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Linux on half as many netbooks as Windows

Analyst says Microsoft inflating numbers

Reports that the Linux netbook is dead or dying are incorrect, at least globally, according to an analyst firm. Nearly one third of the 35 million netbooks on track to ship this year will come with some variant of the free, open source operating system, ABI Research said. The exact split is 32% Linux versus 68% Windows, said Jeff Orr, an analyst at ABI, which works out to about 11 million Linux netbooks this year.

That number contradicts third party market figures, trumpeted by Microsoft, that showed Linux shipping on as few as 4% of US netbooks. "Just because you live in the United States, don't assume that everything is on Windows," Orr said.

Orr said Ubuntu is a popular choice on netbooks, though he declined to confirm that with any hard statistics.

As netbooks running the ARM processor become a major factor, Orr predicted Linux will overtake Windows on netbooks by 2013. That will be driven by consumers in less developed countries buying Linux netbooks as their primary PCs, rather than North American consumers buying netbooks as secondary machines as predominates today.

While US consumers sometimes appear to have a love hate relationship with Windows, those non-US consumers have less experience with Windows, and thus less reliance, Orr said. For emerging ARM-based netbooks, Orr suggested that Microsoft adopt the same strategy that it did last year to wrest away Linux's initial lead on the hot netbook market, which was to cut the price of Windows XP.

That could mean offering Windows Embedded CE or Windows Mobile, both of which already run on ARM, at a discount to netbook manufacturers, he said, in order to stave off platforms such as Google's Android or Chrome OS, or Moblin.

"They need to get a play started now," he said.

In a statement, Microsoft maintained that "over 93% of worldwide small notebook PCs run Windows today.

"With the recent launch of Windows 7, we believe that trend will continue," the company said. Microsoft touted Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R3 for ARM, but declined to say whether it would cut its licence price to win manufacturers.






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