Thursday, October 31, 2019

Linspire 8.5 Released

Happy Halloween. Today the PC/OpenSystems development team is pleased to announce the release of Linspire 8.5 (Swordfish 2) to the general public as well as our faithful user base. This is a major release of Linspire from PC/OpenSystems which furthers our commitment to desktop Linux.

 Linspire 8.5 is packed with enhancements and features showcasing its ease of use and polish as one of the industry's leading Linux distributions. As with Freespire our goal was to “trim the fat” on our flagship distro. Many of our users and customers have told us that Linspire / Freespire as a whole were bloated; what we did in response was pick “best of breed” applications that added to the overall simplicity of the system. The software center is loaded with thousands of applications which make YOUR computer work YOUR way.

 Linspire 8.5 was designed with an intuitive user interface, making it extremely easy to use; easy enough for any Window or macOS convert to make the switch to desktop Linux seamlessly. Aside from the GUI, there has been a lot of work done under the hood to make the system more stable and secure than previous releases. Multimedia codecs, including some under license, are included so that users can enjoy any audio format and video playback of all types.

Linspire 8.5 contains the following enhancements:

Kernel 5.0.0-31
KDE 5.12.9
Ice 6.0.4
Google Chrome 77
KolourPaint
OnlyOffice Desktop Editors
Amarok
Kpatience
DreamChess
VLC Media Player
Kamerka
Boot Repair
Firewall configurator
Powershell 6.2.3

 You can purchase a copy of Linspire 8.5 right now; either self-support or full service.


Linspire Support License
Install Media
Order Notes


Linspire Download Edition

Below is a Q&A with the Linspire lead system designer and conceptualist.

Q) : What changes are we seeing from Linspire 8 to 8.5 to justify this as a major release? 
Linspire 8.5 contains a lot of changes which justify it being labeled major rather than incremental. First, major kernel changes; we moved from the 4.x to the 5.x series. Second, installed applications; we removed many that customers have told us weren’t necessary or that required configuration to make the system operate the way they wanted. Fine tuning was performed per customer requests.

Q) There was a story written a few months ago that Linspire broadcasts information to Microsoft servers. To what level do Linspire and PC/OpenSystems developers communicate with Microsoft? Should customers be concerned that their information is being transmitted without consent to a third party? 
Microsoft collects NO customer information, system information or data from PC/OpenSystems LLC and Linspire. Linspire CE Office does use Microsoft Office Online, Outlook, and OneDrive but users have the option to disclose information to Microsoft when they choose to use the release. Linspire comes preinstalled with the Microsoft repositories for Powershell, Skype, .NET Core and VS Code to make it easier for users who wish to use those offerings (NOTE : Skype and Powershell are the ONLY Microsoft applications pre-installed). The ONLY communication Linspire as an OS product has with Microsoft servers is when those applications are updated. Once again, no customer information is transmitted to Microsoft or ANY third-party whatsoever; any claims to the contrary are false.

Q) Who are our customers for Linspire? Who uses Linspire? 
Linspire is used in many different environments and by a diverse group of individuals. Home and home office and all kinds of enterprise-level customers. Its also used by educational facilities, law enforcement agencies, military, scientists and by creative professionals. Linspire and Linspire Enterprise continues to grow and thrive from our expertise in enterprise computing.

Q) Does removing applications make the system less attractive to end users? How does that add value for customers? 
No, it makes it more attractive. If you look at the current market OS alternatives, Windows, macOS, and ChromeOS, they don’t feature tons of software out-of-the-box. Applications are added as necessary to improve the overall experience. Linspire includes an office suite, web browser, audio / video player, and a basic graphics program. Anything else the user may need can be found it in the Software Center and install as needed. For corporate customers who need a custom ISO with specific additional packages, those will be provided when they purchase their license(s). The value added for our customers is ease-of-mind, secure in the knowledge that everything proprietary from Java to BluRay is completely licensed.

