Linspire Makes Click and Run Free
An anonymous reader writes "After five years of charging an annual fee for their CNR (click and run) service, Linspire has dropped the annual fee, making the CNR service free. This combined with their previous announcement of open sourcing the CNR client, and the Freespire project, is all very big news. This means Freespire users can now have a free distro, using a free CNR service."
according to CEO Kevin Carmony, Linspire is doing well enough from selling its higher-end products and services that it can afford to offer its basic CNR service free of charge
Good for him, and good for us! I guess that's what happens when you become innovative and create multiple products / services!
They are charging for most of the software you download via CNR. I never understood why they charged for the service in the first place, as any charges reduce your potential software sales customer base.
I was a tester in the early days of Lindo... Linspire :) It was a good system then and it is still now. It's a good thing(tm) that it has been made free. They can still sell their commercial products through that chain.
I can finally see this being a good option for people I don't want to deal with helping them "fix" Windows. I knew this 5 years ago, I know this now.
The only reason I post this is in the hopes that the geek I met 5 years ago will read this and realise how much of a stuck-up geek he is. I was at the bus terminal waiting for my bus to go to work. I saw this guy holding a PDA, casually glanced at it, and he just got all excited that someone was checking it out because he had Linux on it and wanted to show it off. So on the bus ride he's prattling on about how great Linux is, how you can do everything in Linux that you can in Windows, how much better Linux is over Windows. So I ask him if he's checked out this new disto, seeing as I just found it and thought it was a cool idea. Nice, easy, user friendly, had this cool utility that downloaded and installed software for you in a single click. "It's called Lindows" I said. "Looks cool enough, and would be nice for the average person that doesn't want to rebuild their kernel." His face dropped...he looked so disgusted. It was like I just killed a puppy in front of him. He could barely even talk. He asked for my email address to "talk about Linux", but I never heard from him. Dumbass stuck-up geek...THIS IS FOR PEOPLE WHO AREN'T GEEKS! It's so that these people bother other people to help them, or don't need help at all because the damn thing just works! It's to free up the geek's time! But he just couldn't see the potential...too disgusted that it was "like Windows"...
I am curious how many people use this as their main distro, and how they got there. I have yet to run into a single person who has settled on this. Hell, I've barely even run into anyone interested in trying it.
...Unless there is some significant advantage to this distribution, but honestly looking at YaST, I don't understand how much easier it needs to get. I'm sort of surprised this distribution is still around. Is the company profitable?
So if anyone is reading this and does use this as their main distro, I'm curious why you use it, and what you tried before it.
Because I'm just not clear on the point of this distribution. Looking at free (as in beer) Linux distributions like OpenSuSE and *buntu, I just don't understand why anyone would pay for this.
Paying for home desktop Linux just strikes me as....bizarre.
(And no, I'm not a SuSE user, but I've played with it.)
Someone step in and drop some science on this please.
It's alright. They told you what the acronym stood for, but not what it does or why it was charged for in the first place.
While I am not personally a Linspire user, it always annoys me when ignorant people complain about them charging for free software. They never did! The free software was always free. If you choose to use the CNR method to install it, you had to pay $20/year for the service of doing so. You didn't pay for all the free software it installed for you though.
Meh.
sorry to be rude, but if you are a real n00b to linux, are you qualified to judge lindows, er, linspire, er, freespire beyond the install and first impressions phase?
sadly, I think computer OS and apps are still polarised into two models:
1/ trivial to get started, difficult to do non-standard tasks
and
2/ hard to understand, easy to do your own thing".
As a simple example, consider the humble Palm.. trivial to use out of the box, doing anything complex with wifi or bluetooth is difficult or impossible. Then take a Zaurus, it quickly becomes non-trivial to use, but immensely rewarding with the full linux tcp/ip stack.
Many have tried and failed to bridge the gap, and it seems only Apple have really had much success.
GreyPoopon
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Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?
I think, as a Windows user, he's perfectly qualified to judge Linspire as a replacement for Windows. In fact, I'd say he's probably more qualified than someone who has a lot of previous Linux experience, or who isn't coming from a full-time, Windows-only background.
Honestly, it's that "hard to understand" part that is a major problem to getting non-geeks, or even geeks who don't like spending a lot of time twiddling with their computer's software, to be interested in Linux. I'd say that trading #2 for #1 (in your post) is not always a bad thing, depending on your ultimate goals for the system.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
I don't think that the fee was really stopping anyone who was Truly Interested from getting the service, but it certainly was keeping some people who were maybe peripherally interested, but not wholly convinced, from giving it a shot.
There is very little difference between $19 and $20. There is a huge, vast, gaping chasm between something that costs $1 and something that is free.
If you can now play with a service at no cost, I think more people are likely to try it out, who wouldn't have even considered it before just because it costs money. Now, it's a valid question whether these sorts of folks are really worth anything as customers, but that's a separate issue.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
the one certainty is that end users are never going to take more than a passing interest in the internals of an operating system.
when linspire first came out it was a pay only distro with no free download so it was quickly tossed by any real linux user. thats why alot of its stuff is outdated no real users would dare port anything to it. nore tuch cnr to be honest cnr is no better then apt-get and its millions of gui frontends. then distros like ubuntu came along offering totaly free direct competion to them installing ati or nivida driver was only a matter of enabling all the respoys threw its gui then hitting request install. just as easy to use and alot faster. it makes alot of sence to open up linspire couse of they didnt it would keep being ignored by the linux world. it removes the main reasion there hated and will help them grow quickly.