click analytics

OpenMoko details pricing, availability for Neo1973

Thursday, May 8th, 2008 by admin

fic, linux, neo1973, openmoko

End users are still in for a bit of a wait, but tinkerers, devs, and 1337 hax0rz should soon be able to get their hands on FIC’s Linux-based Neo1973 handset. The device, getting thrown together courtesy of the OpenMoko project with the goal of open-sourcing both the phone and the platform, will drop first in $200 “Hacker’s Lunchbox” trim (for the aforementioned hackers) late this month featuring a seemingly bombproof plastic box to hold your GPLed bundle of joy and its dev tools. This fall — September, if OpenMoko’s prediction holds up — the retail version will follow on for $350 with a variety of bundled accessories (though not the pictured car mount, which’ll run an extra $75), faster processor, and possibly a cam or integrated WiFi. Why not both, FIC? Go crazy!

[Via LinuxDevices.com]

Read

Switched On: The Linux ultraportable opportunity

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 by admin

 

Asus, Eee, featured, HP, Linux, mini-note 2133, switched on, SwitchedOn

The US smartphone market may continue to be dominated by

mobile platforms from Apple, Microsoft, and RIM, but Linux has been creeping into ever more mobile devices in the last few years. Some Motorola RAZR 2 models have donned a Tux, Palm is looking to Linux to drive its next-generation consumer smartphones, and Android’s backers hope to spread it to an even wider array of handsets. Linux is also driving many avant garde connected consumer electronics devices such as the Chumby, Nokia N810, Amazon Kindle, Dash Express, and whatever the fertile minds tinkering with Bug Labs’ modules are envisioning,. Even the remote control that houses the user interface of Logitech’s Squeezebox Duet is a Linux computer.

However, none of these products are intended for as flexible a range of uses as a notebook PC, where Linux is being tested as a tool to achieve lower price points on a new generation of low-cost but style-conscious ultaportables. ASUS set the pace with Xandros on the Eee PC, and HP has tapped Novel SuSE Linux for the 2133 Mini-Note, but whereas the Eee’s positioning has been somewhat of a loose hybrid between an adult OLPC and the Nintendo Wii’s culture of global inclusion, the HP Mini-Note has been strongly focused on reckless, immature students while acknowledging potential for senior executives that have been known to share their temperament.

This summer seems to be shaping up as a key time for ultraportables with new powerful and power-optimized processors coming to market, the highest-profile of which is Intel’s Atom. However, the first real consumer test for these products will be this fall, when the key target market of students see them as a price-competitive alternative to the 15-inch budget notebook.

Compared to the Eee, HP’s Mini-Note is positioned much more closely to a traditional PC with a $599 starting point for a version with Windows and a 120 GB hard drive. HP offers a version with Linux for $100 less, but even somewhat tailored standard desktop Linux operating systems can’t match Windows for ease of use or application support. In a $500 device, Linux has a hard time competing powering a consumer PC.

At less than $300, though, the 2GB version of the Eee becomes more interesting as a mobile productivity appliance. ASUS created a friendly, tabbed interface with big watery icons for the Eee, but launching applications takes consumers into mostly off-the-shelf Linux applications, some of which struggle on the device’s original 7-inch screen — key to its low cost. Any illusion of a unified design dissolves quickly. Some obvious tasks, like simply changing the taskbar clock to display 12-hour instead of 24-hour time, can’t be done with default graphical controls.

To maximize this opportunity, manufacturers should take a page from leading-edge specialized Linux devices and create an integrated and engaging platform optimized for this form factor. Of course, internet appliances have a miserable history, but times have changed. These products are now aimed at savvy, mobile, tech-savvy consumers, not the grandparents keeping MSN TV alive. Initiatives such as Adobe AIR and Google Gears are laying the groundwork for online lifestyle applications to invade the desktop. A patchwork national WiFi infrastructure courtesy of Starbucks is a forerunner of WiMAX and LTE networks. And even the 7-inch Eee has shown the aptitude of Firefox under Linux for average consumers.
It is no coincidence that, mirroring Microsoft’s product gap between Windows Mobile and Windows Vista, the historically hazy and suddenly hot device space between the cellphone and the notebook is emerging as the best shot yet for the Linux desktop.

Ross Rubin is director of industry analysis for consumer technology at market research and analysis firm The NPD Group,. Views expressed in Switched On are his own.

Tranzda’s PM328 smartphone does GPS on Linux

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008 by admin

linux, newplus, tranzda, u-blox

Linux is getting ever and ever more play in the mobile space, though the hardware frequently leaves something to be desired in the design department (we’re just playin’, Trolltech — bright green phones are awesome). There’s something starkly attractive about this here PM328 from China’s Tranzda, a smartphone with integrated GPS navigation from u-blox. The device clocks in at a reasonably thin 16 millimeters and runs Tranzda’s own “Newplus” software stack atop a Linux core. Bluetooth and USB are along for the ride, too, though the remainder of the phone’s specs are a bit hazy; just as well, since we’ll never have a shot of seeing this one stateside.[Via LinuxDevices.com]

Read

Ubuntu Hardy Heron 8.04 available for download

Thursday, April 24th, 2008 by admin

04, download, Hardy Heron, HardyHeron, linux, open-source, operating system, OperatingSystem, os, release, software, ubuntu

Don’t act like you didn’t have April 24th circled in your day planner — heck, you probably stayed up all night hoping Hardy Heron 8.04 would be launched as the 24th dawned in Australia. Regardless of your level of fanaticism towards the OS, the latest flavor of Ubuntu is finally ready for mass consumption. You know what’s waiting for your torrent manager right down there, so why on Earth are you still reading rather than downloading? Get!

Read

Asus expects Windows Eee PC to outsell Linux counterpart 6 to 4

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008 by admin

Asus ,expects ,Windows ,Eee ,PC ,to, outsell, Linux, counterpart,6,to, 4

Asus has never been one to shy away from making from making bold predications about it’s fast-selling Eee PC, and it’s now come out with yet another feat of prognostication,

saying that it expects it’s forthcoming Windows-based Eee PC to outsell its Linux-based counterpart by a ratio of 6 to 4. As PC World points out, that’s despite the fact that the Windows version will cost nearly twice as much as the cheapest Linux-based Eee PC. Asus chairman Jonney Shih seems undaunted by that fact, however, and assures us that “a lot of people have been waiting for the Windows version.”