I was at a Usenix conference in 2002 and then 2003... what I could see then is that the percentage of Linux laptops vs PowerBooks flipped in pretty much one year. In '02 it was about 50% there using windows, 40% some kind of Linux (some of it on Apple hardware) and 10% Mac OSX. In '03 I'd have said it was about the same for Windows, but 30% Macs with Mac OSX and the remaining 20% Linux. That trend seems to have mostly continued. (\(\ ( -.-) Kris Browne o_(")(") kris.browne at gmail.com > On Jan 9, 2017, at 16:18, Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom <carl.soderstrom at real-time.com> wrote: > >> On 01/09 04:04 , Mike Miller wrote: >> I hope plenty of new people are getting into using Linux but I'm not really >> sure what the data show. It seems like Macs with their OS X unix really >> took off, but did that cut into the Linux user base? > > I suspect it did. > Anecdotally, here at Real Time Enterprises, we've been using OSX on the > desktops for many many years. We do much the same things with them we did on > Linux - run terminal windows and a web browser - but there are some helpful > bits of the OSX software ecosystem as well such as 1Password for managing > passwords, and Slack for communication. > > -- > Carl Soderstrom > Systems Administrator > Real-Time Enterprises > www.real-time.com > _______________________________________________ > TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota > tclug-list at mn-linux.org > http://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list