Dell to use Ubuntu on Linux PCs
May 1, 2007 

 Computer maker Dell has chosen Ubuntu as the operating system for its range of 
Linux computers for consumers. 

  Fans of Linux hope that the move will persuade more mainstream PC users to 
abandon Microsoft Windows and opt for the open-source operating system.  

  London-based firm Canonical, the lead sponsor of the Ubuntu project, will 
ensure the software works on Dell PCs.  

  Ubuntu includes software like office programs, e-mail, a browser, instant 
messaging software and a media player.  

  Michael Dell, the founder, chairman and chief executive of Dell, is himself 
an Ubuntu user. He has the operating system installed on a high-end Dell 
Precision
M90 laptop he uses at home.   

  For a long time Linux had been considered to be too difficult to use for 
normal computer users.  

  However, more recent versions of Linux distributions, like Ubuntu 7.04, have 
become much more user-friendly.  

  "Dell are going to work with us to make sure Ubuntu works fully on its 
hardware," said Chris Kenyon, Ubuntu's director of business development.  

  "For us it is a strong endorsement of Ubuntu and the unique support model we 
provide," he told the BBC.   

  Open-source software is developed by thousands of developers, and is usually 
free to use and download.   

  Firms like Canonical make money by providing software support for users of 
the operating system.  

  Dell has not yet confirmed which computers it will sell with Ubuntu 
pre-installed, only to say that it would offer Ubuntu 7.04  as an option on 
select
consumer models in the United States in the coming weeks  

  Reports on internet bulletin boards suggest that Dell will offer Ubuntu on an 
e-series Dimension desktop, a high-performance XPS desktop, and an  e-series
Inspiron laptop.  

  Prices and availability in countries other than the US have not yet been 
released.   

 Benefits and drawbacks 

  Running Linux makes desktop computing cheaper, as it strips out the cost of 
buying a proprietary operating system from Microsoft or Apple.  

  This has made Ubuntu - and other Linux distributions - popular not just in 
developing countries.   

  In France, the National Assembly has just started using Ubuntu on more than 
1,100 desktop computers.  

  But using Linux also has drawbacks.  

  Most makers of software and hardware focus on Microsoft's Windows operating 
system, as it holds about 90% of the desktop PC market.  

  As a result Linux users often find that software - especially for computer 
games and  accounting - does not work on their computers, and that plenty of
hardware is not compatible either.  

  However, Mr Kenyon insists that Ubuntu is "an excellent option" for most 
users, especially if they want web, e-mail and standard office functionality.
 

  He also points to the fact that Ubuntu is supported in more than 40 
languages, with more to come.  

  And the more popular an operating system becomes, the more companies will 
start developing software for it, he predicts.   

  The man driving the Ubuntu project, Mark Shuttleworth, shot to global 
prominence as one of the world's first space tourists, when he flew to the 
International
Space Station on board a Soyuz rocket.  

  The self-made millionaire from South Africa founded Canonical in 2004 to 
promote and support open source software projects.                          

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/business/6610901.stm 

Vikas Kapoor,
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