Dell Releases First Consumer Product with Mandriva 312
WindozeSux writes "Dell Laptops(Latitude 110L) are now shipping with Mandriva Linux pre-installed. Mandriva says this represents a milestone to make Linux more available to consumers. From the article:"This product shows the world that Mandriva is today ready for the consumer market. We've been developing products for the corporate and enthusiast markets for years. Addressing the needs of the consumer market is a different challenge, because it is all the more difficult, as you don't have a system admin or professional technician at home", said François Bancilhon, Mandriva CEO"
Tomorow's News: (Score:5, Funny)
Are they hidden (Score:2, Insightful)
Soon to change... (Score:3, Informative)
Converting
Re:Soon to change... (Score:3, Interesting)
That's a little like saying having sex with someone who has herpes is usually safe. It's true...it usually is...until it isn't. Don't get me wrong, I like OO bu
Re:Soon to change... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Tomorow's News: (Score:3, Funny)
That's exactly why I don't use MS Office.
Step 2: (Score:5, Funny)
I'm a little bit excited! (Score:2)
But we'll see how long it lasts.
I Wish (Score:3, Funny)
Somebody want to tell my parents this and, while you're at it, tell them I'm not available on loan.
Re:I Wish (Score:2, Funny)
This is a Good Thing (Score:5, Interesting)
I say bring them on Dell, HP. You might have found a way to make me (and many other geeks) customers again.
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:5, Interesting)
I previously ran Mandrake 10 on my HP nx9010 laptop. Hardware support was not the best. Power and sound did not work correctly.
I recently installed Ubuntu and hardware support is now much better. This makes me wonder if HP have been directly helping the debian/ubuntu people with ther drivers.
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:2)
I use Fedora Core 4 very successfully on a rebranded Mitac 8011 notebook. This includes wireless (Intel Pro 2200) and I eventually got suspend to work. The latter seems to be a real issue under Linux, though, and it's a kludge getting it to work properly (i.e., having to "experiment" to find the co
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:3, Informative)
Dude, You're Getting Linux (Score:4, Insightful)
Now that we can recommend Dell or HP with Linux, we'll do it much more often. When they get the Windows machine and ask us for support, we'll be able to say "send it back and get the right one this time". That kind of "word of mouth" is the best advertising Dell and HP could ask for. Way more valuable than a primetime season of "Dudes".
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:2)
Also, laptops with Linspire are b
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:2, Informative)
Maybe desktop Linux will just always be niche (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Maybe desktop Linux will just always be niche (Score:4, Insightful)
I never said that. I said "Desktop Linux" needs such support. Getting Dell on the side of Desktop Linux is needed if it is ever to be as popular as "Server Linux" and "Embeded Linux." I don't really care about crushing MS, I just want my desktop OS to work with more pieces of hardware and I want my family to use Linux even though they won't buy from anyone but Dell.
Why can't it just live happily as a rock-solid server OS with a desktop component that some advanced users use?
Because:
1. That is boring.
2. I want more linux drivers for things like wireless devices, that won't come till the marketshare does.
3. Why can't Linux be good at both. Why hold Linux back at all?
Re:Maybe desktop Linux will just always be niche (Score:2)
Linux desktop projects aren't meant to be 'windows killers' per say, but rather a nice sane easy to use desktop. something you can set gran
Re:Maybe desktop Linux will just always be niche (Score:4, Insightful)
We don't need to crush Microsoft, we just need Linux to become enough of a player that companies are forced to support it.
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:4, Informative)
I haven't had to touch the command line to install my HP Deskjet 932c printer under Linux (multiple versions of ubuntu, fedora, centos, and suse) for several years. Honestly, what crappy distro (or crappy printer) are you using that the printer installation gui can't autodetect it?
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:2, Insightful)
Yep. Students (thats who this is aimed at) share their printer everyday, so all the people in the dorm can use up all their ink and paper.
This is not aimed at a market for those that want advanced networking. This is aimed at those that want to pirate music off the internet without being infected by the spyware of the P2P program.
