Well, Ubuntu/Canonical certified that Laptop, so that it gets a shiny Ubuntu 
sticker and can be sold as "Ubuntu certified".
I would expect at least some person from Canonical/Ubuntu to look at it before 
certifying it, so that there's an acceptable user experience available.

I have bought many (>10) Windows certified systems, and they all worked just 
fine.
It's the first time in my life that I bought a computer system that does not do 
what I expect it to do (bad battery life, fan running all the time, 
hardware/touchpad not working right - never had that before).

That's a pretty poor out of the box experience, isn't it?

And saying that the problem belongs to the manufacturer is not fair I think:
See http://www.canonical.com/engineering-services/oem-services/oem-services: 
Dell has at least booked the Standard package from there, which includes 
"Hardware enablement". Has Canonical made the hardware work, what it promises 
there to do? No! Has Canonical provided any fixes upstream? No. 


The way it is I would not say that Ubuntu is a serious competitior to Windows. 
Back to the drawing board.

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to the bug report.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1

Title:
  Microsoft has a majority market share

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/clubdistro/+bug/1/+subscriptions

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to