Xandros 1.0 320
Mr. Smoove writes "Despite the quick-off-the-mark review from Newsforge this morning, the Xandros 1.0 desktop is finally here! No free download so you'll have to shell out US$99 for it but you do get an enhanced (?) version of KDE 2.2 and built-in Cross-Over Plugin and Office! Finally a decent challenger to Lycoris and also what Lindows should have been..." There's also an interview with a Xandros executive.
damn it....... (Score:2, Interesting)
and $99 for an unprooven peice of software....nope, Im not paying.
Devil's Advocate post... (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, if Xandros is trying to pull the same Lindows crap and charge $99/year "subscription"...then screw that, I'll wait for Debian to put out 3.0 with the Progeny installer.
Re:damn it....... (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, Xandros is just the new version of Corel's Linux. Corel also has part ownership in Xandros.
Its definately not the OS you stick on your webserver... its not meant to be. Its a desktop distro that is supposedly very good at what it does. I sure wouldn't pay that kind of money for it, but for those who are interested in Linux but don't know where to begin, it might be a good thing.
I know a few people who really honestly loved Corel's distro and can't seem to get their minds around any of the others, so for them its probably a no-brainer.
Re:damn it....... (Score:2, Informative)
That looks like where the cash comes in, but do you really need it. OpenOffice is a great replacement for CrossOver Office, and Xine is a great replacement for CrossOver Plugins. And then you are getting a KDE desktop that in one revision behind the time.
Re:damn it....... (Score:2)
Viable Alternative? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Viable Alternative? (Score:3, Insightful)
"Unfortunately, in the world of ignorant desktop users, marketing counts for much more than good product. Lindows is selling pre-installed on computers in multiple countries already. Xandros? The only reason I've heard of it is because I read geek sites like Newsforge."
Re:Viable Alternative? (Score:5, Interesting)
Try this:
Let me tell you: Internet Explorer 5.5 runs beautifully in Xandros. I've used Crossover to install Explorer on Mandrake and SuSE, with only partial success. But everything about Explorer is right this time: the fonts, the javascript, the layouts, the speed -- everything.
Unless you think the reviewer is lying, this may indicate that this particular distribution did it right with the MS compatibility. This is a big deal, if you like to use the MS stuff.
Re:Viable Alternative? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Viable Alternative? (Score:3, Funny)
This could revolutionise the browser experience. Features available in IE 5.5:
Wooo!
Big mistake (Score:5, Insightful)
Big, big mistake. In fact, if they don't provide some kind of live-cd, ala SuSE, they'll completely flop. It's that simple. No one will pay for an OS that they haven't used at a friends house or can freely try it out on their own, especially when the packages are so out-of-date (all these "Windows-killers" seem to use that same outdated version of KDE). Check out the Xandros page at distrowatch [distrowatch.com] and see for yourself.
LindowsOS saved itself by coming pre-installed on WalMart PC's--Xandros will have to try and pull some similar maneuvre. As I see it, there's no way in hell other *NIX users will pay for something they already have, and Windows users are skeptical of change as is ("You mean to tell me they're making this for free?" usually sets them off).
If Xandros were the best desktop distro ever, it wouldn't matter if they couldn't get people to try it, and then buy it. I hope they do in the future, because I'm actually interested in this.
Re:Big mistake (Score:2)
Hm.. well.. what about MacOSX and all the new developers, admins and 'high end people' going to it? No, not all of them are, all of the ones who have
Re:Big mistake (Score:2)
back in the day, MS had to give IBM DOS toplay around with and test before they licensed it.
apple gave test computers to schools.
in the begining, giving stuff away is part of how you build your credibility.
Re:Big mistake (Score:2)
So you see, downloading for free is only one venue out of many that can be tried.
Re:Big mistake (Score:2, Interesting)
Maybe once I'm a 1337 linux d00d then I'll just download and build my own linux but for now linux is hard (a lot of pride-swallowing as I wallow around practically like I've never seen a computer before, taking a half hour to figure out that I can pipe things to grep (still can't write regular expressions) and a couple hours until I finally got rc.d). Anything that made linux more useful, more quickly, is great.
Re:Big mistake (Score:2)
Re:Big mistake (Score:3, Insightful)
However, even without this, I buy my big upgrades. I am going from SuSE 8.0 to Redhat 8.0 and I plan to buy the CDs for both convience and to support the research and time Redhat contributes through its employees to so many projects.
Redhat is not saintly corp or anything. For example, I would love to see them devote some people full-time to a couple of major projects that need resources. However, any business as a corporation is founded for profit. Still it is the corporation that pays the bills for a lot of good folks putting in time on so many projects.
