Dell to sell laptops with Linux preinstalled 240
Now it's official. According to this story on C|Net, Dell is starting to sell notebooks with Linux preinstalled. The laptop models are the Inspiron 7500 and Latitude CPX models. The Latitude models will be available Feb. 4. Prices are the same as with Windows 9x preinstalled. Those models are certified by Linuxcare.
FINALLY! But why still paying the MS-tax? (Score:3)
#include "disclaim.h"
"All the best people in life seem to like LINUX." - Steve Wozniak
finally! (Score:2)
Where is the extra money going? (Score:5)
In short, where is my "extra" $100 going?
Eric
microsoft/intel tax (Score:2)
Inspirion 7500 as VMware machine? (Score:3)
I've been looking at getting a loaded Inspirion
7500 (512mb ram, 75gb disk, 650mhz pIII, 1400x1050
screen!) as a primary development machine. The
only thing I don't like is the pointing
device, but I suppose I can carry an IBM clicky
keyboard with trackpoint, too.
Has anyone had any luck running VMware 2.0 beta
on one of these beasts? I like to use vmware
to do kernel hacking without losing my
xmms and emacs buffers
annoying to lose a VMware machine than a desktop
to a kernel bug, and disks can be checkpointed.
VMware the company says laptops are a bad idea,
but the Inspirion 7500 is studlier than almost
any desktop!
Remember, these things are heavy
configured, and *big*.
Why the same price? (Score:1)
I am pretty ambivalent about this. One of the chief joys of Linux is getting it up slowly, piece by piece on the laptop. Watch it grow. Where's the pleasure in getting a pre-installed system?
OTOH, this means that the hardware works. I could ditch the distro and put Debian on it, without worrying about the hardware not being supported.
Pricing (Score:5)
As anyone who has dealt with Linux on laptops already knows well, hardware support isn't quite as easy as on a desktop machine. You're stuck with the hardware you have, unlike a desktop where you can always swap it out for something compatible. And unless another Linux user has the same hardware (or in some cases) the same exact model, you can be SOL.
Having a machine certified can't be cheap; with Windows you sort of get that by default when your license the OS. Microsoft has already taken the opportunity to certify hardware for use with Windows (think certified drivers). That, combined with the fact that Dell will be using a commercial distribution, would easily account for the cost of the OS for a Linux laptop.
Kudos to tell for taking steps; now if only we could get VA to bring back their models.
Re:FINALLY! But why still paying the MS-tax? (Score:2)
Yeah, but the interface is more confusing for most people, so it probably comes out even.
USB? (Score:3)
Thanks!
Re:FINALLY! But why still paying the MS-tax? (Score:1)
And as far as support calls go, I'm sure they get huge amounts more of calls from people with simple questions about their computer and applications rather than because the whole operating system crashed.
Linux's stability does nothing to address poor developers and dumb users, except people just won't need to restart their machines as often.
This is good... (Score:1)
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:1)
Re:Where is the extra money going? (Score:2)
First, I'm sure Dell doesn't pay near $100 for Win9x licenses.
Second, I'm sure that the tech support cost if where the difference goes.
I guess support really is the only place to make money with free software...
Glad to see they have a real modem in the box (Score:1)
You are still paying Microsoft tax (Score:1)
No, Dell will never change. They will forever be Intel's and Micro$oft's bitch. Better buy stuff from a company that truely supports Linux.
___
Re:Linux but no AMD.... (Score:1)
If intel's chip shortages last much past the end of this month, though, despite their immense loyalty, Dell may end up having great reason to investigate AMD processors. The question would be if AMD could produce enough parts for them. If they're going to be short either way, might as well stick with Intel.
AMD on a laptop = POS unit (Score:2)
I'm not that impressed. (Score:2)
Plus, I personally would not want someone else to install linux on my machine for me. Installing it yourself is half the fun, and there's no way I would want a default installation. I don't think anyone else who would be informed enough to know which models to buy with linux installed on them would want a default installation either.
Linux has always been about customization, and the ability to do things for yourself. I do not see how this is such a leap ahead.
//Phizzy
Re:Where is the extra money going? (Score:1)
It's going straight to Dell's losses from not being able to sell enough Intel machines.