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:2)
There is a "System" menu on the taskbar, which has various admin dialogs where you can probably configure your printer if you have to.
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:2)
Re:This is a Good Thing (Score:3, Informative)
Available in USA or just France? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Available in USA or just France? (Score:5, Informative)
huh? (Score:4, Informative)
Dell does not officially support running Linux on Dell laptops."
So where can I order one of these things?
Re:huh? (Score:2, Informative)
follow the link "Micro Portable Etudiant" and you should finally find the laptop...
Sadly... (Score:4, Insightful)
then the average consumer... of course "line-ux?"
Re:Sadly... (Score:2)
Also, it's not a cost issue either. Most corps will not `download and install' Linux. They'd get no support that way. But -buying- Linux (from RedHat, etc.) is generally more expensive than similar Windows offerings.
Oh, and I use Linux both at home and at wr0k.
or... (Score:3, Funny)
Or you do have one at home, but he gets grumpy if you ask him questions without rtfm.
proper market segment (Score:4, Interesting)
This, and the article says it's being sold direct to students. I went back to school for another degree last year and the specs for the required notebook said Windows XP Pro or 2000 ONLY. The networking people won't let you connect to the school LAN with anything else. I suspect other schools have similar policies. Linux preinstalled systems should be the high end models for hard core technical users, not the nearly bare bones Celeron student models, IMNSHO.
Not all schools, not all high end models. (Score:2, Informative)
I've got two of my own Linux machines on the network right now. In fact, one of them IS running Linux on a Celeron, the other on a Sempron.
I'm sure there are plenty of schools who are Linux- as well as Mac-friendly.
Re:Not all schools, not all high end models. (Score:2)
Re:proper market segment (Score:2)
In case you haven't noticed, the "hard core technical users" are usually the ones with a room full of scavenged parts, running e-mail servers from dual-proc P2 machines and file servers on sidewalk special sparc stations. I don't know a single "hard core technical user" that would bemoan a Celeron, though they're currenly more likely to own an AMD, or some tiny half-sized notebook from Japan running a transmeta.
Unless they're requiring some form of system-side authentication appl
Re:proper market segment (Score:2)
There it is again: Linux needs a cloak mode. It already has a Windows emulator. Now to go with it, a set of patches to drop down a binary "Windows disguise" to the outside world so it can tell the buttinsky server, "Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm Windows, now show me the page!"
Highly called for in these days of OS discrimination. And it'd be just like smart-aleck Linux developers to pull that off!
So we know how it all works then .... (Score:5, Insightful)
Whatever you think of Dell, this is good for Linux.
Re:So we know how it all works then .... (Score:2)
Re:So we know how it all works then .... (Score:2)
It's very hard to get full ACPI support. I bet under Linux, the battery life is still shorter than under Windows.
Re:So we know how it all works then .... (Score:2)
Re:So we know how it all works then .... (Score:2)
Admittedly, I didn't test everything on purpose, I just installed, got on the network and started working. What I can say is that since I didn't react to anything not working, most things probably did.
Re:So we know how it all works then .... (Score:3, Interesting)
The fact is that half the population has a sub-100 IQ. Those people will never grasp Linux in its current form. The solution is certainly not telling them to go and learn something -- they went through years of schooling without managing that. The solution is making software that an idiot can use and making software that an idiot can't break. Microsoft has done the first of these. Li
Re:So we know how it all works then .... (Score:2)
A while later, I learned DOS. There wasn't much to that. The commands dir, copy, and typing the filename were all it took. From the manuals of a couple of games, I learned about freeing memory. After that I picked up Windows 95 as a teenager. Everything was simple and obvious and I never had to look up anything.