_______________________________________________
Re:Big mistake (Score:2)
Crossover is also already established. A trial without Crossover could work.
At any rate, Xandros has given up a once-in-a-corporate-lifetime opportinity to quickly get a user base. Now it will be significantly harder to convince potential customers of their merit--word-of-mouth is arguably the most important advertising method in a new product's life.
Re:Big mistake (Score:2)
Agreed. Why should I bother buying a copy, if I'm a corporate user, when I can demo Linux for free?
If they're not expecting end-user sales, why not make a personal edition available (for $50 or free, either like SuSE's live demo, or totally free), without the Codeweaver plugins and without a couple of other corp-centric features? That way it'll get mindshare, and when my boss (hi!) asks me which Linux we want to standardize on, I can say Xandros.
That being said, best of luck to them - the product should rock. I used CLOS1 for a year and a half, and loved it. It actually put me onto Debian, although I still miss some of the features of CLOS.
For the end user, Xandros should rule. I just wish I could find out without ponying up $100.
Re:Big mistake (Score:5, Insightful)
For a corporation to even consider it, they want to know what others' reactions are. Period. No IT manager will even come close to thinking about a product unless people start talking about it. How will that come about? By developing a client base.
Again, companies know there are ways to cut corners, especially in their OS licensing budget. What stops them from dabbling in the multitudes of different alternatives? Only a few gain any acceptance. Xandros must gain acceptance with a small client base, and therefore generate hype--people need to be talking about Xandros for it to even be considered. A huge cut in costs plus a giant headache and, in the long run, more expenses is not what they want. Risk must be minimized even to get a boss to shell out 100$ and a free computer to try it out on. Considering alternatives itself in a costly process; they're going to weed out the 90% of options that simply will not work before they even install them. If no one knows what Xandros is or whether or not it is a viable solution, it will get tossed.
Sure.
Re:Big mistake (Score:2)
a much larger cost savings, better support base available (A $10,000.00 a year support contract with redhat will get your entire site covered with your IT department.)
so what is your point again? why should I pat $99.00 a pop for something that I can get for a one time purchase of $99.00 and copy the ever living hell out of it legally.....
redhat is the only way man... all these others are just a bad joke.
Just to get this over with: (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, it is legal to make a GPLed project only available for pay.
The fact a product is GPLed means basically two things:
If you give someone a copy of the product, they are allowed to give it away to anyone they like, and you cannot stop them.
That's ALL. There. It's said. Now you don't have to complain about the $99 thing, right? Becuase you all get it now. So shut up. There's a nice FAQ here [gnu.org] if you're still confused.
I'm too late by now, aren't i?
Re:Just to get this over with: (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just to get this over with: (Score:3, Informative)
I know lots of folks here disagree with that, but if you want people to respect the GPL you must respect the licensing of the software you use.
crawling already (Score:4, Informative)
Don't forget the roots, either: http://linux.corel.com/
Not the kitchen sink (Score:5, Insightful)
Thank god. This is something I wish more distros would do. Most seem to think that if I get eight different crappy ways to set up PPP, I'll be happy.
KDE 2.2 (Score:2, Interesting)
It just seems rather a damper on the whole experience of using Linux on the desktop. Part of the fun for me was finding and playing around with the various themes, most of which are kde3 oriented now. I'd find it rather annoying to shell out that much money only to find that my system was uglier than someone who'd just downloaded theirs from the internet.
Re:KDE 2.2 (Score:2)
So, contrary to what most people here are saying, you do have the option to use KDE 3. Xandros is not really aimed at something for the majority of
Xandros appear to be focussing on a very particular market segment and fulfilling the needs of that market as well as they can. Whether it will work or not, i don't know, nobody does, but I think many are missing the bigger picture and bashing Xandros because it isn't what they need.
As a final note, one things that this venture will definitely do is improve Linux's stance in the more general business world. They're rolling back all there modifications to KDE et al (as they have to do) into the main trees. Doesn't this really show off one of the things that is good about these Licenses and the open-source and Linux world in general. Someone sees a market, wants to try to exploit it, works out a business model to attempt to do this, takes the 'raw-materials' available, improves them and has to give them back, therefore benefitting the community. Agree with their business model, idea, product, etc or not, it certainly shows the community is alive and working.
Re:KDE 2.2 (Score:3, Insightful)
Xandros is based on Debian, which is designed and developed to be a production system. As such, it often lacks the "latest-and-greatest bleeding edge toys", sacrificing newness in favor of tried-and-true KNOWN rock-solid stability. In a corporate environment, most managers would avoid EVER upgrading software if they could, which is why there was so much fear and uncertainty about Y2K.
