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Bir çeviri sorunu bildirin
Ahhhh, the goode olde days :P
It's kind of funny how there's always been one major thing stopping people from using Linux for everything (aside from just not wanting to change or lack of knowledge). First, there was the relative obscurity of Linux, then there's the modem compatabilty. That's no longer a problem, but then people can't run their Windows programs on Linux. Then tons of great free software comes along that's way better than the proprietary stuff. But people still can't play their Windows games. Then WINE comes along and slowly started getting better and better until it can run a very large percentage of Windows games, even new ones. This happens just in time for NVIDIA to unveil their Optimus system which they made incompatible with LInux for reasons that basically don't make any sense to anyone. So then the Linux community takes matters into their own hands and reverse-engineers their own solution to make it work.
Right now we seem to be at the stage where there's no major thing preventing Linux from overtaking other operating systems- just a little more improvement in compatibility and more vendor support. Will things finally start to move in favour of Linux this time or will it still be another few decades before Linux becomes a competitive/dominant OS?
It's hard to say, but I think we've got a pretty good chance right now.