MSI Announces Wind 2, Says Customers Hate Linux


Recommended Posts

Source: Wired

MSI Announces Wind 2, Says Customers Hate Linux

The guys at Laptop Mag got to spend some time with MSI's US sales boss Andy Tung, who gave them the lowdown on the hot little Wind netbook, past, present and future, including customers' mass rejection of the Linux version and the real reason for Windows continued success (people are used to it).

First, there will be a Wind 2, officially called the U120 (the current one is called the U100). It will sell alongside the popular, hackable netbook and come in at under $600. The Wind 2 will be a complete redesign -- new case, new hard drive and SSD options and a 3.5G mobile card inside. Ostensibly aimed at the business market, we can see this being a huge modder's hit (just put Broadcom compatible Wi-Fi inside for us OS X hackers, please, MSI). The Wind 2 will ship by the end of the year.

The next big news is that MSI have worked out a deal with a "a major U.S. retailer". Tung is keeping quiet on the details, but the official announcement should come this week. Guesses: Best Buy. A Wal Mart Wind?

Third, and saddest, is the fact that a lot of netbooks get returned, many more than is the case with regular-sized laptops. This is a general trend, but hidden within the numbers is a surprise -- people hate Linux. Tung:

Our internal research has shown that the return of netbooks is higher than regular notebooks, but the main cause of that is Linux. People would love to pay $299 or $399 but they don?t know what they get until they open the box. They start playing around with Linux and start realizing that it?s not what they are used to. They don?t want to spend time to learn it so they bring it back to the store. The return rate is at least four times higher for Linux netbooks than Windows XP netbooks.

Are people really too lazy to learn something new? The Linux netbooks I have played with are simple things, but they do exactly what a netbook needs to do ? web, email, music and movies ? and they do it well enough. Do people really need to pay an extra $50 for Windows, which runs slower on the Atom chip and offers a bunch of extras which aren't needed on a netbook (especially a space-limited 4GB netbook)?

Finally, a teaser from Tung. Laptop mag asked him what differentiates the Wind from Lenovo and Samsung's netbooks. "Well you would be surprised who makes those notebooks." he said.

I have this conversation all the time with my friend...

Him: Normal people don't want Linux on their netbooks, they want Windows.

Me: Oh they want Linux, they just don't know it yet.

I think that Linux is perfect for devices like these, as it's so customisable...and am I right in thinking it makes it cheaper? Either way, you don't hear regular people complaining their phones run Symbian instead of Windows Mobile.

On a device like this, I would prefer Linux too.

Kinda OT, Laptop Magazine is awesome! I need to get a subscription, because I can't find anyone local that carries it (maybe Barnes and Nobel do). I picked an issue up at an airport this last summer and ended up reading every single article in it. I "flip through" a lot of magazines, and this was one that actually had well written and interesting articles.

It doesn't help that the linux distributions shipped on many netbooks are garbage.

I don't think the ASUS Xandros repos have been updated in like 6 months.

e.g. I'm still posting from firefox 2.x because I can't update GTK+ without breaking everything.

I have this conversation all the time with my friend...

Him: Normal people don't want Linux on their netbooks, they want Windows.

Me: Oh they want Linux, they just don't know it yet.

I think that Linux is perfect for devices like these, as it's so customisable...and am I right in thinking it makes it cheaper? Either way, you don't hear regular people complaining their phones run Symbian instead of Windows Mobile.

The problem with your argument is that "people" don't want customizeable. They just want it working, easy and most of all familiar.

The problem wih yoru argument is that "people" don't want customizeable. They just want it working, easy and most of all familiar.

Indeed. It's the same reason, or at least one of the many possible reasons, that people like console gaming over pc gaming. They just want to turn it on and have it work like they expect it to.

The problem wih yoru argument is that "people" don't want customizeable. They just want it working, easy and most of all familiar.

The problem with your post is that shakey was referring to OEMs who market devices. "perfect for devices like these, as it's so customisable" refers to the OEM's ability to trim down and supply only the apps (browser, mail client, etc) that the OEM chooses.

;)

I have this conversation all the time with my friend...

Him: Normal people don't want Linux on their netbooks, they want Windows.

Me: Oh they want Linux, they just don't know it yet.

I think that Linux is perfect for devices like these, as it's so customisable...and am I right in thinking it makes it cheaper? Either way, you don't hear regular people complaining their phones run Symbian instead of Windows Mobile.

I certainly agree, but people don't want to buy a computer for the family, and not be able to run all these programs on it. They want what everyone else has...

The average family doesn't know very much about PC's, but they default to Windows, because they know how to use it.

The problem with your post is that shakey was referring to OEMs who market devices. "perfect for devices like these, as it's so customisable" refers to the OEM's ability to trim down and supply only the apps (browser, mail client, etc) that the OEM chooses.

;)

but the user still gets an unfamiliar system.

oh and OEMs could get a CE verion of windows and make it just as customized, and isn't there also a special netbook version of XP now ?

For doing what, you can watch 720p videos on single core atom netbooks, what more power do you need, battery life would seriously suck juice.

Intel have already stated the the dual core atoms were made for nettops not netbooks.

b/c it makes the not-so-fast Atom that much faster :happy:

as the other guy said, it's allready fast enough to do stuffthe netbook isn't very good for anyway.

It's a netbook what would you need so much power for on a netbook. it's not like you're gonna do 3DS MAX renders on it, or play COD4 on it.

For doing what, you can watch 720p videos on single core atom netbooks, what more power do you need, battery life would seriously suck juice.

Intel have already stated the the dual core atoms were made for nettops not netbooks.

