argued that the $500 per developer license fee was just as much as a developer's salary in some third world countries. That may be true but they don't really take into account the months of headaches and development time they will save by using Qt every year. That alone is probably worth the $500. KDE/Qt is simple and is designed for the desktop. We like it and we have no regrets in supporting KDE at all.
Linspire is suing them, they shared code... (Score:4, Informative)
Apparently Lindows, now known as Linspire [linspire.com], shared code and lent Xandros money to develop their own Linux much like Lindows.
PC OnRamp AKA EPC [pconramp.com] sells Xandros for $40USD on an install CD.
What is a "good interface" (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll admit to being guilty of confusing intuitive with familiar. But let's be honest here, no interfaces are created or used in isolation. They are always based on some previous knowledge, understanding or bias and exploit a framework of shared understanding between users. That "Network Neighborhood" icon is only intuitive if you know what a "Network Neighborhood" is and can guess that the little drawing is about.
I ran into this problem while designing a webmail interface. I had to battle the impluse to go with my personal preferences for a clean, unobtrusve interface with small icons and hovering tools tips. I found out that icons that made perfect sense to me were uselsess to my users. My preference for having additional information appear only when an item was focused on (ie. hovered over) instead of splattered all over the screen up front wasn't shared by my users. Moreover, I found, when I asked for feedback and input, that "experienced" users alway asked for things to be laid out like the software it was replacing (Eudora, Outlook, etc.) while the "new" users, once given a brief tour accepted the interface much more readily. I'm guilty of that myself. I use the Gimp whenever I can, but because I cut my teeth on Photoshop and have hundreds of hours experience with it, I find myself giving the Gimp negative reviews - mostly because it's unfamiliar (read counter-intuitive) to me.
So, after sitting for a while and trying to literally think out of the box and come up with a truly new interface for an OS, I realized that almost everything I imagined was impossible (or at least impractical) with current technology, or heavily biased toward familiar paradigms and conventions. When it came down to it, most of the thing's I'd change are little annoyances instead of overall design. I think if anything, incorporating some fuzzy logic into the interface so that it morphs to my usage patterns. I mean subtlely, I hate it when windows chops off a menu and removes objects I haven't used yet. It's a good idea, but how about leaving them where I was used to seeing them but making the most used items progressively darker, sharper, bigger, whatever. Don't remove them from sight or even rearange them.
For me personally I rely on relative location of objects rather than what they look like for immediate recognition. It drives my wife (and my boss) crazy, but what migh look like a complete mess in my office to others is "organized" to me. Whatever you do, don't move anything. When I'm reading a book, I can literally stop in the middle of the page and be able to pick the book back up months later and know exactly what word I left off on, because it hasn't moved. So for me, spacial orientation is critical. For my wife, it has to be labled and "organized" according to the Dewey-decimal system or she's lost (I don't know how we've made it for 18 years). So, I guess what I'm saying is that comming up with a revolutionarily intuitive user interface may be impossible. That leaves us with an evolutionarily familiar interface. I mean, my God, vi is NOT intuitive, by any streatch of the imagination. However, it IS powerfull and familiar to me, meaning that I'm more likely to turn to vi for many tasks and get things done more quickly, than I am to fire up a graphical editor. My mom on the other hand has no compatible frame of reference and would be totally lost in vi.
So, for those of you who ar
Xandros still has a long way to go (Score:2)
and could be a little more upfront and honest about it's product.
After reading this article I don't feel it gives a balanced view of Xandros at all. I'll tell you my experience.
It installed fine off the CD, even detected winmodems and installed them correctly. They have to be congratulated on getting so much of this right. In general it is a great desktop Linux, but beware of the pitfalls, some other issues come to bite you only after being showered with positive press releases and simple installe
Re:Already /.'d (Score:2, Informative)
Whoever modded it informative deserves to be shot.
Ok, you might not read the article
but ffs, check the fscking links if you're gonna mod it informative?
(Oh and, why was ol' tubby censored?)
Re:Ming Poon?? (Score:2)
Flamebait??? It's a joke you morons. Didn't you ever see "Fletch?"
-JemRe:should be: '..product is based on Linux,' not K (Score:2)
Re:MFC vs. GTK+? (Score:3, Interesting)
Personally, I'm busy learning PyQt and PyKDE for fun. This is the way to do app development - Python is a nice language with the ease and speed of develop
Re:more expensive than windows xp? (Score:2)
I paid $79 for Xandros 1.0 Deluxe (not the standard version which is half that price because it doesn't include CrossOver). A year later I paid $39 for the upgrade to Xandros 2.0 Deluxe.
The office applications are FREE (as in beer and speech), thanks to OpenOffice.org, so no gun-to-your-head mandatory upgrades there.
Xandros allows installation to one business machine as well as your home PCs. Windoze charges for ea
Re:hmmm (Score:2)