Modem support? (Score:1)
Re:FINALLY! But why still paying the MS-tax? (Score:1)
If only! I agree it's more stable but newbies are bad enough at getting the hang of the Windows GUI (sometimes even so called windows power users make me sick with the way they use their mouse+keyboard).
Imagine them struggling with GNOME/KDE/[DOPus
Oh that's it. If they're on premium charges for the Tech Support i'm buying loadsa their shares now !:)
Re:Pricing (Score:2)
Re:FINALLY! But why still paying the MS-tax? (Score:4)
>However, the support calls should be way fewer with the stability of Linux....
MY GOD, MAN! have you ever worked tech support? how many of the calls to tech support do you think involve actual real problems? if the linuxcare support dell offers is free like their normal tech support, then people will abuse it just the same.
good but... (Score:1)
i hope they sell a million of them. i also hope they will support lots more hardware - one size fits all is not exactly acceptable to me, or the community at large...
Availability ? (Score:2)
Well, it was said that they will be offering Linux based laptops only starting with 4 Feb. However I would have expected to see at least a note or a preview or something...
Furthermore, as far as I can see for the Inspiron 7500 model the modem is not an Winmodem. So I guess that since the hardware is the same for both Linux and Windows based systems the price should be smaller for the Linux Laptop. Do I smell some fear that Microsoft will have something to say if they sell cheaper the Linux laptop ? Or perhaps they're just trying to make some extra bucks out of this ?
LinuxCare != LinuxOne (Score:2)
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PCMCIA (Score:2)
I just bought one in November and saved significant money by buying all the extras (ethernet card, modem, carrying case) from 3rd parties.
Way out of the Microsoft tax (Score:2)
--
Re:Linux but no AMD.... (Score:1)
Anyone who says, such as Dell himself, that this is a short term problem is wrong.
Dell has had trouble with Intel for the past 12 months from what I've been reading
The AMD Athlon blows away the PIII or Coppermine.
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:2)
on the 7500 the integrated modem is a winmodem, and they offer various pcmcia modems, some win, some hardware, and as for the comment about the dongle, i believe they still offer a 3-com x-jack pc card modem.
Re:AMD on a laptop = POS unit (Score:1)
Re:microsoft/intel tax (Score:1)
As Linux and other non-MS OSs are becoming the OS of choice we can hope to see the MS tax disappear. Meanwhile, I'm glad to be able to buy a Linux installed laptop.
Perhaps, if enough of these things are sold, we can get together some sort of class action against MS for charging us for something we never ordered.
"For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong."
Re:I'm not that impressed. (Score:1)
Re:FINALLY! But why still paying the MS-tax? (Score:2)
I they might be selling a real (i.e. not free) version of RedHat with each laptop.
It makes sense:
I just wish this had happened about the time I bought my Inspiron 3200. I would prefer to line Redhat's pockets vs. Microsoft's. We're merrily spec'ing Redhat servers from Dell as I type this.
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:2)
Two thoughts:
Either way, this is a Good Thing for Dell and us.
Here's my [redrival.com] copy of DeCSS. Where's yours?
Re:Why the same price? (Score:1)
Perhaps Dell is buying the dist from somewhere, complete with manuals and media to send you? Or support?
Who knows. But until you know exactly what you are getting and what Dell is getting, bitching that Linux is free/Microsoft Tax is just being blind.
Try the i3700 (Score:2)
Plus, it's a great portable mp3 jukebox. The 12G drive has lots of space and I don't have to lug CDs over to my pal's house any more. I just plug in an adaptor cable to his aux inputs, bring up xmms and play random from ~70 CDs with plenty of room for more.
I'll tell you why the price is equal.. (Score:1)
It's basically free anyway, I certainly haven't paid for any MS software
That reminds to bring those VB and VC++ lying about here home! Actually no, I've taken the Xmms source instead, see if I can help the cause, so to speak
Re:Where is the extra money going? (Score:1)
The money saved from not paying MS a few bucks is probably being used to recoup the outlay for adding support [testing, support engineer training etc.]
