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Ubuntu on Dell: Where's the Profit?

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Ubuntu on Dell: Where's the Profit?

Dell generated excitement among Linux lovers this week when it revealed it has chosen Ubuntu as the distro it will offer preinstalled on select laptop and desktop computers. Will the move be profitable for Dell in the long run? The venture will likely include razor-thin profit margins, and despite the high number of consumers asking for Linux, nobody knows how many will actually buy.


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Dell (Nasdaq: DELL) took another step toward fulfilling its promise of brining preinstalled Linux operating systems to select consumer computers Tuesday when it announced it has selected Canonical's Ubuntu as its distribution of choice.

While many Linux enthusiasts have hailed the announcement and look forward to the moment when the Dell computers go on sale at the end of May, some industry watchers have been left to ponder how the No. 2 computer manufacturer will make sales Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales of Ubuntu 7.04, known as "Feisty Fawn," profitable.

It is a legitimate question to ask at the start of Dell's second foray into the Linux OS market. The computer maker's first effort began in 1999 with Linux PCs and grew to include laptops in 2000. However, just a few months later in 2001, Dell canceled that line of Linux PCs due to poor sales.

Ubuntu What?

Ubuntu is true open source, and draws many of its users from real computer geeks who often have themselves contributed lines of code to the operating system.

"It is truly leading-edge stuff," Laura DiDio, a Yankee Group research fellow, told LinuxInsider.

The software is so leading-edge that in a 2006 survey, Didio conducted measuring uptime for different operating systems such as Windows, Solaris and different versions of Linux, Ubuntu had the highest number of downtime hours, coming in at 19 hours of downtime per server each year. Canonical has really pushed the envelope, DiDio explained, so there is not a lot of documentation available.

"You really have to know what you're doing and you have to rely on a really small stable of people to help you out to take remedial action when something goes wrong," she noted. "Ubuntu is very leading-edge and not for the faint of heart. You have to know what you're doing."

What They Say vs. What They'll Buy

The question remaining in the tie-up between Dell and Canonical is how much service and support will Dell provide, DiDio said. Dell could make a lot of money from such a premium service, she noted.

Dell has stated that it made the decision to provide select systems with a preinstalled Linux OS at the behest of some 100,000 members of its IdeaStorm community Web site, the company's portal for consumer suggestions and interaction. That could mean 100,000 computers sold, plus many as word-of-mouth circulates among Linux users. That outcome, however, is far from certain.

"Are they just catering to a very vocal minority of technocrats?" DiDio wondered.

The Money Factor

Preloading Linux instead of Windows, means Dell will lose a lot of financial support from Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), according to Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group. For each Windows PC or laptop Dell sells, Microsoft gives money back to Dell for marketing , he told LinuxInsider. Some of it may go back into marketing, Enderle explained, but Dell can do whatever it wants with the money.

"Linux doesn't throw off enough cash for Dell to get the same thing from Linux," Enderle continued. "Windows sales generate a lot of cash, so [with Ubuntu, the profit margins] will be relatively tight."

Very often the buyer wants the least expensive OS, and in the case of Ubuntu, they start off free. So, Enderle said, Dell cannot even expect to make the same amount it makes with each Windows OS sale. Dell also loses out on any support Microsoft provides as well.

"Ubuntu does not have the resources [to offer any deals similar to those from Microsoft]," Enderle pointed out. "If people paid them anything close to what they paid for Windows, then they might be able to make this work. But it doesn't look like that will be the case."

Intially, Enderle suggested, it will be tough for Dell to make the deal Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse as profitable as their Windows business. Even the Windows market is not that profitable. The margins are very slim and the money that comes back from Microsoft makes a huge difference, he noted.


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Talkback: Join the Discussion.
Re: Ubuntu on Dell: Where's the Profit?
profolio
Posted 2007-05-06
While I don't know what kind of deal Dell reached with Canonical to put Ubuntu on their boxes, I ...
Re: Ubuntu on Dell: Where's the Profit?
tjamnz
Posted 2007-05-06
why not just stick with red hat and/or fedora core, their already well supported, great ...
Re: Ubuntu on Dell: Where's the Profit?
tjamnz
Posted 2007-05-03
Dell probably doesnt profit by installing the microsoft operating system ...

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