1.1 The Excitement of Linux
Linux is, first of all, free software:
anyone can download the source from the Internet or buy it on a
low-cost CD-ROM. But Linux is becoming well known because
it's more than free
software—it's unusually good software. You can
get more from your hardware with Linux and be assured of fewer
crashes; even its security is better than many commercial
alternatives.
Linux first appeared in organizations as ad hoc installations by
hackers running modest web servers or development systems at
universities and research institutions, but now extends deeply into
corporations around the world. People deploying Linux for
mission-critical systems tend to talk about its ample practical
advantages, such as the ability to deliver a lot of bang for the buck
and the ease of deploying other powerful tools on Linux such as
Apache, Samba, and Java environments. They also cite
Linux's ability to grow and sprout new features of
interest to large numbers of users. But these advantages can be
traced back to the concept of software freedom, which is the root of
the broad wave of innovation driving Linux.
As free software, Linux revives the grand
creativity and the community of sharing that Unix was long known for.
The unprecedented flexibility and openness of Unix—which
newcomers usually found confusing and frustrating, but eventually
found they couldn't live without—continually
inspired extensions, new tools like Perl, and experiments in computer
science that sometimes ended up in mainstream commercial computer
systems.
Many programmers fondly remember the days when AT&T provided
universities with Unix source code at no charge, and the University
of Berkeley started distributing its version in any manner that
allowed people to get it. For these older hackers, Linux brings back
the spirit of working together—all the more so because the
Internet is now so widespread. And for the many who are too young to
remember the first round of open systems or whose prior experience
has been constricted by trying to explore and adapt proprietary
operating systems, now is the time to discover the wonders of freely
distributable source code and infinitely adaptable interfaces.
The economic power behind Linux's popularity is its
support for an enormous range of hardware. People who are accustomed
to MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows are often amazed at how much faster
their hardware appears to work with Linux—it makes efficient
use of its resources.
For the first several years, users were attracted to Linux for a
variety of financial and political reasons, but soon they discovered
an unexpected benefit: Linux works better than many commercial
systems. With the Samba file and print server, for instance, Linux
serves a large number of end-user PCs without crashing. With the
Apache web server, it provides more of the useful features web
administrators want than competing products do. Embedded versions of
the Linux kernel are in growing use because, although they are larger
than the most stripped-down operating systems, they deliver a range
of powerful features within a remarkably small footprint.
Opinions still differ on how suitable Linux is as a general-purpose
desktop system. But the tremendous advances in usability and
stability of the desktop software and its applications are
undisputed. Soon (if not today), one will find Linux in many offices
and other end-user environments. Meanwhile, the strides made by Linux
in everyday computing tasks are reflected in the new audio and
CD-related commands found in this edition.
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