Intel ramps up support for Linux in Asia
Intel releases Quick Start Kit for Linux to system integrators in China 
and India
By Sumner Lemon, IDG News Service, November 24, 2004 
(http://www.infoworld.com/article/04/11/24/HNintellinuxasia_1.html)

Intel has released its Quick Start Kit for Linux, stepping up support for 
Asian system integrators that offer Linux-based desktop PCs.

The Quick Start Kit for Linux is similar to software kits that Intel makes 
available for system integrators that build PCs designed to run 
Microsoft's (Profile, Products, Articles) Windows operating system, said 
Scott McLaughlin, a spokesman for Intel. "We are starting to extend what 
we've done in the Windows world to include the Linux space," he said.

Initially, the kit is only being made available in China and India, 
McLaughlin said, noting that demand for Linux is strong and growing among 
education and government customers in these two countries.

"What we're trying to do is provide a resource for the system integrator 
to be able to offer a validated solution to their customer with a minimal 
amount of work," McLaughlin said. "They shouldn't have to worry about 
finding all of the drivers on their own."

The Quick Start Kit for Linux is available for free to Intel Channel 
Program members and supports Novell's (Profile, Products, Articles) Linux 
Desktop 9, Red Hat's (Profile, Products, Articles) Red Hat Desktop and Red 
Flag Software's Red Flag Desktop 4.1, Intel said in a statement. Support 
for China Standard Software's Linux distribution will be added in a future 
version of the kit, it said.

The kit has been validated for use with several Intel desktop 
motherboards, including the D845 family of Celeron-based motherboards, and 
the D865 and D915 lines of Pentium 4-based motherboards, Intel said.

The Quick Start Kit for Linux is comprised of several software components. 
The first component is comprised of Linux drivers that have been validated 
by Intel for each of the motherboards supported by the kit. Secondly, the 
kit contains a management system that allows systems integrators to 
install device drivers with a single command, eliminating the need to 
understand make files, tar files and source code.

The kit also contains Intel's Application Version Compliance tool, which 
helps to ensure that the applications installed on a desktop PC have been 
validated for various Linux distributions and motherboards.

While the Quick Start Kit for Linux is currently only available in China 
and India, it may soon find its way into other markets. "We're actively 
looking to expand where the product is offered," McLaughlin said. 

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