Dell Opens a Poll On Linux Options
narramissic writes "In response to overwhelming user demand for Linux, Dell has posted a survey on a company blog that asks 'PC users to choose between Linux flavors such as Fedora and Ubuntu, and to pick more general choices such as notebooks versus desktops, high-end models versus value models and telephone-based support versus community-based support.' Votes will be collected through March 23, and Dell plans to use the feedback to begin selling Linux-based consumer PCs." The poll is pretty minimal. Wonder how much it will really guide Dell's choices.
I mostly agree with you, but I also want hardware that can be supported by Linux without pulling out my hair. No winmodems, for example. For that reason, I'd be happy with any version of Linux installed which I can then replace.
Here's a summary of the computers they list:
Inspiron
consumer laptop
Dimension
consumer desktop
XPS
high-end consumer systems. Also good systems for serious artists.
support is thin
Latitude business notebooks
just what the name says
OptiPlex business desktops
just what the name says
The survey falls under the Dell small business marketing category
Their servers are already available with Windows, RHEL, SUSE, or without an OS at all.
Who doesn't like free music?
It's working now...
If you have a decent partition scheme, you can have Dell's rescue disk wipe out /boot and /, but leave /home intact. Then you'd have to reset all your passwords, but other than that you'd be fine -- no lost data, just applications (and most of them easy enough to reinstall).
I just bought a notebook, so I'm not in the market, but if Dell had had a performance notebook that shipped with Linux when I was shopping, I'd have bought it. Does that mean my vote doesn't count?
My blog. Good stuff (when I remember to update it). Read it.
I'm one of the people who have, and I'll tell you he's right. I bought a Thinkpad X60 tablet directly from Lenovo back in December (and got it in February -- Lenovo's supply problems suck). Before doing so, I also checked Emperor Linux, Inc., which is the only one I've heard of that sells X60s with Linux. The specific configuration (high-res screen but otherwise low-end) I ordered is not available from them, but even their cheapest configuration is several hundred dollars more than I spent ($2300 vs. ~$2000). And if I had bought the SXGA version from them I would have had to spend $3500, which is a whopping fifteen hundred dollar markup!
I like Linux and want to support it, but I can't afford to support it that much!
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
Because if you know that a Linux distro works on the hardware, they all will in a short span of time.
After all, I am strangely colored.