Japanese PC Manufacturers Preinstalling Linux 48
cshirky writes "There's an article in AsiaBizTech about Japanese PC manufacturers bundling Linux. The article concludes that
'Because Japan's main vendors are starting to offer Linux products and services, the Linux OS is likely to become a viable alternative for corporate customers.'" They're talking about big companies, too, like Compaq, IBM Japan, Hitachi, and Fujitsu. Sweet!
Re:Korea thinks Linux is better? (Score:2)
Thankyou - that's the most useful Korea link I've ever seen. Following a lead to the korean internet faq I found the following interesting statement:
Microsoft Korea came up with its own Hangul encoding, UHC(Unified Hangul Code: MS Code Page 949, Windows-949) stripping Hangul of its unique merit as 'phonetically-combined-writing' system and treating it just like Chinese letters, use it in Hangul Windows 95 and Windows NT (in case of Korean Windows NT 4.0, all internal processings are done in Unicode, but on the surface, it used UHC) despite repeated advices by Korean government to adopt ISO-10646.
Hmm. Talk about de-comoditizing standards. Well I guess if you can take control of an entire country's language encoding standard you've got a real kick-ass lock-in happening. BTW, thanks to your link I've now got hangul up and running in hanterm and Netscape - maybe that missing hangul howto just just say one thing: "get hanterm".
Korea thinks Linux is better? (Score:2)
When did they decide that? I was there for some time last year and the impression I got is that Microsoft is rather dominant to say the least. In Korea the economic imperative is stronger than in many of the leading industrial countries with higher per capita GNP, making it harder to justify spending a lot of one's time doing something that doesn't produce an immediate paycheck. Translation: working as an MSCE pays the bills - being a Linux guru doesn't.
At least, that seems to have been the case till now. What may change that is the obvious utility of Linux on a departmental mail server, or proxy server, or VPN gateway, or odbc database server, etc. etc. The software cost of each of these applications being $0.0 (even less when converted to won
Linux is far from entering the mainstream as a desktop system in Korea. There are a number or reasons for this but one of the big ones is the spotty internationalization support. It's certainly not a "sit in it and drive away" situation. Turbo Linux is jumping in to help fill this void, but tell me - why is there no hangul-howto (IOW how to install hangul) in the standard howto collections? So that you can easily work in hangul even in Redhat, Debian, or whatever?
In my opinion, we haven't done enough to support Linux take-up in one of the world's most populous and industrially advanced countries. Whoever is in Korea and is reading this, please correct me if I've said anything inaccurate.
Re:Pity it's only 5.2 (Score:1)
Whats the point in giving someone 2.0.37
when they could do perfectly well with 2.2.10 or so, that is stable, and has all the extra stuff they might need.
I'm not advocating giving them 2.3 or anything, but at least they should use the latest stable.
Re:Japanese and Technology (Score:1)
Re:Japanese and Technology (Score:1)
I would discount the language as an impediment as proper training with technologies such as IMEs result in faster input and document creation than by hand.
The sad truth is that short-sighted techno-phobic management have kept computers out of Japanese firms. These are guys who grew up in the poverty of post-war Japan and who think that only hard work and endless hours of manual labour can produce a result. The concept that a simple CrossTalk + Excel macro can do in 30 seconds what took two girls an entire Friday every week to accomplish is beyond their comprehension.
This situation is changing as the post-war generation retires and the young shinjin-rui step into management positions, but there is still a long way to go.
Other posts mentioned the bastardized double-byte encodings that have hindered Asian MS products up to now. MS's Japanese Shift-JIS (a.k.a. Shit-JIS) is no exception. Imagine some foreign company coming into the States saying "We have a great new encoding for your language which is really efficient except you can't use Q or X because there aren't enough data points". The Japanese are looking for a proper alternative which they can adapt to be their own (as they always will). An Open Source OS such as Linux is perfect for the job but I would say the risk of forking is WAY higher in Japan since each company will still want to "do it their way". Those around in Japan in the 80's will recall that every manufacturer's hardware was incompatible so a software maker had to produce an NEC version, a Fujitsu version, a Hitachi version, etc. etc.
- Guregu -
Just think (Score:1)
Japanese and Technology (Score:1)
-Ted
this is a Good Thing! (Score:1)
This should also take away the need for customers to perform a relatively difficult install because it is allready installed. this will make more people able to try linux even if they're complete dummy's (operating KDE/GNOME is just as easy or maybe more easy than windows) and they will see the stability and wonder why they have ever accepted M$ crap.
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Preinstallation route to mass market (Score:1)
Now Linux is coming preinstalled and readily available as an option more people will be tempted to try it, and having accepted, it will stick with it. Even if Linux systems are sold on to companies more workers will be exposed to it and the dreams of Linux world domination will become more realistic.
Another factor is that Linux is starting to look quite perty now we have desktops like KDE & Gnome.
Two years ago I always said to anyone who asked that Linux is not really for Joe Public and they should stick to Windows. Now I believe I can see the day when I'll change my recommendation. Especially now we're starting to see the two major holes of Games and Office-type apps being filled. I believe Linux can be said to have won when a games manufacturer feels obliged to release a Linux version at the same time or before the Windows version.
Internationalization efforts (Score:2)
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"'Is not a quine' is not a quine" is a quine.
