David Johnson
2005-Oct-20 22:01 UTC
[Fwd: Re: [Wine] What Windows apps stand in the way of switching to Linux at your shop?]
I accidentally sent this to Molle instead of the list ... -------- Forwarded Message --------> From: David Johnson <johnson_d@cox.net> > Reply-To: johnson_d@cox.net > To: Molle Bestefich <molle.bestefich@gmail.com> > Subject: Re: [Wine] What Windows apps stand in the way of switching to > Linux at your shop? > Date: Thu, 20 Oct 2005 21:50:17 -0500 > On Thu, 2005-10-20 at 18:01 +0000, Molle Bestefich wrote: > > Hello Dan, > > > > Dan Kegel wrote: > > > http://kegel.com/wine/qa/#app is a list of "must-have" > > > Windows applications for various vertical markets > > > (at the moment, just k12 schools and churches). > > > > That's an odd choice of market segments? > > > > > If you have any suggestions for the list, please let me know. > > > > I do, but it's not for K12 or churches. > > Do you want them anyway? > > > > In my experience, churches can, for the most part, use the same business > software as anyone else, scaled to the size of the church's budget. A > church with a $5 million per year budget could function quite well on > the software aimed at businesses with $5 million per year (plus) gross > budget. Good taxation management is critical for churches. > > Governments, outside of USA, are making the move to linux. Even in USA, > there are moves to break Micro$oft's monopoly on the government desktop. > > For my family, the make it or break it app was Quicken. The pure linux > software we tested just didn't stack up to Quicken for home book > keeping. Gnucash was too complex and clunky to run, and the others were > going for the Quickbooks (small business) market. The platform > independent (java based) accounting package just looked and felt clunky. > When I got Quicken working under wine, we switched to Windows except for > my daughter's machine. > > The K12 is pretty important to me. Unfortunately, educational software > tends to be quirky and unreliable. Since I started my career in that > sector of the industry, I understand why and how this came to be. > Nevertheless, there are occasional gems that are worthwhile to make > functional. Right now I am trying to get Jumpstart Phonics running > under wine and having mixed results. Once we can run some decent > educational software under linux, my daughter's system will go pure > linux also. > > My own applications are going SWT/Java for desktop, and J2EE for server > and web apps. This way I don't care what the OS under the application > is. > > Hope this helps.