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Dell's Secret Linux Fling

Slagged writes "The Register has up an article on Linux-based Dell systems being sold in China. While Microsoft quashed an attempt by Dell to create a market for Linux PCs in the U.S., such restrictions are not the case in Asia. From the article: 'Fifteen months ago our own Ashlee Vance, who broke the news of the first break-up in 2001, proved how hard it is to buy a PC from Dell without Windows. Not pre-loaded with Linux mind you - but simply a bare bones box. But far away from the prying eyes of Steve Ballmer, romance is blossoming. An eagle-eyed reader found the fruits of the union, brazenly on display in a Beijing subway.' The article has pictures of the advertisements, which offer Dell PCs preloaded with 'Red Flag Linux'."

146 comments

  1. Aim at foot, fire when ready. by caluml · · Score: 5, Funny
    But far away from the prying eyes of Steve Ballmer, romance is blossoming.

    Well, sticking it all over the front page of one of the largest tech sites means it will get his full attention now.

    1. Re:Aim at foot, fire when ready. by camperdave · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well, sticking it all over the front page of one of the largest tech sites means it will get his full attention now.

      Thus lending a whole new, and unintended meaning to the term Red Flag Linux: "Red Flag! Linux"

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  2. Let me be the first to say: by Janek+Kozicki · · Score: 2, Insightful
    --
    #
    #\ @ ? Colonize Mars
    #
    1. Re:Let me be the first to say: by Machtyn · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That is a really good thesis. I enjoyed reading it. I have one disagreement, but my disagreement does not have solid footing.

      As of yet, there is no killer app for Linux, nor for 64-bit hardware.

      The one thing that got me started on using Linux (though I had installed Linux a dozen times previously) is MythTV. Granted, that application has potential pits, but it could be the killer app that even non-geeks could learn to love. My brother, an attorney, was surprised when I got on his computer at his home and started recording a program using MythWeb running on my pc at my home.

    2. Re:Let me be the first to say: by shaneh0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While I'm sure to get modded -5 EvilAssHole for this, I'm going to do it anyway.

      A coworker of mine runs a Myth box. Practically every day for the first month or so after he set it up he'd give me an update on the tinkering he had to do the previous night. Now, at least once a month it goes offline for some reason. I'm not a linux guy, nor a mythTV guy, but it seems like he's got problems with TV listings mostly, although issues with drivers, audio sync, and a smattering of other issues have also been recurring problems. He's our linux admin and he does great at work, so I don't think this is an aptitude issue.

      Meanwhile, I spent $500 for my Tivo and all I have to do is sit back and relax. I can, of course, record shows thru an internet connection, stream to other TVs/Comps in the house, and use it for pics and mp3 audio as well.

      So if your average linux geek makes $50k a year (total guess), spending more than 20 hours on the box over its entire lifespan is a waste of money.

      I do understand that the hobbyist enjoys the tinkering, but it's important for you to understand that it's _only_ the hobbyist that enjoys it. Everyone else just wants it to work.

    3. Re:Let me be the first to say: by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I had the exact oposite problem. When I set my myth box up, all i had availible was old recycled parts that has been around for a few years. Granted the mythTV project has come even further now as this was a couple years ago. The default install seemed to work "right out of the box". Ok I spent about 2 hours the first night tinkering with it but after that it just worked. The system finaly died after about a year and a half. The hardrive had a massive stroke and took everything with it.

      Now, My question is, Did all the tinkering and 20 hours of maintinence come from using new and extream hardware? I mean outside of upgrading the cooling so it wouldn't be as loud i didn't have too much of an issue. Of course i didn't upgrade it everytime something was availible but that was an option. In my case, I went from about $50 and a bunch of handme downs to a working system -as advertised- with reltivly little issues.

      I am not convinced that your admin at work is a typicle example of every situation. I have often heard all kinds of gripes about how some hardware dosent work when it was just released yesterday. Another issue i come accross all the time is were people run thier favorite distro or roll thier own and wonder why they cannot get na app to work after they had to comile it from scratch and enter a bunch of variables. This is only typicle of people trying to run that app on that hardware with those circumstances- not the linux in general.

      We recently see a story were someene tryed to reload windows onto a raid configure PC and the install refused to see the raid controler because he didn't have a floppy to load the drivers so he eventualy loaded linux. That doesn't mean windows can't use raid controlers or that windows cannot install properly, it means that in that situation with that set of circumstances it didn't work as planed. So for every this doesn't work right that i hear and then look at my own system to see i don't have a problem, I have to wonder if the problem is more of a certain situation with certain facts instead fo a general statment. Your friend could be the best admin in the world but tryed to finagle unsuported or limited supported devices into a working system. He also might have used some obscure distro or rolled his own that required more tinkering then a mandrake (mandriva) install or something. Thats were the difference between a hobbyist and a normal person might come into play. You can get good working stable installs of MythTV with little hassle for close to the same price minus the install time as your Tivo and just sitback and relax.

    4. Re:Let me be the first to say: by shaneh0 · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that you spent 2 hours acquiring and gathering hardware, assembling hardware, installing the OS, installing & configuring the software, networking the box, and settting it up in your living room w/ a remote control?

      If so, then you should do that for a living. But I really doubt it. Maybe you spent 2 hours on the actual myth-config part of that, but you have to include everything else.

      All I had to do was place the order (1-click) on Amazon, open the box, plug in the wireless usb adapter, hookup the AV, and turn on my TV. 15 minutes of self config and updates later, and I have the Tivo ready to go.

      Like I said, I understand the merits of building your own, but in this particular case, an OTS solution is--IMO--the best way to go. I mean, you can use a small form factor linux box as a wireless access point, too. A friend of mine set one up a few years ago when WiFi was still rather new. But it's a lot easier to pick one up from the store, plug in 2 wires, and relax.

      All i'm saying is that if I were to recommend a DVR to somebody--even a big computer geek like myself--it would be a very capable OTS solution.

      And I've never seen Myth up close and personal, but I have a hard time imagining that its UI is better than TiVo. It might not be much worse (although, from the generic DVRs I've seen out there, it could be a _LOT_ worse) but I doubt it's better.

    5. Re:Let me be the first to say: by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Ahh, It isn 't that hard. I take it you have never installed linux before or are one of those people who insist on doing it the hard way for whatever reasons.

      I took an old BT tuner card i got and a recycled P4 1.8 gig computer with a blown hard disk. Inserted the tuner card, added a hand me down video card, a new 60gig drive and booted to a net install of mandriva (or was it mandrake?) spent about 10 minutes of and on clicking next and enabling support for the tuner card in between the download sessions. It wasn't like i had to sit there and watch it for 3 hours on my slow cable conection.

