Why Isn't Linux the Standard Secondary OS?
Recently, I've been using a MacBook Pro that has VMware Fusion installed so that it runs both the Mac OS and Microsoft Windows XP. A friend set it up for me this way, and it's really quite useful to take advantage of virtualization to have access to two robust operating systems and applications available for both of them. I can work with Photoshop and Illustrator, and on video tasks, on the Mac OS, and still jump into Windows to use various useful utilities and open source apps that I like. As I've been using both operating systems, though, I keep wondering why Linux isn't a second or even a third one on systems configured this way.
Of course,VMware and the other proprietary virtualization players have been besieged for some time by free virtualization in operating systems and free, open source offerings. I've also written before about how the Linux-based Google Chrome OS, due in a couple of months, may become an adjunct operating system on many computers.