Again, corporate managers would really prefer to specify a mandatory standard for desktop appearance that applied company-wide. Your "half the fun" is ALL of there problem when they have to bring in a temp to cover for the receptionist or a secretary and the poor temp's eyes are hemorrhaging before noon because of some atrocious color scheme the regular employee "designed" to "improve" the appearance of their workstation. Computers in the corporate environment are supposed to be tools, not toys.
Xandros is going to have a tough go of it. They are taking on Microsoft head-on in a market that MSFT deems critical. The road will be long bumpy and dusty. I truly hope that they have the fortitude to stay the course. I don't think this distro is the Windows-killer, but It does seem to be well thought-out and put together.
Uh no. (Score:3, Interesting)
Next was the license agreement. It was one of those (quickly-becoming typical) EULAS that mention the GPL stuff and then the proprietary stuff. Interesting about this license: There was no license to read BEFORE I opened the box, no shrink wrap or seal on the package, and yet the final paragraph of the EULA states that if I don't agree with the license and haven't broken the seal on the software I can return it for a refund. Oops! Too late. Of course, this is a review copy -- perhaps yours will be shrink-wrapped with a copy of the agreement on the outside.
Sure the Mac OS theme is intriguing, but I can get my mac jollies out using Basillisk. And 99 bucks for what? Lindows with a different name? Let me download it, and we'll see. Frankly, I'm happy with my win98. When I can run Adobe software, Acid & Soundforge on linux, I'll switch. Until then, OpenBeos gets my vote for 'alternative OS'.
Re:Uh no. (Score:2)
I notice you didn't mention Adobe.
Seriously, if linux ran Photoshop, InDesign, ect. there'd be a hell of a lot more linux users. Which equals more drivers, more support, more usabillity, more eyes on code(bugfixes) and basically more software in general. Which equals better linux.
I could give a rat's ass, myself. What I have works. When I need to change (licencing, *forced upgrade*, end of support, blahblahblah) I will.
Until then ACs can offer these insightful comments, and linux will remain second bannana to Windows, OS X and whatever else that is usable to creative professionals. See Windows and OS X for color management, support for professional audio, and point-and-shoot printing.
What a predicament, indeed.
Or you could just... (Score:4, Insightful)
Sorry, but what is the point in Xandros, Lindows, Lycoris, etc?
Infact, what is the point in the millions of distros we have now, (apart from special distros for non X86 hardware, and specialised applications)?
If you're a corporate user, use Redhat
If you're an ordinary user migrating from Windows, use Mandrake, or Redhat
If you're an average geek, use Debian
If you've already got *nix experience, use Slackware
They are all freely downloadable, (although I suggest buying an official disk set - it's usually cheap anyway, and it does help the distros to keep funding themselves).
I know this could be interpreted as a troll, but it's not meant to be. We don't need 'united Linux', we don't need a lot of distributions pretending to be Windows. All that does is to confuse the end user.
When people ask me why they should switch to Linux from Windows, I usually ask them, 'Well, does Windows do everything perfectly that you want it to', 'Yes!', they usually say. I tell them to stick with Windows until they can think of something about it that they don't like. Usually within about 10 seconds they think of something. Then I show them a Linux machine, and tell them that the reason it's better, is because it's nothing like Windows. If they want to benefit from Linux's superiority, they need to invest time to learn it properly. Otherwise, they're better off just putting up with their current in-adequate system.
Re:Or you could just... (Score:3, Insightful)
Lindows, Xandros, and Lycoris are trying to make this migration much easier. In particular, the file management in Linux tends to be a bit difficult to grasp for Windows users (root directory? huh?), so I think Xandros is very smart to work on improving this area. Also, finding/installing new programs tends to be a little trickier than it should be, and I think Lindows is working hard in this area.
The bottom line, though, is "why complain?". There is a hole in Linux that needs to be filled, and there are a bunch of companies trying to fill that hole. For now, more is better, so we the users can benefit from the progress that these companies make. I agree that not all will survive, but I definitely wouldn't be surprised to see one of these newer distros end up threatening the big boys, as long as they play their cards right.
Re:Or you could just... (Score:2)
Why is that better? If you told me that you'd get nothing but a blank stare. Would you elaborate a bit more? How's it nothing like Windows? It's an OS right? People can 'benefit from Linux's superiority' without the time investment. They can benefit immediately just be installing it. Not everyone needs to know how to edit smb.conf in order to make a shared resource, distros like Xandros make sure of that. That's the point of all of these Windows mimics. Make it easy. When they switch they can take it as far as they want; but why not make it easy for them to run Quicken, M$ Office, Lotus Notes and Quicktime Plugin. Xandros is designed for people who will never need to configure a webserver or ldap. It's designed to let them use their computer, in the way they want, and in a way that's familiar/easy. That's it. Oh, and on the RedHat front, I use it everyday, along with several other distros; but RedHat is the easiest way to lose new users to dependency hell. Why RedHat doesn't incorporate urpmi into the distro baffles me. I suppose it's a marketting decision to not give any sort of a nod to Mandrake, but I digress.