Q) How did you choose what software is included in the system and why did you include OnlyOffice vs LibreOffice?
We parsed the available options, looking and opting for simplicity, the least complicated / most immediately intuitive apps we could find. We looked at other OS’ featured in their core lineup. Multimedia, image manipulation, web browsing and a couple of simple games seemed to be the norm; we went one step further and added an office suite. Why did we choose OnlyOffice? What are the common usage scenarios for office suites? Documents, Spreadsheets, and Presentations are the straightforward options shown on the left when the program is launched. The interface resembles MS Office - most of our users and customers are migrating from that environment and we wanted to make the transition seamless.

Q) Is the main distribution the only one being updated? 
 No, All of our CE releases are being updated as is our custom education release. Linspre CE, Linspire CE Office 365 and Linspire CE EDU.

Q) Are the Enterprise releases also being updated as well? 
 No, that update is coming sometime around January 2020.

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Debunking Popular Myths about PC/OpenSystems LLC and Linspire

Today we are going to debunk some common myths about PC/OpenSystems LLC and Linspire that some people have.

Myth:  Linspire is a cash grab 
Reality:  We acquired what was left of Bridgeways Xandros offerings specifically for the technology that they had.. Upon examination, we found that many of their offerings had been superseded by technology that had developed after they left the business and instead of working with that we decided to start over and release Linspire. We could have called it Xandros Desktop and been done with it but we liked the clear distinction between the commercial offerings and the community-driven offering.

Myth: you just usurped the Linspire name 
Reality: No, we acquired full rights to the names, Linspire, Freespire and Xandros. We acquired the source and binary code of all the past releases, customer lists and a very incomplete copy of sales records and other important court filings. To answer the next question, no we will not release any information on Microsoft's settlement with Linspire Inc. We decided, under the advice of legal counsel, to honor the confidentiality of that agreement. We did honor ALL legacy sales that were made in anticipation of what would have been Linspire 7 under the umbrella of Xandros and Linspire Inc.

Myth: No one uses Linspire 
Reality: We already had a customer base and we migrated all of our customers over to the Linspire Enterprise. As with all other enterprise offerings we do have users who continue to use Black Lab Linux and we do make security updates available to those users honoring our commitment to Black Lab until 2026. But Linspire is used by all of our legacy and newer customers and continues to thrive in the home user and commercial space.

Myth:  Linspire continues to broadcast information to Microsoft Servers 
Reality: Microsoft collects NO customer information, system information or data from PC/OpenSystems LLC and Linspire. Linspire CE Office 365 does use Microsoft Office Online, Outlook, and OneDrive but users have to make applicable agreements to Microsoft themselves when they decide to use that release. Linspire itself comes preinstalled with the Microsoft repositories for Powershell, Skype, .NET Core and VS Code to make it easier for users who wish to use those offerings although Skype and Powershell are the ONLY Microsoft applications preinstalled. The ONLY communication Linspire as an OS product has with Microsoft servers is when it looks for updates to those applications. Any claims to the contrary are false and continues to demonstrate the incompetence and petty slander from anyone making them. Despite whether they call themselves “Dr.” or otherwise.

Myth: Linspire is an overpriced release of Ubuntu 
Reality: A lot of work goes into creating Linspire and making Linspire commercial ready. We offer service and support, preinstalled systems, preinstalled drives and install media. We charge according to the services customers require. The self-support release of Linspire is cheaper by far and we do not charge customers for services that they don't require or want. Our track record speaks for itself. We have operated as a business since 2008 and we have a customer retention rate of 98% which is a good record for any commercial software entity. In other words, a majority of our customers have been with us since 2008 approximately 11 years and they don't feel ripped off.

Myth:  Freespire has spyware and uses a survey to make money
Reality:  That is completely FALSE.  Freespire has no adware or any survey attached to it.  That incident came from a "reviewer" whom recompiled the release ISO for his "review" simply for the purpose of trying to paint Freespire and Linspire in a bad light.  That situation was discredited as a situation where that individual felt that we were making false claims regarding his favorite Linux distribution and the "news" site that carried that review continues to show their bias against commercial Linux distributions and guilt by not publishing any of our updates and releases.  We do encourage our users to download Freespire from our legitimate OFFICIAL servers as we do check the integrity of those available ISO's at least twice a week.

