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Netbook Return Rates Much Higher For Linux Than Windows

ivoras writes "An interview with MSI's director of US Sales, Andy Tung, contains this interesting snippet: "We have done a lot of studies on the return rates and haven't really talked about it much until now. Our internal research has shown that the return of netbooks is higher than regular notebooks, but the main cause of that is Linux. People would love to pay $299 or $399 but they don't know what they get until they open the box. They start playing around with Linux and start realizing that it's not what they are used to. They don't want to spend time to learn it so they bring it back to the store. The return rate is at least four times higher for Linux netbooks than Windows XP netbooks.'"

94 of 663 comments (clear)

  1. Which retailers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    And are they selling the returned notebooks at a big discount?

  2. Education would fix that by Gewalt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, put some videos on there that explain how to do common tasks. Tasks that are better on linux than on windows. (Like finding/installing cool toys/software/games). Make the videos right there on the desktop. Once consumers find out they can do the things they want, and easily, they will like it.

    --
    Modding Trolls +1 inciteful since 1999
    1. Re:Education would fix that by Simon+(S2) · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I remember my first Mac had a 1,44" Floppy with a very cool tutorial app that illustraded the most important steps you had to do in order to get started: click to open an app, how drag&drop works, where the apps are located, how to save a document and how to open one. I was 15 years old, and I remember I very much enjoyed the little tutorial app, it was funny and helped me getting started quickly. I agree with you here: put a quick (max 15min) comic style tutorial app on the desktop, and people will have a different view on the whole thing, and like it more.

      --
      I just don't trust anything that bleeds for five days and doesn't die.
    2. Re:Education would fix that by meist3r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Lol what? Ever seen a noob windows user sitting in front of a computer? Windows is far more confusing than Linux especially since you learn a lot of stuff working on Linux while with Windows you're just doing stuff that other people tell you. No learning curve beyond "how to keep that shit from crashing". At least in Linux the error messages MEAN something. I've corrected multiple problems already just by reading the errors in the shell and then reacting to it. Even a noob can understand that "missing library blabla" means "I need to install library blabla". Windows tells me "Wow, we fucked up, here's where. Since we can't tell you what we did this information is useless so just pass it on to us so we can pretend to actually know what went wrong.". The problem here is simply that Windows has been established in larger circles for longer, people grow up around Windows machines and then take that as the only feasible OS effectively conditioning themselves to a certain manufacturer. Same goes for Apple users, grow up in a Mac house, use a couple of Macs until you're in your mid-twenties and everything else will look like the devil to you. I know people that can't even properly type on a PC keyboard because of that. These are the kind of people that buy cars according to the button layout they're used to and color regardless of specs and mileage.

      It's not that they don't want to learn, they learned the wrong stuff and now can't/don't wanna adapt because they're lazy. So I blame the people for not learning "technology" but learning "Microsoft technology" which is kinda sad.

    3. Re:Education would fix that by 313373_bot · · Score: 3, Interesting

      True, but even people who hate to learn were forced to learn Windows at some point in the past. Today, inertia what is keeping Windows rolling, but as Linux becomes more and more mainstream, those people will have to learn something new. And if not Linux, then something else, after all at some point Windows will have to be replaced, it's just a matter of time. A paradigm shift can be delayed, but not avoided forever.

      --
      ^[:q!
    4. Re:Education would fix that by meist3r · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The thing is, Windows was ubiquitous because it was installed on all "regular" machines. It was the cheapest way to get to know an operating system because it was already there. Now recently Linux has improved user experience significantly and now it's the most affordable thing there is. Unless you buy a new computer every time MS finishes a product cycle you'll have to fork over some extra cash to get the latest Windows (or pirate it with all the known side effects). Linux on the other hand is free today, not only as in beer but as in speech as well.

      I think the faster people realize that you only need the latest hardware for gaming and high-end processing the faster Linux will continue to grow. Regular users ask themselves why they should spend 500 bucks on a new OS or even more on a new computer when they could install a free OS that does most things equally well. I personally used free Linux distros to give some old machines a new purpose and would have never done that (or would have been capable of doing so) if I had to buy a Microsoft license for each. After all there's no use in trying to sell Vista to someone who still uses his offline Windows 98 SE machine to type recipes or something.

      We see more and more people who are interested in tinkering with their systems, develop small apps and do all kinds of weird stuff to the OS. Microsoft and Apple both generously avoid that by locking everything down and so the only real alternative for people who want to dive into the internals of an OS will have to use an open OS sooner or later. After all, there's no www.windows-kernel.org.

    5. Re:Education would fix that by Narishma · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's also included in every Windows version since (at least until XP, I don't remember if Vista has it but I would be surprised if not). It's even launched the first time you start Windows.

      --
      Mada mada dane.
    6. Re:Education would fix that by Risen888 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ubuntu's pretty much got that one licked. You try to run something that isn't installed but is in the repository database, you get an error message along the lines of "$FOO is not installed. You can install it by typing sudo apt-get install $FOO."

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    7. Re:Education would fix that by Risen888 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I sell Ubuntu desktops and laptops, and I include something like this with every new rig that leaves my shop. It actually started as a textfile, but it's slowly mutating into a multimedia extravaganza, with screencasts, voice-overs, the whole nine yards. I'd like to wrap it all up in a script that automatically opens the applications I'm talking about at the time, so users can follow along with me. I've got too much time on my hands.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    8. Re:Education would fix that by Glonoinha · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Without going into many details, I'm not exactly a n00b. Given that my first interaction with a keyboard was on a new Commodore PET, there's a strong possibility I've been doing this longer than many of the people in this thread have been alive.

      Want to know why I spend 2/3rds of my time in Windows (the rest in SuSE 10.3 on KDE 3.x)

      1) The games I play, play in Windows. I have no inclination to fumble-fuck around with emulators or what have you trying to get MS Flight Simulator 2004 or STALKER or Team Fortress 2 running on Linux, not sure it's even possible.
      2) The fonts in Windows have been optimized at the per-pixel level to match up with LCD monitors. In KDE 3.x the fonts are about where they were in the Windows 3.1 world, circa 1995. Big pudgy letters that my eyes have to fight to glom. Especially in FireFox on Linux.
      3) For fucks sake - where's the calculator? It's bad enough that I can't hover over the different parts of the start menu (or what ever it's called) and just see what's under there, drill down without it hiding all the other stuff because it 'page flipped' - but the calculator isn't called 'calculator'. It's called kcalc. And the movie player isn't called 'movie player'. It's called ICEwigga or something. And the music player isn't called 'music player' - it's called kude or some shit like that.

      I can get past the games, because - I understand.
      I can get past the fonts, because - it's only a matter of time before they get better.
      But if we don't start naming the applications a little better in Linux, there's NO WAY it's going mainstream. If someone with 25+ years software engineering experience can't play movies because the movie player is hidden behind the name ICEwigga or whatever, what does that mean for the regular people? It means they are going to use Windows - simple as that.

      All that useless ranting aside - I am totally looking forward to picking up a 'refurb' Linux based netbook for 1/3rd off retail.

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    9. Re:Education would fix that by Kickersny.com · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That message only shows up when you try to run something from the command line. Like this:


      user@user-desktop:~$ R
      The program 'R' is currently not installed. You can install it by typing:
      sudo apt-get install r-base-core
      bash: R: command not found
      user@user-desktop:~$

      How do you propose a user run something from the GUI that hasn't been installed?

    10. Re:Education would fix that by CronoCloud · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You should start a sourceforge project for your tutorial thingy. Seriously. It's folks like you who really are making Linux easier and more enjoyable to use for the next less geeky set of Linux users. Kudos to you.

