TurboLinux & Linksys Announce Bundling Deal 73
Sam writes, "TurboLinux, Inc. announced today an agreement with Linksys to bundle TurboLinux in shipments of Linksys 10/100 Ethernet products sold in North America. The special bundling will be included in popular small and medium business solutions such as 10/100 hubs and switches, routers, NIC and PC cards.
The agreement, projected by the companies to include more than 1.2 million product shipments over the next 12 months, will give Linksys customers TurboLinux operating system solutions with selected purchases of Linksys products. Source: Electic Tech "
The Unbearable Lightness of CDs (Score:1)
Bonus!
Plus, I can use more for my costume for Burning Man [burningman.com]...
Re:Oops (Score:2)
What is TurboLinux anyway? (Score:2)
I got a free Turbo 4.0 with vol2 of Linux Mag I think. Looked like RH with a few extra tweaks and apps.
I know they have been arround awhile but they seem to be marketing their products like the Old Gaurd.
Check out their download page [turbolinux.com]. Care to register first? If that doesn't discourage you how about skipping strait to the "download/install" [turbolinux.com] page where you have two options:
There are two primary ways to download and install TurboLinux:
1). FTP Install
2). Local Hard Drive Install
Not exactly encouraging to the 99.9% of potential users who have at best a 56K connection and maybe little experience installing Linux. And if you try to go to ftp.turbolinux.com [turbolinux.com] to download the entire distro you get a dead link.
Re:Bundling Linux is a Good Thing(tm) (Score:1)
Next I bought the Complete Idiot's book by Ricart which came with Calera 1.3. A few month's later I was running a samba server in a MCSE class. If it wasn't for that RedHat CD laying in a pile of other CD's on a desk in a computer lab I'd probably be just another M$ clone. Yeah, I bought Linksys because it said Linux compatible, and I'm running two triple boot boxes at home with it.
If it had just said it was the NE2000 driver on the box the install would have been a breeze. I have 98 & NT installed because I get paid to support them. I use Linux exclusively for my own work/play except for my cheapo digital camera. Any one know of a driver for Largan Mini 350?
Isaac Newton: "If I have seen farther than other men it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants."
Bill Gates: "If I have made more money than other men it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants while my legal team imprisoned and castrated them."
Re:Ethernet Cards with No Windows Drivers. (Score:1)
How about Two Intel 10/100+ Mngmnt Pro's for $39? (Score:1)
Re:Ethernet Cards with No Windows Drivers. (Score:1)
Linksys vs. Netgear vs. others (Score:1)
Netgear's PCMCIA card also doesn't work out of the box, but at least I managed to talk to a support person who sounded like he had some idea what's going on.
Today, I'm going back to CompUSA to return Linksys card and give a shot to a really expensive one, made by a company with a '3' in it's name.
Got one at CompUSA .... (Score:1)
However mine had no instructions on the box or on an internal manual - I was doing an install on a headless system - no xwindows and all the docs were PDFs (grrrr) .... took me forever to figure out which linux driver to build into the kernel (hint - ignore the SMC drivers and use the RT8139 instead - this is for an SMC 'ezcard' model 1211TX
Re:Bundling Linux is a Good Thing(tm) (Score:1)
Not yet, anyway...
Linksys doesn't suck. Much. (Score:1)
A kernel patch and a PCMCIA update later, it did, in fact get automatically detected and configured, but still.
Regardless, now that that particular card is showing signs of dead-ness, methinks I'll be purchacing from Linksys again, because I can't afford a WaveLAN. :(
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Re:Is this new? (Score:1)
Re:I am not an intellectual! [fair enough] (Score:1)
Linksys + Linux = Good (Score:2)
As for them teaming up with linux that's great maybe they could make they're own specific drivers even though the NE2000 driver works just fine for both the D-Link and the Linksys.
