10 reasons Linux should be your netbook operating system
I’ve read countless Microsoft-funded “studies” trying to persuade me that Windows is already dominating the netbook space. According to these studies, Linux might as well just take a curtain call because its act is over in the world of netbooks. That is simply not true. If it were, Asus wouldn’t be selling netbooks with Linux preinstalled.
Linux is not going anywhere but up in the netbook market. Here are 10 reasons why I can say that.
1: Netbook hardware is the perfect match for Linux
One of the biggest arguments people use for Windows over Linux is that “You can’t play games with Linux.” Well, guess what? You can’t play games on a netbook (outside of Web-based games). And there are tons of other software types you can’t (or won’t) use on a netbook. No Photoshop, no Quark, and none of those proprietary apps that people seem to need to do their day-to-day business. Nope. Netbooks serve a small purpose — to let you get online — and they do it well.
Linux is the perfect networking operating system. It plays well with other OSes, it’s secure, and it’s fast. But one thing any purchaser of a netbook should know is that space is prime. Although a fresh installation of Eeebuntu might take up nearly 2.8 gigs, you can quickly trim that down using the Synaptic package manager by removing the applications you won’t be using. Windows XP with SP 2 takes up 2.5 gigs of space so the tradeoff there is minimal.
2: Netbooks require a secure OS
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