In all seriousness it’s very exciting, I just don’t need to see the same information worded 20 different ways from random clickbait sites lol
It did take like 20 years to reach 3 percent and now we’re at 4 so I think it’s alright to be excited.
Turning of the hockey stick. Invest now.
Ah yes, invest in Linux…
well, you can always donate to open source projects…
Stonks!
Look…I use Linux. I love Linux. But let’s be honest. That 4 percent is largely due to the steam deck; a gaming handheld where the vast majority of users don’t know (or care) what operating system it uses as long as they can play their steam games on the go.
That’s not “year of the Linux desktop”, because it’s not a desktop. It just has one hidden under the hood if you want to dig past the steam layer (which, as I said…the vast majority of users never will)
The year of the Linux desktop won’t arrive until there is sufficient market share that software manufacturers are inclined to support us natively. That won’t happen with a gaming handheld because no one would want to use a gaming handheld as a daily driver.
Sorry to be a wet blanket, folks. Downvote away…
Thats like calling MacOS and Playstation rises the “year of the BSD desktop”
Change my mind.
Android devices are the true year of the Linux desktop.
Ok, compile some code on your PlayStation
Folding at home?
Most computer users don’t even know what an operating system is
I agree Steam Deck played a role, but they didn’t sell enough to make that large of an increase. That’d be insane. However, it did cause the appearance of gaming on Linux to change, which is the thing that was holding back a large number of users.
I had used Linux several times over the past decade or so. It was never my main OS, and I had actually stopped using it completely for probably 5 years, maybe more. This is exclusively because gaming on Linux was an issue and I didn’t want to swap OSs just to play a game. Last year I went 100% Linux. I know I’m not the only one, and I’m extremely confident that the increase is mostly this, not the Steam Deck. The number of Steam Decks sold seems to be maybe 6m on the high end of estimates, which is not enough.
The Steam Deck was a catalyst, but it is not the source of the change.
You might statistically be underestimating Steam Deck. Every player on Steam Deck is plus one in Linux and sometimes one in Windows.
Only 1.63% of Steam users were using Linux in 2023. Since pretty much all Steam Deck users are going to be using Steam, we can’t attribute Linux’s increase in market share to the Steam Deck alone.
That doesnt have any correlation to number of non steamdeck linux users. So 1.63% of steam users could represent a number larger than linux users. And we know steam users is a large number.
I’m pretty sure that this specific statistic leverages internet-user-agents. So a Steamdeck probably wouldn’t be counted in as they aren’t really used for browsing.
That is not really true as far as I can tell. Linux is growing because it is maturing as a ecosystem. We don’t need a bunch of proprietary software to have a good experience
The steam deck doesn’t work like a regular gaming console though. Without digging you can switch into desktop mode and it works like any desktop running KDE.
Also, if you’re saying that we shouldn’t count steamdecks because linux came preinstalled, we might as well disregard 98% of the windows market.
I’m simply stating that the “year of the Linux desktop” hasn’t really arrived because most of its increase in market share comes from something that isn’t used as a desktop at all by 99.9% of people.
Year of the Linux Desktop is a meme headline the same way “x considered harmful” is.
While that has been a nice feature on mine, I’ve definitely been more frustrated with the KDE interface than I am when using my Windows desktop - even when my Deck is hooked up to monitors. Much of that could be familiarity, but familiarity is a very real, very important thing.
It’s the year of the Linux phone! Oh wait that happened like 15 years ago and now they make up like 70% of the global market!
India, the country with the largest population, has a 15% desktop Linux marketshare.
Additionally, these surveys are highly inaccurate. They are at best a “conservatively low balled figure”. Linux installations don’t send a ping to a server anywhere to count the install, and there’s no other facility to gauge or count through the Linux ecosystem itself. Most computers used for Linux are also sold with Windows pre-installed, which means there’s no clean way to use sales figures either.
All that leaves is the browser user agent when visiting select websites that track and share the number of unique visitors that identify as Linux.
I did the math a few months ago in a different discussion (not on Lemmy) and my math at the time came up to about 50 million desktop Linux users, and that was using the “official” reported numbers of 3.x% at the time.