Since Turbo comes packaged with Samba this should be a win win situation. Home network with a good network and a great operating system
Is this new? (Score:1)
I was looking around in CompUSA a few weeks ago and saw a LinkSys NIC box that mentioned that TurboLinux was bundled... I didn't get it so I can't say whether it was correct or not, so either they messed up and put the sticker on boxes too early or the announcement is a little late.
Interesting... (Score:2)
Yeah, I thought so....
On the other hand, this form of mass-distribution (ala AOL floppy disks) should have some impact on TurboLinuxs market share, if not on Linux as a whole.
Well... (Score:2)
Would you like a free AOL CD with that? (Score:2)
But I find myself wondering how many folks just toss free CDs that are included with products because of the AOL CD-with-everything phenomenon. Some kind of promotional CD comes with almost everything nowadays.
What will differentiate this CD from the junk CDs (like AOL) that permeate the industry?
Ooh-rah (Score:1)
The content! (Score:1)
Think of the target, it'll be sys admins who get these cd's, and maybe they'll try it out on an extra pc they have laying around, then love it, and move their whole company over to it, then go enjoy a pudding pop.
Think of all the money the Jello (tm) company can make from this!
Hello, welcome to ICQ!
Nice.... (Score:1)
Anybody have any good comments on the Netgear 10/100 PCI card?
Up, Down, or Same? (Score:4)
A standard NE2000 NIC card runs about $15. TurboLinux 6.0 runs $19.99. I don't mind buying NIC cards because they're cheap. If the price stays the same then consumers would be happy, but A) Linksys has no incentive to bundle, and B) TurboLinux makes no money from the bundle. If the price goes up, consumers will buy other cards (Like D-Link, which I have had good luck with) because they're still hovering around the $12-$15 price range.
But if the price goes up, what's the difference between buying a Linksys Card with TurboLinux bundled, or buy a different card and TurboLinux seperately....other than conveniance?
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
And we should care because... (Score:3)
From a "cool stuff" stance... well, okay, maybe.
Re: the win drivers are on SMC's TurboLinux CD (Score:2)
Re:Linksys + Linux = Good (Score:2)
Ummmm, you must have a really old LinkSys card. Every LinkSys card I've ever purchased have been software configurable as well. Even the old 10mbs combo card I thats at least 5 or 6 years old is software configurable.
Personally, for 10/100 cards, I like the 3COM 905 cards myself, as these cards are parallel tasking.
Re:Would you like a free AOL CD with that? (Score:1)
Uhh, yeah, and look where those junk CD's got AOL. Even if only a small percentage of people who pick up a CD in a cerial box install the contents... Well you see where we're going with this... AOL certainly didn't gain it's position by providing the most reliable service.
Re:But... (Score:1)
Plus, people who are already linux users might choose Turbo from among the masses just because they happen to have seen them around on the CD. That's why Cheerios advertises, not to compel people to shell out for the cereal right then, but to get them to think twice when they pass up Cheerios on the cereal aisle.
AOL established themselves by making it as easy as possible to get started (note that long-term ease of use isn't quite as important to this equation because of how hard it is to change ISP's, move home pages, etc. for the newbie). They even made it free to get started, for pete's sake. Their ads were so ubiquitous that people began to think of them as the Internet. Recall Scary Spice's "I want an Internet. Can I have that one?"
Walt
Re:Bundling Linux is a Good Thing(tm) (Score:1)
This is the biggest PITA, even for us experienced old-timers. Not sure what it can do for them. Afraid of the learning curve. Don't want to spend $$$ on an unknown OS.
Re:Would you like a free AOL CD with that? (Score:1)
Q: Where do you want to go today?
[OT] Re:Nice.... (Score:1)
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Re:And the point is .... (Score:1)
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Wow.... (Score:1)
Sheer volume (Score:2)
The TurboLinux approach is to only send their stuff to their target market - small businesses who are networked. Of course, it's still a bit much, and I think that it would be a good idea TurboLinux includes an online registration system in their install program not only to get some marketing research data (just who
Ethernet Cards with No Windows Drivers. (Score:4)
Joseph Elwell.
