Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

(Comma separation for multiple addresses)
Your Message:

Windows 7 on Netbooks: Does Linux Stand a Chance?

By Shane O'neill , CIO , 01/15/2009
  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

Possibly Microsoft's most important strategic goal for Windows 7, in addition to redeeming the brand damage done by Windows Vista, is to dominate netbooks, now the fastest selling segment of the PC market.


Why Windows 7 will never kill off Linux
"Why Windows 7 will crush Linux"


This may not bode well for the Linux operating system. With netbooks, the open-source OS with a highly tech-savvy audience found a market where it could legitimately threaten Windows. But Linux will face an uphill battle in this category now that the sleeping software giant has been awoken to the opportunity that netbooks present, say industry analysts.

Top netbook vendors Asus and Acer, which together account for the majority of the netbook market, run Linux on roughly 30 percent of their Eee PC and AspireOne netbooks respectively-a figure that dwarfs Linux's nearly 1 percent share of the higher-end PC market. Hewlett-Packard, Dell and Lenovo released netbook products in the fourth quarter of 2008, all in the $400 price range and offering a choice of either Windows XP or some flavor of Linux.

But Microsoft designed Windows 7, unlike notorious resource hog Vista, with netbooks in mind (Click here for a video demo of the Windows 7 pre-beta running on a netbook). According to Microsoft's Windows Consumer Product Managing Director Parri Munsell, "Windows 7 has been optimized and engineered to run on anything, from the smallest notebook to the most loaded laptop or desktop."

Netbooks Crept Up on Microsoft

Why is making Windows 7 small form-factor friendly a necessity for Microsoft? The company was caught off guard by a sudden netbook spike in popularity in 2008 that bit into its bottom line.

In its last quarterly earnings report in October, Microsoft pointed directly at explosive netbook sales in 2008 as one of the main reasons for sluggish year-over-year growth for Windows Vista. Because Vista's hardware requirements and licensing costs are too much for netbook OEMs, Microsoft had to get Windows XP running on netbooks to curb the Linux momentum, analysts say.

Initially, netbooks only ran Linux and the OS was able make significant headway before and after Microsoft put XP on them. Asus and Acer executives have been quoted recently as saying that Linux should sustain a netbook market share of 20 to 30 percent.

Linux Lacks Marketing Muscle

But despite reports from bloggers that Linux on netbooks could undercut Windows, industry analysts remain doubtful that Linux can keep up the netbook momentum now that these lightweight, inexpensive laptops have become more mainstream-particularly when the competition is Microsoft, a marketing giant.

"I don't think Microsoft is really worried about Linux on the client side," says Roger Kay, president of research and consulting firm, Endpoint Technologies. "Most attempts to get Linux moving on the client side have gone nowhere and I think its share of the netbook market will decline when Windows 7 arrives."

A bigger problem than Linux, says Kay, is that Microsoft is running "a trailing edge technology [Windows XP] on netbooks" and that Vista is too resource-heavy for that market.

  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

Comments (25)
Login
Forgot your account info?

netbook linuxBy Anonymous on January 15, 2009, 2:34 pmThere is no market share race for linux, you either like it and use it or you don't.

Reply | Read entire comment

Poor ResearchBy Anonymous on January 15, 2009, 3:01 pm"No one has yet created something like the MacOS using Linux for a netbook, but the rumor is Google will do so shortly with Android," he [Enderle] says. This guy...

Reply | Read entire comment

WTF???By Anonymous on January 15, 2009, 3:47 pmWindows 7 is Vista and just as much as a resource hog. Are you getting paid to write this crap. We all know Linux is not taking a market share any time soon but...

Reply | Read entire comment

Light OSsBy HereAndNow on January 15, 2009, 5:30 pmThe need for a fat OS, like Windows, will diminish, as more and more applications become web based. Then much lighter OSs are likely to prevail (smaller, faster,...

Reply | Read entire comment

I think Windows is in trouble due to economyBy Anon on January 15, 2009, 8:17 pmI am skeptical that somehow Windows 7 is going to be leaner and faster than Vista. I think MS is banking on netbooks being faster by the time Windows 7 is released. Windows...

Reply | Read entire comment

WindowsBy Anonymous on January 15, 2009, 9:14 pmFor now Windows 7 is hot. Eventually a new version of Windows will be released. Newer versions of Windows will always better. Linux is good too. Yet it must always...

Reply | Read entire comment

View all comments

Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed