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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4-page paper examines how Linux and Microsoft systems are going head to head, and examines if Linux will be the system that breaks Microsoft's dominance in the operating systems market. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTmiclin.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
company known as Microsoft. And for years, Microsoft seemed invincible to competition, especially when the company introduced the Windows operating system during the early 1990s. However, during the
mid-1990s, another company -- Linux -- sprung up as a competitive alternative to Microsofts more expensive operating systems. These days, there is a debate between almost everyone as to
which system is better -- the supposedly more secure Windows system or the free, downloadable Linux. Some experts predict in fact, that within a few years, Linux will the
able to break through Microsofts hold on market. This paper will examine some of the literature on this topic to determine what, exactly, the experts are saying about the
Linux-Microsoft debate. The first major question that arises when it comes to differences between Linux and Microsoft is cost. For one
thing, Linux is free to those who simply want to download it, while Microsoft tends to cost great deal of money (Guth, 2003). Furthermore, Linux has definitely made straw headway
in simple tasks such as support in e-mail and web sites -- although Microsoft claims its Windows system can certainly handle such simple tasks (Guth, 2003).
According to one author, the clash between Microsoft and Linux is mainly a clash of ideals -- while Linux supporters claim that more secure, reliable and
innovative software can be created by a community of programmers, researchers and companies collaborating over the Internet, Microsoft executives note that only commercial companies with a great deal of money
can offer software innovation (Guth, 2003). Another difference between the two software is that the source code for Linux is open so
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