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Dell withholds Linux PCs from U.K.

No timescale for the provision of pre-installed Ubuntu machines in the U.K., despite the fact U.S. customers will be able to buy them this month.
Written by Richard Thurston, Contributor

Dell will not sell Linux PCs in the UK--at least for the time being.

The PC supplier said on Tuesday it would sell machines with Ubuntu Linux pre-installed later this month. But Dell has told ZDNet UK that the systems will be only be sold in the United States for now. It refused to reveal any timescale for the sale of such systems in the United Kingdom.

In a statement sent to ZDNet UK, Dell said: "Currently these are only being offered in the U.S. Dell is still working out details of its global program." The company refused to put a timescale on when U.K. users might benefit.

It is not the first time that Dell has offered products to U.S. customers but refused to ship the same product to the United Kingdom. It already offers so-called "naked PCs"--computers without operating systems--to customers with a US address. But customers in the UK are unable to order such a system.

Dell's customers have waited a long time for a pre-installed Linux operating system. Over 130,000 users of Dell's IdeaStorm forum have "promoted" a suggestion that the vendor should offer pre-installed Linux as an alternative to Windows. About 60 percent of respondents to a separate survey by Dell said they would prefer Ubuntu ahead of any other Linux distribution.

It took Dell three months to respond to those users' demands, although it will still not reveal which systems are involved and how much users will have to pay.

Dell offered Linux-based systems starting in 1999, although it withdrew the portfolio after two years. The PC supplier could provide no clear reason why its products should succeed this time. All Dell would say was: "When customers win, Dell wins." The company said it would issue no sales targets for Linux systems.

Support--also as yet unpriced--will be provided by Ubuntu's commercial backer Canonical, but Dell will also answer users' queries on the software, the company said.

Separately, Dell hinted that it might extend its use of Ubuntu beyond the desktop and into its server portfolio. Spokesman Kent Cook said: "We're looking at Linux across the breadth of our product line. It takes a bit longer sometimes on that side. Stay tuned."

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