Before I start my post: I am not a computer expert. I just enjoy using computers. Now, onto the thread.
EDIT:
Why Linux?
DUAL BOOT: Keep your old OS anyway! Lose nothing! Use your new one however you like!
WORKSPACES: One Computer = 16 Desktops! Yeah baby! Now THAT'S multitasking!
FLAVOURS: Choose a version that runs on your computer! Extremely low spec versions, workstation/education versions, fancy hitec versions!
Bells and whistles optional (and available) in countless flavours, for your specific purposes, tastes and requirements!
Tailor your OS to your machine, lifestyle and needs!
FREE. ABSOLUTELY FREE. Get it while you can.
People buy Mac/Apple, and their reward is to be locked into a system of software and products which are vastly over-inflated in price.
Windows is the same, it just has a longer/more-established history.
The cost of those systems is that the user is locked into a cycle of using a brand of products, and cannot escape.
They are forced to live in isolationist and insular technological ecosystems that only allows compatible hardware/software from the same company.
Isn't this morally wrong? How can companies and profiteering corporations abuse their consumer bases in such a manner?
The issue is exclusivity. No one can easily change their software-hardware, because they are already heavily invested in it! Both financially and mentally.
When a user is locked into using certain (overpriced) software or hardware, they should consider their alternatives!
Haven't they ever heard of the terms SUNK COSTS or VICIOUS CYCLE?
Microsoft and Apple sure have! That's how they've come to be the leaders of the market!
When I compare them to Linux in my mind, there is no competition: Linux is the clear winner, ethically, economically, practically.
If only people knew that they didn't have to pay through the nose for expensive software licenses and exclusive hardware.
They could just go Open-Source! I downloaded an OS for FREE. And it is functionally superb and rivals Windows!
We've come a long way from the situation 10 years ago, when people used to laugh at Linux! Now Ubuntu is just-as-good-as if not better than the competition.
Open Source forever!
Imagine how much more profitable and prosperous Linux could be, if people knew there was a better choice, and supported it.
With increasing demand, there would be an increase in supply too!
Manufacturers would create tech for Linux/Unix instead of Windows/Mac.
We would have hardware tailored and optimised for Linux, for example. People would build more Linux-oriented rigs!
Software companies would move to open-source platforms. Software manufactures would output for a single platform, instead of 3 different ones.
Instead of 3 different standards/styles, there would be 1 main one, with many splinters and off-shoots.
Imagine if all computer technology was based on a single kernel (some oversimplification here, excuse me, I'm no expert)!
All of coding and computer knowledge would be based on a central, free and openly shared set of information.
Tools and guides to that information would also be free! No more paying license fees to Windows or Macintosh!
That information would be (mostly) free to access and learn: People would put up guides and teaching resources would explode! It would be an industry in it's own right.
No more expensive lessons and tutoring, when all that content is available free on the web, shared and maintained by those who care for it.
And the best thing is it would mostly be free! Sure you would have some premium resources, and nothing can really supplement human tuition and guidance, but the vast majority would be easy to access for newcomers.
People in 3rd world countries could instantly access these resources and become software engineers.
Prospects for entering the market as a developer would improve drastically with the rise of free and open-source.
Creating code and programs would be vastly simplified in many aspects.
The cost barrier would diminish, as would the hurdles to learning, creating and sharing it.
So would the many legal hiccups and problems, currently associated with the current (
) monopoly also disappear.
Of course there would be disadvantages too. Hackers and viruses etc. would run rampant.
It would truly be a survival of the fittest, and there would be a pressure to overcome faults with superior coding and planning.
People would still want to get paid for their work, so they would form companies and make licensable software.
People would steal software all the time. There would be copyright infringement everywhere! (just like now, actually)
Still, there would be vast progress due to the availability of information.
In a more specific sense, users would be empowered to become creators, not just consumers.
We would have more control over our technological destiny, instead of being subject to it.
How can any OS be so good? I started running Ubuntu on my machine in the last year (I've been through about 10-20 'flavours' since then) and it is honestly the single best and most liberating computing experience I've ever had. I can't wait for the future of Linux.
In another vein, how is it that so much software runs from Linux (specifically, Android) yet people are so woefully ignorant of it?
Even scientific laboratories use linux.
Video game vendors and creators also use linux.
Linux can be run on digital piano-keyboards and electronic-ovens!
Is there no end to the spread of technology?
The one downside I can see is a "rise of the machines" type situation. In which case, your oven may try to kill you, but heck, that's similar to the problem with self-driving cars and tracking/surveillance. If it really comes down to it, we could always turn off the power.
p.s. please excuse any errors or faults in this post. I am sure that most computer users would know more about this subject than me in any case.
Here is some original work I felt inspired to make. I hope you enjoy it!