Comments on: Asus to offer Windows-based Eee PCs
Asus confirmed that it will offer Microsoft Windows on its superbudget laptop.
Asus confirmed that it will offer Microsoft Windows on its superbudget laptop.
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Although Redmond's foray into retail bears a big resemblance to Apple's approach, Microsoft has added some distinctive features to draw casual PC buyers and techies alike.
Verizon and Motorola are spending big bucks--$100 million--on marketing the new smartphone, and it looks like it will pay off with 1 million devices sold by year's end.
Windows, unlike Linux, is familiar. I may not understand exactly how Windows works, but I know how to use it, and I know what its interface will look like. I know no such things about Linux. I don't know what it will look like when the kid fires it up for the first time, and I have no idea what the learning cuve on using the interface will be. My concerns may be groundless, but whether accurate or not, my perception is what will determine my purchasing decisions.
Actually, I really had briefly considered buying one of these laptops for my son - and had discarded the idea BECAUSE of the Linux OS. This may cause me to re-visit that decision.
With Firefox and OpenOffice I'm not sure i need to fork out more money for a licence... unless I used an old copy of Win98 bought from eBay perhaps! :D
But, what about normal people? There's a lot of people out there who are easily intimidated by having to learn anything beyond basic computing. Yes, Linux is great for web browsing or word processing, but how about working with an mp3 player? Or, for that matter, how about a printer?
I, too, might favor the Linux-based model, by virtue of that it's kinder to low-end specs. I'd consider XP, but I wouldn't put Vista on it, and I'm a big Vista fan. (All seven of us are pretty lonely.) But, a lot of normal people out there would be better off with an XP-based model, just because they could actually use it like a regular computer without having to worry about finding Linux alternatives to iTunes or figuring out how to unpack .tar.gv files.
While this offering may give way to thin light disposable there are other devices that allow just surfing choices too.
So if it reves up the market for more choices in sub prime that is a good thing, but if it directly mimics what is already there then it has a way to go before it will find it's sweet spot
- Corporate Users have no choice
- by Mikeybabes October 24, 2007 7:40 PM PDT
- A lot of you are missing the point. The eeePC makes an excellent salesman or outdoor corporate PC. Big companies pay big money to replace lost, damaged or stolen notebooks. Switching to the eeePC makes sense if only because it's so portable. Unfortunately many corporate apps only work in Windows, and even web-based ones are geared to IE, which is just the way it is.
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(8 Comments)I think Asus can really get a slam-dunk when it launches the Windows version, even if you you take the existing price and add on a XP license cost it still makes economical sense. As a corporate user, I am sick to death of lugging a heavy notebook on business trips and would happily swap processing power for portability. Corporate apps typically don't don't need C2D.