    11. Re:Education would fix that by Hal_Porter · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's GNU/ICEwigga

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    12. Re:Education would fix that by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Users tend to be fearful of command lines. They're afraid of mistakes that will wreck something badly.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    13. Re:Education would fix that by Jorophose · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wine. Is not. A fucking. Emulator.

    14. Re:Education would fix that by dangitman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We see more and more people who are interested in tinkering with their systems, develop small apps and do all kinds of weird stuff to the OS.

      Really? What is your source of data for that one? In my experience, it's the exact opposite. When I started in computing, everybody had to be a hacker to some extent. These days, far fewer people are interested, the computer is a productivity tool, not something to hack with. And especially not to "do all kinds of weird stuff to the OS." How many people do you really think want to do that? and why do you want your OS doing weird things? I think that's the exact opposite of what people want, power users or newbies. Most people expect predictability from their systems, not weirdness.

      Weird stuff was what we did in the C64/Amiga demo scene. When just seeing a computer do some graphics or sound was a novelty in itself. You don't see much of that any more.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
  3. it's the manufacturer's fault by speedtux · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've had two netbooks so far, and on both, the Linux installations sucked. One came with Xandros, the other with SuSE. Both were poorly installed, neither of them updated correctly over the network, and neither of them was properly adapted to the device (screen, keyboard, etc.). If I hadn't been able to install Ubuntu Netbook Remix, I would have returned the machines myself.

    1. Re:it's the manufacturer's fault by jbellis · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's too bad. My only experience is with the Acer Aspire One, which comes with a Fedora 8 variant installed and has none of those problems.

    2. Re:it's the manufacturer's fault by Fred_A · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've heard this story a lot from seasoned users (being one myself, although I never got around to buying a preinstalled machine). Apparently the first Dell laptops with Ubuntu had the same kind of problems. Likewise a number of laptop sellers advertise as being Linux friendly but I often see small print along the lines of "this and that peripheral (most often the webcam) won't work if you pick Linux as the OS".

      What is it with those people ? They pick their hardware, can't they at least pick some that's supported ? It's not as if it was difficult to find Linux supported components. It's even more irritating when you find out that users familiar with the system report that it was an easy fix.

      I sometimes wonder if there isn't a clause in one of their OEM contracts stipulating that "if you supply another OS, it has to be crappy".

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    3. Re:it's the manufacturer's fault by kcbnac · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, the first Ubuntu-loaded laptops worked (and still work) great - I bought and am typing this on an Inspiron E1505N - all the hardware worked out of the box, except for 3D video. (Intel still had a binary blob for the wireless, but was working on releasing an Open Source driver)

      There was one glitch with updating the kernel, though...but that was the only hiccup in the whole process.

    4. Re:it's the manufacturer's fault by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If I hadn't been able to install Ubuntu Netbook Remix, I would have returned the machines myself.

      It would be interesting to dig deeper into the return numbers and find out if it was problems with Linux in general or the specific OS installed on the returned devices. I believe the Linux in general issues can be addressed, but the device specific OS issues will be more difficult.

      As long as every netbook manufacturer is determined to roll their own flavor, then Linux will continue to be plagued with dilution by fragmentation in the marketplace. Instead of the Windows way and the Linux way, there's the Windows way and 20 different Linux ways.

      --
      That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  4. An MSI problem, rather than a Linux one. by Naughty+Bob · · Score: 5, Interesting

    RTFA, and unlike the submitter, you'll see that the interviewers point out that MSI offer a poorly configured version of Linux.

    I wonder what it would cost someone like Microsoft to have MSI spike the competition.

    --
    "Be light, stinging, insolent and melancholy"
    1. Re:An MSI problem, rather than a Linux one. by Nerdfest · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I would think the people who actively buy a Linux version would also be more discerning customers, more likely to return it if it wasn't exactly what they wanted.

    2. Re:An MSI problem, rather than a Linux one. by lunarpaladin · · Score: 5, Informative

      RTFA, and unlike the submitter, you'll see that the interviewers point out that MSI offer a poorly configured version of Linux. I wonder what it would cost someone like Microsoft to have MSI spike the competition.

      I could have shared this observation months ago. It may have to do with the distro itself in this particular instance, but as a senior sales associate for a larger computer + electronics retailer, I can state for a fact that we get a substantially higher return rate of Linux-based Aspire One and EEE PC's compared to that of the Windows-based ones. The most common complaint when asked the reason for the return? "I can't install any of my programs on here. Office, Adobe, MSN, nothing works!" I try to take the time to assist them, showing them where they can find comparable programs and install them, such as GAIM/Pidgin and OpenOffice. Some are more than happy with that, others still want to return them. Lucky for them we have a pretty lax return policy.

    3. Re:An MSI problem, rather than a Linux one. by moreati · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I wonder what it would cost someone like Microsoft to have MSI spike the competition.

      It would cost much less than allowing MSI do it in the normal course of their business. I know conspiracies are more entertaining than blaming human laziness, but trying to blame poor Linux/MSI integration on Microsoft takes the biscuit. Consider:

      • MSI are traditionally a hardware OEM, having close to zero customer-experience experience.
      • MSI were chasing ASUS, time to market would have been a big priority
      • Netbooks are sold cheap, so they're designed on a tight budget.
    4. Re:An MSI problem, rather than a Linux one. by Joe+Jay+Bee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So basically, it's not a Microsoft conspiracy to distort the market as the GP suggested, more that applications that people want to run don't work on Linux? This is hardly news; for the average user, they want Office, Photoshop and Windows Live Messenger, not OpenOffice, GIMP and Pidgin (the last one of which can easily be viewed as some kind of cruel joke by someone spoilt by the niceties and features of the official MSN client...)

    5. Re:An MSI problem, rather than a Linux one. by MadUndergrad · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you know anything about computers it's easy enough to just install a different distro. The returns are the clueless people who don't know about Linux and won't learn.

    6. Re:An MSI problem, rather than a Linux one. by NeilTheStupidHead · · Score: 3, Informative

      I find the same thing. Several of my friends recently acquired eeePCs through a promotion offered by Royal Bank. One or two of them were interested in learning how to use the built-in OS and the others came to me to 'just put XP on there so MSN will work'; a slight challenge on the 2G models the bank was giving away. To be fair, XP does perform pretty snappily for the hardware but still not quite as snappy as even the default Xandros, which I cart around for presentations instead of lugging my 'full-sized' notebook which is 2-3 times the weight and half the battery life.

      --
      Lose: misplace or fail || Loose: not bound together
    7. Re:An MSI problem, rather than a Linux one. by MBGMorden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Caveat emptor. Just because Windows programs will not install on the machine, that does not mean it is a valid reason to return the machine. If they are stupid enough to buy the machine on the cheap without doing their research properly then they should live with the consequences.

      But your average user isn't going to do heavy research on these things, nor should they have to. You do it because you're a computer enthusiast. Heck you might do so on every item you purchase, but most people don't. They'll do heavy research on something they're passionate about and everything else they just want to work.

      Aside from that, you can image that if Best Buy is more than willing to take back the machine that doesn't behave how you expected it, when Anonymous Coward's Electronics Emporium snaps back "Caveat Emptor!", guess where they're going to be buying the rest of their stuff from now on?

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  5. Just put them on the top shelf. by Zerth · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just put them on the top shelf, since the kind of people who obviously don't read the box and think installing Windows hard will be too lazy to reach them.

    1. Re:Just put them on the top shelf. by Scholasticus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've been hearing about "The Year of Linux on the Desktop" for years. I think at this point many Linux distributions are ready for the desktop, at least for many common tasks. Perhaps one of the things we didn't take into account is that many home computer users are too lazy to learn something new.

