Microsoft tries to squash Linux on ultra-portables
- TAGS:Asus Eee, Linux, ultra-portables, Windows, XP
- IT TOPICS:Desktop Applications, Hardware, Linux, Open Source, Operating Systems, Software, Windows & Microsoft
Worried about the explosive growth of Linux on inexpensive, ultra-portable PCs like the Asus Eee PC, Microsoft has launched a campaign to offer Windows XP at steep discounts to makers of low-cost portables. Insider documents reveal that Microsoft is also trying to make sure those portables don't become so powerful that they cannibalize sales from higher-end Windows PCs.
The IDG News Service reports that Microsoft will offer Windows XP Home Edition for $32 to PC makers of ultra-low-cost PCs (ULPCs) in developed markets as a way to combat the growth of Linux. In developing markets, the cost will be $26. In addition, manufacturers may quality for $10 discounts. But there's a major caveat: The PC makers will have to agree to limit the power and capabilities of the hardware.
According to the IDG New Service, to qualify for the discounts:
PC vendors that make ULPCs must limit screen sizes to 10.2 inches and hard drives to 80G bytes, and they cannot offer touch-screen PCs.
In addition:
the systems can have no more than 1G byte of RAM and a single-core processor running at no more than 1GHz.
Microsoft is eying big sales of the devices, which typically sell for between $250 and $500 -- it expects from 10 million to 13 million of the devices to sell this year.
I expect the tactic to work only temporarily, because Linux-based ultra-portables will end up being more powerful than XP-based devices.
No doubt, as a result of the campaign, plenty of the devices will ship with XP. But hardware buyers alway want more memory, more power, and more hard disk space, even on these small devices.
Keep in mind that inexpensive ultra-portable PCs are best suited for simple tasks, such as word processing, using spreadsheets, and browsing the Web. Do you really need Windows for that? Linux, Firefox, and OpenOffice will do the job perfectly well. So I expect plenty of people to opt for Linux-based machines, not Windows-based ones.
After all, even the marketing might of Microsoft can't stop people from wanting to buy more powerful computers, no matter how small those PCs may be.
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