In college I tried Linux for the first time. Even t
Now if they just went AMD... (Score:3, Insightful)
Rus
Sysadmin? (Score:2)
My list of Linux desktop companies (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.addonshop.com/ [addonshop.com]
http://www.sub300.com/ [sub300.com]
http://www.linare.com/ [linare.com]
http://www.linspire.com/ [linspire.com]
http://www.linuxcertified.com/ [linuxcertified.com]
http://www.microtelpc.com/ [microtelpc.com]
http://www.outpost.com/ [outpost.com]
http://shoprcubed.com/ [shoprcubed.com]
http://www.systemax.com/divisions.htm [systemax.com]
http://www.walmart.com/ [walmart.com]
http://www.xandros.com/ [xandros.com]
http://tuxmobil.org/ [tuxmobil.org]
http://www.us.debian.org/distrib/pre-installed [debian.org]
http://www.linux.org/vendor/system/index.html [linux.org]
Re:My list of Linux desktop companies (Score:2)
How is this news? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How is this news? (Score:2)
I'm sure others have, but I'll add: you see that funny picture of Bill Gates dressed up as a "Borg" that accompanies most Windows stories? That's from "Star Trek, the Next Generation". It's not a joke. In the US, you can damn near get arrested for admitting you use Linux in public. Kind of like being gay, nothing wrong with it, but fat white rich monotheist guys don't like it, so PERSECUTE!
Must be Vista OEM pricing time. (Score:5, Interesting)
It's a nice thought, but probably just a ploy.
Re:Must be Vista OEM pricing time. (Score:5, Insightful)
If this is really the reason they are doing this, it is because it is an effective strategy to get those discounts. The fact that it is an effective strategy is reason enough to celebrate.
News.... yeah.. I guess. (Score:3, Interesting)
I may get one actually, since I need a good laptop with linux running on it. I've had a lot of luck buying a winblows machine and then rolling my linux install, but sometimes vendors play too shifty with components.
Which is why I'd stillbe concerned about this one. The vendor I've had the most issues with *shifty* components lately is dell.
And I like AMD/s.
Comment and Question (Score:4, Interesting)
With a good Linux distro, there's less of a need to. Less computer expertise is needed to keep the system free of malware, and if it works now, it will still work years down the road (barring hardware failures). Also, desktop distros can and do include lots of drivers for various pieces of hardware, so that you can just plug in your device and start using it. YMMV, but I've had more success with this on Linux than what I see in the Windows world.
Now for the question: how good is Mandriva Linux these days? My experience with Mandrake wasn't particularly good, and I'd hate to see Linux get more bad rap because Dell chose to ship with an inferior distro. I assume polish won't be a problem, but what about package management? Does dependency resolution work? Do all packages work? Is the collection of available packages large enough? What about the software that comes pre-installed? Does it cover most users' needs, or would most people have to install extra software first thing when they get the machine? To what extent are Linux skills transferable to and from other distros (proprietary configuration tools, heavily customized desktops, etc)?
Re:Comment and Question (Score:2)
I didn't like it much either, but the package management certainly worked well. It was just a lot of little things which put me off. The real reasons are hard to pin down. I think I just like the techiness of debian or fedora. I don;t think it is really a bad distro. Just different.
But these factors may make it a more attractive distro for general users. So fo
Re:Comment and Question (Score:2)
Re:Comment and Question (Score:3, Informative)
Mandrake's GUI configuration tools are decent enough, though I tend to use the config files myself. They don't commit the Linuxconf sin, they're open source, they work.
The package management is where things get far superior. I've used urpmi for several years and it's always worked better for me than apt4rpm
*cough* (Score:4, Informative)
Its hardware detection has been some of the best for some time now, driver support, clean interface, all good things. Their configuration utilities knock Yast and FC.X off the butts, but they are a LONG way from providing either complete or reliable management solutions. Their package management solution is RPM based, but it excels well beyond YUM and its probably fair to say its on par with Debian's apt-get system, but you also have rpmdrake which wraps a comfy clear, easy-to-use GUI around it.
As far as commercial distros its the bee's-knees (although I haven't installed that free Linspire disk yet) and has the added bonus of being one of the few commercial companies going after the user desktop that still shows a commitment to the GPL.