      Then I installed the easy urpmi links, entered the console as root and typed in urpmi mythtv. It cam back with about 4 different modules so in installed each one with a commans simular to urpmi MythTV-web, ect. I have around 40 minutes of actualy touching the computer by now. Then I made some adjustments to mythTV to get it working how i wanted it. So yes about 2 hours or so and working.

      Now i'm not a part time genius or anything, I'm not ever an evil made rocket scientist. It isn't that hard and i'm sorry to dispoint you. I guess there are even MythTV live cds now that you can run without even installing linux first. So you might be likley to just boot to a cd on any windows media center PC and have a working myth boxen. I don't mean to sound condesending but i don't see any other way of replying.

    6. Re:Let me be the first to say: by zukakog · · Score: 1
      So you're saying that you spent 2 hours acquiring and gathering hardware, assembling hardware, installing the OS, installing & configuring the software, networking the box, and settting it up in your living room w/ a remote control? If so, then you should do that for a living. But I really doubt it. Maybe you spent 2 hours on the actual myth-config part of that, but you have to include everything else.
      I have an old 1GHz computer that was given to me. It takes about 30 min to install xubuntu on, let's say 33 minutes to allow time to insert a newly purchased tuner card. All the mythtv packages are now in the Edgy repos. A simple apt-get and 15 min later mythtv is working. I use a Hauppauge tuner card so I have to build the firmware, but that takes all of 2 min. It also takes, at most, 10 min to register for the TV listing updates, and that is only required the first time you make a myth box. All in all it takes me under an hour to get MythTV up and running. Granted I'm not a total n00b, but there's a nice guide at https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MythTV that should be easy enough for most interested parties to cut & paste their way through in under 2 hours. I'm not contesting that most people would rather have a ready-made product, but it is very possible to get it working myth box in under two hours.
  3. Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by Gr33nNight · · Score: 5, Informative

    Right before Christmas, I found an awesome deal for a Dell PC in their Small Business section. I configured it, added it to my cart and obviously found out I could not de-select Windows. So I called them up and the customer service rep saw my order and promptly removed Windows for me, saving about $50. 2 weeks later my PC arrived with freedos. Seems easy enough for me. Maybe it was because it was Small Business and not home.

    1. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by nine-times · · Score: 5, Informative

      You actually can configure a desktop or notebook without Windows directly from their web site. The selection is more limited, and it's harder to find, but Dell will sell you a system with FreeDOS instead of Windows.

    2. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by symbolset · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I've seen this before, and I didn't believe it, so I clicked your notebook link.
      The page you requested may no longer exist on Dell.com

      hmm...

      The desktop link still works right now though.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    3. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by nine-times · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, I'm sorry about that (not sure why it's doing that). To find them, try going to http://linux.dell.com./ Look along the side for links to "n Series" laptops and desktops.

    4. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by multipartmixed · · Score: 4, Funny

      Your PC came with freedos?

      Like inside the case, or were they still in the bag? Barbecue, or plain?

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    5. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by symbolset · · Score: 1
      I did try that. Apparently it doesn't work as well from outside Dell's localnet.

      If you're getting a good link, try using a proxy, and track it back from there if it's your job to fix this.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    6. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by d3ac0n · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yep,

      Those are the N-Series equipment. They are a Godsend for shops like mine, where we use a RAID drive array and a custom Windows image. we don't have to pay the Windows tax on the machine just to wipe Windows off of it to install our version. (We have a corporate version, unlimited copies.) The notebooks are a more recent addition, and really great given that we don't want Vista forced down our throats for at least 2 more years.

      Nicely done Dell!

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    7. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by DigitalRaptor · · Score: 1

      Going to linux.dell.com and clicking the link on the right worked for me. Nice, too, since I was just considering a new laptop to run Ubuntu.

      --
      Lose Weight and Feel Great with Isagenix
    8. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I have no access to fix anything with Dell (no connection to them, other than being a fairly satisfied customer). I'm connecting from the internet.

    9. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      we don't have to pay the Windows tax on the machine just to wipe Windows off of it to install our version. (We have a corporate version, unlimited copies.)

      Microft if busy rewriting policies, be careful. All corporate installs are now considered "upgrades", you have to have a windows license first...

    10. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www1.ca.dell.com/content/products/compare.a spx/optix?c=ca&cs=CABSDT1&l=en&s=bsd

      Just saw some nice links: "Have you considered?: Linux Workstations".

    11. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      His url ends with a period.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    12. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by el+americano · · Score: 1

      Here is the full link for the notebook

      They make it hard to browse to. If you go to the Home/Home Office you won't see it. Neither will Medium/Large Businesses. You need to be a small business to get any use out of it, apparently. Only there will you see open source computers. Yipee!

      The excitement wears off for me, however, when I see the Latitude D520 selling for $700 with FreeDOS, and only $600 with Windows XP Home. Better to order the Windows version and try to get your Windows rebate - or better yet, buy your Linux laptops elsewhere.

      --
      Those are my principles. If you don't like them I have others. -Groucho Marx
    13. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by jnelson4765 · · Score: 1

      Dell has had these available for a long time. We've sold a lot of them to a our customers running Linux offices - makes life a hell of a lot easier. It's not their full lineup - for example, you can't get one of the ultra-cheap 320 slimlines in the N line, but they're pretty good if you need to throw 10 or 20 linux desktops in an office pretty quickly.

      Dell is playing a lot nicer with Linux than they have in the past - the Dimension N series is even offered with RHEL 4 pre-installed.

      --
      Why can't I mod "-1 Idiot"?
    14. Re:Hard to buy a bare pc...really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is it such a big deal that most computers come preinstalled with Windows? No one is forcing you to leave it on there...

  4. Works pretty well on my Inspiron by petabyte · · Score: 1

    Well, I bought an Inspiron B130 right before Christmas as my Pentium 2 latitude had seen the end of the line and was supprised how well it works with Linux. With Ubuntu edgy, everything worked out of the box sans needing 915resolution to get my widescreen supported properly. I find myself using the laptop more than my athlon64 desktop these days.

    I would have liked the system to come without Windows, but booting the Ubuntu cdrom as soon as I got the machine and using dd to wipe the partition table solved that problem for me.

    1. Re:Works pretty well on my Inspiron by snickkers · · Score: 1

      Yes but MS still get a notch in their belt that way. A portion of what you paid for the computer gets sent to bill gates who, no doubt, will use the money to buy sex toys. Dude, you just bought a leather whip for bill gates. You're a sick sick man.

      --
      GLORX 3:16
  5. Red Flag Linux... by tehSpork · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Would it kill them to find an original name?

    1. Re:Red Flag Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it has to do with the fact that the Chinese flag is red, and that Red Flag Linux is a Chinese distribution?
      Red Flag is partially financed by the Chinese government.