      For myself, I don't care whether most people use MS Windows or OS X or whatever. I just want Linux and/or *BSD to be there for me, which is why I contribute what I can monetarily to various projects, including my preferred Linux distribution.

  6. Eee by EaglemanBSA · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My eeepc was a whole lot more useful once I got a different distro on it. Average Joe isn't going to feel comfortable installing linux on his own, editing boot records and reconfiguring this and that for three hours before the computer becomes useful. They want to hit a button and have a useful operating system in front of them.

    That said, I've bought three eee's, one for me, my brother, and my wife. I've installed ubuntu and configured everything before giving them to the others, and they haven't had a problem since. My wife, who won't use windows because she's not used to it (she grew up with macs), says she likes ubuntu - I suspect her story would be different if she had to spend hours looking up instructions how to install it.

    --
    Quiz: True or False -- On a scale of 1 to 10, what is your middle name?
  7. Mod Parent +1 Funny by ozphx · · Score: 4, Funny

    Games! Good one, sir.

    --
    3laws: No freebies, no backsies, GTFO.
    1. Re:Mod Parent +1 Funny by Debian+Cabbit · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hey! Games like Spore and The Orange Box don't hold a candle to Tux Racer!

  8. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by bondsbw · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But Windows XP is dead. Microsoft wants you using Vista, and Vista is one of the hardest OSes to learn after using XP. Microsoft will soon enough ban OEM installs of XP on netbooks, so this talk of XP vs. Linux is mostly useless.

    People come to me all the time, asking for help with setting up their wi-fi or trying to figure out some other off-the-wall issue with Vista. And I tell them, hell if I know... I wish they'd switch to Ubuntu. It is no more difficult to learn than Vista.

    --
    All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
  9. Re:Of course! by geekmux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course the return rate is higher! Linux is NOT READY FOR THE DESKTOP! You can't buy off-the-shelf software for it at Best Buy and it's hard to use. People buy things based on the price tag without doing their research first. Most of the time, they can't even get their microwave oven to stop flashing 12:00. What makes you think they're going to want to read an extremely lengthy linux user manual?

    Last time I checked, Apple hardware wasn't running Windows. Yet, they've managed to take a *nix/BSD-derived OS and make it VERY simple and intuitive to use.

    If [insert netbook vendor here] Executive staff can't seem to find the value in hiring a COMPETENT *nix admin to create a decent functional disk image worthy of being a Microsoft replacement, or at least as easy to use as OS X for the end user, then I feel NO pity for them.

    Bottom line is *nix IS ready for the desktop, and Apple has PROVEN that. Other distros have made a large enough impact to make it to Best Buy shelves as well. Make it intuitive enough, and you don't need a 300-page user manual to figure it out.

    And ENOUGH with the flashing 12:00 analogy already! Cripes, even my 8-year old knows how to set the damn time on the microwave. Todays generation of 30 and 40-somethings grew UP with tech, and the younger generation can't live without it.

  10. Marketing would fix that by xzvf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People don't want to be trained. They want to be sold. The problem with Linux on the consumer desktop is nobody is selling it to them. Apple marketing makes a different machine cool and worth investing the time to learn. Maybe treating the netbook like a web/mail appliance instead of a small computer would help manufacturers do a better job of satisfying the customer. What are some stats from other netbook makers?

    1. Re:Marketing would fix that by Darkness404 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is, you then get into the "one device for every app". Such things become later abused by hardware and software makers to the point that you can only have "one device for every app". Think of it this way, if they marketed a netbook as only useful for checking e-mail, they might as well leave out all the games, heck, why not take out the entire package manager! Then we get to the point where the OS is not usable as a computer but it becomes a one or two application device. Now, us geeks are of course going to quickly change the OS and have a good computer, but what about Joe Sixpack who looks at a netbook and thinks its just $400 to check e-mail and surf the web, something that his $250 iPod Touch can already do, so they ignore it. And so when Joe Sixpack ignores it, and when businessmen ignore it because it doesn't run Windows out of the box, nor have more applications installed on it than their smartphone, there's little market left over except for the /. crowd which isn't enough to have multiple competing brands and lower prices.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    2. Re:Marketing would fix that by drakken33 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree. My local Sainsbury's are marketing netbooks as cheap alternatives to laptops. They all run WinXP but I can see how people would be disappointed that their new 'laptop' is so different from their desktop or big laptop if they get Linux without knowing what they're buying.

      People don't complain that their mobile phone doesn't run Windows (unless they have a WinMo phone in which case they do complain ;o)) and some of those people use their phones for more than phone calls and SMS. I think marketing netbooks as cheap devices for email, web browsing, chat, casual games and maybe a few other tasks rather than as small, cheap laptops would help people to not care that a Linux netbook isn't running Windows. I see netnooks occupying the space between smartphones and low end laptops.

      --
      Andy.
  11. Amazing. Half assed installs cause returns by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    MSI's install of linux is a piece of garbage. They barely made it run and it's junk. now they are bitching that their half assed work causes returns?

    How come the ASUS eee flys off shelves where it's available and people that own them that are not techies love them in their linux install?

    Oh wait, ASUS did not half ass the linux install. Ahhhh.

    It must be linux's fault then.

    The story headline needs to be changed... "MSI does crappy work again and bitches about it shifting blame to XXX."

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  12. Hey, this is a huge success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    All in all, it's amazing how few returns there are for linux - note how the representative says that the return rate is four times higher. Unless the machines are failing all over, and they aren't or we'd be hearing about it, the return rates are at worst a few per cent of all machines sold. More likely the actual rates are less than a per cent.

    If even one per cent of Windows customers return the machine, that means that the Linux return rate is four per cent. In other words, 3 per cent of customers decide that Linux is a defect they weren't told about, and 1 per cent return it for other reasons, and 96 per cent are more or less happy with the product. That's a success in my book.

    Of course, some of the 96 per cent will replace Linux with a pirated Windows install, or get a friend to do it, but even that won't change the conclusion much. It makes sense since most people are happy with web surfing, email, a music player and basic office stuff. Linux provides all that in a usable package.

  13. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by Chaos+Incarnate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The OS may be no more difficult to learn (for everyday use; if you're a power user, though, XP -> Vista is still easier than XP -> Ubuntu), but then you also have the added learning curve of replacing every single application except possibly Firefox, if they weren't using IE before.

    --
    Benford's Corollary to Clarke's Law: "Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced."
  14. ya, really by zogger · · Score: 2, Informative

    Where are the half price (whatever) cheap refurb units being sold for these netbooks then?

    1. Re:ya, really by EVil+Lawyer · · Score: 2, Funny

      He wanted to know where to get a refub netbook, not bluetooth headset.

  15. Take care of your own product, by gzipped_tar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    rather than blaming the users who "don't want to spend time to learn it". Customers buy your product because they need it, but few would learn it the hard way without well-organized, easy-to-follow documentation. Invest in supporting and documenting your own product and users will be happier, not angrier.

    --
    Colorless green Cthulhu waits dreaming furiously.
  16. Laptop returns are 1000x higher for Windows than L by dUb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If we compare overall return rate we could notice that Windows computers are more often returned than Linux computers.
    Reason might be that people do not know what they get with Windows laptop. They get under-power hardware with software which actually requires more power.

  17. Fixing some manufacturing stupidities. by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Alright, couple things. Yes. It is true that the vast majority of the general public don't want to learn how a computer works.

    But I see some fault by manufacturers too. Couple things.

    Stop shipping laptops with relatively unknown "Lets evade the MS Tax" Linux distros with little support or documentation. This whole "Get a Linux computer so we can pirate Windows" thing has gotta stop.

