Personally, I have resisted the siren call of Dell for a long time. This changes my mind. I need a new machine and this could be just the ticket -- it was either that or refurb an old HP with a new HD and a copy of Feisty Fawn. I like the idea of it pre-loaded.And yeah, that's the kind of response Dell and Ubuntu want to hear. But I think it's time we really question the value and definition of support in the way it's been thought of in the past. Support is extremely overvalued, and lack of support is too often used as a reason to squash a great tool or piece of software. Let's examine our commercial support relationships and think of what we really get out of them. Are our bugs fixed faster? Features added more quickly? Do we find out about upcoming products from our vendros before the blogosphere does? When we have a configuration question, whose documentation is more helpful? Community sites and mailing lists, or the official documentation?
Labels: business, business model, canonical, community, dell, disruptive, information technology, linux, support, ubuntu
[update 11.22PM. Confirmed via Dell KB article!]Ubuntu will be officially supported on Dell computers. Any other details will come on www.ubuntu.com, check it for the official press releaseand
...the Austin, Texas, computer giant will be preinstalling the newly released Ubuntu 7.04. These systems will be released in late May 2007.Technorati Tags: ubuntu, linux, dell, hardware, support, community, open source
According to our sources, Ubuntu will be released on a Dell e-series "Essential" Dimension desktop, an XPS desktop, and an e-series Inspiron laptop.
Labels: business, business model, canonical, community, dell, disruptive, information technology, linux, support, ubuntu
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