Old article, yeah, but it still holds true to this day, the author is a moron who blames Linux for poor adoption when it’s actually OEM’s that mostly keep it held back.
Your grandmother isn’t going to uninstall Windows and install Linux. But your grandmother will also have no idea that Chromebooks run Linux when they buy a cheap browser and email machine.
Once PC OEMs properly embrace the Linux desktop environment with full hardware support, then you will see the market start to shift. It’s very little to do with Linux and so much to do with businesses and OEMs being willing to sell and support it.
Steam Deck (and Valve’s contributions to Proton etc) have helped push up Linux Gaming somewhat notably. I’m wondering if the fall of Unity and increased interest in FOSS engines like Godot might also help push things in that direction. Certainly removed like DirectX was pretty directly harmful to non-windows platforms
Old article, yeah, but it still holds true to this day, the author is a moron who blames Linux for poor adoption when it’s actually OEM’s that mostly keep it held back.
Your grandmother isn’t going to uninstall Windows and install Linux. But your grandmother will also have no idea that Chromebooks run Linux when they buy a cheap browser and email machine.
Once PC OEMs properly embrace the Linux desktop environment with full hardware support, then you will see the market start to shift. It’s very little to do with Linux and so much to do with businesses and OEMs being willing to sell and support it.
Steam Deck (and Valve’s contributions to Proton etc) have helped push up Linux Gaming somewhat notably. I’m wondering if the fall of Unity and increased interest in FOSS engines like Godot might also help push things in that direction. Certainly removed like DirectX was pretty directly harmful to non-windows platforms