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In this article at got apex? (no), the talk is about the new Huge linux... err, Unitedlinux.
Imagine this: With UnitedLinux, an IT manager will be able to go to the store, pick up a piece of software that has been marked as conforming to the UnitedLinux standard, and then take it back to work and install it, confidently and without problems, on all the machines. This is something Windows and Mac users take for granted but that Linux users have learned to live without. UnitedLinux already has Red Hat's (the leading Linux distribution) blessing, and with support from such powerful companies as AMD, IBM, Intel, and NEC, it is sure to make the splash intended.
That is the hardest part about linux IMO. I want a piece of software to work when I install it, and I want an easy way to INSTALL IT IN THE FIRST PLACE!
In this article at got apex? (no), the talk is about the new Huge linux... err, Unitedlinux.
Imagine this: With UnitedLinux, an IT manager will be able to go to the store, pick up a piece of software that has been marked as conforming to the UnitedLinux standard, and then take it back to work and install it, confidently and without problems, on all the machines. This is something Windows and Mac users take for granted but that Linux users have learned to live without. UnitedLinux already has Red Hat's (the leading Linux distribution) blessing, and with support from such powerful companies as AMD, IBM, Intel, and NEC, it is sure to make the splash intended.
That is the hardest part about linux IMO. I want a piece of software to work when I install it, and I want an easy way to INSTALL IT IN THE FIRST PLACE!