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I don't know, being positive I voted that it will increase marginally but the truth is that there is nothing that makes me think that it will increase its share. That Valve machine if it really works will mean that a certain percentage of games have support for Linux and who knows if it will be successful, but compared to a console or a PC with Windows I fear it will not have an advantage.
In addition to all this, the PC will continue to lose market share, it is more possible that Linux finds an outlet for other devices, I am not referring to Android itself which already has a large share but to the distros that exist or derivatives that could go to the touch market with tablets/ultraportátiles.
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That's the issue.
I remember Torvalds lamenting in an interview about having conceived a monolithic kernel Linux. However, that feature (in my short understanding), allows it to be debugged easily for optimal operation on a soc-type device. Hence my doubt about the survey, because Linux already dominates in the world of mobility.
It also doesn't help that it's not offered as an option in some (if not all) online computer stores. ahem -
I don't know, being positive I voted that it will increase marginally but the truth is that there is nothing that makes me think that it will increase its share. That Valve machine if it really works will mean that a certain percentage of games have support for Linux and who knows if it will be successful, but compared to a console or a PC with Windows I fear it will not have an advantage.
I think exactly the same, it will go up, but not much. The thing about Valve is to be seen how it will work and if SteamOS will be easy to combine with the usual Windows for the normal user, because for me this would be the data that really would be worth, because a machine prepared for SteamOS and with this preinstalled for me is a console and not a desktop PC. Unless I'm wrong and SteamOS is more multipurpose than just for playing and multimedia.
Outside of Valve's proposal I don't see any other movement different from previous years.
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I probably phrased the survey wrong since x86 tablets, like laptops, are also personal computers. Moreover, there will come a time when the ARM architecture is normalized and it will be possible to install any operating system compiled for ARM on these devices, which from a functional point of view, would be very close to a PC.
But in any case, the landscape may still change quite a bit in the next two or three years and it is complicated to define what will then be considered a fully functional computer or a simple tablet that allows the execution of only a very limited operating system (like Android or iOS).
For now, the results have a very nice Gaussian bell shape.
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The use of Linux will increase, but only marginally, due to the lack of compatibility of many programs, and although within Linux you can open a virtual machine for compatibility with Windows programs, it is not the same as running them from a virtual machine as within the operating system itself. In fact, I recently tried to put Ubuntu, the latest version on my third PC from my firm and yes, it is very fast. Faster than Windows 7 because it takes advantage of all the resources of the PC, but running a Windows program under a virtual machine in Ubuntu, it goes slower. -
I think that the moment Ubuntu can be installed on smartphones and tablets, the increase will be considerable. But the latest news I have is that Ubuntu is a process loaded in the compilation of Cyanogen. That is, there is still no Linux operating system for these devices.
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Ubuntu already has a version to install on some android phones. It has nothing to do with CM.
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Ubuntu already has a version to install on some android phones. It has nothing to do with CM.
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But as an operating system or as a process loaded in the android system memory, I tell you this because the last thing I had of Ubuntu was that. There was no native operating system. If you can add a link with the information it would be appreciated. Anyway, I think if there is something it will be for Nexus Of the rest nothing at all.
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Ubuntu on phones | Ubuntu as far as I understand it is a complete OS.
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And what difference does it make if it's called Ubuntu or Milagr-OS?
The point is that it's Linux.
What a desire to argue, joder. ;D -
Just remember that the survey is focused on desktop PCs but not on servers, supercomputing centers or mobile phones.
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Obviously Ubuntu mobil is an OS for mobiles, it has nothing to do with the question about desktop, since in mobiles Linux is already the majority thanks to Android. It is still in its infancy but I see it as logical that it will end up in tablets/touchscreen PCs. And prior to this Ubuntu mobil, it had been possible to run a desktop Ubuntu on an ARM mobile to, for example, use it when connecting the mobile to a monitor.
Be that as it may, the big problem with Linux, on the desktop, is that it doesn't generate money and therefore doesn't have the momentum as an OS that has its own stores or advertising. And apart from that there's the mentality of its audience, on Mac they are mostly used to paying for software, on Windows very little and there's a big problem with piracy, on Android they're used to advertising and freemium, and on Linux it's basically opensoft which has its good and bad side.
The good thing is that there's a large amount of free code to use, the bad thing is that there's not always someone willing to spend time on using it to create a good app especially in interface, plus it gets in the way of proprietary drivers as always, which if on x86 is quite standardized (like plugandplay) on mobiles/tablets this doesn't exist yet.
In summary, if Linux wants to grow it will have to find a capitalist partner who sees a business opportunity just as Valve has seen it for its gaming platform.
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I'm going to revive this with what I THINK will be the biggest change for Linux to date.
We are starting to see the first results of the effort that Valve is putting into Linux, games that are starting to run just as well or better than on Windows (See CS:GO) and the Gamer community, it's a community that if you have to switch to Linux to lower the lag by 5ms or increase the fps by 10, they will do it.
Besides, I see it as a double play, since initially they may ask to have SteamOs installed just to play, where they will have Windows to do the things they have always done, and SteamOS only for games, without programs/processes in the background that bother them, and from there it won't be long before they gradually migrate everything to Linux.
That's how I see it! It's our moment!!
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All that is needed is for Steam Machines to hit the market and for the final version of SteamOS to appear. Considering that Steam Machines was planned for this year and that the period for including new features in Debian 8 (the distro from which SteamOS branches) has already closed, it is possible (if they have done things on time without us realizing) that it will become a product for this Christmas.
Once the machine and the operating system are up and running, it will be possible to know if Linux ends up taking hold in homes beyond Android.
On the other hand, it is good to know that Valve is contributing economically to improve the free drivers for AMD graphics cards through a company dedicated to this called LunarG and that considerable performance improvements are being achieved over the same Gallium3D.
If Linux doesn't take off on the desktop with this, it will mean that it will never do so unless something very strange happens.
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Another great news for UNIX lovers