Xandros releases updated desktop Linux OS
By Todd R. Weiss
,
Computerworld
, 11/28/2006
- Share/Email
- Tweet This
- Print
Linux vendor Xandros Inc. Tuesday unveiled its latest Xandros Desktop Professional Version 4 of its enterprise Linux operating system, which debuts two days before Microsoft Corp. launches the enterprise version of
Windows Vista.
Xandros Desktop Professional 4, which retails for US$99.99 and is available in a boxed version or as a download, includes
Bluetooth wireless support, desktop search, ISV support and advanced 3D desktop graphics effects. The new OS maintains what
Xandros said is seamless compatibility with Windows, Linux and Unix networks, including Windows domain authentication -- plus
support for logon scripts, group policy profiles and Microsoft Exchange.
Xandros CEO Andreas Typaldos said in a statement that Linux continues "to make inroads in the enterprise as Windows replacements,"
meaning companies must figure out how to manage disparate systems in mixed Windows and Linux networks. "Today, most companies
utilize a silo-based approach by managing Windows and various Linux versions separately, each with their own administrators
and toolsets."
But Xandros' latest release is designed to help companies "manage their mixed environments holistically" with tools that deliver
seamless integration and help simplify the management of the mixed network environment as if it were homogeneous, he said.
"Our new desktop release does just that with its enhanced network integration, Windows application and file compatibility
and mass-deployment capabilities using the Xandros Deployment Server."
The operating system is being pushed as a low-cost, full-featured alternative to Windows -- a strategy the company has been
pursuing for several years with mixed results, based on its small market share.
Dana Gardner, an analyst with Interarbor Solutions LLC in Gilford, N.H., said Xandros is one of several Linux distributions
that remains very much on the fringe in terms of usage. But opportunities exist, he said, if smaller Linux vendors team up
with partners that could help make their products more popular. Deals with service providers, such as Voice-over-IP (VoIP)
services and telecom providers, could add the operating system into the mix and create a product useful for many users
"I think the next step for these desktop distributions is to find those kinds of partners," Gardner said.
Gordon Haff, an analyst with Illuminata Inc. in Nashua, N.H., said the problem Xandros and other small Linux vendors face
is that desktop Linux still has not caught on as its advocates have hoped. "At this point, I don't think Linux is ever going
to be as important as a traditional Windows-like fat-client operating system," Haff said. "Yes, there will be people who want
it and it may even gain market share," but it won't overtake Windows in the marketplace.
"There aren't the applications, there aren't the drivers" to make Linux a simple drop-in replacement for Windows in all uses.
Haff said Linux could be successful in augmenting Windows in thin-client systems, where users are less concerned about what
operating system is being used.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.
Comment