Re:finally! (Score:2)
Hard to find the Linux boxes on Dell's web site (Score:3)
If you would like an easier way to find Dell computers with Linux pre-installed, please visit MetaSystema.org, where they are all laid out on one page:
www.metasystema.org/dell.mhtml [metasystema.org]
What extra $100 (Score:4)
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One reason that I got an i3700... (Score:2)
The other was simply because the 3700 is smaller, and lighter. If I need a big screen that bad, I can hook it up to a monitor.
Re:microsoft/intel tax (Score:2)
How to get the money back! (Score:1)
Here we go again (Score:1)
a) Why does it cost the same as the MS-taxed version?
b) Now we've hit the big time
c) I'm going to buy from them because they support Linux
d) I'm NOT going to buy from them because they DON'T support Linux.
etc, etc, etc
Finally, someone goes to the Dell site and finds out that:
a) It was just a rumor OR
b) It only applies in another country OR
c) They are really selling Linux "certified" machines, but not with Linux installed OR
d) You can only buy them with one config (one screen size, on HD size, etc) OR
e) You can only buy them in lots of 100 and only if you are a business customer.
etc, etc, etc
If Slashdot is going to continue to shill for Dell's crappy deals, can we at least have the stories put in their own category so that I can filter them out?
--
Java banners:
Bad for users because Java kills Netscape
Re:What extra $100 (Score:2)
I know Dell doesn't pay $100/machine for WinXX but I seriously doubt they pass on the license at no markup. Everything that is sold is marked up by every middleman between the manufacturer and the end consumer.
Eric
Re:Availability ? (Score:1)
This site has a direct link to all of the Dell machines available with Linux:
www.metasystema.org/dell.mhtml [metasystema.org]
Another reason I got the i3700... (Score:2)
After some other
Re:Linux but no AMD.... (Score:2)
Linux has very low overhead of floating point ops. Windows does not.
As a result at same frequency, on equivalent mainboards it usually runs better with AMD than with Intel. I mean casual apps, not something like Seti@Home of course
So asking the question of AMD as long as they preload something different from Win is a valid question.
It is only slightly OT.
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:1)
Re:Inspirion 7500 as VMware machine? (Score:2)
The pointing device is an option. They can have either a joystick thingy or a pad. In fact I have a pad, but looking at the keyboard I can see the hardware for the joystick, so it may support both at the same time.
The only advice is to get the global modem, only use the Dell drivers for X if the ones on the internet don't work, and the newer ethernet cards need to have a few lines added to the PCMCIA config file (email me if you need them). A few hours after doing all that I had it doing everything I needed.
Supply and demand (Score:5)
You seem to be arguing that a given reduction in costs to a retailer should result in the same reduction in the price to the consumer. That doesn't really make sense though. What incentive do they have to reduce the costs that way? If the consumer is willing to pay for the product, Dell can charge whatever they wish for it. Especially since they are one of the only major brands that provide Linux laptops -- that's why this is NEWS in the first place. Since the supply of Linux laptops is low, and the demand is presumably high, the retail price should actually be higher than that of a windows laptop, where the supply is quite high, and the demand is lower.
Also here's a link to the Inspiron page at Dell:
http://commerce.us.dell.com/dellstore/config.asp? order_code=890139&customer_id=04&keycode=6W300 [dell.com]
Re:I'm not that impressed. (Score:1)
At some point the system has to cross over and becom mainstream. and that means selling it to people who dont spend all their time hacking directory structures and kernel files.
we can all sit around and say how much better our system is than theirs. but unless it's sold pre-installed so the man in the street can play with it and sees that it works before he inevitably makes it fall over he'll always take the easy option of installing microsoft's product.
We can shout about how good our product is as much as we like but without someone selling pre-installs we'll never get the home market.
IPO savvy (Score:1)
I also like the *idea* behind Linuxcare because it allows for the big companies like Dell and Compaq to offer different distros and still have the same tech support. For Dell to be able to sell Linux in a corporate environment, they need solid tech support.
Quality? (Score:2)
I'd love to have a laptop so I can hang out on the couch instead of at the desk, but it's not worth that kind of trouble.