Enhanced KDE 2.2? I have that! (Score:2)
They gotta have done a whole lot of revamping KDE 2.2 to make it worth switching to it instead of KDE 3.1 (which will be out shortly).
Not that 2.2 is bad mind you...but the UI has made a lot of progress since 2.x....
This is always a problem with Open Source software and for-pay software: Open Source is developped too fast to compete with; the for-pay software is often too much behind to really take on..
Some people might also read this as 'Open source software never has stable (enough) API's because it's developped and changed all the time', which is also partly true, and is a problem in some cases.
Re:Enhanced KDE 2.2? I have that! (Score:3, Insightful)
While I'm certainly a big KDE3 fan, let's be honest (at the risk of being modded down as flamebait). Can you actually list offhand all the progress that KDE3 has over KDE2?
Okay, so it has a few nicer-looking themes, but let's think more about substance - Xandros isn't going for all-out flash. KDE3's got a better version of Konqueror, but that's not so important given that most Linux desktops use Mozilla. KDE3 has better printer support and an improved file manager, but Xandros has already heavily modified the file manager anyway, and it's not hard to imagine them including a printer setup wizard. Improvements to KOffice are kind of irrelevant given that this comes with CrossOver Office. Multimedia stuff (Noatun, etc.) - not important, there are non-KDE apps that can do much better still. Basically all that it's missing is a bit of a speed boost and some changes to KDE-PIM.
Just to clarify, I'm not saying that KDE2 is better in any way, just that if Xandros has already put this much work into KDE2 to improve it, then it's not so bad that they're sticking with it rather than going with a more vanilla version of KDE3.
Re:Enhanced KDE 2.2? I have that! (Score:2, Informative)
On top of that KDE 3.1 is quite a bit faster (esp. compiled with GCC 3.2, which won't work with 2.2 I guess, but am not sure about that).
I agree that KOFfice is indeed kinda irrelevant, as is noatun (XMMS is much better) and most other kdemultimedia apps.
For companies it might actually make sense, if it runs MS Office really good and opens and writes MS Word docs without a hitch...you wouldn't care about the greatest themes and whatnot, in that case (as a company).
So yeah, you actually have a point, but as for me personally, I'm not going to switch back my desktop OS from KDE 3.x to 2.something. So it'll have to be big companies that buy their OS - which I seriously doubt is gonna happen (a very clear explanation why not is on top of this thread if you sort on highest score).
Re:Enhanced KDE 2.2? I have that! (Score:2)
Uh, last time I checked, Konqueror _was_ KDE's file manager. It's a comprehensive file manager, that can also handle network protocols, which lets it act like a web browser, and ftp browser, as well as local file management.
Re:Enhanced KDE 2.2? I have that! (Score:3, Insightful)
At least open source projects are willing to break compatibility for the sake of better designs. The APIs become more and more stable as projects mature.
No downloads? Get over it! (Score:5, Insightful)
As for using KDE 2.2, do you think maybe the emphasis is on stability, not having the newest stuff? Doesn't Debian do the same thing too? And if you don't like the version Debian stable uses, you can upgrade. Guess what, you can upgrade Xandros too.
I await -1 troll (called posters hypocrites, mentioned Apple in non reverential tone), but I just can't get over the whining!
Re:No downloads? Get over it! (Score:2)
That was a nice analogy if I do say so myself
Re:No downloads? Get over it! (Score:2)
I'm sorry, but having used both, I can say that KDE3 cannot even approach Aqua's usability, speed, or elegance. I love linux, and especially KDE, but don't try and kid yourself that you have a UI that even comes close to Aqua. I can make a web page that looks like the OS X dock, but that doesn't mean I've evaluated it.
Re:No downloads? Get over it! (Score:2)
Your comparison to MacOSX is totally flawed. For one thing, OS X had an IMMENSE amount of hype, review, advertising, and buzz before it was released. I already knew what it was going to be like long before it came out.
Furthermore, Apple has an awesome reputation. Anything they put out is going to have a clean interface, be easy to use, and when they say it's going to be all that and a bag of chips, I can believe it.
Who are these Xandros guys? Why should I trust them? I've had experience with macs for the last 14 years. I've never touched a machine with Xandros on it.
When I can use Xandros in my public library, in my schools, and at a few of my friends' houses, then I'll buy it for myself without a trial version. Until then... forget it.