That also ignores that the Stack Overflow developer survey puts desktop Linux at over 50% for personal use, and (IIRC) about 47% for professional use.
But let’s be honest
You can’t be honest if you look at a single boiled down percentage of a very large, very diverse and technical landscape with more variations and caveats than the English language.
Also, in case anyone is wondering, the Stack Overflow numbers didn’t include WSL. If you do include that then desktop Linux usage was over 70% for personal use.
Obviusly stack overflow users use linux but they are very specialized minority. India on the other hand is actually very interesting statistic. Unusaly high, i wonder why.
I’m Indian. I’m willing to bet a bunch of kids who just built their first pc didn’t realize windows was paid just google free OS and installed Linux lol
(This is a sarcastic whit at the frugality of my people. Truth is a lot of Indians my age are extremely tech savvy and care about privacy)
It is actually a good thing because “I need windows for gaming” is the biggest reason why compsci and IT people still have windows.
You’re still right that it won’t win over non tech people though.
Gaming is why my son has Windows. Minecraft mods and VR games are basically impossible on Linux, although he actually spends most time in Linux playing Stardew Valley (he’s tried learning Dwarf Fortress twice, and still not really gotten it, but maybe someday).
Minecraft mods don’t work on Linux? Java mods?
I anticipated this question! As far as I can tell many of the mods require using some mod framework that is built up using some Windows program. Certainly documentation in the Minecraft world seems to mostly consist of YouTube videos of someone downloading stuff and clicking through installers, always on Windows.
Ah so the launchers and stuff are mostly Windows only?
I was able to get compact claustrophobia to work on linux with the curseforge.
due to the steam deck
You sure? Not proton?
Linux Mint checking in!
We got it? Nice… Gotta go and make a meme about it.
If you can’t beat 'em join 'em
There are memes about this??? Where can I find one?
Here’s one https://programming.dev/post/11087762
Damn, I was about to reply saying a very polite “no shit, that’s the joke” then decided to check the link in case it was funny. I’ve been had by my own shit. Thanks for that.
Every year is the year of the linux desktop. It’s just that most don’t know it yet.
every year since 2022 is the year of the Linux desktop. get used to it nerd
Every year since 1993 is the year is the Linux desktop 😎
Yesterday my school principal decided to install Debian on all the school computers, lol.
You would think schools would be all for it, especially since Microsoft office is a subscription service now.
All the schools I have seen are using Google docs and sheets.
Doesn’t really matter when virtually any business they end up working for will be using Mac or Windows.
How big is the school? That seems like quite the chore for one guy
bro manually typing sudo apt update into 200 computers before learning he couldve just cloned the drive
And that’s why you use NixOS instead!
That’s always something I’ve wanted to try.
Having to learn a programming language to get things working there makes it a distribution only for nerds.
For me, the year of the Linux desktop was nineteen ninety eight when the undertaker threw mankind off hell in a cell - er, no, I mean 2017 is when I switched all my computers to Linux.
Everybody I found /u/shittymorph on Lemmy!!!
Be the shittymorph you wish to see in the Lemmy.
Let me make this simple for everyone. There’s only a real metric for “the year of the desktop Linux” and that’s whenever Microsoft and Adobe release full featured versions of all their products for Linux. Not slimmed down web versions, no emulation/virtualization/-insert.hack- BS.
Get used it the idea, I know it hurts, but it’s true.
It’s a vicious circle. Linux has no representation on the desktop because it lacks support from commonly used desktop apps. And lack support from those apps because it has no representation.
Windows have to screw really hard to push common folks to switch AND Linux must come pre-installed on cheap desktops to appease young people that are entering the ecosystem now.
All you can do is switch to it and wait
Exactly I agree with you but I also have to add that there’s another factor at play. Half of the success of Windows and macOS lies from the fact that they provide solid and stable APIs and development tools that “makes it easy” to develop to those platforms. Linux is very bad at that. If major pieces of an OS are constantly changing and it requires large re-works of the applications then developers are less likely to support it. To be fair the Linux situation might be even harder than that - there are no distribution “sponsored” IDE (like Visual Studio or Xcode) and userland API documentation, frameworks etc. Besides, Linux has the worst track ever of supporting old software, even worse than Apple and I believe this speaks volumes about the situation.