Re:Pricing (Score:1)
now if we could only get VA to drop their prices to compete w/Dell
Re:FINALLY! But why still paying the MS-tax? (Score:2)
Re:Glad to see they have a real modem in the box (Score:2)
Win liscence $ != distro $ (Score:1)
Re:What extra $100 (Score:2)
The extra ~$100 dollars is a service charge for finding the right hardware and installing the OS, not trivial for laptops in Linux (try picking up a random lappy and get Linux up on it).
I would be curious to know how much extra service comes with the box, though.
Re:AMD on a laptop = POS unit (Score:2)
Nope. And I looked. I needed a Pentium III or equivalent laptop and all I could find were PIIIs. The Latitude CPX was by far the cheapest. Not that there are that many laptops with Pentium IIIs at all.
Re:Why the same price? (Score:2)
There's a marketing strategy that Red Hat figured out long ago and Dell and others are figuring out now. If something is available for free, people will still pay for it if it comes in a shiny box. How many people do you think download RedHat? Isn't it easier to just press a button and pay $40.00 for a CD already burned for you? It is. So, suppose I have to pay $1900 Big SuperCool Laptop 10000 Millennium Edition with Windows on it, and $2000 for a Big SuperCool Laptop 10000 Millennium Edition with Debian installed, some tech support time, perhaps some nifty Linux docs using that "paper" stuff, and a Big Shiny Box. I'd gladly pay the extra $100. Why? Because downloading entire distributions is a pain, and I'm on a 100Mb Ethernet with a T3 gateway. I'd rather have someone else do it for me, and that's what the free software market is about: Hardware and services.
</mindless rambling>
Re:LinuxCare != LinuxOne (Score:2)
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Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:1)
Kinda tough to write code for something you can't get specs to.
From the Winmodems are not Modems MiniFAQ [o2.net]: (third section on the page)
3. But someone must have adapted or reverse-engineered one by now!
Winmodem vendors will not release the source code. Without it, creating a software modem is a non-trivial programming task.
There's a link [deja.com] to Deja.com on the subject. Appears the manufaturers don't want to release specs for the community until there's a demand. There isn't really a demand because people know that Winmodems don't work with Linux.
Feel free to draw your own conclusions...
Here's my [redrival.com] copy of DeCSS. Where's yours?
Re:Pricing (Score:1)
AMEN! (Score:2)
When Dell offers Linux on everything, I'll be truly impressed.
Re:Pricing (Score:2)
Interestingly enough, it seems as if VA doesn't WANT to compete head on with Dell, as evidenced by the interview [slashdot.org] with Larry Augustin (their CEO). They are apparently going for the tested, battle hardened market with all their products (which do not include laptops at this time, for perhaps this very reason - it's too hard to see an expensive laptop to someone in volume, no matter how good it is.)
Maybe once they get their revenue up post-IPO they will reconsider the laptop market. I know I would feel more confident in purchasing a laptop from a company like VA who has a vested interest in Open Source, and Linux inparticular, than I would buying from Dell.
Where is the extra money going? (Score:2)
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:2)
If you can convince the WinModem chip makers to release programming information and specs, then I am sure a Linux developer or three will be glad to do a driver.
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:2)
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:2)
Some winmodems (Lucent I know, maybe others) have driver written by the manufacturer of the winmodem. But Lucent ( please correct me if I am wrong ) doesn't distribute the source to the driver, just a binary module that you can use with a particular kernel.
This traps you. This is the reason not to buy secret, undocumented crap in the first place. If you get a lucent winmodem, then you are always dependent on lucent deciding it is worth their time to compile up the module for the version of linux you want to use. You are probably out of luck runing the Herd or *BSD or BeOS or whatever. *You don't really own it, because you can't do whatever you want with it.*
When I plunk my money down and buy something, I want to *own* it. I don't want a pair of apron strings tying me back.
The problem with a lot of the capitalists in the world today is that they don't have the balls to be real capitalists. These loosers can't just fscking *sell* something. They want to rent the right to use it for only one purpose. They want to construe a meaningless EULA to be a contract between you and them, in which you somehow decide to pay them to restrict your behavior. Heck, even in real estate, all the developers are itching to slap on their deed restrictions or get their subdivisions under some zoning or neighborhood association.