    From now on, contract with the BIG BOYS in Linux, Red Hat, Mandriva, Ubuntu, Suse. No more gOS. no more *insert Bizzare distro no one has ever heard of here* distro.

    Make sure all your drivers for your cards work and can survive things like Kernel patches.

    Stop shipping broken configurations. If my Screen can support 1200x800, it better not be set to 1024x768.

    Stop Advertising Linux as "Almost Windows" or "Sort of Windows" - Advertise Linux as - Linux. Put a big Penguin sign up next to the row of Linux Laptops, and say "These are Linux Laptops." and if they are

    Install Wine on Linux Laptops. Show customers that they can take their Windows applications with them where Applicable.

    1. Re:Fixing some manufacturing stupidities. by blind+biker · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I bought my Eee PC with Xandros. It had a few extremely good applications, like the Asus 3G modem app, which is better than the one Huawei bundles with their 3G modems for Windows. Xandros works fine in general, too, but my big, huge gripe with it is that the default installation consumes more than 3/5ths of the SDD, and you cannot remedy this by removing apps (or games) which you don't need, because someone at Asus decided that Xandros has to be installed in UnionFS! Having less free space on the SSD, apart from the obvious disadvantage, also diminishes the places where dynamic wear levelling can spread out the writes.

      Anyhow, my point is that Xandros COULD have been a very decent OS for the Eee PC, if only Asus had a fricken clue. Have a minimum installation with OpenOffice and Firefox, and let the user remove and install what they want. This goes to the heart of the OP, rather than the topic of the original submission.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  18. Re:no surprise there by Zerth · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Since you are posting as AC, I'm guessing "a few people" is longhand for "I"

  19. Re:Amazing. Half assed installs cause returns by deniable · · Score: 3, Informative

    Have you ever run an apt-get dist-upgrade against the out-of-the-box ASUS repositories? They had some real blunders in those updates including tools stop working, icons disappearing, etc. I haven't bothered to patch for a while so hopefully they've got their not half-assed Linux install sorted out.

    I'll probably install Ubuntu on mine when I stop using it for a kitchen computer / photo viewer.

  20. Another reason: laptops in general by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Many users have no qualms about blowing away desktop PC and reinstalling. The same cannot be said for laptops.

    Desktops are typically pieced together from standard hardware components. Mouse, Keyboard, Monitor, x86-based chipset. All these things are supported out of the box for Windows (and Linux). Even in the worst case scenario, the user would still have the VGA graphics and a mouse and keyboard for input.

    But laptops are put together using all sorts of specialized hardware. Touch panel input. Scrolling zone on the touch panel. LCD backlight drivers. Specialized keyboards. Built-in wifi. Assuming that the Windows (or Linux) disk comes with the correct drivers pre-packaged is dangerous. You may be left with a laptop in which half the hardware is not working because it didn't get the correct drivers installed during setup.

    It's safer to assume that the restore CD contains the correct drivers and simply backup from that. It also means having to go through and uninstall all the crap bundled in there. But even that is difficult to do since you never know if the bundled program is something critical (like audio or DVD).

    Add to this that you may be swapping out the OS for something almost completely foreign, and you have set your users up for severe disappointment and given them nowhere to turn unless you provide them exactly what they want up front. They don't have any option except to return the laptop if they are not satisfied with it.

  21. This is why the Microsoft monoculture is bad by Haeleth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Back in the '80s and early '90s, people coped perfectly well with competing computers and operating systems. Sure, an Amiga was a bit different from an Atari, which was a bit different from a PC, which was a bit different from a Mac, which was a bit different from an Archimedes... but so what? People coped, just like they cope with the way every washing machine or DVD player today has a different interface. When you started using computers, you became computer literate, just like everyone's more or less washing-machine-literate and DVD-player-literate. And once you're literate in a technology, you can learn to use any form of it relatively easily.

    What the Windows monoculture has done is to destroy computer literacy among most users. Now, instead of learning to use a computer, people are trained to use Microsoft Windows. Instead of learning about launching applications and using word processors, they're trained to click on the big button at the bottom left of the screen that says "start", then to click where it says "Microsoft Word". And so as soon as that button turns into a picture of a foot at the top left of the screen, and the icon they're looking for says "Word Processor", they're left bewildered and uncomfortable.

    Of course, this has now bitten Microsoft too: it's one reason why Vista and Office 2007 are so unpopular. (Semantics nazis: does that count as irony?)

    1. Re:This is why the Microsoft monoculture is bad by johndmartiniii · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It does count as irony, even dramatic irony, because deep down this audience always new what was going to happen, even while the players did not.

      I agree with you fully. This has served as well to make an even dumber new set of Mac users who switch because it's easy and "just works." I've noticed this amongst other grads in the humanities. They use MSOffice on their Macs, don't know what to do when they lose their internet connection, and can never, ever, ever get their printer configured.

      It's not a problem of Mac users being stupid. It is a problem of basic computer literacy. Computer literacy courses at University in the United States now consist of a several-months-long, very expensive howto for Microsoft Office and using Outlook to answer your e-mail.

      When you change the look or feel of anything these days, people freak, or become frustrated and give up. The inability to reason and sort things out has been lost because of that Start button. Without it, how will you know where to start?

      --
      If you don't know what you're doing, you can't make mistakes.
    2. Re:This is why the Microsoft monoculture is bad by Bender_ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is an obvious flaw in your assertion: The people who don't cope with linux today are the 95% of the population that did not own a computer at all in the 80ies and early 90ies.

      Computers are not targetted at professionals and enthusiasts anymore.

    3. Re:This is why the Microsoft monoculture is bad by jonaskoelker · · Score: 5, Funny

      just like everyone's more or less DVD-player-literate.

      <blink>12:00</blink>

  22. It's not the linux, is the bizarre distros by Cougem · · Score: 5, Informative

    I bought a linux version of the Acer Aspire One, and I loved it at first. It was an RPM based distribution using XFCE, and although I'm used to aptitude-based package management, I've got no qualms with using yum.

    However, I bloody well couldn't, could I? The manufacturers had installed some of their own RPM packages before sending out the laptops, many of which had dependencies on other packages. I couldn't bloody update my system because these packages weren't on the central RPM repositories for fedora etc., and there were countless conflicts. Their proprietry RPMs required firefox, so I couldn't update firefox because that would require interfacing with these RPMs, which weren't there. I couldn't update ANY fucking packages, my distribution was useless, unless I forced removals and forced installs of new RPMs, but then all the conflicts had to be sorted out manually.

    I've ended up putting Xubuntu on it with XFCE, but it's far less responsive because you loose the intelligent optimisation that Acer etc, put into it, and installing it requires making bootable keydrives etc., and loads of optimisations to the SSD, swap etc.

    Why the hell the manufacturers don't just use Ubuntu (I've heard Dell have the sense too, at least), I do not know.
    Stupid.

    1. Re:It's not the linux, is the bizarre distros by wvmarle · · Score: 2, Insightful

      rant about update problems removed.

      Why the hell the manufacturers don't just use Ubuntu[...]

      It seems you give the answer yourself already:

      the intelligent optimisation that Acer etc, put into it

      Laptop manufacturer optimises software to work better with their hardware. Then of course it's not compatible anymore with whatever distro it was based on originally. And you will have to start waiting for said laptop manufacturer to update their complete distro before you can update your system.

      You can't have it all, unless you require the laptop manufacturer to submit all their changes to the original distribution - not sure whether that's so great an idea, as you end up with a lot of software that is useful for only one piece of hardware, and we're not talking about just device drivers for sure. So very tough to keep it all separate.

  23. Numbers? by Frankie70 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Are you making up the 1% & 4% numbers?

    The average rate of returns for consumer electronics in the USA is 15-20%.