      The name "Red Flag" is akin to the US Government naming their own distro "Red White and Blue Linux"

      Maybe not as original as "Redhat", but its name is directly tied to its origin and backers.

    2. Re:Red Flag Linux... by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      if it sufficiently pissed off an authority over there, why yes, attempting such a thing could well get someone killed

    3. Re:Red Flag Linux... by eMbry00s · · Score: 1

      If by it you mean the party, then yes.

  6. A near guarantee by bogaboga · · Score: 0, Troll

    My near guarantee is that a substantial number of those systems are being loaded or will be loaded with "pirated" or "illegal" copies of Microsoft's Windows software. Now call me a troll.

    1. Re:A near guarantee by burnin1965 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      loaded or will be loaded with "pirated" or "illegal" copies of Microsoft's Windows software


      Very true, but will it balance the years of Microsoft taxes levied on linux user's who purchased systems for linux use and were never provided the option of no-OS or linux pre installed? I've personally purchased two laptops on which I ran linux and never intended to run Windows but I had to pay the Microsoft tax if I wanted the hardware.

      I think the pirating also helps Microsoft more than it hurts. The large pirated install base helps to maintain Microsoft's monopoly position. Given a choice of paying for Windows or using linux free I suspect the majority of those users would dump Windows in a heart beat.
    2. Re:A near guarantee by jb.hl.com · · Score: 1

      To be honest, I very much doubt it. It'd probably be quicker, easier and better for the end user to just get the legal edition from Dell with the PC.

      --
      By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
    3. Re:A near guarantee by the_womble · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The difference is that the victims of your hypothetical crimes are not tacitly encouraging it. Kidnap victims do not go around saying "If I am kidnapped I will not go to the cops", do they? They are also real crimes recognised by any society, not ones invented by governments in recent years.

      MS (and other software companies) do tacitly encourage piracy. Otherwise why do they fail to enforce their copyrights.

      I lvie in a country where some of the Holywood studios have proved enforcement works: people are far more cautius about priating DVDs than software because they ahve been sued for it. IBm has also been getting people to pay for Lotus Notes. MS thinks this market is worth fairly heavy advertising, but not worth suing the peole priating their software - why do you think that is?

      If anyone from MS is reading and wants to prove me wrong: I will promise to find you thirty retailers, high street or shopping mall , that can easilly be proven to be pirating your software, in return for a guarantee that you will sue them.

      Rumour has it that MS was considering enforcement, but backed down when some corporate users said that they would rather use Linux than pay for Windows.

    4. Re:A near guarantee by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the fact that the victim benefited is rarely a valid defence in a court of law. What's wrong is wrong, period.


      Setting aside the absurdity in your comparisons between crimes involving property, physical, and emotional harm to the illegal copying of bits, I'd say you have an excellent idea there. Perhaps we need a little tit for tat, and considering the crimes which the management of Microsoft have been found guilty of perhaps its time we had a little justice in the form of hard time for the perps.

      While I don't buy into the outrageous claims by Microsoft and others as to their losses to pirating I do support their efforts to stamp out piracy of their products around the world. I think it would be very beneficial to everyone all around if we could stamp out piracy of Microsoft products over the next few years with the release of Vista. But I suspect one of the benefits will not be a huge influx of licensing dollars to Microsoft's coffers, there will be a mass exodus to open source alternatives.
  7. Re:Lawl by Werrismys · · Score: 2, Informative
    --
    'Once scientists, even the dim-witted social scientists, get muzzled, the Western Civilization is finished.' - oldhack
  8. Re:Lawl by Gerald · · Score: 5, Funny

    Does linux offer something similar to a HOSTS file?

    The HOSTS file is completely different in Linux. It's spelled with lower-case letters.

  9. Makes sense. by satansmurf · · Score: 1

    If you know the Chinese market, this makes sense for multitudes of reasons.

    If for no other than to curry favor with the gov't.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Flag_Linux

  10. Re:Lawl by tehSpork · · Score: 1

    Linux offers many things that could operate in the manner you seem to be suggesting, however in most cases it would be relatively simple to detect and remove such blatant censorship.

    Worst case the user could burn a Fedora DVD and reinstall. Can't be any worse off than with some generic "Red Flag" distro...

  11. price by CapsLock343 · · Score: 1

    i rounded up for the sake of this but 6,000 yen is only like 55 USD...

    1. Re:price by burnin1965 · · Score: 2, Funny

      for the sake of this but 6,000 yen is only like 55 USD


      Only? For $55 that had better be a nice bottle of sake.

    2. Re:price by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      6000 Yuan is actualluy about 770 USD or 400 GBP

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    3. Re:price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China's currency isn't the yen, but RMB. 6000 RMB is about $750 USD.

  12. Re:Lawl by SuperStretchy · · Score: 1

    haha.. yeah I see that. Good old wiki to the rescue. Learn something new everyday.

  13. Yuan, not Yen by gentimjs · · Score: 2, Informative

    They dont use "yen" in the PRC ...

    1. Re:Yuan, not Yen by CapsLock343 · · Score: 1

      oooh! ok that makes more sense i had just typed "¥6000 to dollars" in google and thats what i got. but 770ish dollars makes a lot more sense. thanks!

    2. Re:Yuan, not Yen by gentimjs · · Score: 1

      Its confusing that/when they use the same symbol (the Y with the lines through it) ....

    3. Re:Yuan, not Yen by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      What about when they want to hold an inflationary currency?

    4. Re:Yuan, not Yen by Odin_Tiger · · Score: 1

      ¥: Alt-0165 ;)

      --
      Unpleasantries.
    5. Re:Yuan, not Yen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah.. it's even easier.

      ¥: Option-Y :)

      Oh, what, you don't have an Option key? ;)

    6. Re:Yuan, not Yen by Odin_Tiger · · Score: 1

      Not yet. Motorcycle is paid off March 15. So I figure either May I get a Mini, or August I get an iMac. Planning on keeping the P.C., only looking into Mac for the development environment (Cocoa, etc.)...whaddaya think, will the Mini cut it, or save for iMac?

      --
      Unpleasantries.
  14. Red Flag Linux?? by neuro.slug · · Score: 0, Redundant

    In Communist China, Red Flag Linux installs Dell!!

  15. Nothing Clandestine About It by Pakup · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nothing at all.

    Just look at Dell's Chinese website: there, right in the middle, amongst all those Chinese characters, you'll see the caozuo xitong ("operating system") listed in clear Roman letters: Linux.

    http://www1.ap.dell.com/content/products/features. aspx/dimen_c521?c=cn&cs=cndhs1&l=zh&s=dhs

    (The stuff at the top says Dell "recommends the use of" XP Professional.)

