From: bill.stewart@pobox.com
To: Jim Choate <cypherpunks@ssz.com (Cypherpunks Distributed Remailer)
Message Hash: 05f567de31bb8a491787d74930bd0ae11abab66202ba6a3667707071b312a941
Message ID: <3.0.5.32.19980206211343.007b4ac0@popd.ix.netcom.com>
Reply To: <199802061421.IAA05806@einstein.ssz.com>
UTC Datetime: 1998-02-08 10:20:18 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 8 Feb 1998 18:20:18 +0800
From: bill.stewart@pobox.com
Date: Sun, 8 Feb 1998 18:20:18 +0800
To: Jim Choate <cypherpunks@ssz.com (Cypherpunks Distributed Remailer)
Subject: Re: the best justice money can buy --Lessig (fwd)
In-Reply-To: <199802061421.IAA05806@einstein.ssz.com>
Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.19980206211343.007b4ac0@popd.ix.netcom.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
At 08:21 AM 2/6/98 -0600, Jim Choate wrote:
> Let's give the market another 5-10 years and see where Linux
>stands. Right now the estimate is 6-10 million users world wide use it. Share
>wise that isn't a lot. The reason that Linux garners so much press right now
>is that it is in fact an exception when an organization uses the software
>(eg NASA). The test will be whether it grows significantly over the long
>run and not the 5 years that Linux has been a serious os.
Sharewise, that's not bad for a system that had 1 million users a
year or two ago, though of course it gains a lot of extra slack
because it's quasi-free Unix on an affordable platform.
Getting that much desktop support without running MSOffice is
impressive. Getting lots of support for servers is a different issue;
we've known for a decade and a half that if you want to actually
build a system that will _do_ real work for you, you use Unix*,
even if you use a different desktop GUI. NT has been improved enough
that you can occasionally build services on it if you're desperate
enough, though its stability is still less than ideal.
(I never had it crash except for hardware mismatch reasons,
but its networking stuff reflects the fact that MS still doesn't
understand what networks are.)
---
* In a few environments you'd use VMS, because for all DEC's faults,
they were very strong on making sure they had software environments to
support the applications their customers wanted, like factory control.
Or you could use LispMachines, because they were nice.
Thanks!
Bill
Bill Stewart, bill.stewart@pobox.com
PGP Fingerprint D454 E202 CBC8 40BF 3C85 B884 0ABE 4639
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