Not just a Japanese thing. (Score:3)
There's definitely a growing dissatisfaction in the enterprise with MS software and services. Just yesterday I was sitting in the meeting, and people were talking about how to move some files from PeeCees to our big dumb UNIX boxes, where all the company jewels are.
Someone said something to the effect "let's use our Samba boxes". I asked him to repeat what he just said, to make sure that I heard him right.
I do consulting, and my current contract is with the traditional suit-n-tie multinational financial corp. This is the last place you'd expect to find a bunch of Samba boxes running somewhere. I was in a state of shock for the rest of the day. It turned out that they have Samba running on Solaris, but that's a start, I suppose.
So it doesn't surprise me what the Japanese are doing. It's probably going to happen here too, within the next couple of years. Unless W2K is a smashing success, you'll start to see many places begin to decomission their NT servers when they reach the end of their lifecycle, and recycling the boxes to run something else. Maybe Linux, maybe Solaris, maybe Monterey.
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Bastardized versions (Score:1)
bastardized version on the systems it is great.
Pity it's only 5.2 (Score:1)
Come on, 5.2 doesn't even have a 2.2 series kernel, and we're nearing 2.4 now, if the rumours are true.
Re:Just think (Score:1)
Dell also bundling TurboLinux (Score:1)
Can anyone comment on the reputation Dell presently has in Japan?
timothy
Has China started making moves? (Score:1)
free operating system, they could just flood
the world with cheap computers.
Good, but... (Score:1)
If a new customer who knows Micros~1 products sees this "Linux thing" he'll need an office ap (StarOffice?),
Cpyder
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\_\ You type "WIN" but actually you LOOSE
japan (Score:1)
In all acutality I have never seen a Linux warez site... I guess people have too much respect for the software developers. Lets hope Japan doesn't start a movement.
Where are my damn moderator points when I need them?
Your sig (Score:1)
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Software economy? (Score:3)
The big question is "Unless the Linux-on-the-desktop crowd are significantly successful soon, will it mean that the clue-per-person index will go up in 'developing countries' while it's declining in 'developed countries?'"
The US Government's policies and strategies seem to be tilted towards commercial entities, not the efforts of the population at large (e.g. crypto binaries ok, crypto source bad) - countries with less disposable income in their populations are taking national strategic advantage of free (as in beer), and that could have serious long-term impact on the global computing environment.
More clue is good. I'm just worried that a lot of US and European policy-makers are buying into the less-skilled workplace being good and long term it seems to be a less-than-ideal solution.
Paul
Re:this might be a bad idea (Score:1)
I love linux, I want to run it full time everywhere, but boy - some of the more advanced multi-proc OS/s (Solaris/UltraSparc, Hp-ux, AIX, OS400) are just so much better at large scale projects...
Re:japan (Score:1)
Daniel.
Good for the Customer (Score:1)
This means more hardware support (Score:1)
Think about it: if major manufacturers like Compaq and Dell are going to be supporting Linux, they will not want to have to build two different kinds of machines using two different kinds of components: they are going to want their vendors to supply components that are Linux-compatible so that tehy only have to stock one kind of component, and to reduce their support costs. Soon enough, component vendors won't be able to ignore Linux support as if it didn't matter, because their major high-volume customers will be demanding it, not just end users. Compaq will be saying "look, Mr. network-card-vendor, we want Linux support, and we want *good* Linux support, or else we'll go find someone whose product *does* have it."
And that will be a happy time, as hardware manufacturers scramble not only to rtelease their specs, but actively work with the Linux community to make sure tehir drivers are solid.
Re:japan (Score:1)
Re:Pity it's only 5.2 (Score:1)
Leave the latest and greatest release to the hobbyists. Commercial users don't/shouldn't want the bleeding edge release on their desk. Better to go with something guaranteed to be working and secure.
Re:Software economy? (Score:2)
With nations being sensitive to things like trade deficit, it is going to be very tempting to jump on the chance to quit shipping [bm]illions of dollar-equivalents of the local currency off to Redmond, Washington, USA. Even technically clueless politicians will "get it" when it's put into that perspective.
> The US Government's policies and strategies seem to be tilted towards commercial entities, not the efforts of the population at large...
Or replace "efforts" with "interests".
Your posts mirrors my sentiments exactly.
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It's October 6th. Where's W2K? Over the horizon again, eh?
Re:japan (Score:1)
Re:japan (Score:1)
Re:Has China started making moves? (Score:1)
in the US.
http://www.law.emory.edu/FEDERAL/usconst/amend.
Article XIII.
Section 1.
Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within
the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Re:Turbolinux (Score:2)
Re:Korea thinks Linux is better? (Score:1)
Re:Japanese and Technology (Score:1)
Personal computers are still relatively rare in Japan, largely due to the daunting problems imposed by the complexity of the Japanese script. All software must support multibyte characters in half a dozen incompatible 'standards', you need input frontends for converting phonetic input into the correct kanji, special keyboards with phonetic kana characters, etc. While the West has been typing away for several decades, Windows and Linux with full Japanese support have only been available for a few years. Previously the Mac (which has had much better internationalization for quite a while) and bizarre local workarounds (MSX, etc) had most of the market share, but the market stayed small due to high prices and limited support.
Cheers,
-j.