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/v3-uk/news/1980251/netbook-sales-driving-linux-adoption
07 Jan 2009, Iain Thomson , V3
The burgeoning netbook market is helping to drive Linux adoption around the world, according to new figures from Forrester Research.
The analyst firm's Netbooks are the Third PC Form Factor report suggests that netbooks have driven adoption of the open source operating system in ways that have not been achieved with either the PC or notebook markets.
"While Linux-based netbooks have not gained much consumer acceptance in the US, their success varies greatly by geographical market. In developing countries, Linux-based Eee PCs have fared better," said Forrester analyst J P Gownder.
"Even if a majority of netbooks run Windows, the minority that run Linux are the most successful non-Windows, non-Macintosh consumer PCs in the industry in terms of penetration."
Over a third of US households are investigating buying a netbook, according to the research, primarily for second or third computers, for use by children or to use exclusively on the go.
The good news for manufacturers is that the new segment is unlikely to encroach on the laptop market, as fewer than a quarter of those questioned said that they would consider buying a netbook as a replacement for a laptop.
Overall, laptop owners are the most interested in buying a netbook, followed by PC owners and non-PC owners. Barely a third of the 15 per cent of non-PC owners questioned were interested in a netbook, suggesting the existence of a hard core of consumers who do not want a PC at any price.
One of the key drivers is that netbooks are seen as ideal for mobile data use, while mobile phones are not. More than half of those questioned said that mobile phone screens are too small for mobile data use.
Do you agree?
Convergence is driving this moment.
Nokia had it first with their 9200 and later 9500 communicators.
Big (for a phone) screen with qwerty keyboard with wifi + gprs data capability. They bailed the market for some reason but the truth is the amount of business-driven need for a small computer that does email, IM, and simple web browsing with wifi and gprs along with a gsm sim-slot in a formfactor that can be carried about is what its all about. Notebooks are awkward to use as telephones and handphone screens are just too damn small for a decent look at what is ordinarily A4 (or larger) in size. And some form of real keyboard is a must - not this t9 crap that the girls from the bar get so hot over.
Posted by techqc, 07 Jan 2009