    Then assuming 20% return rates for Windows netbooks, it will translate
    to 80% return rate for Linux netbooks.

  24. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by the_womble · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Unless these things have a really high return rate, it seems that most people are quite happy with Linux, and a few did not realise that PCs came with anything other than Windows and return them. So an apparently fairly poor Linux install keeps most people happy - which says something for the level of expectations Windows has set.

    It is probably "power users" who are returning these. Not people who just want their web browser to work and write letters with the word processor and little else.

    Not geeks who would know what they want in terms of OSes.

    People who know Windows, and MS Office well, but do not actually understand at an abstract level that can be re-applied to other OSes and apps. From people with a memorised sequence of muse clicks for hundreds of tasks, to people who write apps in VBA and Excel.

  25. Mod parent up! by clang_jangle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While he lacks eloquence and tact, he tells the truth. In fact, I just spent two days helping a neighbor prepare her soon-to-be-published manuscript in OO.org, after her windows machine died. Initially I loaned her a laptop with Ubuntu on it, showed her how to start OO.org, and told her to call me if she had any trouble. This poor woman ( a typical non-tech user) was nearly in tears over not being able to find how to change text fonts and autoformat settings. And in OO.org, those settings are RIGHT THERE IN FRONT OF YOUR FACE. They're not labeled in Hindi or anything...

    Now, this neighbor is actually quite an intelligent and insightful person, but as I've witnessed before, give her a computer and she transforms into a complete moron. Yet she uses one daily! I suspect the great majority of users are like that; they learned once, long ago, how to do something on windows and now they are done learning. If they can't see the same icons and menus in the same places they simply give up, complaining bitterly that it's the computer's fault. They may be perfectly reasonable and intelligent people away from the computer, but while using one they are, for all intents and purposes, completely fucking stupid. It's frustrating.
    So no, I'm not a bit surprised that lots of people return Linux netbooks. I see how they are.

    --
    Caveat Utilitor
  26. I don't blame people for the returns... by will381796 · · Score: 5, Informative

    My wife just purchased an HP mini-note. I've dabbled a bit with Ubuntu but Suse was new to me. The system comes completely uncustomized for easy use by the general consumer. For instance, it still has the OS set to search the optical drive for installable software...but there is NO OPTICAL drive in the computer. NONE of the online repositories for software are already added to the OS. There is absolutely NO documentation included with the system to help a new Windows XP -> Linux individual navigate their self around or teach them how to do something as simple as installing a piece of software or adding a software repository. Yeah, Google is there but to the Average Joe, you shouldn't have to search Google for every simple answer and then risk messing up your computer if you input a typo into one of your Terminal commands.

  27. Re:Of course! by Tim+Browse · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's too bad there is so much stupid people in the world.

    It's truth. There is too many stupid people on the world. If only they where perfect like us we wouldn't be all that problems.

  28. Try a few of these free games... by jonaskoelker · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just to straighten things out a bit, I recommend you try a few of these games:

    FPSes:

    • Nexuiz
    • OpenArena
    • Tremulous
    • Warsow
    • Sauerbraten
    • Alien Arena

    Strategy (mixing real-time and turn-based):

    • Battle for Wesnoth
    • FreeCiv
    • bos
    • boson

    Others:

    • xmoto
    • Frets on Fire
    • Supertux
    • Cowsay
    • mu-cade, noiz2sa and `apt-cache search kenta cho`

    Those are all packages I found with a quick `aptitude search "~i~sGames"; that is, these are games that are packaged and trivially easy to install straight out of the box.

    You can of course also install wine and create bottles for Starcraft, Warcraft and Diablo II if you have those games [or you can buy them at blizzard.com], among many others (so I hear).

    Or you can install DosBox and play your old dos games (One Must Fall is the win). Or you can install uae (Amiga), vice (Commodore: Pets, VIC-20, 64, 128, CBM-II, PLUS/4), pscx (PlayStation), xmess (Atari 400/800/2600, Lynx, NES, SNES, GameBoy, Sega Master System, Sega Megadrive) or mame. Apologies to all emulators that I left out.

    I'm not saying that Linux is just as great a gaming OS as windows. But claiming that there are next to no good games that are runnable on linux is simply being uninformed. And the cowsay bit, that was just making fun ;)

    1. Re:Try a few of these free games... by Miseph · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "FPSes:

              * Nexuiz
              * OpenArena
              * Tremulous
              * Warsow
              * Sauerbraten
              * Alien Arena"

      Dude... have you actually played any of those? I applaud the efforst of those teams, and I admit that many of them have potential, but they aren't even on par with a lot of the 3rd party hl (let alone hl2) mods in terms of graphics and playability... and that bar is pretty damned low.

      That said, I agree that the Linux gaming scene isn't all doom and gloom, Battle for Wesnoth in particular is a great game and one of my favorites on any platform, but the FPS offerings are definitely on the weak side.

      Of course, one can always just run Steam via Wine. Source is unstable, but DoD runs like a champ.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
  29. Yes, But Linux Is Not The Incentive by reallocate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, I read the article. Yes, I know that they're looking at Ubuntu. Regardless of what it looks like, Ubuntu is still Linux. People who can't find the Word icon will still be unhappy.

    No, saving a little money is not enough reason for most Windows users to switch.

    Look, I'm not bashing Linux. I used it for a decade. But it is naive to expect people to willingly throw away their investment in Windows (time and money) simply to learn an OS that allows them to keep on doing the same things.

    If someone is happy using, say, Word and Photoshop, what's attractive in hearing that Linux can't run Word and Photoshop but they can do pretty much the same things with Openoffice and Gimp, once they take the time to learn how to use them? Why should they do that when they can keep on using Word and Photoshop?

    Like I said, i used Linux for ten years. I switched to Apple a few years ago because I wanted wireless to work. Now, I need to buy new hardware. I could easily save a few bucks and run Linux on something. But, why should I? I like Apple software, I'm accustomed to using it. Everything I did in Linux I can do on a Mac, often with greater ease and reliability. Why should I care if Linux allows me to do the same things once I learn how to use it and a bunch of new programs? Where's the incentive? There are tens of millions of Windows users thinking the same thing.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    1. Re:Yes, But Linux Is Not The Incentive by visualight · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When I got hired to convert a small company from Windows to Linux ( and train the staff ) I spent some time one on one with each person, selling them on things like yakuake ( I chose KDE ). But the most important thing I did was convince them that wrt to ui and set up, "if you can imagine and articulate it, I can probably show you how to set it up that way".

      This was really hard to do because people who use Windows aren't used to thinking that way. But eventually I had everyone coming to me with ideas on how to make 'their' workspace more useful. And they were happy to be using Linux because they liked it, not because their company was saving money.

      PS. This experience is the main reason I think Gnome's 'simple/consistent' approach is the wrong one.

      --
      Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
    2. Re:Yes, But Linux Is Not The Incentive by Draek · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But it is naive to expect people to willingly throw away their investment in Windows (time and money) simply to learn an OS that allows them to keep on doing the same things.

      Why? anyone who's ever browsed the 'net on their cellphones already has (and no, Windows Mobile is different enough from vanilla Windows that they'll still need to be "retrained"). Simply put, it's not that big of a deal, it just requires the desire to do so.

      If someone is happy using, say, Word and Photoshop, what's attractive in hearing that Linux can't run Word and Photoshop but they can do pretty much the same things with Openoffice and Gimp, once they take the time to learn how to use them? Why should they do that when they can keep on using Word and Photoshop?

      Because, one imagines, they'd appreciate the $1000 saved by not buying either Office or Photoshop.

      Why should I care if Linux allows me to do the same things once I learn how to use it and a bunch of new programs? Where's the incentive?

