It's werid that we celebrate the fact that we already failed in the
desktop market; consider GNOME's 10x10 goal and the reality.

I'm a FOSS advocate but I feel that the result is well deserved.

What's the point of Windows? It is a DEPENDABLE platform that developers
can write software and make profits. Yes, Microsoft ended VB6, VFP9,
..., which annoyed many loyal developers. However, Microsoft continue to
support the runtimes even in Windows 8. On the other hand, Linux GUI
programs get obsoleted very fast, if it is not continously maintained.

Linux people are always trying to build fancy systems using FOSS while
being hostile towards third-parties; third-party software is hard to
package and it may work for only a limited time before things break.
Default Ubuntu installation includes a productivity suite, LibreOffice.
Wow! But as it is generally inferior to Microsoft Office, it is
worthless. Every point Windows sucks, there is some software to deal
with, most notably the virus issue.

Ubuntu seems to become the reference platform of Linux desktop over
years. I find that "Linux = Ubuntu" is a life saver for a non-FOSS-
enthusitic third-party developer, it's a good start but too late.

Do we have a well-defined SDK yet? No.
Moving to Qt is a sane decision but a bit too late. 
( Microsoft's SDK is called Visual Studio, quite integrated, just slow )

Do we have a package system suitable for end users yet (like Android's system)? 
No.
I see some work in process, also too late.
( Windows before Windows Store make installation much easier than 
uninstallation. Though the installation system is abused by many software to 
include toolbars crap, it is still the way many people familiar with. )

Do we have a well-defined UX yet? Yes and No.
The Unity UX is well-defined, I presume.
But the apps from GNOME is constantly having stupid changes. Don't forget that 
we don't have a huge pool of third-party software; we cannot ship crappy apps, 
.e.g, Notepad, like MSFT do.
( Microsoft breaks UI in Windows 8, but they have resource to do that. )

Can people do almost everything with Ubuntu in GUI? Yes and No.
Many GUI program in Linux is simple-minded, when things OK it works. When 
things go wrong, terminal is the only rescue.
How can one know which repo has certificate error when Update Manager complains?

Do we have good support from OEMs? No.
There are Ubuntu pre-installed on some low-end computer models but OEMs don't 
put enough resource to back them.
They always recommend Windows.
( You must know who is the real boss of the OEMs. )

I have some personal advices for people have similar feeling.

1. When possible do FOSS in HTML5. HTML5 seems to be the only way to destruct 
the notion of system requirement WinX/WinY/WinZ. 
2. Otherwise, do cross-platform FOSS. It can be hard, but I feel that it is 
worthwhile to test our software stack by buidling cross-platform application. 
We may also leave some useful documentation during the process. Cross-platform 
also ensures a wider user base.
3. Try do things in the "Windows way" and report bugs, if any, to direct 
upstream.

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Title:
  Microsoft has a majority market share

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