Xandros made products for both the consumer and business markets. While the distributions included many packages licensed as
free software and
open-source, Xandros also included
proprietary software developed in-house by the Xandros Corporation.
Commercial editions Xandros Desktop Home Edition This edition came with a 30-day trial of
Crossover Office. It also included an "Applications CD" which includes extra programs which can be installed via Xandros Networks. As opposed to Home Edition Premium, the Home Edition did not include the photo manager, music manager, security suite, wireless profiles, or the ability to write to
NTFS partitions.
Xandros Desktop Home Edition Premium This edition came with a full version of Crossover Office Standard Edition, and a second CD (the "Applications CD") which included extra applications which could be installed via Xandros Networks. Despite its name, Xandros Desktop Home Edition Premium did not include a Xandros Networks Premium Membership. Xandros Corporation offered a 30-day trial version of Xandros Home Edition Premium as a free download for evaluation purposes.
Xandros Desktop Professional Formerly known as Xandros Desktop Business Edition, this edition was basically the same as Xandros Desktop Home Edition Premium, but it included the ability to authenticate to Windows PDC and
Active Directory Domains, used
PPTP VPN to connect remotely to the office, and used
broadband wireless connectivity with
3G,
GSM and
UMTS support. Xandros Desktop Professional was officially released on 28 November 2006. As with Home Edition Premium, Xandros Corporation also offered a 30-day trial version of Xandros Professional.
Presto Introduced in 2009, Presto was a lightweight "instant-on" operating system which uses the lightweight
Xfce 4.6 desktop environment. Similar to
Canonical's
Wubi installer for
Ubuntu, it was installed inside of Microsoft Windows, with Windows XP as the earliest supported version. It also had access to an "application store" based on
CNR, which was acquired through Xandros' acquisition of
Linspire in mid-2008.
Xandros Moblin In 2009, Xandros announced that it would develop a new netbook operating system based on
Moblin v2.
Server systems Xandros Desktop Management Server (xDMS) was available. It easily set up repositories as it deploys customized Xandros Desktop configurations across a large organization. Xandros Server was designed to run on
servers. It was officially launched at the 2006
LinuxWorld Conference and Expo in Toronto, on 25 April 2006, and officially released for purchase at the Xandros website on 1 May 2006, at a
MSRP of US$450. Xandros Server 2.0 has been released in May 2007.
Previous editions Xandros Open Circulation Edition (OCE) was a freely redistributable edition for non-commercial use, with a limited set of additional software. Soon after the 4.0 version was released as a DVD shrinkwrapped with Linux magazines, the torrent was pulled from Xandros' servers and all references to OCE removed from the Xandros website without explanation. Previous versions of Xandros OCE were generally released about 4 months after the release of the commercial versions. Xandros Desktop OS Standard Edition was basically the same as the Open Circulation Edition, but it included full-speed CD/DVD burning. This product was replaced by Home Edition. Xandros Desktop OS Deluxe Edition included an "applications CD" which included extra programs which could be installed via Xandros Networks. This product was replaced by Home Edition Premium. Xandros Desktop OS Surfside Edition (branded and sold as Xandros SurfSide Linux) was basically the same as Xandros Desktop OS Standard Edition, however the Surfside Edition also included a Plantronics USB headset and 120 minutes of
SkypeOut service. According to
DistroWatch, Xandros Desktop is discontinued. When Xandros purchased Linspire, they announced plans to retain
Freespire as a Debian-based free community distribution and to base future editions of Xandros Desktop Professional – Home Edition and Home Edition Premium were to be discontinued – on Freespire. (This would be similar to the way
Novell bases
SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop on their free
openSUSE and to the way
Red Hat bases
Red Hat Enterprise Linux on their free
Fedora.) However, according to one website, Xandros has discontinued Freespire. In addition, the DistroWatch website has added Freespire to its list of discontinued distributions. == User interface ==