    1. Re:Nothing Clandestine About It by simontek2 · · Score: 1

      Way tooo funny. Click the customize button. Says Red Flag Linux, with a picture of MS Windows.

      --
      SimonTek
    2. Re:Nothing Clandestine About It by dtfinch · · Score: 1

      That's hilarious.

    3. Re:Nothing Clandestine About It by celticmonkey · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing this is the comparable box in the USA with Windows XP installed: http://www.dell.com/content/products/features.aspx /cto_dimenc521?c=us&cs=19&l=en&s=dhs The cheapest Chinese model is $512.43 USD and the most expensive is $768.70 USD The cheapest American model is $359 and the most expensive model is $859. That's without add-ons. I don't know Chinese, so I can't really say how the advertised features compare. Perhaps someone who does speak Chinese could say how much money Linux users are (or aren't) saving with a Dell box.

  16. Dell: PLZ sell Ubuntu laptops to replace my Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If Dell sold Ubuntu laptops where everything (wireless, 3D accel) "just worked" I'd get those instead of the mac laptop I use today.

    My desktop's Linux - all my company's servers are Linux - and as cool as BSD/Mac is I don't really need the context switch. I liked Dell hardware last time I used it - and yes, eventually I got Ubuntu running fine on it (damn wireless chips) - but no, it's not worth the effort to change. Yes, I understand for wireless and 3D it might cost as much as Windows to get the proprietary stuff licensed. But it's worth it. Yeah, I know it's not that hard to do it all yourself - I'm just not interested and would rather have something that just worked (and that's my problem with windows - it doesn't "just work" without all the antivirus/security screwing around you need to do).

    Dell, if you want to get your market cap back above Apple's -- please get a real OS.

    1. Re:Dell: PLZ sell Ubuntu laptops to replace my Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How to get a Dell laptop to work with ubuntu easily.

      1 - buy dell laptop with supported video chipset. Ignore ram, HDD and other aspects other than screen.
      2 - Buy a minipci Atheros+bluetooth wifi card or other supported wireless.
      3 - buy some quality ram at far lower price than DELL.
      4 - buy a decent Segate HDD that is faster, cooler, and way quieter.

      install all the above, then install Ubuntu.

      Dell tends to put low grade junk in their laptops, their wifi,ram and hard drives espically are really low grade.

    2. Re:Dell: PLZ sell Ubuntu laptops to replace my Mac by Matilda+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      2 - Reinstall windows when you find the default image is borked. 3 - Return Dell to Best Buy when reinstalling windows breaks the Dell hardware. 4 - Realize that by reinstalling windows you apparently broke the service contract and you'll have to fix it yourself. 5 - ??? 6 - Install Linux anyways.

      --
      Tluin natha Linux xxizzuss uriu olt bwael mon'tun.
  17. Red Flag by ShorePiper82 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    The article has pictures of the advertisements, which offer Dell PCs preloaded with 'Red Flag Linux'

    Red Flag Fork: Linux for Commies --- In Soviet Russia, Linux Codes You!

  18. Re:Lawl by SuperStretchy · · Score: 1

    But then the government would castrate you, take your wife, kill the one child that they let you have, and throw you in jail for the rest of your life. Not fun.

  19. Hard to get a Dell with no OS? by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 5, Informative

    No it's not. I have one. OptiPlex GX280n. The "n" is for "no OS", it does come with a CD of FreeDOS, but other than that, you're on your own. You can see their newer versions of the "n" series by clicking this link http://www1.la.dell.com/content/products/compare.a spx/optix_n?c=pr&l=en&s=bsd

    1. Re:Hard to get a Dell with no OS? by bill_kress · · Score: 1

      Why is there no price at that link? Like nowhere to be found...

    2. Re:Hard to get a Dell with no OS? by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 1

      There's no price listed because you have to hit the "Contact us" button. Why they did this when the 280n had a price listed I don't know...perhaps it's a half-assed attempt to appease MS? Either way, it's worth the effort if you truly wish to avoid the MS bundled OS.

  20. Re:Lawl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Of course Linux has a hosts file. Linux is a Unix knock off so the lineage is obvious. Windows network layer used to be a BSD knock off so rather than re-invent the wheel M$ ripped off the design and mangled it to fit whatever the bizarre filename mangling was at the time (8.3 with long aliases and byzantine rules for capitalization and when it matters). I don't know for sure if the Vax/VMS with Wollongong networking had a hosts file or not -- it probably did and since all things Vax were default upper case maybe that's where the M$ folks got the idea that HOSTS must be shouted LOUDLY.

  21. And we care about Dell why, again? by Perp+Atuitie · · Score: 0, Troll

    Tiger Direct and a whole bunch of other vendors have been selling barebones systems for years. Worrying about Dell's opinions on Linux is like worrying about what Fernando Llamas likes for breakfast.

    1. Re:And we care about Dell why, again? by EXMSFT · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Love them or hate them, Dell sells more PC's than any other vendor. So their moves as a whole would generally be something that the linux community SHOULD follow, not just disregard and only cite statistics for much smaller vendors or channel resellers. Frankly, though, this isn't that big of a deal. As has been said before, it's relatively easy today to buy a PC from Dell (US) without an operating system. And the fact that in China you can buy a PC preloaded with a government-funded operating system isn't something I'd use the word "shocking" to describe.

  22. Surprising? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

    Given a country where local shops will sell you a system without charging you for the OS (in any way), how does a deep pocketed competitor from overseas compete? Linux. It can be shipped for free, without breaking laws, and avoiding lawsuits. I'm sure MS is well aware of this, and we have all read on /. how they keep making threats to China in efforts to solve this problem. Unfortunately, people that like to use cheap foreign labor to MAKE products, do not often understand that those same people can't afford to BUY them at those wages.

    1. Re:Surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Brazil you can buy any DELL with FREEDOS it even comes with a GNU GPL license.

    2. Re:Surprising? by satansmurf · · Score: 1

      Well. If you spend much time in China, you will find out that no matter what box has someone buys, a priated copy of Windows (around 10 RMB = $1.20) will be put on it. Heck, some of the copies I have seen are pretty impressive.

      A DVD that has Win98, WinXP, Server 2003 Pro/ENT that you install from an XP look alike menu.

      Or even better, one pirating group build a new "version" of XP every ~2 months that have *all* the MS security patches slipstreamed.

      I would also guess that MS penetration in China as a % is probably higher than the US or Europe.
      But it is mostly pirated penetration.