Re:No downloads? Get over it!-Ditto poster. (Score:2)
KDE 3 is included (Score:5, Informative)
"The shipping version of Xandros has two CDs. One is the main desktop that we think is good enough and stable enough, and easy enough for people to use. The second CD is basically KDE 3, so the bleeding edge users can try it out to see what the fuss is all about. We are trying to satisfy both worlds, as opposed to just satisfying the bleeding edge.
but is the GPL source available? (Score:2)
Re:but is the GPL source available? (Score:2)
The GPL doesn't stipulate this at all.
If I made a GNU tar derivation called faulTAR, I could sell the binary for $4,000. I wouldn't have to give anyone the source except for people who bought the binary. Even then, I don't have to make it available online (in fact, this is the secondary method), but only available by post mail on request.
Devil's Advocate time... (Score:5, Insightful)
These guys are off on the right foot. They don't want
Why? Simple. The file manager [xandros.com] is brilliant in terms of what it does, how it looks, and how it can be incorporated with existing machines, and especially, domains. You ever wonder what Linux has been missing? Well, this is it.
Does anyone else here, especially those bitching the loudest, actually administer users? I don't know about you, but any tiny change will cause an uproar. A rollout of Mandrake, Redhat, or SuSE would cause numerous heart attacks where I work, with users complaining about everything from clutter in the menus (why are there 4 different configuration menus in Redhat? No one's really sure...) to lack of a decent resolution changer, something Xandros already has. Training is a big issue in large companies, and the more you can port from Windows to Xandros, the easier (and more compelling) a choice it will be.
OpenOffice should save companies lots of cash. It's compatible with Office 97->XP docs, and the savings on the lack of licensing on that product alone will be worth raising an eyebrow for the upper execs. Those who still need it for Outlook, Powerpoint and/or Access can keep their copies at little to no cost of what businesses are paying now, or simply buy the products seprately instead of the whole office suite. The only thing needed now is a true, open source Exchange-connecting email client (I know Evolution can use the calendars, but it costs $70 and I love Linux because 95% of it is free) and then they'll really be in high cotton.
I know everyone's balking about the cost, the GPL source tinkering, and the rest, but from a sys admin's POV, this OS has done more in one release than Redhat did in five.
Re:Devil's Advocate time... (Score:5, Interesting)
Supporting users is easy in the switch from win** to linux, IF your management has the balls to do it and your IT depratment is willing to stand behind their decisions.
Re:Devil's Advocate time... (Score:3, Interesting)
Why the hell should users have access to any configuration items? These are the company computers. The company is the one to pay for your changes to the system. The company is the one who pays to settle with the EEOC over your 'bikini babes screensaver'. If it weren't for licensing costs, we'd be all over Citrix. As it is, I can swap any two machines in our network (only about 40 terminals) and nobody is the wiser.
We have about 90% employees who made it out of high school. (The other ten percent are physicians and three others, including myself). We switched from a minicomputer with dumb terminals (some bastard vt100 rig) to Windows NT. Guess what? No problems. Users didn't have access to CD's, minesweeper, solitaire, control panels, floppy drive, etc. There is a network share in the off chance they need to save something. We spent one month training. And had almost no problems.
Re:Devil's Advocate time... (Score:2)
Also, there's no comment about the results of using apt-get on the debian site against a Xandros install.
This may be the best thing for a slice of the market, but how will they ever find out? And if they've already gambled on Lindows, will they be willing to gamble again (it appears to be aimed at the same market slice).
Re:Devil's Advocate time... (Score:2, Informative)
Does anyone else here, especially those bitching the loudest, actually administer users? I don't know about you, but any tiny change will cause an uproar. A rollout of Mandrake, Redhat, or SuSE would cause numerous heart attacks where I work,
FYI, Mandrake 9.0 installation allows you to join a windows domain. After installation, any domain user will be able to log into the machine.
Then, fire up konqueror, hit the services button, and double click the Network browser, and you will be able to browse Windows/samba shares, FTP servers, web servers, and with KDE3.1, ssh servers (via kio_fish).
The only thing needed now is a true, open source Exchange-connecting email client
Await next KDE release
I know everyone's balking about the cost, the GPL source tinkering, and the rest, but from a sys admin's POV, this OS has done more in one release than Redhat did in five.
Off the backs of all the other distros, contributing none of their stuff back to the community (ever wonder how they do the windows domain thing?, they use winbind from samba, just like Mandrake).
It's a good thing they are around (provide focus to other distros), but it's not where money should be spent, it would be much better spent on a fully open-source distro.
A Step in the right direction... (Score:4, Interesting)
The only way for Linux to have a shot at becoming a major OS and compete with Microsoft is if it can become dummy-proof and easy to use for the average PC owner.