Almost the only people doing real business any more are gun manufacturers. You have to respect someone who still has the balls to sell a piece of hardware and declare that whatever you do with it afterwards is your responsibilty.
Prices not the same (Score:2)
You'll see that Dell will charge you $99 extra if you want Linux instead of Win98+Office2000 small business...
%japh = (
'name' => 'Niklas Nordebo', 'mail' => 'niklas@' . 'nordebo.com',
'work' => 'www.sonox.com', 'phone' => '+46-708-405095'
Re:Laptop with AMD chip (Score:2)
Athlon? I got the machine because I needed one for running Dragon NaturallySpeaking which is optimized for a Pentium III or Athlon. I never saw an Athlon on a laptop.
Re:Pricing (Score:2)
I agree; upon re-reading the comment you responded to, I realized I was not quite clear in what I was saying.
According to the interview, VA has focused on the market for an extremely reliable, "hard-core" type of machine. You can get away with this in the desktop market, whereas you cannot in the laptop market.
For example, assume the cost to evaluate and certify your configuration is the same for a desktop or a laptop. The difference then, must come from the parts themselves. Better quality and more reliable desktop parts carry a permium, but that premium is likely quite a bit less than that carried by laptop parts. It costs more to build smaller parts anyways (that's why typical laptop configuartions can cost almost twice as much as their desktop counterparts.) Add in the fact that you want a better quality part, and the premium has jumped quite a bit. Now you've priced yourself right out of the market.
And theres the problem; VA can't compete in the Linux market since they want to focus on the "hard-core" sort of PC. Nobody wants to pay $5000 for a laptop, even if it has 32-day uptimes
Re:I'm not that impressed. (Score:3)
Most companies do not even tell you what network card, video chipset or sound chipset they use, so it's off to the Internet to see if there are any testimonials by other Linux'ers on that particular model. I'm glad Dell is making things easier for us and I hope other companies follow suit.
Re:Hard to find the Linux boxes on Dell's web site (Score:2)
Re:Linux but no AMD.... (Score:2)
I don't know about anyone else, but I'm starting to tire of the weird rallying behind anything that's not "mainstream." Any CPU thread is now filled with "Athlon rocks!" posts, because Intel is considered the bad guy. Any video card thread is flooded with "GeForce rocks!" posts, because 3dfx is evil.
The problem with both the Athlon and the Pentium II and III chips (and the GeForce, and anything else from 3dfx or Nvidia) is that they're huge suckers of power. Incremental improvements in speed are not nearly as useful to most anyone as would be drastically lower power consumption.
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:2)
Re:FINALLY! But why still paying the MS-tax? (Score:2)
Yes, they can. But then who is going to provide the end user support. By having individually licensed copies on each computer, RedHat or LinuxCare or whoever is providing the support for the OS, not DELL. Think about it. This is the way Redhat and all the other distribution make money....not by selling the OS, but by providing support for it after you buy it!
Re:Quality? (Score:2)
Our company has several IBM TPs, and the only problem we've had was when the boss dropped his running TP600E onto a concrete floor and had to replace the hard disk.
There's a huge quality difference between cheap laptops like WinBooks and IBMS. For one thing I don't scorch my hands on the palm rest. But the IBMs seem much faster, and more reliable.
I expect the Dell laptops are of similar quality.
Linux on a quality laptop would be like a dream come true, since I can count on two or three times a year having to sacrifice a day or two to fussing with balky Windows. Linux is more highly modular, and thus more consistent. Once I have a Linux machine configured just so, the job is done. Once I have a Windows machine configured just so, I can count on having to do it over again sooner or later.
Slashdot folks don't want laptop Linux support? (Score:4)
Let's say that I'm a company that sells laptops, and I'm considering supporting Linux. I hear that Dell's going down this road, so I check in to Slashdot to assess the community reaction. What would I conclude?
For one, it appears that the community expects the work to be done for no money. They scream because the machine isn't cheaper with Linux on it, even though the amount of work to be done to get Linux to work decently with laptops is considerable, far more than with desktops, and support costs can be expected to be higher (simply because there are far fewer experts on Linux-laptop issues than for Windows-laptop issues).
Second, the community screams because support for all platforms isn't instantly available, even though many laptop components don't have Linux drivers present.