  23. Re:Lawl by SuperStretchy · · Score: 1

    THANK YOU I understand now. At least its not spelled hOStS or something dumb like that

  24. Dell and Linux for corp customers mainly by flyingfsck · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have bought hundreds of Linux machines from Dell. For a corporate customer it isn't an issue.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
  25. Linux on Dell by DaMattster · · Score: 2, Informative

    Linux on Dell Laptops seems to perform almost flawlessly. I run Ubuntu on my Inspiron 6400 and everything was detected. The only noticeable problem I have is that I have to manually put the laptop to standby before closing the lid. I confess I haven't checked the power control panel yet. Otherwise, everything was detected and cooks!

  26. Dell is evil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any computer manufacturer that rivets its cases shut is evil. Moreso if they install Windows before riveting them shut!

    At least the Chinese have a less evil Dell... I don't know if Chinese Dells are riveted shut, but at least the TFA says they come with Linux!

    I'd prefer, however, a box I can actually upgrade or repair. I can always wipe Windows, but a friend was crestfallen when I discovered I couldn't fix his broken Dell, or install a second drive with Mandriva on it. Unless he has a pop-rivet gun I can borrow!

    Dell is evil, Dell with Microsoft is doubly evil. What's next, riveting your Ford's hood shut? Note to Dell: Microsoft WELDS the hood of their OS shut. You should go the double-evil route yourselves and WELD the boxes shut. The poor saps will NEVER get them open! Mwahahaha!

    1. Re:Dell is evil! by csplinter · · Score: 3, Informative

      What are you talking about?! We have hundreds of Dells of different types were I work and I've never seen one welded or riveted shut. I've seen rivets used in their construction but, not used to keep you from getting inside. I think you are mistaken. I know those Dells can be pretty tricky to open sometimes because they have weird case designs but given enough time I have not encountered one I could open with a screw driver or my bare-hands. Maybe I'm wrong, whats the model number on the machine your talking about?

  27. can't buy a Dell PC w/o Windows -- bull! by renehollan · · Score: 2, Informative
    ...proved how hard it is to buy a PC from Dell without Windows.

    I call bullsh*t, or at least misinformation.

    I was able to negotiate a refund of some $62 for each of four Dell PC purchased while I worked at a former employer because we explicitly did not want Windows for them. Even though it came preinstalled, with shrink-wrap installation media, we got the refund upon returning the installation media and attesting that we reformatted the hard disk.

    Dell was not difficult about it.

    Of course, the fact that all our desktops were Dell machines, and most of them did run Windows, and my employer did have a blanket corporate license from Microsoft for all MS software may have had something to do with it, but still.

    Of course, getting a refund for returning something you don't want is not the same as not having to purchase it in the first place, but the bottom line was that, in the end, Dell happily sold us PCs with no operating system on them.

    --
    You could've hired me.
    1. Re:can't buy a Dell PC w/o Windows -- bull! by bigpat · · Score: 1

      You are calling "bullsh*t" about someone's post saying it was hard to buy a PC from Dell without Windows and then as a an example of how easy it is you say how you were able to "negotiate" with Dell to get a refund of $62 after you returned the installation media and had to promise that you reformatted the hard drive. Seems to me that you just proved the point that you were calling "bullsh*t" at the point in your story where you say "negotiate".

    2. Re:can't buy a Dell PC w/o Windows -- bull! by renehollan · · Score: 1

      Seems to me that you just proved the point that you were calling "bullsh*t" at the point in your story where you say "negotiate". "Negotiate" as in: one two minute phone call to our Dell rep. who was so quick to agree, that I had to make sure he understood what I was requesting. I wouldn't have spent more than 15 minutes trying to get a lousy $248 refund, anyway. It may have been that we did so much business with them that they'd not even blink over a louse $248, but my boss was in a nickel and dime mood that week and was quite happy that two minutes of my time got us $248 and established the principle that we didn't have to pay the MS tax on Dell machines we bought for Linux-based development.

      --
      You could've hired me.
    3. Re:can't buy a Dell PC w/o Windows -- bull! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      my employer did have a blanket corporate license from Microsoft for all MS software may have had something to do with it

      I certainly hope it had nothing to do with it, as Microsoft only sells upgrade volume licenses. You an existing retail or OEM install to use them.

      Quoth The 'Soft:

      Note Volume Licensing agreements cover only Windows client upgrade licenses, not the full Windows client operating system. Customers must have a qualifying underlying operating system license before Volume License software can be installed.

      or, here:

      Volume Licensing programs: For organizations that use multiple copies of Microsoft software, Volume Licensing is a flexible and economical way to acquire from five to thousands of licenses for software. Volume Licensing agreements, including Academic Volume Licenses, do not offer the full license for Windows Client operating systems; Volume Licensing covers only Windows Client upgrades. The full operating system license must be acquired as FPP or pre-installed by an OEM or System Builder.
    4. Re:can't buy a Dell PC w/o Windows -- bull! by bigpat · · Score: 1

      I think you can agree that if when I clicked on a button on Dell's website that said Linux instead of Windows and it took 2 minutes to change Windows to Linux in the configurator, then you would hardly call that "easy" and certainly not convenient. You might even call customer support and complain about the responsiveness of the website. But you aren't even given that option, aren't told that it is an option, and have to call someone you do business on a regular basis in order to make it happen and then make it seem like it is no problem. Perhaps you were just trying to show it wasn't impossible to get what you want with Dell, but it is hardly good customer service.

  28. Pro-Microsoft people please explain? by erroneus · · Score: 1

    Please explain to me in the most civil terms possible why is it okay that businesses even as large as Dell should be afraid of Microsoft's disapproval?

    I feel similarly about Walmart and what it does to its vendors, however, it's interesting to see what Walmart's push for flouescent lights over incandescent will do... such power over the market CAN be used for good.

    1. Re:Pro-Microsoft people please explain? by Haeleth · · Score: 1
      Please explain to me in the most civil terms possible why is it okay that businesses even as large as Dell should be afraid of Microsoft's disapproval?
      Please explain to me in the most civil terms possible why it is okay for you to beat your wife.

      Hint: Dell simply is not afraid of Microsoft's disapproval, which is why they have been selling PCs with Linux on them for some time -- certainly in the UK, at least, I can't speak for America. This is a non-story.
    2. Re:Pro-Microsoft people please explain? by westlake · · Score: 1
      Please explain to me in the most civil terms possible why is it okay that businesses even as large as Dell should be afraid of Microsoft's disapproval?

      The only thing that Dell fears is the market, service and support costs.

      Dell will sell the bare bones, FreeDOS or Linux PC, in any quantity to its commercial and institutional buyers, who are typically thinking RHEL. It isn't persuaded by the die-hard Geek who thinks that OEM Linux is right for the direct seller in the domestic consumer market.

      Walmart lost interest in Linux quite some time back, though at Walmart.com you will probably find one or two mediocre Microtel boxes remaining on life-support. If you look hard enough.

