-Dave
Dell Ends Linux Desktop Program
By CHARLES XI
Associated Press Writer
ROUND ROCK (AP) -- Amid economic downturn affecting millions of
consumers, Dell Inc. announced the discontinuation of its Linux offerings.
"Offering Ubuntu on desktop and laptops was an experiment -- an
experiment that has now failed due to the extreme engineering time it
took to produce each system and the low volume of sales we got out of
the program," said Senior V.P. of U.S. Sales William Prince.
Dell will continue to offer Red Hat and SUSE Linux for servers.
An undisclosed sum will be paid to Canonical Ltd., the company behind
Ubuntu & Dell's desktop Linux program, to maintain existing Ubuntu Linux
support contracts.
"This is a sad day for Linux," said Ubuntu and Canonical Ltd. founder
Mark Shuttleworth. "Dell's desktop support was a shinning beacon of
light telling mothers and grandmothers that Linux was OK to use."
Dell's announcement comes only weeks after Wal-Mart Inc. withdrew its
hyped $200 Green PC from store shelves and online warehouses citing,
"lack of consumer uptake and satisfaction."
Hewlett-Packard, which has been considering the idea of also selling
Linux desktops, says Dell's decision has not in any way changed their
position. But industry insiders disagree.
"I've always doubted HP would ever ship a single personal Linux
desktop," said Erehwon Beth Mary. "They were hedging their
bets, waiting to see what happened at Dell. Now that Dell's program has
failed, HP will quietly discontinue their own program."
Original Article:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/03/AR2007050300374.html
--
David A. Harding Website: http://dtrt.org/
1 (609) 997-0765 Email: da...@dtrt.org
Jabber/XMPP: dhar...@jabber.org
In the end, a viscous monopoly has been damaged and
that is a good thing if you believe in open markets as
I do.
Jerry
____________________________________________________________________________________
You rock. That's why Blockbuster's offering you one month of Blockbuster Total Access, No Cost.
http://tc.deals.yahoo.com/tc/blockbuster/text5.com
Gerald D. Neale said the following on 04/01/2008 2:46 PM:
> Yes it is sad, but I think the brief presence of Linux
> at Dell has served to bring down costs of the
> competition,i.e. Windows. Surely there also is some
> behind the scenes negotiating that also goes on. I'm
> not sure if I believe "extreme engineering" is
> required to get Ubuntu loaded.
>
Yea, this "extreme engineering" argument doesn't hold water. I can
understand that the sales might not have made selling the product
worthwhile (esp. if Dell's cost to support this PCs were high), but
extreme engineering?
Edward
--
Edward M. Corrado
http://www.tcnj.edu/~corrado/
Systems Librarian
The College of New Jersey
403E TCNJ Library
PO Box 7718 Ewing, NJ 08628-0718
Tel: 609.771.3337 Fax: 609.637.5177
Email: cor...@tcnj.edu
-Etan
Happy April Fools everyone. <eg>
-Dave
That was a dirty trick.
:)
--- "David A. Harding" <da...@dtrt.org> wrote:
____________________________________________________________________________________
You really had me going! Good one!
Luis