So, it would appear that neither profit nor good will is available by doing Linux support for laptops. The users don't want to pay for it, and they'll hate you anyway.
Re:Why the same price? (Score:2)
Re:What extra $100 (Score:2)
Dell also sells directly to consumer (in effect, Dell is its own distribution and retail arm), so the markups are reduced. Not eliminated: the retail arm doesn't run for free, but reduced.
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$upport Co$ts (Score:3)
$upport Co$ts (Score:2)
Re:Pricing (Score:2)
So, if you buy a Latitude CPX, Dell has to pay a licensing fee to MS. That charge is passed on to you, the consumer.
BTW, IMHO, what the consent decree of 1994 accomplished was giving MS a much finer degree of intelligence into the PC industry. Pre-1994, they only knew how many systems shipped from each OEM. Post 1994, they knew how many systems within each product line of each OEM shipped. Thanks, DOJ.
Re:Beowulf!!!!!! (Score:2)
Support maybe? (Score:2)
Support for such systems is a whole new world and companies accustomed to paying X amount of dollars for X amount of support may take some time to realize how they can't recycle most their current windows support staff resulting is some messes. I think this could be a stumbling block to many companies who's support may poor with windows (to say the least) and then attempt to do support for Linux/Unix. The alternative would be outsourcing, however with a limited # of such outsourcers the costs there will be prohibitive for some companies to start.
Re:Where is the extra money going? (Score:2)
Dell was likely paying MSFT substantially less than $100 in return for buying a whole pile of copies of Win9x. Likely something more like $50. Or perhaps even less than that for Huge Quantity Discounts as well as Exclusively Installing Win9x So As To Block Out Alternatives.
I'd say the more the merrier.
The only thing you get support on is installation support.
If you bought a system where Linux was preinstalled, then you don't need installation support.
Re:Pricing (Score:2)
So when you buy a machine with no OS installed, Dell pays a license click, when a machine is sold with Linux, Dell pays, when a machine goes out with Windows, they pay. Is that it?
If that really is the standing licensing agreement under which Dell is selling these Linux pre-installed laptops, then some small percent of the purchase price of one of these things ends up at Microsoft. I sure hope that's not right.
By this logic, if Dell sold 999,999 machines with Linux and only 1 with Windows (I know), then Microsoft would get the equivalent of 1 million machine's Windows licensing fee from Dell. Crazy.
Dell preinstallation is not great (Score:3)
So even if you get it preinstalled, odds are you'll want to redo it yourself. At least you'll know that it can be made to work, and there's only you to blame if it doesn't... and if you're running Linux, that's the way its meant to be, right?
So think of it as "tested to run Linux."
(*) Ah, a dual Pentium III 550 box, with a GB of RAM - those FFTs really fly now.
Offtopic note: kernel 2.2.5-SMP15 doesn't do too well with the GB of RAM, and it seems to dribble the RAM away to rogue processes until it has a little over 170 MB left. Anyone interested in a remote diagnosis before I blow it away for a new kernel?
Re:Slashdot folks don't want laptop Linux support? (Score:2)
It was "the community" which did the bulk of the work here, not Dell.
"They scream because the machine isn't cheaper with Linux on it, even though the amount of work to be done to get Linux to work decently with laptops is considerable, far more than with desktops . .
If they would publish the specifications to the parts of the laptops, they wouldn't have to do any work, because the linux people would have drivers out before their slow-moving corporate programmers could assign a project number to the job.
" . . . and support costs can be expected to be higher (simply because there are far fewer experts on Linux-laptop issues than for Windows-laptop issues)."
On the other hand, a given linux user is far more likely to also be an "expert" (i.e., not want or need support) than a given windows user.
"Second, the community screams because support for all platforms isn't instantly available, even though many laptop components don't have Linux drivers present."
While I shouldn't speak for the rest of the community, what burns me is that they use those laptop components which have secret specifications; this is what generates the lack of linux drivers, not the lack of effort on linux programmers or lack of investment on the part of the manufacturers.
"So, it would appear that neither profit nor good will is available by doing Linux support for laptops. The users don't want to pay for it, and they'll hate you anyway."
