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New Numbers on Linux Market Share Soon

prostoalex writes "New numbers on Linux market share are due this week. As far as global PC market is concerned, Gartner claims 5% of all PCs shipped this year ran Linux OS, although by the time the PCs were actually on the user's desk, only 2% of them run Linux. In the server world IDC estimates that Linux-powered servers comprise 28.3% of all server sales in 2004."

6 of 611 comments (clear)

  1. NX support? That is soooo *LAST* month! by Asprin · · Score: 3, Informative


    Gammage also stated that until Linux is shown to support the NX (No eXecute) security technology supported in Microsoft Corp's forthcoming Windows XP Service Pack 2, it will be seen as potentially deficient to Windows. However, Red Hat released a patch for the Linux kernel to support NX in June that has the full blessing of Linux creator Linus Torvalds.

    Yeah, right. Read 'em and weep.

    --
    "Lawyers are for sucks."
    - Doug McKenzie
  2. Re:Excuse me by vondo · · Score: 4, Informative
    My experience is the opposite. Linux (Mandrake) installs perfectly, it auto-configures the printer and the scanner. You reboot, get all the updates, reboot again, and keep on sailing. XP takes two reboots for the install, then about 3 more for the updates (and several of those have to be installed seperately). Granted, that's a lot better than Win 98 where I lost count after 8 or 9 reboots to get all the drivers installed and updated on a machine I built.

    Now of course, there are some machines where a linux install is a REAL pain, but most on "desktop" hardware sail right along.

  3. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by UserChrisCanter4 · · Score: 5, Informative

    If I'm not mistaken, Dell offered business users a choice of some random flavor of Linux or FreeDOS preinstalled on their computers.

    The logic was thusly: Licensing agreements force them to ship the computer with SOME OS on it, but a lot of businesses already have a Windows site license. Because the price of the non-windows Dells was slightly lower than effectively purchasing the license a second time, the companies order these computers with one of those two OSes preinstalled, then wipe the drive and install WinXP/2000.

    So while there are a small number of users purchasing their computers with Windows pre-installed and migrating to Linux, that number is effectively buried by businesses doing just the opposite.

  4. Re:The other way around? by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Informative

    People who buy from Dell and don't want to pay for Windows. You can't buy the machine with no OS, so you choose Linux (which is cheaper than Windows) and then just install your warezed copy of XP over the top.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  5. Think "prostitution". by khasim · · Score: 4, Informative

    Gartner is in the business of selling "reports" and "studies".

    Most of the "reports" and "studies" you'll see from Gartner are linked from vendor's websites. Vendors who paid for the report. So the vendors use those "reports" and "studies" as marketing materials.

    I've only seen Gartner stuff used to justify a decision that has already been made. And, IMO, that's all they're good for.

  6. Re:Ship % should underestimate, not overestimate.. by arvindn · · Score: 3, Informative
    U.S != World.

    In India about 5-10% (probably closer to the latter figure by now) PCs are sold with linux pre-installed. Obviously, not all stick with linux. My guess is 2-3%.

    Its the same situation in most of Asia. Linux PCs are reportedly selling like hotcakes in Malaysia. In China, it is even more extreme than in India because the number of people actually using linux is negligibly small.

    The reason for this is that most home PC users in these countries use pirated software whereas OEMs still have to pay for Windows if they want to install it. The amount of wipe-out-linux-and-install-windows going on in Asia totally dwarfs the number of geeks in the world installing linux on their machines after paying the windows tax.

    Slashdotters are living in the 1990s. The new reality is vastly different from what it used to be. The vast majority of linux users are non-geeks. There is no problem at all in getting linux PCs. The number of Linux PCs sold significantly overestimates atual usage.

    The reason that linux usage continues to hover around 2% is no longer due to Microsofy bullying, but because Linux is still quite hard for non-geeks to use.