Over a year and a half ago I blogged about buying an ASUS EEE, the first netbook, even though the term netbook had not been coined yet. Since then a whole new industry segment has been created, with just about every major laptop manufacturer participating. Netbooks and similar mobile devices have become such a big market that Google created a new operating system Chrome OS for these devices. Some folks are expecting that Android will also be a player on these devices. Now there is a Linux distribution specifically for netbooks and mobile internet devices. The Moblin steering committee has announced the release of Moblin v2.0 for Intel Atom Processor based netbooks. Moblin is an open source Linux-based platform optimised for mobile devices including netbooks, mobile internet devices, and in-vehicle information systems. A key aspect of the architecture is that it provides a uniform way to develop applications for these devices. The Moblin Core is layered on top of the Linux kernel and h/w device drivers, and above the Moblin Core is the user interface for the target device. The Moblin user interface was developed from scratch for mobile devices.
At IDF 2009 Intel, Microsoft, Adobe, and Dell announced support for Moblin. Dell asked Canonical (of Ubuntu fame) to create a Moblin developer edition for one of its netbooks, which you can buy from Dell with Moblin pre-installed. Intel has demonstrated the next version of the OS, Moblin 2.1, running on a smartphone and from early next year, Moblin will be supported by Microsoft's Silverlight and Adobe's Air platforms as part of Intel's Atom Developer Program. You can download Moblin v2.0 here.
The mobile space is seeing a tremendous amount of innovation including ultra low-powered ARM processors, that are in the Palm Pre, in some Dell laptops and in the just released AlwaysInnovating netbook called Touchbook, which I am expecting to arrive at my door any week now.
Comments