      For your Mac, it's easy, and you'll know it when your motherboard decides to give up the ghost. For Windows, well, security first, performance second, and price third. The amount of time you need to learn how to use Linux from a user's POV isn't dramatically different than that of learning how to secure Windows, and the price difference between a computer that can run Ubuntu acceptably and one that can run Vista can be anything between "big" and "fucking huge", depending on your definition of "acceptably", and of "computer".

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
  30. Re:Amazing. Half assed installs cause returns by McDutchie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    MSI's install of linux is a piece of garbage. They barely made it run and it's junk. now they are bitching that their half assed work causes returns?
    How come the ASUS eee flys off shelves where it's available and people that own them that are not techies love them in their linux install?
    Oh wait, ASUS did not half ass the linux install. Ahhhh.

    I thought ASUS users just replaced their Linux with Windows in most cases. I have not seen MSI's Linux installation, but the ASUS version of Xandros on my daughter's Eee PC 4G is an unusable piece of crap. The most basic things don't work properly. A few of the snags I've run into:

    • it forgets about the wireless network after every restart so it has to be reconfigured every time;
    • many dialog windows in programs such as Firefox don't fit on the screen so that you can't even click on OK or Cancel to get rid of them because the buttons are hidden (you have to alt-drag and then resize the window but that's too much to ask for the average user, never mind a newbie);
    • Flash is crashy as hell (so much for my daughter's Flash games);
    • the "anti-virus" included plainly doesn't work, it can't even update itself (not that it would be any use anyway);
    • Skype crashes at least once in every conversation;
    • the Software Update control panel doesn't seem to do anything;
    • the "Messenger" doesn't open any window when you click on it but just keeps adding more useless icons to the system tray instead;
    • etc.

    Never seen such a mess before. If I were not an experienced Linux user myself, I'd have returned it. If MSI's is even worse than that, then wow... just wow.

  31. care factor by MrKaos · · Score: 2
    Personally I haven't used windows at home for at least 10 years. I wanted people to use linux but the realisation I think I am coming to is people don't deserve Linux unless they actually ask for it.

    I got pissed off when I upgraded Fedora 7 to F9 because it took me a whole three days to get things working the way I wanted because of the nvidia drivers, sure I restored my home directory and everything else worked. I was in the middle of an on-line course and I just had to get on with it. I thought 'no wonder people don;t want to use linux'

    But soon after I compared that to a laptop that I had to configure for a C# development project with VS2008 and SMS2005 and MSSQL. I am diligent with my XP installs because I don't want the thing to fuck up once I get it set-up. So I use Project Dakota to patch it, installed VS2008, SMS2005 thinking I would be ok. Of course when you have a shit fight on XP - it drags on. Certain versions of MSSQL doesn't install properly with SMS2005 and I can't use database diagrams. I'm hand deleting roughly 50 registry entries and suddenly remembering why I like Linux.

    I don't like using windows because it restricts me, but most users won't encounter those restrictions. What they don't realise is in Windows you go A-B-C-D and the task is done, in Linux you go A-B-C-D or A-D and the task is done. When you use windows there is no more efficient way to complete a task, you have to do the same brain dead RSI operation every time. I resent being told I have to use Windows in a work project because my effectiveness is instantly reduced. I feel lobotomised.

    Which is the same reason windows people don't want to learn a new OS. There neural patterns have be set to *windoze* and they don't understand how to make that leap. They don't want their effectiveness reduced because thinking is the hardest work.

    The F9 and Ubuntu I have is at least as pretty as Vista and mouse gestures come in handy too. I don't know how much better windows is than linux because I don't want to feel like a retard when I am using it, be limited to one pissy workspace, not be able to use all 8Gb ram, or all the CPU cores. I hate licence keys and registry shit. I get so frustrated using windows I think that anyone who really wants to use it, should.

    Because that is the user experience they deserve. I think people's experience with the hassles of windows is what they presume is going to happen when they move to Linux. They fear that they are going to go through a whole new set of those experiences.

    And they will, for a little while, lets be realistic, but then they will realise they don't get viruses any more, system performance is consistent, and they are able to fully utilise the machines power.

    Linux will never be like windows, and thank goodness for that. Usability in Linux is improving with every distributions and no longer needs to duplicate functionality in windows, it gets better and better and is starting to pull ahead. If this is what makes Linux continue to improve then I hope linux is never ready for the desktop. If MSI want to distribute a shit version of linux, then they deserve to pay M$ licencing fees. They should stop distributing it because people will think that Linux is as crap as windows is.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  32. Re:Wrong business model by jalefkowit · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's a business model here that no company seems to catch.

    1. sell a cheap computer with adequate software. Asus fails, their repository is ridiculous.
    2. sell media at reasonable prices. I'd never pay $15 for a movie, and renting DVDs is a hassle. I'd be ready to pay $1 or $2 to download a 700MB mpeg, why don't the media companies want to sell it to me?
    3. Profit!

    I'd pay for a *system* that solves this specific need, give me entertainment during my daily bus ride.

    Such a system does exist: the iPod/iPhone and the iTunes store.

  33. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by AndGodSed · · Score: 4, Informative

    The OS may be no more difficult to learn (for everyday use; if you're a power user, though, XP -> Vista is still easier than XP -> Ubuntu),

    I call BS on that statement.

    I am a power user and in high level tech/server support, and one thing about power users is this: Interface is irrelevant.XP -> Ubuntu is equally as easy as XP-> Vista, Vista -> MacOS and MacOS -> Ubuntu.

    What you are forgetting is that XP -> Anything Linux you could have a choice of Gnome, KDE, XFCE or a tonne of more obscure ones like IceWM or Enlightenment.

    I have tried all of these above, I give tech support on all of these (OS'es and Environments) and once you teach a user where to click to do what they want they become drones again and to open mail click here, to edit a document click there and so on and so on endlessly. Users tend to "forget" the actual environment that they are in and learn an almost "muscle memory" type of sequence of mouse-gestures and keyboard clicks to get done what they want.

    I got my wife to use Ubuntu, and she uses it every-day. I could've gotten her to use anything else.

    The real pain comes in the "under the skin" things like adding your computer to a network, setting up your wireless and other essentially one-time housekeeping tasks that need to be done (setting up wireless on a laptop is more than a one-time task, but migrating around wireless networks with notebooks is an equal pain regardless of OS)

    Then we get to actually installing the software and getting it to work with the actual hardware.Now immediately both you and I can point to areas where Windows has greater driver support from vendors than Linux - but ask yourself this: How many users ever set up their own hardware? Being a tech manager with an IT team I get the very strong impression that regardless of OS a user will call on us to install a new screencard, PCI/USB wifi network card or whatever the case might be. Thus user-wise the hardware issue has largely been negated by user incompetence. Remember though that users need only worry about using the computer - IT geeks like those who's job it is to fix computers are supposed to worry about the actual hardware, and again for a power user/tech support it is less than an issue than you think.

    but then you also have the added learning curve of replacing every single application except possibly Firefox, if they weren't using IE before.

    Again I need to point to the error of your statement.

    1) Have you looked at the awesome cockup that is the Office 2007 interface?

    I have countless users who phone me regularly to ask "where is the file meny", "where do I name the file when I (eventually found how to) save as" and so on.

    2) Have you tried bringing an Office 2007 setup into an existing officespace?

    Try telling a user over the phone how to install the patch that allows him to open .docx documents in Office 2003 OR explain why the Office 2007 user suddenly needs to save his files in a different type every-time-he-saves-it, or why it says "compatibility mode" when he opens a .doc file. Or why he can no longer open his old e-mails since he started using Outlook 2007 and his .pst file is no longer supported. Older versions of .pst files are a pain to recover.

