Actually, the rule is that punctuation like a comma is supposed to go inside quotation marks unless doing so would be confusing and/or change the meaning of what you are writing. The exceptions usually involve question marks or exclamation points. That is, if a quesion mark is part of a title you put it inside the quotation marks, but if it's the end to a question you're asking, you put it outside the quotation marks to avoid confusion. Generally, since titles won't end with a comma (or a period), you follow the rule and put the comma inside the quotation marks.
Of course properly all of these titles should be underlined or in italics rather than in quotation marks at any rate. Only titles of things that are part of a larger work are supposed to be put in quotation marks, such as a chapter title or the title of a story in a newspaper or magazine. Sometimes people resort to quotation marks when they don't have a good way to use italics or underlining, but most modes of written communication provide one or the other.
I just wanted to make a clarification. According to other sources the $89 Linux version of the Intel compute stick will have only 1GB of RAM and 8GB of storage. What is still unclear, however, is whether or not there will be a $149, 2GB RAM, 32GB SSD version with Linux preinstalled.
I would hope that, at any rate, there will be no artificial restrictions on the hardware, and that you will be able to install whatever operating system it can handle on every variant of the stick.
Actually, the rule is that punctuation like a comma is supposed to go inside quotation marks unless doing so would be confusing and/or change the meaning of what you are writing. The exceptions usually involve question marks or exclamation points. That is, if a quesion mark is part of a title you put it inside the quotation marks, but if it's the end to a question you're asking, you put it outside the quotation marks to avoid confusion. Generally, since titles won't end with a comma (or a period), you follow the rule and put the comma inside the quotation marks.
Of course properly all of these titles should be underlined or in italics rather than in quotation marks at any rate. Only titles of things that are part of a larger work are supposed to be put in quotation marks, such as a chapter title or the title of a story in a newspaper or magazine. Sometimes people resort to quotation marks when they don't have a good way to use italics or underlining, but most modes of written communication provide one or the other.