Microsoft is bringing Linux GUI apps to Windows 10:
Linux on Windows 10 gets a big boost and GPU acceleration
Microsoft is promising to dramatically improve its Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) with GUI app support and GPU hardware acceleration. The software giant is adding a full Linux kernel to Windows 10 with WSL version 2 later this month, and it’s now planning to support Linux GUI apps that will run alongside regular Windows apps.
This will be enabled without Windows users having to use X11 forwarding, and it’s mainly designed for developers to run Linux integrated development environments (IDE) alongside regular Windows apps.
While it has been possible to run Linux GUI apps within Windows previously using a third-party X server, poor graphics performance has always been an issue. Microsoft is promising to solve this, too. Windows 10 will soon get added support for GPU hardware acceleration with Linux tools. This is primarily focused on development scenarios involving parallels computation or training machine learning and artificial intelligence models.
So is it the year of Linux on the Desktop?
(Score: 2) by aiwarrior on Wednesday May 20 2020, @08:33AM (3 children)
And? This not stop a fork on the still GPL code. Oracle has pulled such tricks with the db berkeley and made it AGPL. The community just forked and continued on the GPL code.
(Score: 2) by Pav on Wednesday May 20 2020, @08:51AM (2 children)
And GitHub, the US government (US Navy, NASA etc...), Tesla, Netflix, WeChat, Facebook, Zendesk, Twitter, Zappos, YouTube, Spotify etc... including their developer contributions stuck with MySQL. Community divided, victory largely achieved, all while nerds deny reality online so nothing is learned.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by aiwarrior on Wednesday May 20 2020, @10:41AM (1 child)
It goes both ways. I just gave you an example of the other way around, ironically from Oracle also. I do not see any victory achieved, specially in the DB space where there is so much diversity already, open and closed source. Actually your example shows exactly that software where there is plenty of support it is a non issue. I can guarantee you that those exact same companies are the first to switch if the community dies.
So i politely disagree. For what is worth i manage an embedded linux distribution for a very big telecom base station manufacturer. We want to take as much for free as possible. Dead communities do not provide "value" so we just move to the next one. The Open source community is self healing.
(Score: 2) by Pav on Friday May 22 2020, @04:01AM
It doesn't have to result in a project kill. It just has to slow development enough, perhaps make security worse because of less eyes etc... so that life is easier for Oracle. How is that NOT a win?