Myth:  PC/OpenSystems LLC doesn't care about the open-source community 
Reality: We do very much care about open source and sharing our technology and individuals working in it. We do develop a free and open release called Freespire and our core developers and contributors are encouraged to work on other open-source projects when/if they wish. Participation is not required but encouraged.

That covers most of the common myths and realities of Linspire. You can visit https://www.linspirelinux.com or https://www.pc-opensystems.com for more information.

Thank you.

Powershell in Linspire

Many people have asked me, Why include Powershell in Linspire?  The answer expands more than just "because it's there."  PC/OpenSystems LLC realizes we live in a world where organizations use a variety of operating systems.  Whether it is Android, iOS, ChromeOS, other Linux distros, Windows or Mac we strive to be a good citizen.  Whether it's working with other companies or including technologies that allow us to interoperate with other systems.  Powershell fits that criteria.  Not only is it open-source, so the source code can be downloaded and improved upon, but it is the primary command-line interpreter for Windows 8.x/10.x .  Our job is to make our user's lives easier and one of the ways we feel that is accomplished is by limiting the learning curb.  Users can switch between platforms and work between them easily and effectively.  That is why we include Powershell in Linspire, Linspire CE and Linspire Enterprise.  Not because of some shadow agreement with Microsoft as some have suggested.

Monday, October 14, 2019

Linspire CE 8.5.1 ESR (Education Special Release) Released

Today the PC/OpenSystems development team is pleased to announce the release of Linspire CE 8.5.1 ESR (Education Special Release) to our educational customers. This release contains many bug fixes and feature enhancements from our previous ESR.

Linspire CE educational Release is currently used by over 200 school systems around the United States and internationally.  Linspire CE ESR is a strong commitment to educational computing and is the number 2 Linux distribution used by schools and academic facilities.

One of our main goals with the distribution was security. One of the things that we have heard from customers in this arena were several security concerns. An example of this was being able to go into the Synaptic Package Manager and uninstall or cripple core OS functions. So Synaptic has been removed and we gave control of application installation to the Software Center. We also updated Time Keeper so any systems left on premises you can set usage times so students and faculty can only use the system during scheduled times. We also have heard from users that the Thunderbird e-mail app was no longer necessary since most e-mail work is executed using Gmail or Outlook Web interfaces so we did include the Gmail web app for users (Linspire CE Office 365 customers will receive their update later this week) We have now included the latest release of WebMin for remote access and system maintenance in the core OS.

 Some of the features we have included specific to this release are:

 Better XBox One controller support
Preliminary Nintendo Switch support for use with Presentations
Google Classroom web app now installed by default
Google Docs and Google Keep web apps installed by default
Improved Google Admin support
Improved Chromebook support for installation on EOL (End of Life) EOS (End Of Service) Chromebook models so that you can maximize your hardware investment

Core OS  Features that we have updated are:

Kernel 5.0.0-31 KDE 5.12.9
Ice 6.0.4
Google Chrome 77
KolourPaint
Kpatience
DreamChess
VLC media player
Kamerka
Boot Repair
Firewall configuration
Discover Software Center

 Current customers will have this release delivered to them.  New customers can purchase a facility license or individual licenses here



Linspire CE ESR (Education Special Release)
Install Media
Order Notes

Saturday, June 15, 2019

Linspire 8.0 Maintenance Release 1 RELEASED

Today our development team is pleased to announce the release of Linspire 8.0 Maintenance Release 1. MR1 is part of our bi-annual strategy to make sure Linspire is kept as secure as possible for our customers and users. Proving once again, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Linspire is the best commercially supported Linux-based operating system on the market today. With all of the features modern PC users expect from their computing experience, Linspire continues to rise above and shine over all other commercial Linux desktop solutions.

