
Ex-Microsoft employee giving his old boss cause for concern...
By David Becker
Published: 31 October 2002 09:00 GMT
US retail giant Wal-Mart has added the Lycoris version of Linux to its menu of budget PCs.
Wal-Mart has become one of the most important mainstream boosters of the open-source Linux operating system and other alternatives to Microsoft's Windows.
Through its website, the retail giant early this year began offering low-cost PCs without an operating system preinstalled. It then expanded to Linux, initially relying on the Lindows distribution of Linux and later expanding to include MandrakeSoft's version of the OS.
By using the open-source software and low-cost processors from Taiwan chipmaker Via, Wal-Mart has been able to drive down prices to $199 for a PC without a monitor.
Lycoris was launched in Microsoft's hometown of Redmond, Washington, two years ago by former Microsoft systems tester Joseph Cheek. The company began selling Lycoris Desktop/LX, its version of Linux for desktop PCs, early this year and quickly won recognition for dressing up Linux with a user interface similar in look and feel to recent versions of Windows.
Lycoris Marketing Director Jason Spisak said: "We don't have the same abhorrence for Windows that a lot of Linux fanatics do," said. "We like what Microsoft's done - we think they've come up with a lot of great innovations. The difference is that our software's open; we don't have anything to hide."
David Becker writes for News.com
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