Linux and Open Source

Attention: This is not big news

Takeaway: It has been announced that Ubuntu 11.04 will come pre-installed on three of ASUS’s Netbook PCs. To that, Jack responds with a hip-hip-meh. See why Jack is so down on Linux pre-installed on netbooks.

I don’t know how much you follow Linux news, but if you do, you have probably had just about enough of Ubuntu 11.04 lately. Most every announcement has been one proclamation or another about Ubuntu Unity. The critics either hate it or love it enough to make it headline fodder for weeks. I’ve done it. I’ve flip-flopped on my opinion about the new desktop from Canonical a couple of times (my final opinion is that I’m not a fan).

That desktop, however, is not the topic of this blog. Instead, I want to go on the record to say that the recent announcement of ASUS Pre-installing Ubuntu 11.04 on three of their EeePC machines (1001PXD, 1011PX, and 1015PX) is not big news.

Although the Linux community will stand up against me to say that any time a company sells a piece of hardware with the Linux operating system pre-installed is a win; this “win” just doesn’t feel like a win. Why?

We’re talking about netbooks. Again.

Netbooks. One of the most useless variations of the laptop ever created. They are too small, under-powered, and nothing more than a stop-gap between standard laptops and tablets. And once again a company is throwing a bone out to the Linux community by pre-installing a distribution and selling them to the public.

Is it just me, or does that seem like a step backwards? While the whole world is embracing fresh tablets with Apple’s iOS or Android, Linux is enjoying netbooks. A step backwards.

This, my dear readers, is not big news. In fact, this news is so insignificant, very few will even know about it. Instead, what ASUS needs to do is step up to the plate and create the first-ever Linux-driven tablet (and no, Android does not count as a full-blown Linux tablet).

From what I recall (from Mark Shuttleworth’s blog) the whole idea behind migrating to Unity was so that hardware makers could easily support a standard interface on every type of hardware — I would think that to include tablets, laptops, desktops, and servers. But instead, what we are getting is netbooks.

Raise your hand if you use a netbook with any regularity. Yeah, I didn’t think so.

Look, I’m about as pro-Linux as anyone. I’m all for open source and getting Linux pre-installed on anything that will help to bring Linux to the masses. Problem is, the netbook is not the hardware to help get Linux out there. I have been yelling this from the top of my gargantuan soapbox for over a year now — what Linux really needs is a killer tablet with a Linux distribution (such as Elive or Bodhi resplendent with Ecomorph) that can make that tablet stand out from the masses. ASUS even has a number of convertible and tablet PCs — why couldn’t they concentrate their Linux efforts there? Even shipping ASUS Tablet PCs with Ubuntu 11.04 and Unity would be a huge step forward from the tired netbook hardware.

What would really be big news for Linux?

A Linux tablet. That would be big news.

Linux pre-installed on three netbooks from ASUS? Not big news.

What do you think? Am I overstating this? Am I missing the simplistic beauty that is Linux being sold pre-installed on Netbooks? Share your thoughts on the issue.

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Jack Wallen

About Jack Wallen

A writer for over 12 years, Jack's primary focus is on the Linux operating system and its effects on the open source and non-open source communities.

Jack Wallen

Jack Wallen

Jack Wallen is an award-winning writer for Techrepublic and Linux.com. As an avid promoter/user of the Linux OS, Jack tries to convert as many users to open source as possible. His current favorite flavor of Linux is Bodhi Linux (a melding of Ubuntu and Enlightenment).

When Jack isn't writing about Linux he is hard at work on his other writing career -- writing about zombies, various killers, super heroes, and just about everything else he can manipulate between the folds of reality. You can find Jack's books on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Smashwords.

Outnumbered in his house one male to two females and three humans to six felines, Jack maintains his sanity by riding his mountain bike and working on his next books. For more news about Jack Wallen, visit his website Get Jack'd.

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