  29. It's HP now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HP passed Dell last year some time, I remember reading about it. And laptops now outsell desktops. Sorry no links right now, just an anecdotal. I am sure others remember this.

    with that said, Dell (Michael) said he'd be glad to offer Linux on his machines all over-once the community decides on "the" distro that he would need to support. He threw it right back at the critics and he is still waiting. Although I think he could just pick one of the big distros out and say you are on your own with anything else. I would guess that the faster release cycle distros really need to stop and think on that if they really want linux on the desktop. Geeks don't mind too much upgrading, but joe average might get annoyed with every 4 to 6 months, with the resultant stuff that used to work now doesn't, and so on.. I think in the non geek real world a once a year max release schedule, up to two years, then just security and bug fixes might be more appropriate than the constant bleeding edge all the time.

        In china, they passed a law there that no bare computers could be sold (international IP concerns and the WTO and etc), they have to ship with some sort of OS at least at the retail level. Red Flag was a natural for their internal market.

  30. Re:Pir8 enablers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh come on is there a way to moderate -2?

  31. Tinfoil hat time by wsanders · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    > Microsoft quashed an attempt by Dell to create a market for Linux PCs in the U.S

    Disclaimer: Both my grandfathers were Freeemasons, so I'm in on the conspiracy.

    I subscribe to the Dell Poweredge Linux mailing list - it a continual litany of woe from Linux newbies whining about how they can't get the latest random distro to work perfectly with the latest something-or-other. (Along with the odd message about the Broadcom ethernet and onboard RAID drivers locking up.) It's perfectly within Dell's rights to sell only preloaded systems with their qualified OSes, particularly since they have only a skeleton crew of talented people to support Linux, and their onboard RAID controllers are mostly useless unless used with drivers built with this morning's patches. And it's perfectly within our rights to buy boxes better-suited for the task, or to cough up the bucks for RHEL or Suse. There's plenty of competition here, see Penguin, et al.

    --
    Give a man a fish and you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish, and he'll say "WHERE'S MY FISH, YOU IDIOT?"
  32. Suse? by RockoTDF · · Score: 1

    I can't help but wonder if microsoft would allow the companies it intimidates into using only windows would mind if they allowed Suse (more specifically, SLED) to be preinstalled?

    --
    There is more to science than physics!

    www.iomalfunction.blogspot.com
  33. Re:"Red Flag Linux?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello. Your a sociopath.

    You are so messed up in the head that you consider charity communism, and then go up to those people and call them bastards.

    The sad thing is that was started by Steve Ballmer.

  34. Dell Linux laptops ... not here. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    The link is not working for me, either.

    Just to confirm, the link I'm trying is http://www.dell.com/content/products/features.aspx /nseries_nb, linked to from http://linux.dell.com/. The resulting page is just a generic "The page you requested may no longer exist on Dell.com" error.

    What seems odd to me is that the link to "n-Series Desktops" points to http://www.dell.com/nseries, while "n-Series Notebooks" points to http://www.dell.com/content/products/features.aspx /nseries_nb. I would have guessed that the URLs for the two destinations would be similar, but they're not.

    Is their server just down, or have they decided to purposely bury their Linux laptops?

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    1. Re:Dell Linux laptops ... not here. by assassinator42 · · Score: 1

      The links works for me. Although, when I replace dell.com with either 143.166.224.244 or 143.166.83.38, it gives me a page not found error.
      Perhaps this link would work better? What OS, browser, and country are you connecting from?

    2. Re:Dell Linux laptops ... not here. by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 2, Informative

      http://www.dell.com/content/products/features.aspx /nseries_nb

      I just rewrote the same link they used for the desktops. It seems to work.

  35. Might want to be careful there. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Unless you have a very strange or old volume license agreement with Microsoft (different than every other volume license I've ever seen), what you are doing isn't legit. You can't install volume or corporate-license Windows on bare hardware; the hardware has to have some sort of Windows license on it first. I don't think Microsoft sells unlimited-install licenses that entitle you to put XP onto totally bare hardware. It's their way of cooperating with the big VARs; this is one of the reasons why you never see a big company with white-box PCs, even though any reasonably-sized organization with its own IT department could go to Taiwan and get their own equipment for half of what Dell charges. Only the gear that comes with a license sticker on it from the factory is eligible to have corporate images put onto it. (Which really makes me question the utility of those corporate licenses, but I guess that's because I'm not in management.)

    Dell is pretty clear about this on their n-Series page, as it states in bold type: "It is not a Microsoft operating system and is not qualified for Windows licensing use under any existing Microsoft Volume Licensing Program (OPEN, Enterprise, etc.) Customers interested in a Microsoft® Windows® solution should purchase a Dell desktop pre-loaded with Windows XP Professional."

    If you get audited, you may be in trouble.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    1. Re:Might want to be careful there. by aaronl · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The blurb from that Dell page is just saying that FreeDOS has nothing to do with MS and in no way gives you a license to use anything MS related. If you take the full quote, it makes much more sense. This was the line directly before the bold part:
              "The open-source n Series desktops feature select popular models from the DimensionTM desktop, OptiPlexTM desktop and Dell PrecisionTM workstation lines available with a copy of the FreeDOSTM open-source operating system included in the box, ready to install."

      As far the MS licenses, yes, if you have a volume license, you can certainly use it on bare hardware. There are plenty of places that do use white box systems, too. Most of the time, it just isn't worth the cost to maintain everything in-house, so you go to a Dell or IBM for hardware. If you have good people and policies, then white box is a nice cost cutting measure. No little hologram stickers are required.

      There are unlimited licenses from MS, too. You just buy a site license, and don't worry about the numbers. Most vendors have something like that, just for the big companies.

    2. Re:Might want to be careful there. by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Interesting, it didn't say anything about that on my MSDNAA copy.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    3. Re:Might want to be careful there. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not an expert but...

        Volume Licensing programs: For organizations that use multiple copies of Microsoft software, Volume Licensing is a flexible and economical way to acquire from five to thousands of licenses for software. Volume Licensing agreements, including Academic Volume Licenses, do not offer the full license for Windows Client operating systems; Volume Licensing covers only Windows Client upgrades. The full operating system license must be acquired as FPP or pre-installed by an OEM or System Builder.

      Q. Can I order a PC with no operating system from a manufacturer and then use my Volume License to install Windows on the desktop?
      A. No. Volume License agreements--including Academic, Government, and Public Sector--never cover the initial full Windows Client operating system license. Volume License agreements cover only Windows Client upgrade licenses. Windows upgrades are designed to upgrade previously acquired qualifying desktop operating system licenses. See the PUR for more information on qualifying underlying licenses.

      pasted from http://www.microsoft.com/licensing/resources/faq.m spx

    4. Re:Might want to be careful there. by aaronl · · Score: 1

      Well, will you look at that. I've been lied to by sales reps for quite some time, it would seem. Makes me wonder whether the Windows Server licenses that I've purchased in the past are actually real, either.

