Ubuntu Dell Now In UK, France, and Germany
mrcgran writes "Dell announced the availability of Ubuntu in Europe and future plans for China. 'I hinted at this before, but today, it's official: Dell announced that consumers in the United Kingdom, France and Germany can order an Inspiron 6400 notebook or an Inspiron 530N desktop with Ubuntu 7.04 pre-installed... In his LinuxWorld keynote, Kevin Kettler announced that Dell and Novell intend to offer SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10 factory-installed on select consumer notebooks and desktops in China.'"
this will expand to the rest of Europe soon.
Bite my shiny metal ass.
Why wouldn't Dell extend this deal into Canada?
Seems like the next logical step since Canada is a very similar market to the U.S.
I don't buy the excuse that they would have to deal with French language regulations, since they're extending their deal to France and to another non-English country, namely, Germany.
This space left intentionally blank.
Speaking for myself only, I'd like to see Linux get wider adoption but not become some kind of corporate product. Large corporations tend to take grassroots ideas and turn them into the Same Old Thing by applying the same old metrics to them, in short, in doing what corporations do. Remember how blogs used to be an alternative form of media, and now every newspaper is a blog and every blog links to a newspaper? Hint: it's not the guys in front of the screen, but the guys behind the screen that you must pay attention to.
Anti-Globalism
...but apparently its the OSS fractions that's wedging into territory occupied by MS...
I feel this is only a win if Ubuntu and Suse stop embracing proprietary, non-free (as in freedom) drivers. If they don't then the hardware manufacturers will still in in control of your computer, and you'll be at their mercy if there are bugs in the drivers which make the hardware unusable with your selected distro. Only if there is a push for free drivers will this be a win for everyone, rather than just for Ubuntu, Suse and others that happily ship non-free drivers.
Free software, free thought, free society.
Is KDE the default on any of these configurations?
(Please browse at -1 to read this comment.)
http://objection.mrdictionary.net/go.php?n=2104217
As I recall, from a few weeks ago, dell's cheapest desktop is $349 and is available with Vista Home only.
The cheapest dell/Ubuntu is $499.
I'd buy a machine right now if the pricing made sense.
Even if they shipped the $349 box with a blank hard drive I'd buy that over the Ubuntu @ $499
And the walmart everex 20 watt machine that was in all the news a couple weeks ago is MIA. I went to the local superstore and they not only did not have any everex desktops, they had no idea what $298 offer I was talking about. Two people told me it sounded bogus. Even the walmart website has a monitor bundled, nothing for $298. The superstore had one small aisle space with desktops, all starting around $600 and all having far more cpu and ram than i need for my low power 24/7 home server project.
A lot of these linux friendly claims are just vapor.
Maybe with backing from Dell, Ubuntu and especially SuSE, NVIDIA will finally be forced to make a video driver worth the powder to blow it to Hell.
The game.
In the US the max CPU offered on the Ubuntu-loaded Inspiron 530N is currently the E4300. If you want a faster CPU with Ubuntu, you have to go with the (much more expensive) XPS 410N instead of the Inspiron.
Whereas on Dell's FreeDOS-loaded 530N you can go up to the E6420.
Why does Dell restrict the Ubuntu-loaded Inspiron to low-end CPUs?
Goolly..... I had not' realised that the typing on internet was a toll of such useful that makes people mad. May be that if you cann not read past such errors withput a spike in blood pressure that you mightn't read at'll. Hope my words can be readed by you.
Good job, editors. With all the complaints we see about bad summaries, it's nice to see a summary that's so concise and correct.
"You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows." - Bob Dylan
Well, they discontinued the 1505N, and my guess is that a full range of the new 1X20 series Inspiron notebooks will be available shortly.
In this case I'm talking about the desktops (Inspiron 530N).
I haven't checked the CPU options on the laptops.
For someone who is preaching good grammar, you are using some very crude language. Starting a post with the title "Fuck you", calling people "fucking asshats", and using phrases like "go fuck yourself!" is not a very good way to make an intelligent argument.
I checked both the UK and German dell websites and even if I specifically search for Ubuntu, the only thing I can find is the US Dell Ubuntu site.
Both Ubuntu and SUSE-super-enterprise-desktop-10000 default to GNOME.
All operating systems suck! Use whatever you like.
My friend with a head that resembles a penis, the mere use of the phrase "asshat" and the existence of what is known as American English proves that language can and will evolve.
For all the haters out there, let me just say that I like linux and I like ubuntu. Being community based, they've managed to get popular without getting the illwill that red hat did. And I think this is a good thing in general, but let's be honest: Dell sucks. This would have been great news 5 years ago when Dell was the top dog, but now they're racing to the bottom. HP/Compaq, Gateway, Lenevo, etc are eating their lunch. Apple is where it's at.