Actually, I hope that is part of the lesson any other OEMs take away from this. Because I don't what their "support". I'm not interested in buying a computer which reverts into a silicon-and-plastic doorstop every time I don't get "support". I am interested in buying a computer *and never talking to the seller again*. To do that I need the specifications to all hardware to be published, so I or others can write drivers to use them how we please.
I don't want Dell to "support" my laptop or my desktop (I'm typing on a Dell Dimension XPS T450, on which I have never managed to get the sound card working, because it uses some built-in-to-the-motherboard non-published specs piece of shit). I just want them to sell a piece of hardware fully described so I know what I am getting and I can use it.
Re:I'm not that impressed. (Score:4)
Maybe preinstalled desktops aren't very cool, but preinstalled laptops mean that you don't have to go scouring web sites and ftp sites for clues on how to get everything to work. It means that odds are, all the hardware will work! This _is_ a leap ahead.
Re:Quality? (Score:2)
First the laptops arrived several weeks behind schedule, then about 20% of them were missing a relatively important piece of software that's used locally, then 4 or 5 of them were apparently set to 800x600 resolution at the factory. (They all had 1024x768 LCD screens, so those looked extraordinarily bad.) I heard a fair number of horror stories from students who dealt with Dell's Friendly Helpful Tech Support, too.
Remember, this was using an OS that Dell is experienced with and knows well. Maybe they've gotten their act together in the intervening 5 months...
Re:What extra $100 (Score:3)
They don't pay MS $100/machine for WinXX, but Win XX costs them more than they pay MS. When an OEM licenses WinXX from MS, the OEM assumes all support costs (at least, at the lowest pricing levels they do). Dell takes their support costs for WinXX and averages that over all the systems that have WinXX preloaded. The discount you saw reflected both the licensing cost and the average support cost.
Interesting tidbit - the profit margin on PCs is so slim that the average technical support incident for a consumer-level system will wipe out the profit for that system.
I still have 486 (Score:2)
And so do many other people. Now, I don't use it as my workstation -- it is primarily an IP masq gateway for LAN, and also a small-scale www/ftp/mail/samba server, running Debian. The hadrware is AMD 486dx4-100, 32MB RAM, 1.2 Gig HD. It does the job very nicely. In fact it is actually over-powered for what it does. I am not about to get rid of it as it is still a very nice machine.
Admittedly, my workstation is AMD k6/2-300 and I am running Mandrake on it which does appear to be noticeably faster then any other distro I tried. Although most of the performance gain comes from GUI stuff which is quite bloated (*ghm* KDE) -- pentium optimizations sure make a difference there. The majority of the daemons though are rather light weight so the pentium optimization would not make that much of a difference.
So, what I'm saying is that pentium optimizations are indeed very nice, but
1) you cannot just obsolete 486 and 386 -- they are still being used and they might even live for the next 10 years in embedded devices -- who knows?
2) I don't believe the difference in performance of the majority of the daemons would be anywhere near as dramatic as that of KDE. And besides, when it comes to servers you want to make 100% sure they are reliable. 99% is not good enough (ok, now I'm being paranoid, but hey -- only the paranoid survive
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Re:$upport Co$ts ?? (Score:2)
However I've another machine we're trying to get Outlook on and it repeated says "There's been a problem that requires you to reboot your PC" - reboot and it says the same thing - which to me says, uh-oh, both the registry AND it's backup are corrupted. Now THATS a support cost in that I'm going to have to spend hours fumbling around in the undocumented bowels of msft, perhaps reinstall everything, to fix. Those are the guys who regularly get dinged for all the "hidden cost of ownership" once you take the bait, at least to those of us who aren't blinded by BS.
Zen Master Jack
Not Responsible for Errors in Other Companies Property
And a DVD drive... (Score:2)
Re:It's still not so easy. (Score:2)
site doesn't support choosing Linux."
If you go in through the "Small Business" area, you can order it via the web. At least, I can configure it and get a price. I havn't hit the "purchase" button yet.
"2. They won't do a dual boot setup. "
That is a bummer, but at least the fact that they support Linux gives me confidence that I could install a dual-boot system without too much grief.
Jonathan