Mobile menu toggle

Linux GNOME More: GNOME Creator Ditches Linux For Mac

By

tt2_miguel_de_icaza_keynote

Miguel de Icaza isn’t a casual PC user. He’s a life-long Linux user whose main claim to fame is the creation of GNOME, a completely free desktop environment for Linux and other Unix operating systems.

But de Icaza no longer bothers with Linux. He’s abandoned the platform for a Mac.

In a fantastic post over at his blog, de Icasa explains the feather that is Linux’s fragmentation made him stop using a Linux machine in favor of a Mac.

To me, the fragmentation of Linux as a platform, the multiple incompatible distros, and the incompatibilities across versions of the same distro were my Three Mile Island/Chernobyl.

Without noticing, I stopped turning on the screen for my Linux machine during 2012. By the time I moved to a new apartment in October of 2012, I did not even bother plugging the machine back and to this date, I have yet to turn it on.

de Icaza’s comments about Linux fragmentation really seem to mirror a lot of what we’re seeing in the Android ecosystem as well, with widescale fragmentation all but squeezing out most developers.

Could there ever be a day when Android’s fragmentation will reach such heights that even Android’s creators are openly switching to iPhone?

Source: Tirania

  • Subscribe to the Newsletter

    Our daily roundup of Apple news, reviews and how-tos. Plus the best Apple tweets, fun polls and inspiring Steve Jobs bons mots. Our readers say: "Love what you do" -- Christi Cardenas. "Absolutely love the content!" -- Harshita Arora. "Genuinely one of the highlights of my inbox" -- Lee Barnett.

2 responses to “Linux GNOME More: GNOME Creator Ditches Linux For Mac”

  1. Robert X says:

    Miguel is pretty cool. When I was looking at Linux and Gtk programming, I asked him where to start learning. He asked me for my address and sent me “Gtk+ /Gnome Application Development”.

  2. stelellico says:

    Mr Icaza doe snot know that the strength of Linux is in the variety and versatility of its distros. As a matter of fact, multiple Linux OS hardly can be hacked by any hacker, at present, whereas Apple computers start receiving the first malware those days.

Leave a Reply