I've started a letter writing campaign to Steve Jobs to encourage him to sell Macintosh computers preloaded with Linux. Apple is on the leading edge of personal computing (or at least the journalists and newsmakers seem to think so). If we could encourage them to ship an iMac with ubuntu linux (or maybe kubuntu), that would have a halo effect. Curious people would install ubuntu on their home pcs. Maybe Apple will even open source iWork (Pages/Keynote/Numbers) and we'll finally have a decent word processor and spreadsheet.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
I'm fed up with Dell getting all this free publicity by pretending they offer Ubuntu. Recently, when looking to buy a new laptop, I wasted too much time talking to their sales people asking about Ubuntu and Linux. I ended up buying a Toshiba. Go to Dell's UK site and do a search for Ubuntu. No products offered. But right at the top of the screen: "Dell recommends Windows Vista." Please: no more Dell-might-offer-Linux-machines-in-future stories. Dell are only doing this to crank more out of Mr Baalmer. (Yes, I do know how to spell his name. That's how I prefer to spell it.)
I "voted with my cash" as I've seen others mention, and ordered a Dell Ubuntu laptop. Best computing decision I've ever made, easily. If you are even entertaining the slightest thoughts about getting one, do it.
The machine made it through its first major presentation to clients today (not presenting the laptop, but presenting materials to the client) without a hitch. I've installed Kubuntu, Ubuntu Studio, Enlightenment, and Fluxbox on it so far. I was really, *really* tempted to run Enlightenment during the presentation today, just because of the slick animations and minimal GUI.
I'm not the most talented Ubuntu apologist, but I think that most of us who should be using it, know who we are.
BTW, my non-techie wife uses this machine every day without problems.
Interesting. Now, get yourself a time machine and go read that paragraph to Chaucer, and see how much he understands. He spoke English, right...should be exactly the same.
Stasis is death. Embrace change.
I've contacted Dell on two different occasions asking why I am required to buy a computer with an Operating system I have no intention of using. Both times I received an email stating it had been referred to xyz and they would be in touch soon regarding my enquiry; Needless to say they have neglected to get back to me.
With any luck if the sales continue overseas we will finally see such offerings here. I don't use Ubuntu myself, so it would be wiped in favour of Deb, but at least I wouldn't be contributing to Microsofts coffers.
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Which is strange, as the Dell PCs for those markets are -made here-...
Hidden in the press release and not obvious on the main UK site is a text link to www.dell.co.uk/ubuntu
Following this link takes you to the "Dell with Ubuntu" homepage, but clicking on "Choose Desktop" or "Choose Notebook" results in a 404.
Excellent work there Dell.
Has anyone seen any sales figures on Ubuntu Dells? It would be very interesting to know, on a model for which Ubuntu, XP, and Vista are all available, how the sales numbers are coming out.
The notion (or assumption) of "the Linux OS" is a very unfortunate and confusing delusion in the world of software. It causes otherwise intelligent techies to start talking about a mythical FOSS operating system "Linux" as if users who are exposed to its various userland environments are having a shared experience. Yet the methods for setting up printers, network shares and applications can be wildly divergent between distros (or... the methods are mostly the same, just ignore the page and-a-half extra shell instructions for distro-X in order to get a supporting subsystem up and running).
Maybe you could say that each distro family like Debian/Ubuntu/Mepis, RedHat/CentOS/Fedora, Mandriva/PCLOS kind of represent an OS. Or perhaps you could say that LSB defines what could be considered an OS (almost).
On the whole, "Linux OS" is a misleading and self-defeating term when used outside of systems-programming environs. It raises expectations about user interface and interoperability standards that just don't exist between the distros.
availability of Ubuntu in Europe [...] consumers in the United Kingdom, France and Germany
Well, geography was not my favourite subject, still, I got fed up with similar moves. Reminds me of iTunes, like how it's available in Europe... right. People complain about globalization, hell, I'd really prefer it, if it would mean services would be global - or at least be available in Europe if they say it's available in Europe. Made me angry about on the same level when I happened to find some good stuff in an online store the other day, only to find out they only accept cards for payment if they were issued in the U.S. Well, keep your stuff and don't let me tell you where to put it to rest.
I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
I kindly disagree.
While Linux (and the other opensource projects surrounding it) isn't just 'grass roots' as it once used to be the community and its individual (sometimes hobbyist) members are very important. It's good that the key developers around Linux are employed at companies where they can program for Linux and be paid for it. But where would Linux be without those many people writing bug-reports, howtos, translations and the like? Gentoo and Ubuntu wouldn't be half as popular if their many wiki entries wouldn't exist.