    3) A personal tale from first-hand experience.

    We use a custom in house program developed in MS Access. Me, being a Linux user cannot use this program since I cannot open the database in Linux. That goes for every Office 2007 user in our company. The database needs to be converted to an Office 2007 compatible format before they can use it - and when that is done the ones using office 2003 can no longer use it since now it is incompatible with their version of office. We will only be able to get Office 2003 licenses for a short time still before 2k3 goes the way of XP. Thus very soon we will be forced to up

  34. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by peragrin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    that is more true than many realize. in my humble opinion 90% of users are nothing more than monkeys clicking keys in order to get the desired result. The same applies to cars. all they truly know is that you put a funny smelling liquid into it, turn a key, and wiggle the steering wheel around while pressing buttons on the floor to make it go and stop. It isn't complicated to understand the thing is they don't want to know.

    it is the difference between memorizing a method and understanding the concept. you can set me down in front of any computer and I can learn the ins and outs of it in hours, (longer with more command line options). After a while some people stop learning, and everything after that point is a struggle.

    --
    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
  35. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by santiagodraco · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So they returned it because they expected Windows but got Linux and not because it was difficult to learn for them? I think not, read the interview.

    Oh, they should blame the install, which was poor? Exactly how?

    Oh, power users are the cause...the ones that probably have hacked copies of Windows waiting around to install over Linux (as you say, that's what they wanted...)

    I think you are simply trying to divert the fact that Linux is not some kind of magical operating system that every user should embrace as the panacea to Windows. That's not the case and everyone knows it.

    Right now the ONLY logical reasons to move to a Linux based PC is 1) cost and 2) boot time when run in minimalist mode. Otherwise an XP machine is far better for the availability of apps and consistency of experience.

  36. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by modernbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, here is the thing. I think most people understand that a computer has become an appliance. It's a machine to gather information, publish information, and a simple communications tool. Most people have come to know windows because it's loaded on every factory made box everywhere. I think that people want to spend time doing the things they do on a computer and not to learn about the machine or software they are using. It's all about being productive. *nix is a vastly more powerful OS in the hands of someone who knows what to do with it. The vast majority of people going to Wal-Mart to buy a computer don't care about this. The only way to make this customer happy is to emulate what they do know (outlook express, IE, Menu's, Office). If you can't do this 80% of the people buying your machine are going to be some what unhappy. Will some people learn a new way to do things, yes. However, even after they learn this still might not be enough as these are the same people who will likely become frustrated and have someone load windows back on their machine. If equipment manufacturers want to move away from windows they will need to provide a distro that looks and feels like windows and I haven't seen any distro that has accomplished this.

  37. Re:Amazing. Half assed installs cause returns by hullabalucination · · Score: 2, Informative

    Bingo.

    I found an online review of MSI's U90 unit, and the review found that neither the Webcam nor the wireless worked out of the box. They opined that you'd need to go buy and install a copy of XP Home to turn the unit into something usable.

    Seriously, is MSI a Microsoft front organization?

    * * * * *

    "Empty-handed I went to the widget library, empty-handed I renturned."
    —Binkei, 9th-century Japanese programmer-monk

  38. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Or, it's the case of people having other, more interesting things to spend their time learning.
    I used to be a computer geek, but now stuff like OS' bore the living shit out of me.

    Yes. and the end result of this anti-intellectualism is an inability
    to back up your own data or keep your computer safe from malware.

    In some misguided rush to avoid being a "computer geek" you can't even
    use the "appliance" beyond its most rudimentary features (even in Windows).

    Nevermind "the difficulty of Linux", drones like you can't even be bothered
    to fully utilize Windows. The go whining to the local Windows or Linux guru
    to be bailed out or coddled.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  39. It's in the hands of the vendors by TheModelEskimo · · Score: 2

    C'mon, vendors. This is Linux we're talking about. Customize it until there's NO WAY people can't understand how to use it. Include training videos, tutorials, goal- or task-based projects. Do WHAT IT TAKES because this is Linux, and you have *only* yourself to blame if your approach doesn't work. I mean, you (the vendor) can do whatever you want with it, for crying out loud. Make it stand out in ways that Windows or OSX lacks. But no, vendors are too cheap for this crap. They can't see past Linux's lack of a price tag long enough to understand the real opportunity here.

  40. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by linhares · · Score: 5, Funny

    Or, it's the case of people having other, more interesting things to spend their time learning. I used to be a computer geek, but now stuff like OS' bore the living shit out of me. I have -zero- interest in dicking around with a computer any more than I have to. I have a lot more interesting things to do ,like running my business, fixing up my house, studying art, whatever. I wouldn't bother with Linux because to me, it's a complete and total waste of my time.

    Hi, Nice point. I am sending you a file called FUNNY_SEXY_PAYPAL_KEYLOGGER.exe, and you are so going to love it. It's like, well, I won't spoil the fun. Let me just say it: it will drive you nuts!

  41. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by kripkenstein · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When you buy a netbook with installed Linux, all of your complaints here are not relevant. Yes, Linux has a way to go yet with regards to installing on random hardware, but the article was not talking about random hardware installations, but pre-installed netbooks.

    So there must be some other reason for the higher rate of returns. In any case, as others mentioned, the higher rate is meaningless without absolute numbers. 40% return (vs. 10% for Windows) would be horrendous; 4% return (vs. 1% for Windows) would be not great, but not that bad either.

  42. Which gets to FOSS' main flaw by Burz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It has little to do with the OS merely being 'different' than Mac or Windows, otherwise all these smartphones running everything from Symbian to custom Linux-based stacks would suffer the same returns problem (and for the most part, they don't).

    Installing and updating software applications is a royal beeotch.

    With a Windows setup (horrible warts and all), you just download and install your software packages as on a desktop PC.

    But with Linux-based stuff, since you're not dealing with a well-defined platform, you will almost never encounter a neatly-packaged application that will install with a few clicks. So you are stuck with outdated/missing apps in the distros repository, or wrestling with downloaded rpms and debs and their dependency nightmares.

    The lack of a well-defined desktop platform and the adherence to software repository culture that inserts itself between the user and the app developers are to blame here.

    It doesn't have to be this way in FOSS. As it happens though the politics of defining a platform that ISVs can target directly just aren't there yet.

  43. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    that is more true than many realize. in my humble opinion 90% of users are nothing more than monkeys clicking keys in order to get the desired result. The same applies to cars. all they truly know is that you put a funny smelling liquid into it, turn a key, and wiggle the steering wheel around while pressing buttons on the floor to make it go and stop. It isn't complicated to understand the thing is they don't want to know.

    it is the difference between memorizing a method and understanding the concept. you can set me down in front of any computer and I can learn the ins and outs of it in hours, (longer with more command line options). After a while some people stop learning, and everything after that point is a struggle.

    It always strikes me as ironic that the more elitist comments here have the worst spelling and grammar.

    --
    echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  44. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by Draek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Then please refrain from using a computer.

    You know the first thing I did when I first got a digital camera? I learned photography. Not just "how to turn the camera on", but aperture, shutter speeds, exposure, rules of composition, etc. Yeah, I "could" have let the camera handle most of that stuff, but I know that unless I know what's it doing on the background even on the Auto modes, I have no right to expect something other than shitty results.

    I simply can't understand why people don't do the same with computers... I mean, do you go to a guitar store, buy a $600 guitar, and then return it the next day because you didn't sound like Jimi Hendrix? I seriously hope not.

