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To: puborectalis who wrote (111819)8/14/2000 9:09:46 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 120523
 
VA Linux lets customers fine-tune
software choices
By Stephen Shankland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
August 14, 2000, 11:50 a.m. PT

VA Linux Systems has unveiled a new online store that allows
buyers to configure the software they want as well as the hardware.

Build-to-order hardware ordering, popularized by Dell Computer, allows customers to specify
what memory, video card, hard disk size and other options they want. But thus far,
build-to-order software has been limited generally to a few basic packages, such as Microsoft
Windows 98 vs. 2000 or adding packages for video games or small business.

VA's build-to-order software option allows customers to choose
from a few basic configurations, then specify in detail which of more
than 700 software packages they'd like installed, chief executive
Larry Augustin said in an interview. In addition, customers can save
configurations and return to them later if they want to order another
or modify the configuration.

VA hopes it will benefit from the new system by promoting repeat
business, Augustin said.

"It increases the stickiness of the customer," he said. "Most of our
customers want the ability to configure the software on the system.
They don't want a generic software load."

The offering also ties in with VA's push to become a services and
support company as well as a computer seller. For one thing, the
build-to-order program helps VA keep track of what customers have
ordered, making it easier to provide them with technical support.

"In terms of operations, I think it ends up costing us less,"
Augustin said. "We know what they've loaded."

By the end of the
year, VA Linux will add the ability to update
customers' computers with the same
build-to-order technology, sending updates over
the Internet, Augustin said. VA hasn't decided
whether to charge for that service, he said.

Typically, build-to-order software is a feature
computer sellers offer to large, valuable
customers who buy lots of computers.

The 700 software packages in VA's build-to-order program are freely available open-source
components, the sort that can be found on distributions of Linux from companies such as Red
Hat, Caldera, SuSE or TurboLinux. VA will later expand the program to include proprietary
packages such as Oracle's database software.

"In effect, we become a reseller of that software," Augustin said.

In the future, as VA learns more about what types of configurations customers are ordering, the
company will create new basic packages such as Web server or programmer workstation, he
said.

The build-to-order system has been a year in the making. It involves a close collaboration with
Synnex, the contract manufacturer that actually builds the systems and installs the software.

Synnex has VA servers at its manufacturing site that have all the necessary software
packages. After a customer has placed an order, the VA computers create the software
components needed on the fly, and Synnex installs them.

VA is one of the top Linux companies that had its initial public offering in the glory days of the
operating system. High demand for the company's stock pushed its price up a record 698
percent on the first day of trading. VA's stock has since settled down to about $41 today, still
above the $30 IPO price.

The build-to-order package is based on Red Hat's edition of Linux, Augustin said. In coming
months, however, VA will add an option based on Debian, a version of Linux maintained
completely by volunteers. Debian differs from Red Hat in that it uses a different boot-up and
update process, and components are stored in different directories.

The software has been in development for more than a year, Augustin said.