Xandros may not be that solution, but it's a step in the right directin to bridge the gap between linux and user-friendly needs.
they have a niche... (Score:2, Insightful)
In fact, having a niche is a strength, not a weakness. Think about the rise of the SUV. So many people liked the functionality of a truck (riding high, cargo carrying, not being tied to pavement) but many didn't want to drive a truck, either because of the look or because of less passenger room. The SUV fits the niche between the two nicely, and you can't drive 10 seconds without seeing one. Of course, some will stick with their trucks, others loyally to their cars, but the SUV makers will rake in the dough. What's $99.00 for a functional solution that is taylored to someone's needs.
I think that they will do well with this.
Re:they have a niche... (Score:2)
But aren't SUV's a rich man's Mini Van
Same applies here
Niche's are nice, but masses are better
The problem is.. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is the business model for UnitedLinux, so you best get used to it. The days of freely copying linux CDs are numbered. Per seat licensing, here we come!
Use Gentoo or Debian. It's the only way to protect your freedom.
Re:The problem is.. (Score:2)
Re:The problem is.. (Score:2)
Perhaps I'm paranoid but... (Score:4, Interesting)
Guess who is currently "part owner" of Corel? (MS!)
Is anyone else getting the "extend and embrace" jitters or have I had too much coffee?
Maybe I've been posting here too long.....
Re:Perhaps I'm paranoid but... (Score:3, Funny)
You are on to something....
ok..
so microsoft likes to "embrace and extend", right?
stay with me...
this new Xandros distro(partly owned by Corel, which is partly owned by Microsoft) is meant to
deceive us! how?
look at the word Xandros....
let's just rearrange it a little to : rosandx...
(stay with me....)
ros and x...
don't get it yet?
ros, in business means Return On Sales
x, means extend..
get it yet?
(stay with me...)
microsoft, through corel and xandros will embrace(substitute ros) and eXtend(notice the X!) linux for it's own EVIL PURPOSES!!!!
think of the EVIL!!! embracing and extending linux for it's own return on sales...
PURE EVILLLLLLLLLLL!!
My friend, THANK YOU, so much! You have saved the hundreds or so people who might actually buy Xandros from being unwilling pawns in Microsoft's WORLD DOMINATION DIRECTIVE #4....
nbfn
I've got to go. My tinfoil hat is all crinkled, and you know what that means! (LOL)
Xandros != Corel (Score:3, Informative)
Reasons for adoption (Score:3, Insightful)
It just works.
You can run Office on it, you can run IE on it, you can browse domains. When you're plumbing in corporate IT, the number one selection criterion isn't "is it cool?" and the number two isn't "is it free (as in speech)?". Those criteria actually are: "does it work?" and "is it cheap?". Right behind those comes "can we push it on the users?".
I'm constantly suprised by the software centric outlook of many people here. In a corporate environment, it's not about the software. If you make it all about the software (is it "Free", is it Linux?), congratulations: you're not doing your job properly.
Kde 2.2? Cutting edge stuff here. (Score:2)
Since its a 99$ download just to see, ill wait until someone that DOES spend the money for the binaries, then requests the sources which they then legally can post to the world.
Perhaps its worth the money, but its not worth spending $ just to find out.. Unless there is a unconditional guarantee of course.
So much for avoiding the "Microsoft Tax" (Score:2, Interesting)
So what is it really? (Score:5, Insightful)
What is this distro really? And how does it compare to Corel Linux 1.2/Second Edition? What have they removed/replaced and what have they added? I have established the following so far:
I think Corel Linux was a great start to an OS project. I went far beyond anything any other Linux distro had done to reach out to the non-enthusiasts out there and offer them an alternative to Windows for their x86 computer. It wasn't perfect, it was a work in progress, and I hope that Xandros are actually able to take the ball and run with it as it had promise. The only things I question are the shift away from the home market, the lack of a Free CD and the inclusion of CrossOver Office which diminishes the impact of OpenOffice (Corel supplied a WP8 with their distro and let you choose the office tools you wanted on top of that, i.e. gnumeric or WPO2000 or StarOffice).
Re:So what is it really? (Score:2)
XFree86 4.2.1 is in Debian unstable now.
Don't Complain.. (Score:2)
Re:Someone hook me up (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:5, Insightful)
If someone buys the $99 dollar copy, then posts the binaries and sources on his website for free download, that would be fine, but so far, nobody has done that, so you must pay $99 dollars if you want it. GPL isn't free beer.
Go read the GPL, this question has been answered on
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2, Interesting)
If you take a GPL'd application, make changes to it, and then release/sell it publically, you're under obligation to return those changes to the original creators of the application, no?