Until we don’t get a single DE with a single solid and well designed theme, UI library, developer friendly frameworks and whatnot Linux won’t be getting any meaningful traction among regular people and professional developers.
The vast majority of people use a web browser, an office suite, an image viewer, a video player, and maybe some games. They’ll use whatever OS came free with the machine, or whatever they can get a friend / relative to install for them.
Most people have at least one other app that most people don’t use, that they use religiously, and has little UI foibles they don’t want to change. For some, it’s a native-app E-mail client they’re familiar with where they have 20-year-old messages backed up. For others, it’s a photo management app.
It often doesn’t matter if AltWinMintbuntuXYZ has those capabilities. If it doesn’t handle them in the exact same way, it’s an anxiety-producing shift.
whatever they can get a friend / relative to install for them.
This is a fairly rare amount of adventurism. Unless the computer won’t come up anymore and a friend/relative will fix it for free.
It usually happens when they buy from a respectable company, so the machine doesn’t come with a free (pirated) Windows preinstalled.
You’ll lose your shit when it hits 5%
Unironically, yes. That’ll be a huge milestone. It’ll probably happen pretty soon, too, with the way Linux adoption seems to be accelerating.
Next year: 10%
this may happen because of chromebook’s increasing marketshare
obviously not 10% but 6-7% seems possible
i think chromebooks don’t get counted as linux, i may be wrong though
I read that chromeos now runs actual Linux underneath
not like android tho android sucks
android is based on a modified linux kernel, but boesn’t have much else in common.
that’s why I don’t like android
I’m just waiting for windows 12. If reports are to be believed, it’s going to be a subscription cloud OS, probably with a thin client. If they really go through with that, then I can imagine linux gaining some ground in 2026 when windows 11 hits EOL.
Windows 11 EOL in 2 years?
Quite possibly.
Windows 8 reached end of support in only 4 years.
Particularly if Microsoft thinks they can get away with “Operating System as a subscription” as part of “Windows 12”, then they may well be very aggressive about retiring Windows 11. The software companies are falling all over themselves to force people to pay monthly in perpetuity.
However, I’m thinking that Microsoft sees Windows as their gateway drug, so I don’t think they’d risk making the base platform subscription. They want people to still get “free” OS that nags them with “hey, give us money for backup storage, and you want office, right, and oh you are a powershell user I see? Then you’ll just love renting an Azure instance so we’ll advertise that as part of launching a powershell prompt?” They’ll of course continue the milk the OEMs for license fees offset by bloated “sampleware”, and still ostensibly charge for it to drive the perception of value, but broadly Windows is more a launching board for steering people toward Microsoft subscription services.
If they did throw the switch on “subscription for OS”, then they’d risk people just getting ChromeBooks which will steer the users instead toward Google Docs and Google Drive and all the other services Microsoft expressly doesn’t want users to get into.
I doubt Microsoft is that dumb, though.
Don’t think of it like that. Think of it like, “next quarter’s profits”.
It takes a lot of effort for non-technical people to switch to a new OS. Microsoft can capitalize on that to rake in egregious profits for probably five years or more before businesses finish sincere efforts at supporting Linux.
Yeah, probably they aren’t, but who knows. Unity thought they were infallible and went for their “pay the installation fee or else” that gave power to engines like Godot.
We finally hopped ship this year. Some small bs antifeature finally pissed us off enough to (gasp) learn something new and now I can’t find my way out of Vim.
Did you try to alt+F4 ? I want to jump ship too, next computer will have an AMD graphic card. I only have Nvidia ones and it crash games on Linux.
deleted by creator
Damn, a lot of people bought Steam Decks.
Linux desktop and fusion energy have something in common, it seems.
No one realizes that the equation to calculate both of them have a limit where a value is devided by x where x is approaching 0
The only thing it can’t do is leave the lab.
Are all top 500 super computers, all the computers at CERN, the servers at Google, Facebook, Amazon, Azure, Netflix, eBay, etc, just a lab?
It was a joke. This is /c/linuxmemes not /c/howtobepedanticaboutanoperatingsystemyoulike
Upvote for Jimmy Neutron meme