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Linux Operating System
History of Linux
1
Estimated Desktop Usage Share
Windows• 92.00%
Linux Notes• 1.02% January 2010
2
Pre-installation
Windows
• Pre-installed by default on almost all new desktop PCs
• Notes• Microsoft's agreement with
vendors to sell only the Windows OS is being challenged in court by French consumer rights groups
Linux• Pre-installed by default on
very few new desktop PCs. January 2010
3
Server revenue market share
Windows
• 7.3%
Linux Note• 33.8% April 2009
4
Top 500 supercomputer operating system family share
Windows
• 1.0% (absolute 5)
Linux• 88.6% (absolute 443), the
14 fastest supercomputers run Linux
• June 2009
5
Graphical user interface
Windows
• The window manager is the Desktop Window Manager on Windows Vista. The desktop environment may be modified by a variety of third party products such as WindowBlinds
Linux• A number of
desktop environments are available, of which GNOME and KDE are the most widely used. By default, they use as their window managers Metacity and KWin respectively, though these can be replaced by other window managers such as Compiz Fusion
6
Command-line interface
Windows
• The Command Prompt exists to provide direct communication between the user and the operating system.
Linux• Linux is strongly integrated
with the system console. The command line can be used to recover the system if the graphics subsystem fails. A large number of Unix shells exists. with the majority being "Bourne shell compatible" shells, of which the most widely used is GNU Bash.
7
8
A command-line interface, typically displayed in a system console or terminal emulator window, allows users to tell the computer to perform tasks ranging from the simple (for example, copying a file) to the complex (compiling and installing new software). Shells are powerful but can be confusing to new users. Some complex tasks are more easily accomplished through shells than through a GUI, such as piping, or scripting. See also: Comparison of computer shells.
Ease of Install
Windows
• On Windows Server 2003 and prior, the installation is divided into two stages; the first, text-mode; the second, graphical.On Windows Vista and newer, the installation is single stage, and graphical.
Linux• Varies greatly by
distribution. Most distributions intended for new or intermediate users provide simple graphical installers. General purpose oriented distributions offer a live CD or GUI installer (SuSE, Debian, Pardus, Pclinuxos, Mandriva, Ubuntu, Fedora etc.),
9
Drivers
Windows• The Windows installation media
usually contains enough drivers to make the OS functional. To this end, "generic" drivers may be used to provide basic functionality. Drivers for these devices can later be upgraded from the manufacturer. Windows Update may also contain updated drivers that can be installed after the base OS is in place.
Linux• Linux kernels in most distributions
include the majority of drivers available as modules, hardware is detected and drivers loaded at boot with usually little or no user interaction required.usually the drivers are included in the kernel (open-source), and therefore do not require additional media or any user interaction. A few hardware manufactures (Broadcom, Nvidia) have proprietary drivers which require manual installation.
10
Pre-installed software
Windows• Some multimedia and home use
software (IE, Media Player, Notepad, WordPad, Paint…) plus OEM bundled software. Windows Vista Includes IE7, Windows Mail, Windows Media Center, etc. depending on which edition is purchased. It does not include Office suites or advanced multimedia software
• Microsoft's methods of bundling software were deemed illegal in the case United States v. Microsoft
Linux• All main distributions
contain numerous programs: multimedia, graphics, internet, office suites, games, system utilities and alternative desktop environments. Some distributions specialise in education, games, or security.
11
12
Not pre-installed software
• Windows• A massive pool of both proprietary
software (including shareware and freeware) and free software. Programs usually come with the required libraries and are normally installed easily.
• Uninstallation can be of varying difficulty depending on which of many installer methods were used, components and registry entries may be left behind
• Linux• A massive pool of free software
and some proprietary software covering a wide range of use. A Microsoft employee wrote in an internal report in 1998 that "Most of the primary apps that people require when they move to Linux are already available for free.Using free Windows-compatibility layers like Wine, some Windows software can also be run
13
Linux distributions can not lawfully include MP3 or MPEG-4 file decoders in a majority of countries, as it would violate the Patent Cooperation Treaty. There is nothing preventing a user from installing these decoders, however the user assumes all liability for installing said pieces of software. Media players (such as Rhythmbox)) for free alternative audio/video formats are available in Linux, but these players are unable to decode patented formats, such as MP3, without installing additional plugin
Partitioning
14
File systems
15
Boot Loader
16
Accessibility and usability
17
General stability
18
Performance
19
Support
20
Programs
21
Security
22