So while it isn't 'grass-roots' anymore its more like a community in which individuals and companies play their role.
And whats so bad with the hobbyists image? I myself am sick and tired of marketing types promising the moon and the sun and delivering nothing but hot air.
Because they don't need to be 'Vista-ready'.
Trust me, I work for the government.
In case that went over your head, look up disjunct adverbs.
Ita vero, amice!
I can't for the life of me find these laptops on the Dell website.
Can anyone else supply links to them (Inspiron 530N and Inspiron 6400)?
"Dell announced that consumers in the United Kingdom, France and Germany can order an Inspiron 6400 notebook or an Inspiron 530N desktop with Ubuntu 7.04 pre-installed..."
Not as of today, they can't. I live in the UK, and I just went to dell.co.uk and started to customize an order for an Inspiron 6400. Guess what? The operating system options are Windows, Windows, or some other flavour of Windows. "Any OS you like, just as long as it's Windows".
Looks like the Dell marketroid who issued the statement was using the Microsoft present tense. As in "jam yesterday, jam tomorrow, but never jam today". (Actually not yesterday, and probably not tomorrow either).
Wake me up when Dell has actually done something.
I am sure that there are many other solipsists out there.
Dell are acting like amateurs. At Dell France website there is no way to find any machine with Ubuntu, I tried the search, "/ubuntu", manually checked almost all their offer, there is no Ubuntu on the page. At best the client is redirected to Dell USA with the USA offerings of PCs with Ubuntu.
I have a friend of mine who runs his business with only email and phone, he have 4 employees that do the same thing. All the PCs at his office are used for email, browsing the web and some document editing sometimes (spreadsheet and doc). He is complaining about spyware viruses and all that stuff. Many times I talked to him to switch to Linux, not because is free (he gets all the OS and Word licenses for free shipped with the PCs by Dell) but because of the stable and virus free system it is. Just to write emails and browse the web, he already uses the Mozilla soft. But he is scared of that Linux thing, not sold and supported on the desktop by any major vendor.
For guys like this , I think this is a great news ! This September I'll buy for him new machine, and I know with which OS it will be sold, loaded, supported BY DEFAULT !
PuTTY makes Windows usable
From Dell Ubuntu Page:
"The main thing to note is that when you choose open source you don't get a Windows® operating system."
Aaahh, so that's what this Ubuntu thing is all about..
Good for you that the particular Dell laptop that you bought serves your needs, but that was pure coincidence.
...
The vast majority of Dell computers don't even offer Windows XP as an option, let alone Linux. And the fact that Dell is introducing new kit like the recent Vostro range without any O/S options at all just shows that their heart isn't really in it.
I'd buy two Vostro 1500 laptops like a shot if those options were on offer, one with XP for gaming and music production, and one with any Linux distro for all other work. The integrated nVidia 8400 and other options on the Vostro 1500 model makes it a no-brainer decision for me.
But none of the applications that I use work under Vista, so that's two sales lost through lack of O/S options.
Are you listening Dell? No, I thought not
Athletes? As in jocks? The ones who probably kicked your ass in HS because you're an anal-retentive grammar Nazi?
I'd've voted with my cash also once the OptiPlex 740 Energy Smart MT was made available with Ubuntu (or just, crazy idea: an OS free PC), except for the fact that Dell is now part of the Novell/Microsoft deal according to Techworld. No cash for Dell.
I've seen the reports as of late, and I can't help but wonder if this is the very beginning of the end of M$'s reign. This is how it starts, how history repeats. One by one the OEM's open up, let Linux in, and soon every OEM offers it. People buy it, thinking it might be a breath of fresh air from Microsoft. "I've heard about this Linux thing, I wonder what its like?..." And word of mouth is a powerful thing. The strongest, greatest advertising campaign can be brought down by a few simple words... "That product sucks!"
Coming from the right mouth, those words destroy entire companies. So Linux creeps in, takes over households one by one... how long before we start seeing reports like we see about Firefox? "Firefox steps up as leading competitor to IE", "Firefox market share grows!", "Firefox pounding away at IE Market share".
There's no doubt now that Microsoft is feeling the burn. Every move they make now suggests desperation in their effort to control open source. To keep it from being free, open.
Time after time throughout history, humans have proven that when we want freedom, we will have freedom. Free and Open Source software is freedom, and people want it. I don't remember who said it, but the line still rings true in my mind... "Somehow, I can *just* start to smell the first whiffs of decay from the old software giant."
Proprietary software is dead. It just doesn't know it yet.
