There are good things as well.
For music notation Linux is at least equal to any other system except the handwriting of a
19th century professional.
For the advanced stuff and music that is really meant to be published as print product
there is of course Lilypond which still beats all other products in quality, the only
category that matters here.
And for the consumer and amateur market there is Musescore.
Both those programs absolutely suck at playback functionality compared to a typical midi
sequencer with a piano roll editor. Windows world has Notion, which seems to be made by
educated and intelligent people, because that is how their program is desinged and
presented.
With Laborejo I am working on a program for exactly that usecase, creating great playback
through notation, without the need for a piano roll sequencer. Except I base it on
Lilypond and they don't, so in terms of printout-quality the match is already won here
for the open source side.
As you may know from other messages here and my blog
www.nilsgey.de a "great
Playback" also requires good sound creating programs such as Samples, Synthesizers or
Physical Modelling, which are drastically underrepresented in the Linux Audio World and
the best option is still to slave a win/osx machine or to rely on Wine/VST, unsupported
and unstable as it is, unable to load the newest copy protection years after their release
or never.
I see this as a pattern: Nearly all of us work on host programms and connection tools.
Obviously this it the right choice because who needs the best synth when you can't
play it? Could it be that we are so far behind that our brightest and most creative minds
still have to concentrate on the underlying general purpose tools instead on specialized
short-term software? (such as synths and samplers. These follow a trend and are still
driven by technological innovation, so each orchestral lib really sounds better than
another one two years earlier)
Nils