"Switch to Ubuntu Linux" say two high profile Mac advocates

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APC administrator06 July 2006, 3:12 AM

Mac fans worldwide are feeling a disturbance in the force: author Cory Doctorow (of BoingBoing fame) and software developer Mark Pilgrim have announced they've had it with OS X, and are switching to Ubuntu.

Apple has long positioned OS X as the operating system for getting the most out of your computer, and there is something to that claim.

If you want to spend more time enjoying your PC (and less time configuring it and battling 'helpful' popups), you could do a lot worse than the synergy of a Mac running OS X.

So I got a big shock when I read that two of the Mac platform's greatest supporters have moved over to GNU/Linux - the Ubuntu distribution - because they feel that it better satisfies their needs.

Cory Doctorow has this tattoo on his bicep - it's a sad MacThe first was software developer Mark Pilgrim about a month ago, and recently Cory Doctorow piped up an admitted that he was switching too.

How could it be that things could have changed so dramatically, so quickly?

Well, for starters, looking at their justifications one gets the impression that these issues have been looming for some time now.

Mark Pilgrim points to DRM and proprietary file formats as being a huge problem for him, and these have been a part of the Mac platform since iPods became the music player of choice for the discerning consumer.

(As a sidenote, hopefully he won't freak out as much as the Windows and Mac users did when he notices Ubuntu doing evil update checking.)

ubuntu350.jpg

A lack of choice is also troubling for Pilgrim, who sees recent software offerings from Apple as being generally inferior to third-party GPL software.

I can see his point - I recently yelled "LOLZ!" in the office when I realised that Quicktime player still won't play in full screen without a command line hack, or a full version license.

quicktime350.jpg

Sheesh, even GXine that comes with Ubuntu can do that straight out of the box. So much for superior offerings from commercial software vendors.

Cory Doctorow's reasoning is partially that he agrees with Pilgrim but also the considerably more pragmatic concern that, now that the installed hardware is point for point comparable, he couldn't see a Macbook as being a superior offering to a Lenovo Thinkpad with the same hardware configuration.

This is a big issue for Apple. A Macbook, regardless of what the more zealous members of the Mac fraternity will tell you, is still more expensive than offerings from other vendors, even though it's now possible to do a direct comparison based on specifications.

macbook350.jpg

So what is a Mac these days? Intel chipset and CPU, ATi or Intel GPU, SATA drive, dual layer DVD burner, and so on.

Sounds suspiciously like the Dell that I'm writing this on (running Ubuntu funnily enough).

Interestingly, Ubuntu uses GNOME as the primary desktop environment. I've always used the "GNOME is like Mac OS Classic, and KDE is like OS X and Windows had a baby with ADHD" analogy to explain the difference to users.

One point that's always made about GNU/Linux is that people need to be familiar with the UI before they can be productive with it, so users will be reluctant to switch.

However, GNOME is apparently similar enough to an interface that these users have already had years of experience with before OS X, so the switch was nice and easy.

Certainly Doctorow and Pilgrim are advanced users, but they're also users who have made a choice to go for usability over flexibility when they first chose a Mac.

Now, they have both decided that a GNU/Linux flavour is sufficiently usable, and considerably more flexible, so will go down that road.

Cory and Mark, welcome to the friendly world of GNU/Linux. We hope your stay is long and comfortable.

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Zaphod:

Who photoshopped the prices for the macbooks?

they start at $1099. NOT $1749!

Dan Warne:

Err, well, they start at $1749 in Australia, where this site is based.

Yes, Apple stuff is expensive in Australia. The direct exchange from $1099 would be $AU1481; even factoring in freight costs, it's a bit hard to believe there's really $382 in it.

However, there are big differences in market size too. US would have some big volume advantages which would create shipping and support economies of scale for Apple.

Nonetheless, it's a bit hard to believe Apple isn't making a fast buck out of Aussies.

