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| Wednesday, August 16, 2000 |
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In other words, it rocks
I'm in the press room at Linux World Expo in San Jose, resting my butt and wishing I had time to write more. I don't, so I'll list a highlight. There's just one: Eazel.
Bud Tribble told me yesterday that there really aren't that many former Apple folks at Eazel. But it's hard to ignore the significance of just five: Andy Hertzfeld, Mike Boich, Susan Kare, Mike Homer and Bud himself.
Eazel is a Finder. It fills the same role for Linux that the Finder has for Apple since Andy wrote it back in the late Pleistocene and Susan gave us all those pixel-perfect icons. More importantly, it does four things:
- It moves OS user interface design forward in a number of significant ways (among which is nailing down browsing as a prevailing modality, and moving that forward too)
- It moves the GNU/Gnome (desktop and tools) version of the Linux platform into both a practical and aesthetic lead over KDE (which more or less copies Windows, and therefore gives us a sort of Windows/Mac-like choice of desktops).
- It finally puts to rest the claim that open source development is all about implementation rather than innovation.
- It locks users into the Gnome object model, the very inventive bonobo, named after an unusually sexual monkey.
It was fun running into Andy Hertzfeld at the Eazel suite, and flattering to find that he not only knew me, but liked my writing in particular what I wrote about Steve Jobs a few years back. Knocked me out. I've always been a big Andy fan.
By the way, between Gnome and Eazel is a Gnome distribution called Helixcode, which is instrumental to Eazel's success. Neat company. Nat Friedman, one of Helixcode's co-founders, spoke at a couple of Linux For Suits* events, where he was very entertaining, original and smart.
*I had a knockout idea for the new Linux For Suits site. Can't wait to make it happen. (The current one is just an archival placeholder.)
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