3 Results for netbook

Linux Notebooks, When Netbooks Won't Do

I like hardware. When I say this, I don't mean gadgets (although I don't turn those away either), I mean hardware. I like to build desktops, from chassis to power supply to motherboard to peripheral cards. I like desktops because I feel I have control over what goes in them, as well as what I run on them. They're easy to upgrade -- and they seem far more durable than their lap-sized peers. I understand this is in no small part due to desktops not being portable.

I made a vow a few years back I would never use a laptop as my primary machine. This was before the advent of solid state disks and netbooks. But because portability has its appeal, Linux is my operating system of choice, and because it fit both the hardware and gadget criteria, I picked up an EeePC a year ago. It works well as a quick way to get online and do basic tasks. Who needs a full-sized notebook?

I do. I've found I need to break my vow, even, and use it as my primary work machine. It needs to run Linux, and what's more -- it needs to be pre-installed. Fortunately, I have options.



Moblin V2 Core Alpha for Netbooks Available

One of the most appealing aspects of open source software is its ability to be almost everything to everyone. Fine, it's hyperbole, but flexibility and access to the source code means a wide array of needs can be met for diverse groups of people -- and the shared efforts benefit developers as much as those who've never written (or seen) a line of code. I've been enamored of the Moblin Project for some time, simply because it so clearly demonstrates that open source can be as hands-on (or off) as you'd like.

On Monday, the Moblin team announced its Moblin V2 Core alpha release was available for testing. Tariq Shureih, Moblin Linux Engineering Manager, says that this alpha release is the first chance the wider community has to really kick the tires on a number of new features, including package and core interactions, the Fastboot feature, new user interface development and connectivity tools, and a new iteration of the Moblin Image Creator.



CherryPal's Bing Netbook to Explore New Territory

A few days ago we reported on efforts from Freescale, Asus and others to take netbooks--many of them running Linux--down to the $200 range. CherryPal may be approaching that price with its new Intel Atom-based Bing netbook (shown) that runs either Linux or Windows XP. The price is undisclosed until it ships in March, but this week only CherryPal is offering it and its C114 green nettop system in tandem for $400, as LinuxDevices reports. The price for the combo, given the C114's normal $250 price, imply that CherryPal is exploring how low portable computer prices can go.