Tim:

Dan, Not quite as bad as you say - We (Australia) have a 10% Goods & Services Tax - this takes your AU$1481 to AU$1629 so the mark up is AU$120 - not too bad for providing a different power supply etc. to a country that is less than 2% of the world economy.

Dan Warne:

Excellent point. Hadn't thought to take into account the GST.

Then again, surely USA has sales taxes of some sort as well that would be built into the price or hidden in the supply chain?

CpILL:

I have to agree with Mark Pilgrims reason for switching. With Firefox, Jabber, VLC and Azureus you have 95% of what I use me Mac for. Of course there is SubEthaEdit for text editing but I have the cut down free version and I don’t really care which text editor I use for coding as long as it indents and syntax highlights.

I am only 6 months on a Mac from PC and I love it but I was appalled at the radically different attitude 3rd party software vendors for Mac have. There are far fewer free software options for Mac as most of the little guys charge after the first version. The opensource alternatives are not usual geared to Mac and require fiddling and downloading C librarys to compile into makes. I feel a bit on the fringe on a Mac when looking for alternatives.

An my gosh you need em. I can relate to iCal and iTunes corrupting and losing all my data. I’ve never experienced this before with software. They must be using the same buggy XML library. I switched to Mail as it intergrades with Addressbook (the best address book I’ve ever used btw) and Quicksilver, but it was a mistake. The main pain with it is that you can’t send emails from an alias with Mail so you have to show your real address at all times. I’d been using alias up until then and when one started to get spamed I would kill it and use another, only giving out my real email address to trusted friends.

But the lack of alternative to iTunes is really killing me. VLC is OK but is not a real music manager, and after 10,000 mp3’s iTunes just gets slower and slower and keeping it accurate gets harder and harder. Not to mention the odd corruption of the library file which results in an hour to rebuild (if you can at all).

The only draw back to a Linux switch is that I can’t live without Quicksilver and need to be able to do some Flash programming occasionally, which I don’t believe you can do on Linux atm, but maybe Adobe will do something about it…

manyoumeeteveryday:

try amarok. It handles devices, has music store integration and a really nice interface. It is frankly awesome.

Andy:

It's called 'Capitalism' - you see, companies like Apple need to *make money* in order to fund the huge amounts of RnD that they put into new products. They make money by *selling things* that their engineers have spend a lot of hard work developing.

Whilst I'm impressed with OS developments like Ubuntu (I'm installing it under Parallels on my MacBook as I type this), what I find extremely telling - and not a little sad - is the total lack of innovation that Linux shows. I"m sorry - but that's the cold hard truth. It seems to me that these days, Apple innovates (and funds the innovation by charging premium prices), MS copies the best bits and adds some more, and the Linux community cherry picks from both.

Of course, I'm focussing on the Interface

So, yeah, great - we could all switch to Ubuntu or something similar, and have a very OSX-ish experience (with the emphasis on the 'ish'); but we'd be freezing ourselves into the current OS featureset until another Apple innovated some more, and was lax enough with patents that the Linux community could rip it off.

Adrian Hoe:

Andy,

Yes, I agree with you. In fact, Apple's capitalism is good to move innovation ahead. Their engineers need bread and butter to feed their families so that they can focus in making new innovation.

If all the Linux distros come together and fund the innovation for Linux, I believe Linux will be the best OS on the planet.

For this moment, nothing beats Apple's hardware and OS. They are marvelous!

I moved to Linux in 1995 and totally Windows free in 1998. I moved to Mac OS X in 2003 and completely on Mac OS X in 2005. The reasons I moved to Mac OS X were 1.) Disappointed on how different distro packaged and configured their product. 2.) Unreliable online upgrade, system corrupted after online upgrade happened so many times and I had to fix it or re-install it. 3.) Hardware detection problem, my hardware could not be detected properly.

I believe most of these problems have been pretty well addressed by now but I don't have the heart to try any though. I am running a Debian Etch box for data storage and to provide me some functionality and programming needs.