Many messages in this thread say something like "I
vote for Linux versions of CC software." It's not a democracy; we customers don't get "votes." CC can run their business any way they prefer. It's up to us customers to give Scott S. & company insight into why we'd like one product idea or another executed, and for them to figure out how to make money meeting those needs and wants. Few things so focus the mind like making next week's payroll, and that depends upon having made good business decisions months before. Been there, survived that.
I'm currently dual-booting Win XP Pro-64 and Ubuntu 10.10. Another LAN node runs Win 7 Pro-64. I did this to straddle past and future, since it allows me to test across multiple browsers, variations in default font sets etc. In the process, I was shocked to discover how easy it was to install Ubuntu with XAMPP as a local Web server. I was also shocked to discover that I could make Ubuntu mount my Windows NTFS volumes automatically, which in turn opened the door to using the same Firefox and Thunderbird settings and databases on either side of the dual boot. Furthermore, I can refer to the same Web code and resources from either boot; no need to copy or sync file versions.
In the process, I noticed the obvious: Web work is easier on Linux. Even the little things matter enough to push me in that direction, like conventions for line termination and file path delimiting. So, without intention, I find myself in happy transition away from Windows. Of course that also takes me away from CC's software.
The Web's idioms split into two major camps, open systems (Unix / Linux, Java, PHP, Zend, Perl, Python, ECMA Script, Apache, MySQL etc.) and proprietary. If one works on the proprietary side, he uses tools and platforms by Microsoft, Oracle, IBM etc. (which I cannot enumerate, since I am unfamiliar with them). So I doubt that many in the proprietary camp use CC's tools. Therefore,
CC lives in the open systems world whether they prefer to or not.
This is a world in upheaval, as smart mobile 'phones and tablet PCs bust up the Microsoft / Intel hegemony that has ruled computing since MS-DOS and the 8086.
If that is so, and if CC hopes to grow and prosper, then they must make their tools play well with the open systems camp. Impending MacOS support is a major step along the path for a company in CC's position. I'm hoping that CC promptly takes other steps, too. They are inevitable.
Perhaps these need not be giant steps. Several have mentioned the Wine compatibility layer (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wine_%28software%29 ) in this thread. I would be delighted with CC's porting & supporting via Wine if that were possible.
halfnium -AT- alum.mit.edu
Yes, I looked just like that in 1962.