That said, development hasn't shown any remarkable leaps in usability. Its a Linux distro and for the most part its about as good as any other favorite might be. It requires a hobbiest or enthusiast to use still, unless they've got something big they've been keeping under wraps, but 2005 (aka Mandriva) isn't remarkably better or worse then previous releases and they, along with most every other distro seem to be sticking pretty closely to the status quo, which isn't as innovative as I expect would be required to penetrate that particular consumer space, but I'm a sys admin, what do I know.
Been there, done that. (Score:2)
Ummm, I seem to recall that Redhat used to be available pre-loaded on Dell laptops. Lets see how long it lasts this time.
Just wondering.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Just wondering.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Just wondering.... (Score:2)
You don't understand...I want to be stereotyped; I want to be classified!
Yes... (Score:5, Funny)
Light on details (Score:2, Interesting)
Many posters assume that Dell has done some optimization / tuning / development. But the article says bubkis about that. Did Dell do any work so that things are guaranteed to run smoothly? E.g., is the WiFi support 802.11g, or is it just some old out-of-date 802.11b chipset? Does the power management, in particular sleep / standby mode, consistently work even with X11?
Seriously, if any of you know the answers (and aren't just presupposing one way or the other) let us know!
What's the problem? (Score:2, Interesting)
yeah, but where? (Score:3, Interesting)
Okay, I took the bait. Nasty hook marks in my mouth now.
If they're serious about this, how come when doing a search for linux in their "search all dell" option on their home page, I get no results around this new offering? If they were really proud of this and really intended to sell it it'd be nice if they made a bit more noise about it. This feels like PR.
First Consumer Product With Man... (Score:2, Funny)
What about US customers (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What about US customers (Score:2)
Because then you will know what PC company has some balls (since doing that would be the way to loose OEM Windows pricing)?
Re:What about US customers (Score:2)
Corporations have no balls. If any PC maker started selling gnu/linux preinstalled it would be because they are convinced there is a market for it.
8O (Score:2)
Eh? (Score:2)
If someone wants to go by a daft name then fair enough, it's not the editors' job to protect submitters from chosen embarassment.
Re:Eh? (Score:3, Funny)
But in all fairness, someone should have done that with Mandrake. I mean, Mandriva ... it just sounds SO gay ...
I mean, even Lesbian Linux [lesbian.mine.nu] sounds cooler.
Re:Eh? (Score:2)
It works. After all, didn't YOU (and who knows how many others, me included) click on it?
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
So thats why it costs money
Re:This is irritating (Score:3, Interesting)
I work for a large multinational company. I am currently studying source control systems for an eventual move away from cvs.
Chances are it will come down to a choice between commercial and open source systems, and that the commercial system will win for exactly the reason you have stated.
When you think about it this is a good thing. The open source project could sell a premium package (or something), and actually make some money for a change.
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
Assuming the distro is released under GPL, anybody who has paid for a particular release can then distribute it for free to everyone else.
You just don't understand opensource. (Score:2)
As long as the code remains free the ideal remains. They can charge whatever they want for the binary package, you always got the freedom of the LFS distro if you don't want to pay them for their hardwork.
Re:This is irritating (Score:5, Informative)
Get to know Mandriva before flaming it ...
First, Mandriva is TOTALLY open source. In fact, of the major commercial distributions Mandriva was the first to do so. Go read section 4-6 of Mandrakesoft's 8 Golden Rules [opencurve.org]
Not only is it fully OSS, but they give you all the instructions and such to fork your own Mandriva based distro easily (look at the popular PCLinuxOS as an example) Google for "mandrivasoft wiki" and have ball forking your own.
Secondly, if you've actually engaged with the Mandriva community, you'll notice that it is comprised of both employees and non-employees. The non-employees deal with real packages and stuff, and not bull-shit non-important packages.
Sunny Dubey
Re:This is irritating (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
Open Source, in terms of GPL, means that the source is available either by free of charge download of via CD/DVD at cost price. The seller can sell the binaries for as much as they like, but regardless of the price, the source will be available as mentioned previously.