    --
    No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
  45. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by Heather+D · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Or, it's the case of people having other, more interesting things to spend their time learning. I used to be a computer geek, but now stuff like OS' bore the living shit out of me. I have -zero- interest in dicking around with a computer any more than I have to. I have a lot more interesting things to do ,like running my business, fixing up my house, studying art, whatever. I wouldn't bother with Linux because to me, it's a complete and total waste of my time.

    Hm, this is one of the reasons why I don't do free tech support anymore. Yes people are free to choose what they learn, but if they choose not to learn basic concepts they become a burden to others. I have absolutely no problem with charging them money to support this behavior as this sort of thing is the root of all kinds of trouble that could otherwise be easily avoided.

    Regardless of what OS you use you still need to know something about it. Well, either that or you pay someone to fix your stuff regularly, or maybe you just replace the thing whenever the trojans cause it to become an anchor. Frankly, the fact that MS markets to people who think this way probably does more to damage their software's rep than the fact that so much of it is buggy.

    Take the bail-out for instance. Like that old saying implies it may not have been corruption so much as the side effect of having too many 'post-turtles' in the wrong places.

  46. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Right now the ONLY logical reasons to move to a Linux based PC is 1) cost and 2) boot time when run in minimalist mode. Otherwise an XP machine is far better for the availability of apps and consistency of experience.

    Oh, and software that gets faster with time (see KDE 4 vs. KDE 3). And better hardware support (dead serious). And a nicer desktop (got anything to compare to Compiz yet?). And a smaller footprint (I'm using less than half of the 1GB of RAM on the Eee PC I'm typing this on right now). And a software library that makes Windows look niche (I'll put apt-get against VersionTracker any day of the week). And a more consistent interface (see: those screenshots of 20 different widget toolkits on a single Windows screen).

    Yeah, besides being a better, faster, cheaper, prettier system with better 3rd-party support, I don't see much point in using Linux over XP. Oh, and double that for Vista.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  47. Linux not ready for prime time by wshwe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yet another sign that Linux is unsuitable for the mass market.

  48. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by omuls+are+tasty · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You give me my point? I wasn't trying to make a point at all, just stating the simple fact that the current (=stable) version of OpenOffice doesn't support .docx out of the box. I know very well that Office 2k3 doesn't support it either.

    But if you insist on me trying to make a point, I can restate my personal experience that I haven't been able to get the official conversion tool up and running - though admittedly I haven't spent much time with it, and it's probably just a hickup in the (unofficial) Arch package and big distros such as Ubuntu probably pack their own (working) binaries.

    OK, so now you've got me to rant. Look, I've been using Linux since 1995. I like it and it fits my needs very well - I haven't booted Windows on my main machine for about a year now, except for a VirtualBox XP image I use to check whether my Javascript works under IE. But from an average desktop user POV I wouldn't say Linux is still up to shape when compared to Windows. It's much better than a few years ago, but still not great.

    Drivers. What can I say, we've all been there. I have an Atheros wireless card, and if I were an average user on a Fedora I'd be screwed. I'm also screwed on Arch because the driver for my TI card reader doesn't read XD cards. Both are very common in laptops. Guess I'm lucky because I own an Intel video card. Worked great under Ubuntu, Compiz and all that - until you discover that XV video doesn't play all that great. But you can fix it, if you switch to the EXA rendering mode instead of XAA and use a greedy migration heuristic. Simple, huh?

    Codecs. People would kinda like to play their DVDs and stuff occassionally. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Add an additional repo and download it. Doesn't work.

    Visual impression. I agree that it's much improved now - when I just think of fonts from say, Fedora Core 4... oh boy (and that wasn't too long ago). KDE looks pretty good now, Crystal Clear is nice, and KDE4 is a hot mamma (a buggy hot mamma, but still a hot mamma). Still the quality of the interface is not consistent accross apps.

    Category: misc stuff. My big personal gripe is the NetworkManager - that thing has a mind of its own. Not to mention that the last time I used it, you couldn't even disconnect from a network with it. Why why why why don't distros replace it with wicd or any other sane alternative?

    And finally, there is the point of niche apps that has been raised in this thread. CAD users, video artists, music artists. I'm a hobby musician, and Linux doesn't cut it - my $400 M-Audio rig only works with Windows and Mac, sorry. I have to keep a separate box for that.

    So anyhow, I'm not just sure about the year of the Linux desktop. I don't know if it's ever going to happen. It might be an evolution rather than a revolution, as Linux gets gradually better and more user-friendly - Shuttleworths recent efforts are surely to be applauded. But somehow I feel that it's just going to be about marketing - you know, an iLinux or something.

    Why the heck am I getting into these discussions and rehashing something that's been said a million times by others, I don't know. Please mod me down into oblivion and make me come to my senses

  49. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by hairyfeet · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually,and I know i'm going to get the hate for mentioning them,but Xandros does a damned good Windows impersonation. The initial setup wizard even asks you if you want it to "act like Windows"(it also asks whether you'd like it to act like Apple or KDE) which if you choose yes all the keyboard shortcuts and context menus act like Windows.

    That said,Crossover Office,which also comes built into Xandros,would solve probably 80% of those returns IMHO. With Xandros you stick in the software disc,the wizard pops up,you go "clicky clicky next next next" and your Windows software is ready to go. Because I'm betting a lot of these folks stuck in their Windows discs and got mad when the software didn't go and returned it. I'm sure an OEM Crossover license wouldn't be that much when you are a large OEM like this so that would be an easy fix. But if they want their Linux to act like Windows they ought to put in Xandros. I have yet to run into a Windows user who couldn't adapt to Xandros very quickly.

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    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  50. Re:For return people computer... by shimage · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's be honest here, though. If all you want is an appliance, Linux isn't any more difficult than Windows. Realistically—and I say this as someone who uses both Windows and Linux—it isn't even that different. Unless, as people above have mentioned, someone has rote memorized how to do (a large number of) specific tasks, the differences aren't worth mentioning. Linux isn't harder than Windows, and it's only different if you're doing "complicated" things (where I've defined "complicated" as things that differ in Windows and Linux ... ). People looking for an appliance—which, I thought, was the point of a netbook—shouldn't notice much of a difference.

  51. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2, Informative

    That's valid for the 1,000 people in America who actually need some obscure function, but no big deal for the rest of us who are completely supported by Open Office.

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    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  52. Re:they don't know what they get until they open t by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The poster mentioned "fixing up [his] house" as an alternate activity with more value. How many "computer geeks" out there who fault people who don't know basic computer operations, don't know how to sweat copper pipe, or replace a light fixture and so don't have the skills to maintain their home?
     
    Your leaking pipes and worn-out light switch don't affect or inconvenience anyone other than you. Fix them at your leisure or not at all; nobody else will bother you about it.
     
    If your computer is part of a botnet spewing spam across the Internet, it's a different class of problem entirely -- it affects thousands of people other than you. In fact, you may not even notice it happening....
     
    I submit that the second is a much larger issue and more important problem than the first.

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    If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
  53. Yeah sure. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Like if Windows was that good.

    Inertia is the word you need.

    People prefer to continue in the current state of suffering rather than to try something new that may or may not be better.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  54. What are you talking about? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2, Informative

    PCs sold as appliances, irrespective of the OS, will have Flash, Real Player, PDF reader , Java VM and any other necessary software.

    The EeePC is just like that, as are several other Linux appliances in the market.

    This scaremongering is frankly tiresome, bring on real issues to have a meaningful discussion, lack of basic software is no longer an issue in most situations.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  55. Four times what? by WhatDoIKnow · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Four times higher? That could mean 4 in a thousand are returned instead of 1 in a thousand. Doesn't really mean much without knowing the absolute percentages.

  56. Re:DKMS as a Solution by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Or the hardware vendors realise that Linux isn't the only game in town, and ship PC-BSD or Nexenta on their machines.

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