      It looks like it's just for the client, at least. I don't think I know any business that followed that rule, which makes me wonder if they invented it recently.

    5. Re:Might want to be careful there. by jimicus · · Score: 1

      It was certainly the case for educational licenses in 2000/2001.

      I do hope you got the sales reps to put it in writing that you were OK to buy bare PCs.

  36. That's better by symbolset · · Score: 1
    Now if they would only fix the website.

    To answer your question though, west coast US, firefox2 and IE6 for me.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:That's better by assassinator42 · · Score: 1

      That has got to be one of the weirdest pages ever. It only worked in the first browser/OS combo I tried, Firefox 2.0.0.1 on Windows XP. It didn't work under Opera, IE7 or Firefox 1.5.0.6 on XP or Firefox 2.0, 2.0.0.1 on Linux. When I upgrades from Firefox 1.5.06 to 2.0.0.1 on my other XP box, it could view the page fine. Anyway, the customize links seems to always work:
      Latitude D520
      620
      820
      420

    2. Re:That's better by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      All the links worked fine for me; I'm in the UK using firefox2 on win XP, so it might not be a dell problem.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
  37. In Singapore too, and with Red Hat Enterprise by ggvaidya · · Score: 1

    Workstations with RedHat pre-installed have been available in Singapore for ages. This seems to only be for small business-targetting workstations, though: I haven't seen any in the home/home office range yet (although atleast one of the OptiPlexs come with 'DOS not factory installed').

    1. Re:In Singapore too, and with Red Hat Enterprise by robinvanleeuwen · · Score: 1

      Yeah sure, but if you look at the link more cerfully and go to cutomize you can choose
      "Windows 64 bit" "windows 32 bit" and "no windows". The windows 64 bit costs $42 more. There
      is no price difference for "no windows" and "windows 32 bit" which suggests that you
      are paying the microsoft tax anyways...

      http://www1.ap.dell.com/content/products/compare.a spx/workstations?c=sg&cs=sgbsd1&l=en&s=bsd

      And why only RHEL? Isn't that the a version of linux?
      I don't want windows, i don't want support from them, so i don't want to pay the
      MS tax. That is not possible.

      So dell doesn't really do the good thing(tm) here.

      --
      If you don't like my sig then don't read it.
  38. We could /. Dell with Linux Desktop Searches by smeckert · · Score: 1


    I followed a few of the links listed, and found
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2001/08/03/dell_ends_ great_linux_desktop/
    where a dell marketing sleeze says:
    "Our customers did not seem to want it though; the numbers didn't add up,"

    If enough people searched for "Linux Desktop" on Dells website
    it might make them reconsider.

  39. easier than that by edxwelch · · Score: 1

    Actually you don't even need to look for the non-windows version. They will automaically offer to sell you the PC without Windows at the end of the customization process and you save $30 (I tried using the OptiPlex 320)

  40. Re:It's a XP rip off by orkysoft · · Score: 1

    Damn, you're right. It's got a Winamp icon in the Start Menu to start XMMS, and it's even got the blue E icon.

    Maybe it's to make the desktop seem less strange to people used to Windows? You and I can use a new theme or switch from KDE to Gnome (and vice versa) without freaking out, but I doubt most computer users can manage that.

    Still, I think this should run into legal (copyright/trademark) problems in western jurisdictions.

    At least they didn't change the Open Office icon for the MS Office icon ;-)

    --

    I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
  41. Re:Lawl by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    "if it had a HOSTS file (its linux)"

    So if it has a hosts file, it's Linux? Hmm...

    C:/windows/system32/drivers/etc/hosts

    ZOMG! Stop the presses! I'm running Microsoft Linux XP!

    On a more serious note, if you're going to implement a censorship regime on a large number of clients, why would you try to do it on the client end with a file easily reconfigurable by the user rather than intercepting and redirecting the DNS requests?

  42. Guess China is not big on the "NSA INSIDE" logo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that now comes with windows:)

  43. Hey Dell guys working on this issue! by symbolset · · Score: 1

    Apparently Dell is fixing the problem with this link. It now works in FF, but not in IE.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  44. OS Monopoly is why... by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

    Because Microsoft has a monopoly on operating systems for the PC and because the profit margin on PCs is so small, a moderate increase in the cost of Windows can make it impossible for Dell to compete.

    Most people don't want to buy a PC that does not come with Windows preinstalled. So if Dell does anything that really frosts Microsoft's cookies, Microsoft could make it very difficult for dell to stay in business simply by raising the price it charges Dell for its monopoly operating system.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  45. "and cooks"??? by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1
    http://www.metafilter.com/mefi/21813

    Is cooking a good thing?

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  46. Re:Lawl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think he was asking if Linux had an equivalent to Windows's C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts, not realizing the origin of the "etc\hosts" bit.

  47. URLs that end with a period by symbolset · · Score: 1

    Yes. That has a specific meaning in HTTP. It's not an error.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:URLs that end with a period by h2g2bob · · Score: 1

      Showing my ignorance here, but what meaning does it have?

    2. Re:URLs that end with a period by indigoid · · Score: 1

      It has a specific meaning in DNS , not HTTP.

      It denotes the root DNS zone. Hence the fully qualified domain name is linux.dell.com. --- the com zone is a subdomain in the root zone.

      --
      P-plate adventurer
  48. Supreme irony by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am, in essence, an avowed capitalist, but let me say this:

    It is the supreme irony that it is possible to more freely purchase what you want in China than it is in the United States - the country of the products' origin and central influence of capitalism throughout the world.

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    1. Re:Supreme irony by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      It is the supreme irony that it is possible to more freely purchase what you want in China than it is in the United States - the country of the products' origin and central influence of capitalism throughout the world.

      I appreciate the poetry, but there's not a free market in the United States. It's a market where large corporations can make political donations to get the market changed to suit their needs, with the regulators either oppressing their competition or not enforcing laws where it's inconvenient.

      Patches welcome...

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    2. Re:Supreme irony by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      That was indeed the intended point of my statement. You know, the irony.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    3. Re:Supreme irony by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      That was indeed the intended point of my statement. You know, the irony.

      Yeah, that's really clear now that I'm reading it again. I'm not sure what the cause of the brain-fart was but my reading comprehension skills were clearly on the low-end that day. It wasn't even late at night!