Thomas A. Knight
Author of The Time Weaver
Every natural language was produced through change. You can't stop it from changing.
http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/products/feature s.aspx/inspn_1720?c=uk&cs=ukdhs1&l=en&s=dhs
On 08/Aug/2007:
16:46:09 System System Initial Question/Comment: When will the Inspiron 1720 be loaded with Ubuntu Linux in UK??
16:51:10 System System You are now being connected to an agent. Thank you for using Dell Chat
16:51:10 System System Connected with Sherrel_Long
16:51:15 Agent Sherrel_Long Thank you for contacting Dell Sales Chat. This is Sherrell, your Sales Advisor. Please give me a moment while I review your query.
16:52:26 Customer Me ok
16:53:10 Agent Sherrel_Long The software is available if you purchase through phone.
16:55:34 Customer Me i'm buying in uk, 1720 with ubuntu is available in uk as well?
16:56:40 Agent Sherrel_Long Yes, you can call the sales line for this.
INSPIRON 6400N - £616.87
BASE Intel® Pentium® Dual-Core T2130 Processor (1.86GHz,533MHz,1MB L2 cache) N-Series
OPERATING SYSTEM Ubuntu Edition version 7.04
HARDWARE SUPPORT 1 Year Base Warranty - Collect & Return edit
LCD 15.4" Wide Screen WXGA (1280 x 800) Display
MEMORY 2048MB 667MHz Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM [2x1024]
HARD DRIVE 80GB (5400rpm) SATA Hard Drive
GRAPHICS CARD N-Series - Intel® Media Accelerator 950 Graphics Up to 256MB shared graphics memory
OPTICAL DRIVE Fixed Internal 8X DVD+/-RW Drive for N-Series
PRIMARY BATTERY 6 cell Lithium-Ion Battery (53 Whr)
WIRELESS CONNECTIVITY Intel® Pro Wireless 3945 802.11a/b/g Mini-PCI Card (for Dual Core Processor)
INSPIRON 6400 - £648.75
BASE Intel® Pentium® Dual-Core T2130 Processor (1.86GHz,533MHz,1MB L2 cache)
OPERATING SYSTEM Genuine Windows Vista(TM) Home Premium - English
HARDWARE SUPPORT 1 Year Base Warranty - Collect & Return
LCD 15.4" Wide Screen WXGA (1280 x 800) Display
MEMORY 2048MB 667MHz Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM [2x1024]
HARD DRIVE 120GB (5400rpm) SATA Hard Drive
GRAPHICS CARD Intel® Media Accelerator 950 Graphics Up to 256MB shared graphics memory
OPTICAL DRIVE Fixed Internal 8X DVD+/-RW Drive including software
PRIMARY BATTERY 6 cell Lithium-Ion Battery (53 Whr)
WIRELESS CONNECTIVITY Intel® Pro Wireless 3945 802.11a/b/g Mini-PCI Card (for Dual Core Processor)
I've tried to set them up as close as possible. The Vista version can be made £23.50 cheaper by choosing the (default) base wireless card, and has a larger hard drive, and has free shipping which brings the price down and isn't available on the Ubuntu machine.
Have to say I'm disappointed with the offerings, especially as the 6400 is quite an old model already, and there's little scope for building a powerful (by 2007 standards!) machine.
I just bought a Dell / Ubuntu laptop. Inspiron 1420, Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, 2.0GHz, 800Mhz, 4M L2 Cache. I have never had a dell and it has not arrived yet so I can't say anything much about it. With tax I'm in WA, it was slightly over a grand. I hope it is better than the Toshiba it is going to replace.
1 Intel® Core(TM) 2 Duo T7300 (2.0GHz/800Mhz FSB/4MB cache)
1 Jet Black
1 2GB Shared Dual Channel DDR2 at 667MHz
1 Anti-glare, widescreen 14.1 inch display (1280x800)
1 Intel Graphics Media Accelerator X3100
1 Size: 160GB SATA Hard Drive (5400RPM)
1 Ubuntu version 7.04
1 Integrated 10/100 Network Card and Modem
1 8X CD/DVD Burner (DVD+/-RW) with double-layer DVD+R write capability
1 Integrated High Definition Audio
1 Intel® 3945 802.11a/g Mini-card
1 No Camera
1 56Whr Lithium Ion Battery (6 cell)
1 1Yr Ltd Warranty and Mail-In Service
1 Free Recycling Kit
1 Intel Centrino Core Duo Processor
FREE 2GB upgrade: Value of $150!
FREE 160GB upgrade: Value of $125!
Does it not seem ironic that right at the top of the page is the statement "Dell recommends Windows Vista® Home Premium" !!