This release also features improvements to Linspire CE and Linspire CE Office 365. Linspire 8.0 MR1 integrates the following upgrades / improvements :

Linux Kernel 4.18.0-18
KDE Plasma 5.12.7
Plays On Linux 4.3.4
Wine 4.0 Stable
LibreOffice 6.4.2
Google Chrome 75
Thunderbird 60.7
VLC Media Player
Amarok Full multimedia codecs
Ice SSB

Many more performance and security enhancements under-the-hood will improve your experience, making it smoother and typically hassle-free. You can purchase Linspire 8.0 MR1 below; purchasing Linspire 8.0 MR1 entitles you to free upgrades for the lifetime of the release and 12 months of e-mail support / 6 months of phone support or you can purchase the self-support release and download it from the digital locker today.


Linspire Support License
Install Media
Order Notes


Linspire Download Edition

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Distrowatch Review Response - Republished

We had pulled our review response to Distrowatch for Linspire 7 and Freespire 3.0 because we wanted to put this thing to bed and when one of our people talked to Jesse Smith he assured that would happen should the response be removed, but alas it has not.  But because Distrowatch has refused to report on new releases and showing bias to Linspire we have decided to republish the response in its entirety.  We are doing this because we want the truth of what happened to be out there and not just the one side.  We have attempted to work with them to mitigate the situation but since they obviously have no desire to treat Linspire and Freespire fairly and equally here is the response:


So I was reading Distrowatch and I came across the review of Linspire and Freespire.  Really it wasn't a review and should have been called "In defense of Linux Mint"  So while I could sit here and insult the guy and tear apart his review piece by piece but he is entitled to his opinion I'm not gonna bother.  That's what a review is, someone's opinion.  Now that you have read his opinion let me fill in the blanks that he left and give you some facts.

When did this "review" start

It started a couple of weeks ago and the guy sent me an e-mail saying he wanted to do a review for Distrowatch.  I forwarded the e-mail to press.  She said, "Roberto this is just a hit piece do what you want he is going to write what he wants to write and be done with it."  I also forwarded it to our lead engineer and he said the same thing.  So I wrote him back and the impression I got was this guy was simply pissed because he felt I disrespected or insulted the other Ubuntu derivative Linux Mint.  That's fine.  I turned it over to the head developer because I had some family issues pop up and Simon took over.   Let me clarify that, he had access to the head of development the guy who works on it more than myself and he didn't ask any questions regarding development, didn't ask us for access to the changed source code which is completely available via our download server, only icons.

So let's go over the facts.

Untruth One - The installer - We do not monetize the installer at all in Freespire or Linspire.  Any claim that we do is devoid of fact and whoever says we do is lying and what's most important they know they are lying.  His screenshot does not represent us as a US company, in fact, its a UK survey site.  So what happens if you click release notes while connected to the internet in Linspire or Freespire?  Very simple.


In this case, it takes you to the PC/OpenSystems LLC website.  So wherever he got that URL from was not from Linspire or Freespire.

QA (Quality Assurance) process - We like any and all professional software houses use QA testing to test our products.  We take people with different knowledge levels sit them down in front of a computer with our products and competitors products and we test to see who has the better product.  Well, no one except for the author of this review had any issues with our installer.  Some of our QA testers had an issue with Linux Mint when installing additional drivers.  It happens, no one product is perfect.  He says "Well only 3 people"  He is missing the point.  ONE person who has issues is too many.  But I will concede one point, I do disagree with the QA team from time to time and that's OK.  I do apologize they don't like his distribution of choice.  There are plenty of people who DONT like Linux Mint


Software Changes and included packages - As stated to him we do make changes to Freespire 3.0.  Xubuntu 16.04 is 1.2 gb to download, Freespire 3.0 is 1.5 gb.  So after removing LibreOffice and Thunderbird it GREW to 1.5 gb.  We add 3 gb of "artificial modifications"  We make changes to Linspire and Freespire.  All of our changes to Freespire are sourced and posted for download, for free and for anyone to make changes and commit them.  Were we asked for these changes?  No.  Were these changes looked at? No.  But they are available.


