On 07/16/2014 04:17 PM, Pete Travis wrote:
On Jul 16, 2014 9:07 AM, "Neal Becker" <ndbeck...@gmail.com
<mailto:ndbeck...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> Sorry, I know this subject has been written about before. But
google shows
> mostly 5 year old info.
>
> What are some recommendations for a relatively high performance
laptop that
> works well on linux, and without paying windoze tax?
>
> --
>
You're aware that in a lot of (most? All?) cases, it's actually
*Microsoft* that pays the "windoze tax", right? They want to get their
product in front of users and want their latest and geatest, like
win8, to be popular. They might actually provide incentives to the OEM
ranging from license discounts to free licences and then some.
My advice is to pick a machine based on your needs and budget and
don't worry too much about keeping your cash out of Microsoft's
pocket. With Fedora you won't be getting MS news or bing results in
the shell or using their app store; that pretty much does the job
these days.
I have a Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro, a flagship Windows8 convertible
ultrabook. It works great, and I have never booted Windows on it.
--Pete
So what you're saying is, Microsoft makes no money, or even loses money,
on OEM installations, and hopes to make all their money on those who
upgrade existing hardware from one version of Windows to another. Or
maybe on advertising through the Bing search engine.
If that's true, then I suggest Richard Stallman was correct and the
business model of a proprietary operating system was never tenable
long-range, and has come to the end of the road. Because I'm sure
everyone knows that no enterprise, that has any true sense of TCO,
upgrades existing hardware from one version of Windows to the next. Each
succeeding version of Windows is a worse resource hog than the last, and
also breaks at least one application the enterprise uses regularly. So
what they do instead is wait until their version of Windows is
approaching EOL, then upgrade hardware and software together. (I
recently bought a new machine, moved all my apps onto it, then ended up
erasing them all because the new Windows had to go through a full system
refresh just to install a "vital update.")
And let's see if I further have you straight: nobody's going to get a
significant discount, or indeed even an insignificant discount, by
buying a "bare" machine with no OS installed.
Temlakos
--
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