Well, here in England you rarely see products in whichyou can read something like "suitable for linux"...and when you ask the customer's service, they know nothing about compatibility issues... Of course, I'm talking about personal computers...what I found interesting is that IBM is spending a huge amount of money advertising linux here, but they have no linux laptop to sell (I didn't check desktops)... this sounds, at least, controversial... I mean, somebody could think, "if linux is so good as claims ibm, why don't they sell products with it?" (again, talking about personal computers). Even Dell which, by the way, sells linux desktops in Brazil, apparently has nothing over here... Now, moving on to the business world, linux here is growing up... some companies I know use one of its flavours (mostly suse)... but there are still some nonsense from the general public... in Brighton University, for example, they have solaris and windows... no linux... and they won't install dual boot (I asked 8))... sad... > Jay Daniels wrote: > > > Is it too much to ask that hardware manufacturers put a "Designed for > > Linux" logo on their products? We can only hope, maybe one day. > > > > JMHO:) > > :) > > I really don't think it is too far away now Jay - I can only guess what > the rest of the world is doing, but here in Australia, ALL my SMB > customers now have A Linux box on their premises. Some only as a cut > down router on an old PC, for sure, but when I first started with RH5.1, > I couldn't sell Linux to any of my SMBs for any reason. > > Regards, > Ed. -- Norton --- QVIDQVID LATINE DICTVM SIT ALTVM VIDETVR.