      Anyhow, we're agreed - I offer a sympathetic 'grrr' at the current state of affairs.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  49. Hay; Mr. Ballmer... by jskline · · Score: 1

    Welcome to Slashdot Mr. Ballmer. We support free speech here so if you have more opinions about this, please share! :-)

    --
    All content in this message is copyright (c) 2008. All rights reserved. RIAA is prohibited here.
  50. Re:"Red Flag Linux?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello. Like most commie bastards, you're a humourless moron.

    Don't spell very well either, do you?

  51. huh by way2trivial · · Score: 3, Informative

    I always use
    www.dell.com/linux

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  52. You Still Bought Windows Though... by EXTomar · · Score: 0

    You still bought a copy of Windows though even if you were successful in getting a refund in exchange for the media. The fact you had to request this by doing extra work is still an issue. The fact that the option isn't available is still an issue.

    Even with the nicest return policy in the world doens't excuse the problem: You still can't buy a Dell in the US without Windows. If you are going to call "shanigans!" point it at the loopy OEM deals.

  53. desktop by kurtis25 · · Score: 1

    Where can an American (living in Indiana) buy a good Linux desktop? My computer is currently dying and I would like to replace it with a not-windows computer. I want to write documents, check email, surf the internet and other normal usage tasks. I don't want half the software I have on my computer to be dedicated to protecting my computer like it is right now. I want a smooth running Linux system which doesn't cost $509 (sorry dell), where can I by such a computer? I don't have the skills to buy the parts or patience to build one. Any advice?

    1. Re:desktop by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      system76.com Rather high-end, so yes, a good desktop.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    2. Re:desktop by jimrz · · Score: 1
      --
      Never try to out-stubborn a cat.
    3. Re:desktop by El_Oscuro · · Score: 1

      You can find get a Linux system at http://www.custombarebones.com/ for under $400.

      --
      "Be grateful for what you have. You may never know when you may lose it."
  54. Too late? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The page cannot be found
    The page you are looking for might have been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavailable.

    Please try the following:

            * Make sure that the Web site address displayed in the address bar of your browser is spelled and formatted correctly.
            * If you reached this page by clicking a link, contact the Web site administrator to alert them that the link is incorrectly formatted.
            * Click the Back button to try another link.

    HTTP Error 404 - File or directory not found.
    Internet Information Services (IIS)

    Technical Information (for support personnel)

            * Go to Microsoft Product Support Services and perform a title search for the words HTTP and 404.
            * Open IIS Help, which is accessible in IIS Manager (inetmgr), and search for topics titled Web Site Setup, Common Administrative Tasks, and About Custom Error Messages.

  55. Re:"Red Flag Linux?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I go diarrhea in your mouth, crap spouter.

  56. Finally, something works... by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    Yep, the customize links work for me, but none of the other ones seem to.

    I've tried using Firefox on WinXP, and Firefox on Mac OS X, the former from work and the latter via Comcast broadband, both on the East Coast. Neither one would bring up the page.

    Glad I finally got to see them, though. Thanks.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  57. Dell has been cheating on windows?! by icedcool · · Score: 1

    I wonder what OSX will think?

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    Most people aren't thought about after they're gone. "I wonder where Rob got the plutonium" is better than most get.
  58. Isn't this "restraint of trade"????? by no_sw_patents123 · · Score: 1

    Uhh... Microsoft strong-arming PC-makers to preload their crappy OS. Isn't that "restraint of trade"? Intimidation? Hello .... legal folks....? Anyone there???

  59. This is a response to market pressure... by patio11 · · Score: 1

    ... namely Chinese customers saying "WTF, Dell, I just checked your invoice. It seems you charged me for software. That must be some sort of mistake. Software doesn't cost money in China."

    Seriously, though, I think this is as much about giving Dell plausible deniability as it is anything else. Hardware makers have vastly different incentives than IP companies: Napster gave Dell a shot in the arm because the whole MP3 rip/burn craze sold a ton of boxes with extra ram, processor, and CD-RW drives. Apple, similarly, certainly isn't selling 8 GB iPods so that they can hold $10,000+ worth of music from iTunes. ("Rip. Mix. Burn." was their old marketing tagline during the heady early days of Napster. I'm sure that they gave absolutely no thought to the fact that their core demographic was engaged in widespread music piracy at the time.)

    Dell, as a responsible corporation which has offices in a country with enforceable IP laws, can't sell a million computers with pirated Windows on them. Somebody at MS would notice the license counts didn't quite add up. They also don't want to lose a million sales to Chinese manufacturers who have no compunctions about that. So they release Dell boxen with Red Flag Linux on them. And after its out their doors, well, what happens after that is none of their lookabout.

  60. Don't believe everything you read by kallen3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I had my other half look at the ad. Since she is from China I felt that should qualify her as an expert. The first thing she told me that it didn't look right and don't trust any ads in China unless you see and are able to try out the product first hand. She also told me that the literal translation for the wording before Linux on the 2nd picture was "flag" and not Red Flag so it would be Flag Linux

  61. The point of Myth vs Tivo by arete · · Score: 1

    I'll be the first to admit that our Myth installation has been problematic and a pain. So now I'm going to ask you some questions about Tivo which cut to the core of the things I really like about Myth compared to Tivo. I'm not a Tivo expert, so these really are questions; some of them Tivo probably does fine... But I think at it's heart Tivo has a great interface but is much more limited than Myth.

    Can you really BUY a Tivo, or only rent it? (That is, you buy the hardware but my impression is it doesn't work without a subscription)

    Can you cheaply and indefinitely expand the capacity of your Tivo for roughly the cost of drives? (Tivo is Linux based, so it certainly COULD support mounting a new drive over, say, NFS, but I don't think it does...) It's only a few hundred $ to expand your Myth box to 1 TB...

    Are Tivo's files encypted? Can I copy them to another machine and have them play while the Tivo is off, disconnected, far away - or if the Tivo breaks. Can I back them up to another media and have them work? Can I put them on my laptop and watch them on a plane without internet?

    Can I guarantee my Tivo will let me skip commercials? ALL commercials, including ones Tivo might put there? (I believe they've several times talked about adding unskippable commercials...)

    Does Tivo support fast-playback with adjusted audio? I haven't used this, but at least some versions of Myth are supposed to support playing on a fast-forward speed (say 2x, but even 1.5x) WITH audio, and with the audio adjusted so that you hear normal words but you don't hear gaps between words. Supposedly it's quite reasonable to watch a lecture in 3x once you get used to it, because someone can only talk so fast and still be clear, but that has gaps.

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  62. Dell tried UNIX SysVR4 in 1990's by WindShadow · · Score: 1
    I was part of a test program to sell SVR4 as a Dell product, and it worked very well compared to similar software of that time. But Dell found that it ran on other computers, and didn't want to sell it just as a software product. Unable to bundle the O/S with Dell hardware, they dropped the project.

    I still probably have the install tapes around, DC600 format.