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Linux And Unix Devices Popular On Amazon's 'Best of '07' List
Posted by
Zonk
on Sat Dec 29, 2007 03:41 PM
from the penguins-out-and-about dept.
from the penguins-out-and-about dept.
christian.einfeldt writes "Computers and handheld devices running default GNU Linux or Unix OSes have swept Amazon's 'best of' list for 2007, according BusinessWire.com for 28 December 2007. Best selling computer? The Nokia Internet Tablet PC, running Linux. Best reviewed computer? The Apple MacBook Pro notebook PC. Most wished for computer? Asus Eee 4G-Galaxy 7-inch PC mobile Internet device, which comes with Xandros Linux pre-installed. And last, but not least, the most frequently gifted computer: The Apple MacBook notebook PC."
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Linux Notebooks Selling Well On Amazon Germany 207 comments
christian.einfeldt writes "The LinuxTech.net blog points out that Linux notebooks are currently selling quite well on Amazon's list in Germany. The blog includes screenshots showing the Linux Asus and Aspire notebooks in positions 2 and 4, respectively, on that list. These machines are not netbooks, but full notebooks, albeit on the moderate to low side regarding price and performance. That LinuxTech.net blog was dated 23 July 2009, and the Asus machine is still holding second place more than one day later, while the Acer machine slipped to fifth position, despite the volatile nature of Amazon bestseller lists. While these two data points are just snapshots in time, they are consistent with other data showing that Microsoft itself attributes some of its recent weak earnings to surging sales of low-end notebooks, as well as data showing that the Linux-powered and Unix-powered computers topped Amazon's sales charts in all categories for 2007. If there is to ever be a 'year of desktop (or laptop) Linux', it won't happen all at once, but will creep up in ways similar to what we are seeing now."
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Im Linux (Score:5, Funny)
Linux is cute.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aufL76bXLAg
Asus Eee very popular in Australia (Score:3, Informative)
The last I heard they were getting more in just before Christmas but a lot of those had been pre-sold in December. I don't think Linux is a negative for the people who buy this product. They like the fact that it has open office out of the box, which is a bigger money saver than the OS.
Re:Asus Eee to equal Mac sales in 2008 (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Asus Eee to equal Mac sales in 2008 (Score:4, Interesting)
Have a look at the post count on eeeuser [eeeuser.com]. Posts about windows installs are significant but not overwhelming.
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filtered view (Score:2)
reading the list myself I think it needs some filtered perception to summarize it like it was done for this entry. This is
EEEPC... (Score:3, Funny)
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The impression I get is that the big name linux desktops (kde and gnome) are just as bloated if not more so than XP.
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Except nobody's forced to use a "big name linux desktop", and in this case they're not, so that doesn't really matter.
Using Windows on a device like that just doesn't make sense. Linux can be trimmed down *way* more than Windows when you know exactly what kind of machine it'll be running on.
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If not, then I guess that shows who is more guilty of IP "theft" then. The ones who pay for an OS are more likely to "steal" software than the ones who don't pay for the OS.
Swept != Won most of. (Score:5, Informative)
If you take the definition of "electronics" to be anything that has a microprocessor, ram, program storage, and I/O, then all of these would be "electronics", but I don't think any of them run Linux. I might be wrong, and some of them might run Linux, but I am sure that at least one of them doesn't.
If the Canon A570IS ran a GPLd OS, that would be awesome to modify that so that I can do things that Canon hadn't thought of or doesn't want users to be able to do, like time-lapse, recording RAW, changing the menu system, etc...
Yes, there are a lot of devices running Linux or Unix on the Amazon "Best-Of" list, but it isn't a sweep unless you mean "computers", but even then the line gets fuzzy.
Alternative firmware gives you RAW support (Score:2)
If the Canon A570IS ran a GPLd OS, that would be awesome to modify that so that I can do things that Canon hadn't thought of or doesn't want users to be able to do, like time-lapse, recording RAW, changing the menu system, etc...
Not GPL, but the CHDK alternative firmware [wikia.com] (for the A570 and most other mid/high-end "prosumer" Canon cameras such as the S3) that enable RAW mode and other enhancements for these cameras.
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Actually the iPods run a "commercial microkernel embedded operating system," made by PortalPlayer [wikipedia.org]. From Wikipedia/iPod [wikipedia.org]
I agree with you on the rest.
I didn't look too hard at the smaller items, but I would still consider them "electronics," just not "computers." As you said there isn't much of an OS on those, and definitely nothing the size of even a stripped down version of Linux.
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Also, the Wii does NOT run on Linux.
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Here's what the iPhone runs:
# uname -a
Darwin Darby's iPhone 9.0.0d1 Darwin Kernel Version 9.0.0d1: Fri Jun 22 00:38:56 PDT 2007; root:xnu-933.0.1.178.obj~1/RELEASE_ARM_S5L8900XRB iPhone1,1 Darwin
The iPod touch runs the same, and I don't have a clue what other iPods run.
At last, and end to "Year of the Linux Desktop" (Score:5, Insightful)
Like the $1,000,000 "mainframe", the DEC $100,000 "minicomputer", and the Sun $10,000 Unix "workstation", each major generation had its most-popular software environment, the one with highest network effects.
Pushing for a change in the desktop from Windows to Mac or Linux is, in 10 years, going to seem like striving to continue the VMS vs Unix wars on the VAX platform.
What 2008, 2009, and 2010 are going to be are the "years where appliances took over half the desktop functions" - you still want a big monitor and ergo keyboard to Photoshop, do development of web pages and code, and so on. But people sitting right at their desktop will whip out their paperback-sized appliance to do E-mail and chat, because that's where their communication apps live.