Untruth Two - Dubious claims - He claims that when you click on the "Help" box in the menu it takes you to the Xubuntu documentation complete with Xubuntu logo and all.  That is false.  As evidenced by the video below when you click on the "Help" icon in the menu this is what pops up:



Once again the PC/OpenSystems LLC website.  We remove the Xubuntu documentation because A) while Xubuntu is trademarked we can't use the name or the logos.  So the Ubuntu documentation is actually removed from the system.  Now we could go through there and change stuff, change the logos and change the text but B) we prefer help to be online because it gives users the ability to contact us real time and actually saves install space while allowing us to update "Help" as necessary.

Robert Rijkhoff, again is trying to make it sound like as we are pushing Linspire and Freespire as something it is NOT.  We arent when asked by him why its derived from Xubuntu our head developer Simon Lincoln made this statement " Good observation.  We do try to stay as close to Xubuntu, Debian and Ubuntu as possible.  That was strategic and planned.  There is a lot of work that goes into the core kernel system.  Im at a loss coming in on the backend of this so I dont know what he gave you.  We do a lot of custom work, as I do a lot of that work, on drivers for SGI and HPE systems.  I work with some HP developers and some of our clients who need drivers either for the graphics subsystem or the kernel itself that specific clients need hence our custom spin generation.  Some customers are on the receiving end of this and some are not.  These drivers are included in the extra-drivers package.  With Freespire in particular and with Linspire we do try to stay as close to the base because we saw what happened with Linspire Inc.  we saw what happened with Xandros and we saw what happened with Parsix.  Shit happens.  Companies go bankrupt.  They get bought out and developers get burned out.  So we made a decision to stay to the base because in the case that something happens our customers are not left struggling or out in the cold and having to rush decisions they can either fire up the Ubuntu or Debian repo's and continue to get updates and they are set and can make a decision later.  Its called contingency planning. "  so were we honest and open with him? Yes.  Now we do have our own commercial repository which is not included in the press ISO that was provided.  Robert had unfettered access to ask the head guy what he wanted.   Instead, he talked shit to the guy and ran off when he realized someone who could give him the MOST answers was presented.

And nowhere in the FAQ do we say people need to "Mind their own business"

So while yes we can go ahead and tear apart his "review" piece by piece and point by point.  There really is no need.  Opinions are opinions.  For those of the commentators who say they won't "buy" Linux that's fine, Freespire is available for download free of charge and you can form your own opinion.  We make improvements every day and usually have incremental ISO's every week.  Opinions are fine and usually, I don't bother rebutting reviews or people but with this one that had so many untruths aka lies, misrepresentations, and fabrications and why?  Because someone doesn't like your distribution of choice.  I will go ahead and keep selling Linux, services around Linux and hardware to run Linux as I have done for the last 12 years.

Monday, March 4, 2019

Is Linspire CE Office 365 spyware for Microsoft

Techrights facilitated a piece that they claim that we are pushing Microsoft's agenda to be able to spy on and exploit Linux users.

Here is a link to the article in question:

http://techrights.org/2019/01/12/linspyware/

So why did we create Linspire CE Office 365?  Customer demand.  Some of the school systems we service and others asked for it because some states REQUIRE the use of Microsoft software and services.  We do have communications with Microsoft but mostly to tell them that somethings not working correctly and of course permission to use some of their copyrighted material.  Microsoft Corp. has no hand in the development, deployment or sale of Linspire CE Office 365 they get no "cut" off the sales of Linspire CE Office 365.  Using Linspire CE Office 365 is no different, data transmission wise, as you using Fedora and using Office Online or Bing yourselves.   If you don't want to use Microsofts services DONT USE THEM.

Linspire Desktop which is our primary product retains Google Search and the Chrome browser infrastructure.  It only contains one Microsoft application and that application is Skype.

People who purchase Linspire CE Office 365 know what they are getting, they know what's included and its what they want.

Please do your research before you write fictional hit pieces or as Donald Trump would say Fake News.


Why do we honor the Lindows lifetime agreement from Linspire Inc.

 One of the questions people have asked me; Why do you continue to honor Lindows lifetime members even though Linspire Inc is no longer arou...