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Asus To Phase Out Sub-10" Eee PCs

jeevesbond writes "The Register reports that Asus president Jerry Shen has revealed his company will be phasing out all sub-10" Eee PCs. According to Shen, the 'standard' netbook next year will be a 10" model with a hard drive running XP. Shen also said XP is outselling GNU/Linux on netbooks by a ratio of 7:3. This is somewhat contrary to news from the UK earlier in the year that GNU/Linux units were out of stock while XP machines sat unsold. Are Brits more open-minded than the rest of the world when it comes to choosing an OS?"

11 of 497 comments (clear)

  1. XP outsells Linux, guess why by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 4, Informative

    I sat posting this on my XP-equipped EeePC 901. Why XP? Because I can't find the Linux version at any store around my area. Whenever I ask whether they'll offer the Linux versions, store managers invariably answer "we won't offer them, they won't sell, people are afraid of non-Windows machine". Can you say chicken and egg?

    Oh and yes, and another thing, the Linux GUIs offered on netbooks are designed for retards. That's also perhaps geeks don't buy them. When I have a minute, I'll install Debian on mine, but even if I had managed to find the Linux Eee, I'd have zapped the original distro.

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    1. Re:XP outsells Linux, guess why by mollymoo · · Score: 3, Informative

      True, but you get a larger SSD with the Linux machines (20 GB vs 12 GB for the XP models).

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
  2. Re:Linux on Netbooks by Yst · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, in the Aspire One community, this has similarly become a common piece of advice: buy the XP model for its better battery; install Ubuntu.

    I bought the Linux version partly for the sake of supporting the Linux product, and partly for the sake of the slightly lower price. But now I'm starting to kick myself, wishing I bought the XP version and installed Linux. It's kind of a Catch-22. The best Linux netbooks available have XP installed on them.

    --
    Karma: Chameleon (comes and goes)
  3. XP outsells Linux because... by The+Famous+Druid · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...it's so hard to find a Linux one.

    I searched the computer retailers of Melbourne for 3 weeks before I found one that had a Linux 901 in stock, and bought their last one.

    Memo to the geniuses of retail: customers can't buy if you don't have stock.

    --
    Quidquid Latine dictum sit, altum videtur (anything said in Latin sounds important)
  4. I prefer the smaller sized netbooks by gameguy1957 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Looks like their going to lose sales then. The schools I'm in charge of find the smaller ones better for the students. It's used as an appliance to type, print and for some web browsing. If we wanted a larger sized machine with a hard drive and XP then we'll just buy standard notebooks. If they give us no options in the size we want then we'll just buy several hundred of them from another manufacturer. -JM

  5. Linux versions are hard to get in some countries by Peter+H.S. · · Score: 4, Informative

    Where I live the Linux versions of the eeepc 901 are impossible to get, Asus simply refuses to release them. They give no reasons, but it is well known that MS have been very active in negotiating with vendors like Asus in trying to curb Linux version sales. It is interesting to note in this regard how MS has backed down on their "maximum 80GB hdd" for using MS-XP, since Asus are selling 120GB XP version of their eeepc's.

    Anyway, I find it impressive that Linux sales amounts to a whopping 30% of the eeepc's.

    --
    Regards

  6. ubuntu-eee.com by tepples · · Score: 5, Informative

    Oh and yes, and another thing, the Linux GUIs offered on netbooks are designed for retards. That's also perhaps geeks don't buy them. When I have a minute, I'll install Debian on mine, but even if I had managed to find the Linux Eee, I'd have zapped the original distro.

    Have you considered Ubuntu Eee, based on Ubuntu Netbook Remix?

  7. Re:XP is closer to "just works" for most by Ant+P. · · Score: 3, Informative

    For Linux to compete, it should aim at producing distributions that support as much hardware as XP

    XP? You mean that OS with the sick joke installer that asks for a *FLOPPY DISK* to install to a SATA hard disk?

  8. Re:Well "Works With Linux" is a feature to me by TheModelEskimo · · Score: 4, Informative

    >I decided to revitilize my grandparent's old Celeron 500 w/ 128MB of RAM with Xubuntu.

    Ouch. I have a machine with those exact specs here, and there's no way on earth I would try Xubuntu on it. In my experience, Xubuntu is faster and lighter than the "normal" Ubuntu desktop, but it's not really a "legacy PC" distro to me. My normal choice for legacy PCs has been Puppy Linux, and it has *never,* *ever* let me down in that capacity. It's always fast, does a wonderful job supporting dialup modems, old video cards, and has "wizards" included that help you do common setup tasks.

    It works well on modern machines, too; When I couldn't get Renoise working without JACK on my Ubuntu laptop due to high CPU use, I booted into Puppy and it ran fine.

    In my experience, Xubuntu gets mentioned here a lot by people who have just heard of it, and not tried it.

    With that said, the web is a different place now, with high demands. An afternoon's worth of footwork should net you a *much* better used machine for grandma and grandpa, for free or $10. Try Craigslist, local mailing lists, doctor's offices, etc.

  9. Xubuntu requirements by quenda · · Score: 3, Informative
    "Once installed, Xubuntu can run with 192 MB RAM, but it is strongly recommended to have at least 256 MB RAM."

    http://www.xubuntu.org/get

    ie wrong distro. Xubuntu is a medium-weight desktop. Not quite as bloated as gnome/KDE/Vista. Try DSL?

  10. Not a stunt; easy to use by Frankenbuffer · · Score: 5, Informative

    Disclaimer: I'm the product marketing manager for the Xandros desktop that runs on the Eee PC.

    I can assure you that this is not an MS stunt. At Xandros we've worked hard with Asus to make the Eee PC easy to use by non-techies. The simplified interface is easy to navigate on a small screen, apps downloaded through the Eee Download capability "just work" in a few clicks without enduring long download times or frequent updates, and there's good interop with Windows. Kids especially find the Eee PC fun and intuitive to use.

    Obviously there's a strong techie interest in the platform as well, so I'm interested in the discussion here. Got some constructive suggestions about how you'd like to use your netbook? I'd love to hear them. You can email me at jordan.smith(at)xandros.com.

    Thanks!

    Jordan