this post was submitted on 09 Mar 2024
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It's not about giving up. It's about continuing the fight while also making sure that people have real, tangible alternatives in the meantime. Look at GNU/Hurd - it might just as well never grow into something useful or competitive. Don't put all your eggs in one basket. The first "goal" is to get rid of Windows, and Windows is for the first time in like 30 years losing one of its pillars (gaming) to Linux (and by extension also MacOS, because every non-Windows OS profits from the developments). It doesn't matter if the overall situation isn't perfect. It's still real, tangible progress. Also the market share jump from < 1% (since pretty much forever) to 4% recently.
Not by itself maybe, but in combination with Linux becoming more mainstream-viable for sure. I've heard from so many long-time Windows users lately that they're considering switching to Linux in the near future. I don't think Windows is in it for long, except on business desktops because they're usually vendor-locked-in with special applications. Maybe a generation after that, when home users aren't all guaranteed familiar with Windows anymore as they are today. I also don't think people will take much more abuse, the EU is also pushing back hard against abusive US companies. Also, if the AI copilot stuff blows up or doesn't become popular enough, Microsoft will have put all their eggs in one basket in vain. Currently it seems more like a very expensive gimmick - who needs an AI admin copilot to clean up the trash bin, change font size or toggle dark mode? Sure, you'll be able to talk to your bot, but everything you do will be harvested and the gain you get from it is almost irrelevant. Maybe if you have a disability or so it could be cool.
I don't think it would. It would be a mixture of libre software and propirietary software, which is better than 100% proprietary software still. The most important component is the OS itself.
Yes, we must continue advocating for libre software. However, it's still time to celebrate the beginning of the end of Windows.
We will keep enough freedom. It's a gradient. The world isn't black and white. Playing a proprietary game or playing back a BluRay on an otherwise fully free system is still much more progress than running 100% proprietary sofware. Change also won't come in a perfect way. First, desktop Linux needs to fight back on equal footing against Windows, and that (unfortunately) means it needs to be able to run whatever proprietary apps or games the users still need. Because otherwise they wouldn't switch and your utopia would remain an utopia without any measurable progress towards it.