Give Me The Dang Button!
I should probably start out by letting you know that it's now official! Yes, Ubuntu/Kubuntu and all the other *buntus are out in release 9.10, the very Karmic Koala. After months of running 9.10 alphas, followed by betas, I am now running the official Karmic release. Feels good to be official for a change.
What about you? Did you attend any of the release parties? Heading out to one of the parties still to come? Throw one of your own, perhaps? I did pop the cork on a rather nice bottle of 2007 Archangel Pinot Noir Rose last night, a wonderful, dry, sparkling wine from Angels Gate Winery. Here's to 9.10, even if Canonical didn't use my new mascot.
This past Saturday, I gave a talk on "Linux Without Fear" at Ontario Linux Fest which took place in Toronto, Ontario. Sorry, make that Ontario GNU Linux Fest -- the name was changed a couple of weeks before D-day. Before I get into that, let me doff my hat to the organizers for putting together a first rate Linux/FOSS conference. It gave me the opportunity to meet and chat with friends I don't see anywhere near often enough, like LinuxPro's own Rikki Kite. I also enjoyed meeting Joe "Zonker" Brockmeier, who I've spoken to a few times over the years, but had never actually met in person.
What I talked about last Saturday was Linux on the desktop, specifically the definition (and delivery) of a user-friendly Linux distribution. To make my point, I ran VirtualBox where I had preinstalled five purportedly user-friendly Linux distributions . . . six if you count the copy of Kubuntu 9.10 I was running on my own desktop, on top of which everything else was running.
My demo choices were Fedora 11, OpenSUSE 11.1, Mandriva 2009.1, Ubuntu 9.10 (for the GNOME side of things), and LinuxMint 7 which is built on *buntu 9.04.
Every one of these distributions has real positives, regardless of your personal favorite. They are, after all, built using the same base operating system and a common set of tools. One might go further and suggest that the desktop itself is a shared idea, or at least, two popular shared ideas.
The sessions weren't particularly long and we had wardrobe, er, room partitioning malfunctions, so this tour of user-friendly Linux and promoting these to people coming from other, lesser, operating systems was more of a rapid tour -- I called it a rogues gallery. But I digress . . .
In comparing the various distribution, I talked about what I thought they did right, and what they did wrong. For example; Fedora, I know you believe in the whole total freedom thing, but Abiword is not a replacement for MS Word. That would be OpenOffice.org, a choice that most major distributions make. And that, was in fact, my point.
To lure the masses from the clutches of Microsoft Windows, you need to provide an experience that is more than just technically superior. Linux has been technically superior for years -- it's a done deal. What you need to do is provide a way to continue doing those day to day things a Windows user takes for granted. OpenOffice.org provides an obvious answer by making it possible to open, edit, and collaborate on, documents created with Microsoft office. Kopete and Pidgin make it possible for people to continue their instant messaging conversations over MSN or Yahoo, as well as the open protocol Jabber/XMPP. Firefox and Thunderbird are available for both Windows and Linux desktops thereby making that transition painless.
Then there's the browser and multimedia experience. Yes, yes, I know all about the whole free/non-free codec argument. I know that some countries, notably the United States, have very strange laws about being able to watch and/or listen to content created in various formats. It's stupid but politicians aren't, by and large, the most technically adept people in the world (oops, that was supposed to be my inside voice). Here's the experience in a nutshell. If you visit a Flash site, or try to play an iPod format file, or play a Java game, the hoops come out for you (or your users) to jump through.
Only LinuxMint, in all these distributions, makes it possible for me to do all this without having to install anything special. It's already there. I can hand over a copy to my Linux-timid friends and most of their wants and needs are taken care of without having to look through community documentation or finding packages to install.
Ubuntu almost does this by telling me that I need to install this codec or that plugin in order to listen to a song or view a Website. Ubuntu tells me it can install the Flash plugin. Cool. It tells me it can install an MP3 codec. Cool again. Sure you get a warning, but we're all just going to click Okay anyhow. Next time, there's an MPEG-4 format file that doesn't play. Oh, Ubuntu is telling me it can locate and install the necessary plugin. Cool. Then I stumble on a Java site. Will you look at that? There's apparently a plugin for this too. Cool. I think.
Ahh! Don't make users go through this! Pre-install it or offer a version that is pre-installed. Again, I understand the laws and the philosophy behind not providing these things, but you're half-way there by telling me how to do it. Couldn't we go a little further, Ubuntu? Put a button on the desktop that says, "Install All Those Goodies You Know You Need" (or something like that). Have it pop up a card with appropriate warnings about non-free software, proprietary blobs, and what have you, provide a "Do It Anyway" button.
If you can't pre-install it, then give me the button. I understand there are times when you can't -- you don't want to put your business customers in a potentially sticky legal position. But your casual home users probably aren't in that position. For many of them these codecs and plugins are completely legal. Give them the button.
I want the button. And I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one.
Until next time . . .
Comments
User-friendly,
Thursday January 07 2010 03:41:03 pm
Calvin R
It's not really that easy, it's just that we tell you it's easy...
Wednesday November 18 2009 01:06:41 am
Charles
"Technically Superior" vs. market success
Monday November 02 2009 09:15:03 pm
Dan Saint-Andre
spell things
Monday November 02 2009 07:26:21 pm
just a guy
Excelent article
Monday November 02 2009 04:45:10 pm
Someone in time
What really needs to happen
Monday November 02 2009 04:26:35 pm
Nonya
Codecs
Monday November 02 2009 03:07:15 pm
EchoBravo
Maybe have an icon on the desktop called "mutimedia"
Monday November 02 2009 02:51:12 pm
SwiftNet
easier said than Done
Monday November 02 2009 02:46:45 pm
Eric Mesa
Yes, totally agree
Monday November 02 2009 02:32:37 pm
lpbbear
You nailed it!!
Monday November 02 2009 11:16:04 am
Robert Gilaard
Legality Issues Regarding Software
Monday November 02 2009 04:48:48 am
Draca
why is any of this harder than windows
Monday November 02 2009 04:33:22 am
joe
Release Party and Install-fest
Monday November 02 2009 03:53:19 am
The Doctor
Sure, it's there ...
Monday November 02 2009 03:33:54 am
Crazy Henaway
re: restricted stuff
Friday October 30 2009 08:28:58 pm
Marcel Gagne
Re: Dang Button
Friday October 30 2009 06:40:01 pm
Will
Dang Button
Friday October 30 2009 06:34:52 pm
Will