The new wave of Linux Lite – lean, mean and green E-mail
by David M Williams   
Thursday, 26 June 2008
Linux is coming to an ultraportable near you! Sure, the oft-touted “year of the Linux desktop” is seen in the same light as such notable phrases like “the cheque’s in the mail”, “I’ll respect you in the morning” and “Duke Nukem Forever is being released” but there’s no denying the smash-hit success Linux is enjoying in the budget price ultraportable market. These are the Linux desktops that will catch on and here’s why.



I’ve spruiked in this column previously that one reason people use Microsoft Windows over alternate operating systems like Linux is that they don’t think about it; Windows just comes on the computer systems they purchase. This isn’t to criticise the ordinary people who buy such systems by any means, merely that the choice of operating system isn’t generally a major factor in purchasing decisions unless one of the parties involved is reasonably tech savvy. This fact is fairly reasonable; after all, the operating system in itself isn’t especially useful until you have something else to do with the computer (like write letters, browse the Internet, check mail, play music, etc.) When the regular consumer off the street buys a computer they quite fairly expect it just to work.

The decision whether to convert operating systems can almost be seen as a religious proselytising process. The target has to be persuaded that such things matter, that there is a different worldview than that which they had previously adhered to, that a conscious decision must be made to change, and that they must operate in a different manner going forward. Maybe it’s no small wonder the most common Linux command line shell is the “Bourne Again SHell” (or BASH.)

Yet, times are a-changing, just as Bob Dylan proclaimed. Linux-based PCs began to get notice last year due to some interesting pricing decisions. Now, Dell has been bundling Ubuntu with a line of its desktop PCs and specialised local computer stores have been providing their own custom-built systems with variants of Linux for some time. Yet, these were all, for the most part, conventional desktop systems with conventional pricing. In some cases there was no variation in pricing despite saving on “the Windows tax” – the cost of a Microsoft Windows license. And worse, in other cases the Linux option was more expensive, perhaps because the supplier received systems with Windows pre-installed and were charging for the time they expended loading Linux instead.

Last year, however, we saw two machines come to light which received attention due largely to their sales tag. The first was the Everex gPC which sold on the stores of the expansive, and highly accessible, Walmart chain. The gPC was cheap, really cheap. It was hardly high powered but it was cheap! This has to be understood; it was at a pricepoint that turned it into a commodity item which could be easily justified by most punters, whether on the spur of the moment or as a second (or third!) computer, for students, or whatever reason they need to give themselves.

Then came the ASUS Eee Linux PC.

CONTINUED







 
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