By
Michael Singer
Wednesday, October 05 2005 09:51 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39273933,00.htm
Dell began offering a new desktop PC this week with no operating system
installed. The machine is designed for people who want to run open-source
software such as Linux instead of Windows.
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The Round Rock, Texas-based company's Dimension E510n PC comes with a blank
hard drive and a copy of the FreeDOS operating system, which can be installed by customers.
The computer is part of Dell's n-Series of PCs, which first started shipping without an operating system back in September
2002.
The desktop retails for US$849 and comes with a Pentium 4 processor; 512MB of advanced DDR computer memory; a 128MB ATI Radeon X300SE HyperMemory video card; an 80GB serial ATA hard drive and a one-year
limited warranty.
The computers are designed for customers and companies that want to
experiment with Linux and other open-source operating systems. Many large
companies that have pre-purchased Windows through licensing programs have to
erase all the software that comes on factory-shipped PCs and then install the
alternative software they've chosen. Buying a PC without an operating system
saves a step and eliminates the cost of the extra software.
Despite its affinity for selling Windows-based computers, Dell is also a
staunch supporter of Linux. The company has invested almost US$100 million in open-source developer Red Hat and sells PCs and
servers based on its operating system, such as its Dell
PowerEdge SC430 with a dual-core Pentium.
On the desktop, Dell has been installing Linux on its Precision workstations
for a couple years. Dell spokesman Liem Nguyen said the company will continue to
do so.
The launch of the new Dimension desktop also marks the beginning of Dell's
efforts to streamline
its consumer products business, which features Inspiron notebooks and the
Dimension desktop PCs.
During its launch of its new XPS series last week, Dell said it will continue to offer Dimension
and Inspiron products as they are, for now, but each will eventually split into
two increasingly divergent categories.
One of these categories will target audiences for basic systems; the other
will aim at markets for entertainment PCs. The entertainment series will come
with Microsoft Windows Media Center Edition (WMCE) standard, and the basic
series will be loaded with Windows Home Edition.
Although the entertainment systems will offer WMCE both with and without a TV
tuner and related hardware, Dell expects most of these computers to go out the
door without the media hardware, since the company is counting on its
media-savvy customers to trade up to the new XPS series.