In which case, I'd expect Xandros to, at the very least, publish the source code to all the standard applications that they're using that are GPL'd.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2, Informative)
Of course, nothing prevents any of those customers to just set up an ftp site with all the source and binaries for anyone to get.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:3, Informative)
GPL faq says:
Section 2 says that modified versions you distribute must be licensed to all third parties under the GPL. "All third parties" means absolutely everyone--but this does not require you to *do* anything physically for them. It only means they have a license from you, under the GPL, for your version.
Translation: If you take a GPL'd program and make modifications it and release that program you must make the modifications available to anyone who had a license to the original program or any derivative version of it!
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:4, Informative)
Read the FAQ again -- it explicitly says that you do NOT have to do anything. You don't have to make the modifications available to anyone; you just have to permit them to use your modifications, if they should happen to get their hands on them.
The only people who have a *right* under the GPL to get their hands on your modifications are the ones you give the modified software to.
This doesn't matter. Odds are almost 100% that Xandros has already released all their modifications as patches. The main reason they're not giving it away is that they're heavily integrated with non-GPL, and in fact non-free software. They couldn't give that away if they wanted to, and they shouldn't.
-Billy
Indirectly receiving binaries (Score:2)
The only people who have a *right* under the GPL to get their hands on your modifications are the ones you give the modified software to.
And the ones they gave the modified software to, and so on. This is why the GNU GPL requires commercial redistributors to make the source code available "to any third party" if they don't include the source code with the binaries.
Re:Indirectly receiving binaries (Score:2)
Any third party (Score:3, Informative)
No. The ones that receive binaries from the original customers have the right to get the sources from those customers, not from the company that put it out originally.
What? Please back up your position with a citation from the GNU GPL [gnu.org] or the GNU GPL FAQ [gnu.org].
I'll back up my position. From the GPL (my emphasis):
From the GPL FAQ:
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:3, Informative)
1. Everyone who has the binary and is licensed to use it is entitled to the source code(to my understanding excludes some random person stealing the binary).
2. Everyone who had a license to the original work or any derivative works of the original work also has a license for the modified version (even if it is distributed for a 99$ fee - perfectly acceptable).
3. Distributor of modified version to my understanding is not required to provide either the binary or a source to a third party (original version license holder) but if this third party happens to come across the binary somehow they have the same rights as anyone who acquired it directly from the provider of modified version.
4. A third party can acquire a license also if someone who bought the software from you distributes it to them.
5. If a third party has acquired the binary and have a license to use it they can demand the source code and the provider must provide it or they are in violation of gpl.
Now, I wonder what the implications are for a case where a third party original license holder who does not have the modified binary "steals" it from somewhere. Technically it is not even a theft since they were licensed to use the software anyway.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2, Redundant)
They must provide the source code on the same meduim you recieved the binaries and free of charge.
So if they sell a $99 CD with the binaries on it (ok by GPL) they must also give you the source on a CD, just via email isn't good enough.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:3, Insightful)
This is how GNU got $$ initially. RMS sold tapes with the source code to Emacs and other GNU software.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:5, Informative)
also from the FAQ's
" You're supposed to provide the source code by mail-order on a physical medium, if someone orders it. You are welcome to offer people a way to copy the corresponding source code by FTP, in addition to the mail-order option, but FTP access to the source is not sufficient to satisfy section 3 of the GPL.
When a user orders the source, you have to make sure to get the source to that user. If a particular user can conveniently get the source from you by anonymous FTP, fine--that does the job. But not every user can do such a download. The rest of the users are just as entitled to get the source code from you, which means you must be prepared to send it to them by post.
If the FTP access is convenient enough, perhaps no one will choose to mail-order a copy. If so, you will never have to ship one. But you cannot assume that.
Of course, it's easiest to just send the source with the binary in the first place. "
" "Valid for any third party" means that anyone who has the offer is entitled to take you up on it.
If you commercially distribute binaries not accompanied with source code, the GPL says you must provide a written offer to distribute the source code later. When users non-commercially redistribute the binaries they received from you, they must pass along a copy of this written offer. This means that people who did not get the binaries directly from you can still receive copies of the source code, along with the written offer.
The reason we require the offer to be valid for any third party is so that people who receive the binaries indirectly in that way can order the source code from you. "
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:5, Informative)
3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
* a) Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
* b) Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
* c) Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you received the program in object code or executable form with such an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.)
E-mail is fine and dandy. You can even charge costs, and you only have to do it for three years.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:3, Interesting)
My time is $100/hr , so if it takes 10 minutes to open the letter, extract the name, mailing address and such, then another 10 to burn the CD and another 10 to drive to the Post office to mail it then add in the costs of packaging and postage and the CD + state tax, $75 would be a reasonable cost.
