Did Microsoft force Asus to axe Linux?
The problem was that Asus had not only adopted Windows and jettisoned Linux (which I knew), but the computer didn't even come with the free services that came with the $199 model. I know there are millions who love Windows. That is their human right. But it fails completely - for me - on usability. So, the Seashell ends up not as a next-generation netbook, but as a Microsoft-occupied computer and all the simplicity of the earlier Asus machines has gone out of the Windows. Every time I open it, I am assailed with stuff I don't want - Windows Live this, Norton that, Phishing this, Works that - with no obvious way of switching some of them off. When I simply wanted to write a note there was no Open Office and when I tried Word in Microsoft Works it kept asking me to sign up for another 45 days (or whatever) after inputting a key number I was supposed to have but didn't.
How did this happen? There are various versions. One is that Microsoft suddenly woke up to a serious threat to its market share and became Microhard. It gave Asus a package it couldn't refuse - a cheap version of Windows as long as it tossed the upstart Linux overboard. True or not, Asus has changed from being a successful proponent of Linux to an evangelist for Windows. The second version is that Asus, seeking a cheap web book to sell globally, used free Linux as a lever to force Microsoft to give it a cheap deal it wouldn't otherwise have got. A third version is that Linux wasn't yet up to the job.
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