TurboLinux (Score:1)
And the point is .... (Score:2)
I guess I could use some new coasters. I don't really see how this is going to be effective for anyone invovled.
Not the most brilliant move I've seen this week.
Interesting, but not new. (Score:2)
For what it's worth, the card cost $15, and there was a $29 TurboLinux about an aisle away at the CompUSA. I still like my Debian & FreeBSD, but it was a neat gimmick. And since the DE4x5 chipset wasn't listed on the box, it was a convincing cue that there'd be driver support for the card.
But... (Score:2)
Also, I like seeing the variety of distros doing these things. I'd rather not see any one distro capture the entire market.
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Re:Would you like a free AOL CD with that? (Score:1)
I really don't mind having a few spare distros since I consider myself still "distro shopping".
IMO Linux CDs will never be like AOL CDs because of the content and the flavors. I would not mind having a CD for ever distro!
Oh, and AOL is shitty buggy software that you eventually must pay for too...
Re:Ethernet Cards with No Windows Drivers. (Score:2)
I'm sorry to say that I don't remember the name of the directory, but it was in the root of the CD and not too hard to figure out (I think). I did this quite a while ago (5 months? Not sure.)
I am not responsible for the boxes, though. Sorry.
Other bundles? (Score:1)
Bundling and product tying (Score:1)
Re:Ethernet Cards with No Windows Drivers. (Score:1)
I'm taking a great liking to it. Although I don't really need TurboLinux, it's a nice thing to have. What got me was the included CAT5 cable, something I haven't found included with most of the cheaper cards. With NE2000, you get a tenth of the performance at a cheap price that'll work almost universally--it's a great deal in my mind. For now, I'm recommending the SMC cards to anyone who can get them, even without the driver disks.
Re:Well... (Score:1)
Re:I like this... (Score:2)
Re:And the point is .... (Score:1)
Next 2 months at McDonalds: A different flavor of Linux every week! Collect all eight!!!
Welcome to Slashdot. Please do not feed the trolls.
Re:Would you like a free AOL CD with that? (Score:1)
Bundling Linux is a Good Thing(tm) (Score:5)
How can anyone complain about bundling Linux with hardware? Many people that I know don't run Linux because they've:
Bundling Linux with a NIC or LAN-in-a-Box package is great. Not only do you get hardware that will run on Linux, you get the OS as well. This will undoubtedly increase Linux's presence in the desktop and server market.
People are comparing AOL's CD distribution scheme with the Linux OS bundles. I view this opinion as flawed. Linux bundles are not mailed to every household, they are not included in most new PC purchases, etc. Additionally, I'm certain that the AOL CD marketing scheme has been wildly successfull. Otherwise, AOL would have stopped long ago since it does cost money to press and disseminate the CD's.
In closing, let me state that the Linux bundles hurt no one and may introduce people to Linux. In other words, it's a Good Thing(tm).
"Me, Myself, and I" -- De La Soul
Re:Is this new? (Score:1)
I like this... (Score:2)
Secondly, something I noticed at the Linux Demo Day we just had - people were amazed that we were giving them a complete operating system for free. They were walking out of the Microsoft show into the throng of friendly smiling Linux folks. They had just been told that they were going to have to pony up $500 for a buggy as hell piece of software, and here we were handing out a very worthy competitor. Hell, a lot of people even came to the show just so they could get a CD which they read about in the Kansas City Star.
People want to try Linux. Will they keep using it? I don't know. I hope they do, and I am going to do my best to see that they are happy running it and will be there to answer their questions. I am sure they will enjoy it. Linksys is helping to spread the word here. Sure, people are going to mess up their systems, but to that I say "big deal!" I can't even begin to tell you the number of times I have messed up my system because I did something stupid and boneheaded. But another way to look at it is this... When I ran Windows I would reinstall the OS every 6 months. After six months the system would come to a crawl. That is part of my normal MO here at work too - reinstall it at least 2 times a year on every desktop. If you don't you are asking for trouble from all the absolute crap that gets in there and clogs it up.