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Lenovo Preloading SUSE Linux on ThinkPad

An anonymous reader writes "For years, the holy grail of the Linux desktop has been to get a major computer vendor to commit to preloading a Linux desktop. It's finally happened! Lenovo has made a deal with Novell to preload SUSE Linux 10 on its ThinkPad T60p mobile workstation. Ironically, in June, Lenovo was in hot-water with Linux fans because an executive had said that the company would no longer support Linux on its ThinkPad line. But the company did a quick about-turn. Who knows, maybe Mr. Dell will finally get the message, too?"

6 of 143 comments (clear)

  1. Preloaded Lenova by joshsnow · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you lived in the UK, you can buy a Lenova/IBM thinkpad with linux preloaded already, from here

  2. Re:Minor vendor, major vendor by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's hard to beat an incumbent?

    KFG

  3. Re:Minor vendor, major vendor by Excelsior · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nice logic, good point....NOT. For every minor vendor that commited to preloading Linux and never became major, there are thousands of vendors that are commited exclusively to Windows and never became major. For reference, see pricewatch.com or Computer Shopper. Good try though.

  4. Dell did this 5 years ago by pyros · · Score: 5, Informative

    Dell was selling Latitude's with Red Hat pre-installed in the late nineties, lasted until at least 2002, then they canceled it due to lack of customer interest. I hope Lenovo sees better results (they should given how much Linux has improved since then).

  5. They still do, but... by Svartalf · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's not on all models. The biggest problem they have is that they've got magic tags in the BIOS that XP sees and uses to allow an OEM install intended for Dell machines to go on without plugging in the CD key on the labels they're sticking on the machines. They've got to make a "special" version of the machines they're offering no XP preinstall on that doesn't HAVE this magic key to "prevent piracy", especially since they've apparently caught at least three major businesses cheating on licenses this way in the past. The same goes for at least HPaq (I didn't need to key in the license when I re-imaged my laptop for a small XP partition for my wife's benefit and put Linux (Then Mandriva, now FC5 x86-64 on it...) on.

    Blame their wishing for an "easier" way of things for the customer- I blame them for doing something silly that ties them even tighter
    than ever to Microsoft that honestly wasn't something that was relevant save for the fact that the damn thing needs regular re-installs
    to be of any use to anyone.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  6. Re:American Way by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The American Way: wave a (made in China) American flag whenever something has an American label, and turn your back on anything even vaguely "foreign".

    How about that Microsoft monopoly abuse decision? They abuse Americans. How about that MS corporate tax payment? They don't pay any, but Americans have to pay for all the government services they consume - including all the government SW revenue we pay for.

    Linux, on the other hand, is an essential tool for millions of taxpaying Americans. Which represents the best American traditions of hard individual work paying off in results rewarded by merit, not corporate leverage. And it's an immigrant which has brought its experience to build America, in the best American tradition.

    --

    --
    make install -not war