Jump to content

Gates offers Asia cheap Windows


think_too_mut

Recommended Posts

Gates offers Asia cheap Windows

 

June 30, 2004

 

Microsoft chairman Bill Gates has said the company may offer a cheaper version of its Windows operating system in more countries in Asia after making it available in Malaysia and Thailand to counter the growing popularity there of the less expensive Linux software.

 

Mr Gates and Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer are in Asia this week to meet customers and government officials to promote the Windows operating system, which controls about 95 per cent of a global market valued at more than $US10 billion ($A14.3 billion).

 

The dominance of Windows is under greater pressure in Asia than elsewhere. Linux, a cheap alternative to Windows, last year sold three times as many copies in Asia than it did in the US.

 

"We will talk with other governments about whether they have a program to get very low-cost computers to their citizens; and, when they have programs like that, we will talk to them about which of the versions of Windows will make sense for them," Mr Gates said.

 

Some versions of Linux are available for free over the internet. Companies such as IBM and Novell Inc also modify Linux to suit customers' needs and sell the software and related services generally at a lower price than Windows.

 

Microsoft last week said it would sell a simplified version of Windows at a lower price in Malaysia and Thailand.

 

- Bloomberg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

M$ did the same in Indonesia around the same time they dropped prices in Thailand last year. Huge markets Malaysia and Thailand, have they already given up in China and India?

 

 

from : China Daily 18/11 03

Sun inks deal to distribute Java Desktop System in China

( 2003-11-18 10:40) (Agencies)

 

Sun Microsystems Inc. has scored a deal with a Chinese technology consortium to distribute its Java Desktop System to citizens of China, the company said Monday.

 

The China Standard Software Company (CSSC) has selected Sun as its preferred technology partner to help provide a nationwide standard desktop software system to China's 1.3 billion citizens, according to Sun.

 

The CSSC is a consortium government-supported IT companies formed to deliver a standard Linux-based desktop system for China.

 

The CSSC and Sun Microsystems technology licensing agreement will allow CSSC to deliver its own branded desktop system using the Java Desktop System as the foundation for its desktop standards, subject to export approval from the U.S. government, according to Sun.

 

The Chinese government plans to ultimately install at least 200 million copies of a non-Windows desktop solution throughout the country.

 

The multiyear agreement with Sun is scheduled to start at the end of 2003 with the installation of approximately 500,000 to 1 million seats per year.

 

In September, China, Japan and South Korea decided to seek an alternative to Windows as a standard desktop system for their citizens. As part of this push, Chinese programmers developed a homegrown Linux version called Red Flag Linux a few years ago. That software has been touted by Beijing as a secure alternative to Windows.

 

Sun's deal with China comes only days after Sun's Executive Vice President of Software Jonathan Schwartz said Sun was seeking per-citizen licensing as a way to offer its Java Desktop System to a host of countries outside the United States.

 

Schwartz admitted that Sun is marketing the desktop outside of the United States because interest in the suite in North America where Microsoft's Windows OS has been dominant. He also said Sun hopes to help countries whose citizens do not have broad access to PCs bridge the "digital divide" through inexpensive or free access to the Java Desktop System.

 

Sun's Java Desktop System is a Windows-like operating system based on Linux and consisting of open-source technologies such as the Mozilla browser, Evolution mail client and GNOME GUI.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...