Nat Friedman Quotes (26 Quotes)


    Our turnaround time on fixes for document importing issues is actually averaging 24-48 hours, which is pretty remarkable.

    It's probably fair to say that the ratio of time our Connector developers spend in the debugger versus the Emacs buffer is higher than with most software.

    A lot of that momentum comes from the fact that Linux is free.

    We're not going to make Evolution or any of our other products depend on Mono anytime in the near future.

    I'm personally working on converting about 250,000 different Windows machines to Linux desktops, primarily in European government.


    GNOME is aiming for simplicity and consistency we're the first open source desktop project to have a documented set of human interface guidelines.

    One of the things that people like about apt-get is having an easy-to-use software catalog at their fingertips, so if you want to install some missing software on your machine, you can do it with a quick command.

    This is what people need: an easy-to-deploy, easy-to-use tool.

    Apple is cool. We like Apple. But we're not going to spend a lot of time porting and supporting our stuff on Mac OS X.

    We expect that developers from a variety of projects will come to Better Desktop.org and review these results to see firsthand how they can improve the design of different applications, desktops and distributions. Ultimately, improved usability will help Linux succeed on the desktop.


    It makes it clear to people what a virtual workspace is.

    Red Carpet Enterprise has been really well received since one guy can install it in about an hour, and it makes it trivial to deal with software management issues like deploying updates and creating standard package sets for your various machines.

    I started hacking in Mono a few months ago for some personal projects, and was very impressed with how complete and usable it is.


    Red Carpet has a nice package abstraction layer that allows us to support RPMs and DEBs transparently.

    As a programmer, it's sometimes difficult to know how ordinary people with no technical experience are reacting to your software. Linux people tend to know other Linux people. In these usability tests, we selected test subjects who were experienced with Windows, but who had never heard of Linux, and asked them to perform basic tasks using the Linux desktop.

    Our goal of Desktop 10 is to build a really easy-to-use, powerful desktop for general knowledge workers. These are people who live in e-mail, in the browser, in the office suite -- not people who need a hundred different applications, but people whose lives really consist of just living in those applications.

    OS X is sweet: it's simple and intuitive, and I think GNOME shares a lot of values with it.

    Now Linux has a world-class totally modern graphics system that will last us for the next decade.

    As Mono matures, people will begin to use it to write desktop components that take advantage of all the hard work that's gone into some of the meatier GNOME libraries, as well as the nifty language features of C.

    We plan to support Exchange 2003 as soon as it is released. We already have the prerelease versions from MSDN.

    There are a lot of people who've been able to ditch their Windows machines and switch over to Linux because they can now use their Exchange server for calendaring and collaboration from their Linux desktop.

    Those little things give a desktop a sense of physicality.

    I have a G4 at home. They're great machines for individual users, and I even know a few core Linux hackers who are having a lot of fun with them. But if you want to move the needle on the non-Microsoft desktop, you've got to look elsewhere.

    Big Linux deployments have reached the point where it's become a real problem for administrators that they don't have nice tools to manage their servers and desktops.


    More Nat Friedman Quotations (Based on Topics)


    People - Experience - Time - Home - Facts - Design - Future - Evolution - Sense & Perception - Government - View All Nat Friedman Quotations

    Related Authors


    Steve Wozniak - Steve Jobs - Mark Zuckerberg - Marc Andreessen - Jeff Bezos - Jay Gould - Howard Hughes - Gordon Moore - Eric Schmidt - Cornelius Vanderbilt


Authors (by First Name)

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M
N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z

Other Inspiring Sections