A summary of my Linux experiment
So about a week ago I decided to try Linux again. I thought enough time had passed since my earlier trials that things might have matured enough for me to give it another shot. I attempted to be as subjective as possible. I wanted to view this not as a move away from OS X, but as a move towards Linux.
I expected hurdles would line my way. My machine isn’t cutting edge. My machine is a PPC, which would limit my choices. I would have to give up some of the creature comforts I’ve come accustomed to. I had all of these hurdles in my head before hand, but I didn’t know how big these hurdles actually were.
My Requirements
I have a few basic requirements for my OS. They aren’t anything extraordinary, but they can cause some extra work for certain distros. Some distros restrict proprietary software from their systems, some are more open to software developers, some make it easy to install new software, some make it harder.
My primary requirement for an OS is MP3 support. Plain and simple I want to listen to music. I listen to over 100 songs a day at work, and I expect no less from my home computer. Some distros passed this requirement with flying colors and out-of-the-box would play my music collection. Other distros required me to install MP3 support before listening, and other distros wouldn’t play anything even after I installed their ‘mp3 support library’.
Another requirement I have is easy access to new software. There are a lot of new tools popping up on the internet these days and I want my OS to be able to communicate with them. Twitter is a prime example of this. Under OS X I have numerous options to post to my Twitter account. In Linux I found nothing. I was forced to visit the website to post.
There are numerous other items that have the same story. It seemed that Linux didn’t have any options, or they made the available options hard to find, or their options were subpar.
Polish and shine
It seemed that everything I attempted to do in Linux either took too long to accomplish or would result in me being disappointed. A prime example of this was my attempts to install a music jukebox program. Amarok came preinstalled on some distros, but it either didn’t play music or wouldn’t load. I searched around and found a nice application called Exaile. So I attempted to install this application on each and every distro I tried. And each time it would either fail to load or would crash after showing the splash image. I never got it loaded on any of the distros I tried. Why show me an application in the software repository if it doesn’t work? Why show me an applications that I can’t install?
Flash Support
I know I’ve harked on this numerous times, but it needs repeating. PPC, which includes all older Apple computers, has not flash support! I’ll say that again. There is not flash support for PPC computers in Linux. There is an attempt to create an open source alternative, gnash, but it would never install for me. Again, why offer software that doesn’t work?
Conclusion
In my Linux experiement I tried out Debian, Fedora, Gentoo, OpenSUSE, Ubuntu, and YellowDog. Each had their up and downs, except for Fedora which rebooted into a kernal panic after installation. But the one thing they all had in common was the feeling they gave me. Each and every distro made me feel like I was an outsider, like I had somehow beaten the system and escaped from The Matrix. I liked that feeling. They also made me feel like The Matrix was more complete. I felt like I was giving up usefulness simply to live outside of the box.
None of the distros satisfied me. They all failed on many levels and left me wondering why I was doing this? Why was I choosing to have less options? Why was I choosing to give up features? It didn’t make any sense, so I’m now back in OS X. I’m listening to my music, watching flash videos, installing applications without having to first locate and install obscure dependencies.
I hope the Linux experience on a PC is more enjoyable. From what I gather the difference of Linux on a PC and Linux on a PPC can be likened to iTunes on a Mac and iTunes on a PC. It shines on one platform, and crumbles on another.
I hope to one day be a Linux user, but that day isn’t today. Perhaps one day I’ll build a PC machine and install Linux on it, but it better play my MP3 files.
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