Cheap PCs With Lindows Are Well Intentioned but Flawed

Published: 31 July 2002 y., Wednesday
Stranger yet, the PCs (built by Microtel Computer Systems, a Los Angeles area manufacturer) come installed with a version of Linux, the open-source operating system that has been giving Microsoft fits lately. The computers sell for less than many comparable Windows systems -- $299 for a basic machine, sans monitor, with a roughly 10-gigabyte hard drive, 128 megabytes of memory, a CD-ROM drive, Ethernet, a modem and an 850MHz AMD Duron processor ($599 doubles the memory, quadruples the hard drive, and upgrades you to a CD-RW drive and a 1.8GHz Pentium 4 processor). To make this break with industry tradition, Wal-Mart didn't work with experienced Linux distributors such as Red Hat. It went with Lindows.com, a San Diego start-up headed by MP3.com founder Michael Robertson. Lindows says it wants to sell to home and small-business users, not computing veterans. A lot of Linux developers say such things, but Lindows bundles two nifty features to support that goal. One is single-click installation of software from a Web archive. Another is a program that lets you run regular Windows applications in Linux.
Šaltinis: washingtonpost.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Wincor Nixdorf takes award for cash-recycling system

Wincor Nixdorf’s new cassette-based cash-recycling system, the ProCash 4000, received the "Best Product at CIFTEE 2005". more »

“Gemplus” Products Presentation

30 th November, 2005 – A presentation of world leader company in smart card solution “Gemplus” took place at the “Penki kontinentai” conference center (Business center “Europa”, Konstitucijos ave 7, Vilnius). more »