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
Commercial Products: The Mandriva Linux Distributions that are not available for free download and which are sold in retail, e-commerce, and directly by Mandriva its partners and distributors. These include (but are not restricted to) Discovery, Powerpack, Powerpack+, Corporate Server, Move, Multi Network Firewall, Mandrivaclustering, Mandriva Linux for PPC,
and Mandrivalinux for AMD64. and before you jump to any conclusions, im not
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
Exactly. That's why no OSS-related company will get Big.
i'm not quite sure i'm understanding this - in fact, lol, i know im not getting this.
Mandrake began as Desktop RedHat 6.? with better KDE support.
The people at RH probably grumbled a tad, but they knew/know what the GPL means.
If so
Re:This is irritating (Score:3, Interesting)
Linux of any sort is pretty much free (as in GPL'd), so it's hard if not impossible for me to sell you the uncompiled version. This is a given.
But I can sell service instead. I could sell you the hard work I did to compile everything and make sure it works fine together. That saves a lot of people time, and in business time means money. To compile it for the 64bit systems, I could assert that it's twice as difficult, ergo twic
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
Re:This is irritating (Score:5, Insightful)
If this really was the goal of Linux, perhaps releasing it under a license that specifically allows you to charge money for the software wasn't such a good idea, no?
Oh, and just to let you know, Red Hat and Mandriva do in-fact provide full source code for every open source component in their products, as they are required to by copyright law (they cannot distribute others code unless adhering to the attached license).
It really disgusts me some people around here. Half of you that bitch about Red Hat are sitting there running kernels and other Open Source packages that contain code that Red Hat paid to have contributed to these projects so you could use them FOR FREE, yet you get in a huff when these companies try to make some money. Quit being so fucking selfish I say. Don't want to pay for something...great I say...Red Hat could care less. Let all of the companies and enterprises that do value Red Hat's value-add pay for their services. If I were you, I'd be happy Red Hat is doing this. It lets them continue to pay people to improve code you are using.
Oh, and one last thing. You can download Mandriva x86_64 edition for free.
PS I'm not saying you HAVE to pay for Linux....I am running a free distro myself, one that is based extremely heavily on Red Hat's products (CentOS). But to use their code and complain when they try to make money is really low.
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
What, you don't think there are development costs? It's not as though these distros aren't writing code of their own. Yes, I know, some distros do some great work with only volunteers, but development of these free distros are helped by the developers that are paid by others.
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
Companies like Novell, Mandriva, and Redhat actually employ programmers who are paid to improve these distributions. And part of what I was saying was that, yes, the distros that do it all for
Re:This is irritating (Score:2, Interesting)
T
Re:This is irritating (Score:2)
Re:Free as in FREEDOM (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This is irritating (Score:3, Informative)
What are you talking about? Granted I'm running Mandrake 10 and not the absolute latest Mandriva, but I find it hard to believe that they spontaneously dropped support for something they've had since the earliest version I used, 7.something.
Nope, just checked, they haven't. It looks like 2006 beta 1 will use
Re:And so it begins.... (Score:2)
Re:And so it begins.... (Score:3, Insightful)
By your own logic, you should never go anywhere you don't currently go. Don't switch grocery stores, don't switch clubs... don't even switch TV channels because you'll just be a newbie to i
Why is my insurance so high? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:A most timely announcement (Score:2)
computers as the new hotrods (Score:2)
Re:I cut my Linux teeth on Mandrake (Score:3)
I've always been alarmed and disturbed at the mad rush to make Linux into a Windows look-a-like system.
I'm sorry but I didn't leave Windows to switch over to Windows. I left Windows because I despise it deeply and want nothing at all to do with it.
I could give a damn about drawing the Windows people over. I don't want the Windows problems that are sure to follow when Linux becomes so much like Windows that you can't tell one from the other.
And when all the deviant, mali