Canonical Talks Netbook Remix Details 38
geekinchief points to a just-posted interview at Laptop Magazine "with Canonical's market manager, Gerry Carr, where he
talks about Ubuntu Netbook Remix. Some interesting details: Canonical does not plan to make the Netbook remix available for download or sale. It will only come pre-installed on new systems. It will boot in 5-10 seconds."
uh (Score:1, Funny)
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We don't need no steenkeen prepositions!
And don't get me started about "Canonical Discusses Netbook Remix Details" or all those other ways to say it. Trying to parse headlines is half the fun of
5-10 seconds?! (Score:3, Funny)
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--Homer Simpson
Not available? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not available? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Once installed, it is relatively easy to customise to your own tastes/needs. For example, I removed all the Bluetooth gubbins, as much printer related stuff as possible and a whole host of odds and ends (various fonts for languages I don't use saved me 70+ mb)
I haven't looked at the Notebook Remix specs, but I imagine the various tweaks are all going to be eas
Re:Not available? (Score:4, Insightful)
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How do you replicate a 5-10 second start time?
You have me there! Running Kubuntu, my start up is a lot slower than the other EeePC running the stock Xandros based distro - it isn't bad, but nothing like the stock system. I probably *could* cut a second or two off the time - I haven't done much other than disabling a few things in the System Services tab. On the other hand, the system seems more useable than when it ran the Asus Xandros.
But you have encouraged me to see what start up speed I can reach with basic tweaks.
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eeeXubuntu (Score:3, Informative)
You don't need a company, a community is more than enough.
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I wonder if this will successfully force the sales numbers to reflect Ubuntu's popularity?
Re:Not available? (Score:5, Insightful)
They're required by GPL to provide the sources to anyone who purchases one of those notebooks. They're not required to post the ISOs, though.
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Just add it to your sources and install the packages.
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It is likely that we will, over time, make an ISO available, but it is less a market about displacement. If you want Ubuntu, and you want this device, you can simply go and buy it.
Looking at : https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDS-Intrepid/Report/Platform#head-754034f06b81508d29d241478e49760403b42558 [ubuntu.com] IMHO it's likely that eventually (intrepid?, intrepid+1?) you will be able to download a tool to make a netbook usb image.
So easy to get rich... (Score:2)
1/ "Hello M. Manufacturer"
2/ +"5-10$/notebook for a fully fledged, hand tailored os"
3/ +"garanteed OS/drivers support for that particular system hardware for 5 years" (about same as Ubuntu LTS)
4/ +"instead of 90$ for microsoft and no garantees from them at all"
5/+"Of course, it's available now and already running on X millions of systems, it even already have self help forums by the thousands "
6/+"And we will cut you in on all support contracts you bring in (http://www.ubuntu.com/support/paid
not a big fan (Score:3, Interesting)
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Ubuntu has taken a route that is no more 'free' than Xandros or, for that matter, TiVo
And RedHat?
I think that this is more akin to what RedHat does than to TiVo's infamous model.
Canonical is giving you both the source and the compiled binaries, for free, but they are not going to give you the bundle; that they reserve for the OEMs, with whom they'll strike deals to distribute (in theory) customized versions of the 'Remix' on their certified hardware and make some cash.
You'll still be able to turn a vanilla installation of Ubuntu into the 'Netbook Remix'; whether there will be TiVo-iz
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This OS is optimized for specific hardware. It would probably not work very well on just any PC. Or at least that is what I got from TFA.
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No ISO because UMPC hardware is different (Score:2)
A lot of the infrastructure needed to drive this level of hardware interaction simply doesn't exist on general-purpose machines. There's no generic ISO for the XO-1, there's only