FTP servers arent free either, the machine, the admin time, the T1 all cost money. It's a little harder to determine costs there, If one person a year wants source, then its gonna cost about $10k,
if 1000's want it, then $10, if millions, then I need a T3 and a rack of servers, so the cost may still be $10 or more..
Of course the GPL allows someone else to get a copy of the source and provide it for free, and that would be fine with me, saves me the time and money, and I can work(bill$$) on more interesting things.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:3, Informative)
As a good citizen of the open source community you should feed your patched upstream but you are not required to.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2)
The GPL only affects programs that contain GPLed code. No doubt Xandros has many programs that are completely proprietary, and customers have no right to repost those.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2)
So you would only legally be able to post the sources or binaries of stuff covered under the GPL (or another permissive license).
The GPL does not say that you have to provide the source free of charge. You are allowed to charge a fee for the production of the media, such as burning CDRs, shipping, etc.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2)
overhead related to the copying, and probably shipping. They couldn't, for example, force you to pay for an extra manual or box, or add on any additional $$ for profit.
If it takes $3.00 to produce the cd with the source code, all things considered, then that's what they would have to charge for it.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2)
You are also paying for the associated *services* of creating the distribution. You are allowed to charge for services associated with GPL software. The charge for services business model is common for many companies that use/support GPL software.
In their case, they are not simply collecting GPL software and burning it onto a CD. They have created significant "value added" (regardless as to whether you like it or not) and they are allowed to change for it.
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:2)
Re:What about GPL?? Sources?? (Score:5, Insightful)
the FSF tries to save money by trying to work with the infringing company to fix the gpl violations. if it comes down to it, the FSF tells the infringing company that it must stop using the software of face litigation. no company has tried to fight the GPL, so in ecense it does have teeth since it keeps infringers from using the product out of fear of litigation. about it holding up in court or not, I do not see why it would not....copyright give authors control over the agreement with other parties who want to use there creation....if I say you have to give this to one other person in order to use it, then you have to give it to one other person or you don't get to use it.....
very simple stuff.
Re:Up do date (Score:2, Redundant)
" Technology Preview CD that is included with the product contains many of the most recent software releases including KDE3. "
Re:99 bucks for already out of date software. (Score:4, Insightful)
A key message that we want to convey is that we are not trying to compete for the bleeding edge user. We want people to actually get their daily work done -- everything should just work. If you look at most of those other distributions, much of what's there either doesn't work, or it's too hard for the average user to understand or to use. That's the key difference.
So it's ok..they are not targeting you, me, the linux geeks & the bleeding edge crowd. I don't know many among those who would pay $99 for an up to date distribution anyway.
They're targetting business users, the office desktop, and want to make a cheap OS that just plain works, even in fields where Linux traditionnaly doesn't do too well (browser plugins, compatibility with Microsoft software) thank to a tight integration with Codeweaver's Crossover plugin & office.
So.. I'm not interested in Xandros, but that doesn't mean Xandros is not interesting.
Re:Damn. (Score:2, Insightful)
Some people just can't face reality.
Re:isn't this the reality ... (Score:2, Insightful)
? Why did Microsoft get as powerful as they now are? The main reason is marketing, marketing and a fanatical devotion to bundling...yes, two reasons. Sorry, for the cheap MP reference.
Anyway, how can a company with no market penetration, no free samples etc... hope to compete with Red Hat especially, but even Suse and the other distros. I have not heard any Linux people talking about "Gosh, I can't wait to BUY Linux from that new company", "yeah, boss, it's only 3 times as much as Red hat. I hope it's good" Hmm....not a great market entry IMO.
On the other hand, not having multiple choices about how you work and what tools to use is sure helpful, *sarcasm*Linux people hate choice*sarcasm*
Re:I don't know (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Switch User Feature (Score:2)
Seriously, is there anything stopping a distro (i.e. debian) from offering a *dm login screen and then offering the ability from within that session to spawn another login screen on another vt (too many anothers I know, sorry). Then within each session (desktop) a menu choice can appear which allows you to switch vt, with each user having the option of automagically running a screenlock when the session is switched out of, and that screensaver can have a password, and the option of displaying the current open sessions on the computer in a "form" which allows you to click onto your session, all without recourse to Ctrl+Alt+Fx which is obviously going to be far too complex for 90% of computer users?
Re:BS loophole (Score:2)
Anyways, go and buy Xandros for $99. Then, you can request Xandros for the sources. Remember that Free Software (in terms of speech), isn't free software (in terms of beer).
Re:One small detail ... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:IE speed? (Score:2)