Depends on what codec is being used and the operating system. I have several 720p films that can not decode fast enough on a 2.0GHz Pentium M (which by benchmarks blows away an Atom) when using Linux since the graphics driver does not accelerate decoding (Nvidia 7800GTX Go). Viewing 720p content is much better in Windows since the Nvidia driver supports video decoding, maybe it will make to the Linux driver someday.

I certainly agree, but people don't want to buy a computer for the family, and not be able to run all these programs on it. They want what everyone else has...

The average family doesn't know very much about PC's, but they default to Windows, because they know how to use it.

Its more like many think that PC and Windows are the same thing, like a Mac is to OSX. Many just don't know that there is a choice out there now. You can make Linux look and act just like Windows and even OSX and most wouldn't even be able to tell the difference.

BTW, my 72 year old mother has an Asus Eee PC with Linux and she likes it just fine.

You know, my mum recently got one of these new smaller notebooks, and it came with a Linux variant on it. I was worried at first because she is very "I don't want to learn something new to accomplish the same tasks I have always accomplished". You know what? Rightly so!

However, she boots it up, and there is a ****ing great big in your face icon for "WEB", "EMAIL", "DOCUMENTS", "MUSIC" etc

It's like a lot of home hardware, the OS is now transparent, she doesn't need to learn it. You don't need to learn an OS to operate your tumble dryer, dishwasher, VCR, TV. These little handheld laptops are appliances and as such, I think they should fall into the same "Get the job done" category.

Off the back of this, I have installed Ubunto on an old laptop I had codemned to the loft. My GF now uses is to check hotmail, facebook, download music, sync her iPod and probably send naked pictures to strange men. She's happy, I'm happy, lover69 is happy!

The problem with your post is that shakey was referring to OEMs who market devices. "perfect for devices like these, as it's so customisable" refers to the OEM's ability to trim down and supply only the apps (browser, mail client, etc) that the OEM chooses.

;)

I bet the real reason for supplying Linux over XP is the HDD space consumed. If XP takes a good couple of Gig, which will no doubt expand (Show me a Windows Install that doesn't), then that is valuable space over say a 250mb Linux install.

There is also a small speed increase but if XP is stripped down enough as well then I doubt the increases would be that great, nothing that your average consumer would complain about.

From a business point of view, XP is obviously the money maker. I don't see why the OEM would be bothered, unless something on the system was compromised. I put it down to space. After all, the Eee PC only came with XP when it shipped with a 20gb drive.

I certainly agree, but people don't want to buy a computer for the family, and not be able to run all these programs on it. They want what everyone else has...

The average family doesn't know very much about PC's, but they default to Windows, because they know how to use it.

That is precisely why I questioned the distribution choice for the original Wind. Ubuntu (either Gutsy Gibbon or the current Hardy Heron, or even olde reliable Feisty Fawn) would have made more sense, as it requires little fiddling, is supremely small, and is actually designed for non-techies.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Google are hyprocrites for signing this. They have been pulling the same dirty tactics as Microsoft, only they do it on Android and ChromeOS.
    • In some countries the law has forced Microsoft to display a menu on a fresh install of Windows which asks which web browser you want and it will install that browser. This doesn't add any bloat to Windows. It simply an additional step when setting up a new PC.
    • Chrome is also a first party browser on Android and ChromeOS. And on those systems, Google is pulling the same dirty tactics as Microsoft does on Windows.
    • Unofficial script lets you install unreleased Windows 11 features without Microsoft Account by Sayan Sen Microsoft has been steadily evolving the Windows Insider Program over the years, introducing new channels and testing paths that allow enthusiasts to experience upcoming and yet-to-be-released Windows features (some interesting hidden ones too) before they reach the public. However, one long-standing requirement has remained largely unchanged as users are generally expected to enroll in the Program and with a Microsoft account. That's where a third-party tool called "OfflineInsiderEnroll" can help. OfflineInsiderEnroll is said to be a lightweight script that enables access to Windows Insider Program builds on systems that are not signed in with a Microsoft account. Essentially the tool configures the necessary Insider settings locally and hence allows users to select and switch between available preview channels while continuing to receive builds through the normal Windows Update channel. If you are wondering how it manages to do so, it is made possible by a Registry value known as TestFlags. When configured to"0x20", Windows stops communicating with Microsoft's online Insider enrollment services thus preventing locally configured Insider settings from being overwritten. This allows the script to apply its own channel configuration directly through the Registry as Windows Update does not verify whether a device has been officially enrolled in the Insider Program or not. Previously the utility has had already supported the traditional Insider branches including Dev, Beta, and Release Preview. However following Microsoft’s recent restructuring of its preview channels, the script has now been updated. The latest OfflineInsiderEnroll version, 2.6.6, adds support for the newly introduced Insider channel lineup. As such, users can now choose from several Experimental channels in addition to Beta and Release Preview options. The update also retains tools for refreshing the Insider cache, resetting Insider settings, and completely stopping Insider enrollment when needed. Keep in mind though that will need elevated privileges when running the script (run as Admin). You can get the latest version of OfflineInsiderEnroll from this page on its official GitHub repo.
    • The "Classic" Outlook has done that for a few years as well. The option to even change that is really hidden away too... It really shouldn't be hard to respect user defaults. Sadly we are the product now, not Outlook. To change in the Classic Outlook: File > Options > Advanced > change "Open hyperlinks from Outlook in"
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Dr Jared Dental Studio earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      RG INVESTMENT GROUP earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      The Norwegian Drone Pilot earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Very Popular
      s0nic69 earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Collaborator
      Asgardi earned a badge
      Collaborator
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      250
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      67
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      60
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!