And, yes, those new appliances will mostly run Linux. What else?
All the hot new developers and innovative companies are not going to hogtie themselves to proprietary platforms like Windows and Mac; they've tossed themselves out of the running by their lack of freedom. They can put out their own product entries, sure -- but as Bill Joy said, most of the smart people in the world don't work for you.
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The funny bit is that even the openmoko makes it a pain to run a different OS. On a PC you just set the BIOS to boot from an external device and off you go. On all handheld devices you have to take a punt on re-flashing the bootstrap in eprom. Get it wrong and the device is bricked.
I don't see why these devices should not support pc-like behaviour.
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Oh i dont know everything else in the mobile world? If linux on the desktop is dead, and it surely is compared to the predictions Ive read here and elsewhere, then linux on the mobile is even more dead. Windows mobile, blackberry os, osx, android, etc. Companies dont want to hand out their code and they have enough resources to build their own OSs. FOSS isnt as attractive as you think it is for these financial behemoths. THey can easily
Re:At last, and end to "Year of the Linux Desktop" (Score:5, Informative)
Android is Linux. OSX is BSD. Apple hardware is locked down, not the OS.
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Then why can't I run the OS on a PC?
You can.
How is this insightful? (Score:2)
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The "Year of the Linux Desktop" generally referred, IMHO, to Linux attaining if not dominance (yeah, right) then a respectable enough market share to be in the news, like Mac. For which 10% is minimal and 20% better.
As to mobiles having many non-Linux OS's, true enough, and my apologies for not writing "mostly
A matter of time (Score:5, Interesting)
I, for one, welcome our new agnostic overlords.
What? No Vista? (Score:4, Insightful)
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How about the OLPC? (Score:2, Interesting)
The trouble with Amazon is that it will naturally focus on stuff you can buy. Here is Groklaw's review of the olpc. http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20071223132431291 [groklaw.net]
My gripe with the Nokia is battery life. My wife's Blackberry goes for days without charging. It has a keyboard (sort of). The Nokia is reported as getting only a couple of hours under heavy use.
Apparently the buy one, give one, program for the olpc
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If wouldn't be very useful if it focused on stuff you couldn't buy.
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But it doesn't blow the Nokia IT out of my pocket where it very neatly fits.
love my Nokia N800!!! w00t! (Score:2, Informative)
- what's not to like?
FM receiver built in w/automagic polling of station lists based on zipcode!
web cam/camera built in
video playback (nearly any codec - dunno about QT though)
mp3 playback
pdf, MS
web browsing
touch screen
two SDHC slots
USB (albeit non-powered)
bluetooth keyboard support (nearly any model AFAIK - i'm getting an Apple!)
GPS support for external BT GPS units
Skype (don't u
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Giving vs. gifting (Score:3, Interesting)
Is it just me, or is the use of "to gift" a recent development of holiday commercialization? I could swear I never heard that as a kid; now everything is about "gifting" rather than "giving". I suppose "giving in the spirit of Christmas" is too non-specific: it could mean giving to charity, or giving one's time at a senior center. No, it has to be "gifting", because that can mean only one thing: a piece of merchandise that one must purchase. It's hard to find an ad with the word "giving" anymore.
Do consumers know? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Do consumers know? (Score:4, Insightful)
The geeks get a device with open software that they are free to modify, and normal users get something that is easy to use and enables them to access the internet and information in a new and convenient way. I don't see any losers here, except Microsoft, and since I am not a shareholder, this doesn't bother me one bit
Parent
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It seems that it's enough to celebrate that many large companies have found linux to be the right solution for their mass market, consumer oriented devices. This seems to be a win for the linux community. After all, a few years ago it was very rare
ouch! (Score:2)
They also seem to spread virally. I know of 2 people who bought n800s after seeing mine, and they aren't IT professionals either.
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I am not afraid of direct hardware knocking but think I need to get lower than python+gtk to get there.
http://maemo.org/development/documentation/how-tos/4-x/maemo_architecture.html#SWDecomposition [maemo.org]
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http://www.internettablettalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=8689
I always got this at work. I really wanted to be able to use it as a portable skype phone, as I have skype out and in. But the connection issues really got me... I don't have an n810 yet, but I'm hoping it doesn't have this problem.
Mod parent down, -1 bullshit (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:Mod parent down, -1 bullshit (Score:5, Funny)
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Let me call you out for a second: do you have proof of this?
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Apple have 3 models of Macbook, and 3 of Pro, each of which have a separate amazon listing.
The only word he chose incorrectly was "model" but I think he meant "line". So a product line of macbooks. A product line of macbook pros.
And his point still remains. There is only one manufacturer for Apple while there are multiple manufacturers of PCs (Toshiba, Sony, HP, Lenovo). If each of these manufacturers only had two models of notebooks each, they would still have more models than Apple (4 * 2 = 8). Bu
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13" 2.0 Ghz White Macbook
13" 2.2 Ghz White Macbook
13" 2.2 Ghz Black Macbook
15" 2.2 Ghz Macbook Pro
15" 2.4 Ghz Macbook Pro
17" 2.4 Ghz Macbook Pro
Each one has a separate marketing part number and get recorded separately during sales. The thing to keep in mind is that there are still probably a lot less models available then Dell or Acer or Hp machines, and so the numbers are still likely to be artificially inflated but not as much as the
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Linux on the N810 is however normal linux, and pretty much anything you can compile on desktop linux can be recompiled to run on the N810.
The fact that most apps come with source code just makes the process simpler.