Linked by snydeq on Wed 3rd Jun 2009 19:49 UTC
Hardware, Embedded Systems The world's third-largest PC vendor plans to roll out Moblin Linux across a range of machines, including its Aspire One nettops, as well as regular laptop and desktop PCs, the company announced at Computex in Taipei. A number of netbooks running several different versions of Moblin were also on display at Computex, including Suse Moblin, Xandros Moblin, Linpus Moblin, Red Flag Moblin and Ubuntu Moblin running on netbooks from Hewlett-Packard, Asustek Computer, Micro-Star International, and Hasee Computer.
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Question
by boldingd on Wed 3rd Jun 2009 20:37 UTC
boldingd
Member since:
2009-02-19

I thought Moblin was a discrete distribution: I'm not sure how "Xandros Moblin" or "Suse Moblin" etc. makes sense; that impression was re-enforced by wandering through moblin.org for twenty seconds. While moblin.org never uses the word "distribution" that I saw, the thing they describe sounds like a complete, discrete operating system, not something that would be included as a component of an existing Linux distribution.
Is the problem here with the information in the linked/abridged article, or with my understanding of what Moblin is?

RE: Question
by kaiwai on Wed 3rd Jun 2009 21:30 UTC in reply to "Question"
kaiwai Member since:
2005-07-06

I thought Moblin was a discrete distribution: I'm not sure how "Xandros Moblin" or "Suse Moblin" etc. makes sense; that impression was re-enforced by wandering through moblin.org for twenty seconds. While moblin.org never uses the word "distribution" that I saw, the thing they describe sounds like a complete, discrete operating system, not something that would be included as a component of an existing Linux distribution. Is the problem here with the information in the linked/abridged article, or with my understanding of what Moblin is?


From what understand it is the technical basis to which distributions can base their customised and branded version of Linux on - it also provides the opportunity for OEM's to brand their Linux version as a unique experience for their users rather than it being yet another linux netbook. Basically it is what was attempted by UnitedLinux but dedicated for Netbooks. I hope that this idea is actually expanded upon and we see in the future a notebook/laptop version as well to bring so coherency to the distributions.

PS: The WAP wesbite is broken, I tried to send this via my mobile phone, however, it ended up complaining that I needed to put my login/password - which I did. I guess the WAP site is dead or deprecated.

RE: Question
by niemau on Wed 3rd Jun 2009 21:32 UTC in reply to "Question"
niemau Member since:
2007-06-28

see below:

http://moblin.org/documentation/moblin-overview

it looks like it's intended to be further customized. while that particular page isn't too specific, i don't think there's any question (as far as intel is concerned) that other companies are going to further tailor moblin.

that being said, acer also just announced that they'd be shipping android-based netbooks later this year.

i find that... errr... strange. i mean, strange that they're shipping two entirely different linux-based OSes. it *could* prove confusing to customers.

i readily acknowledge that i don't really have a full grasp on their "big picture", so maybe their roadmap will become a lot more clear in the coming days/weeks/months/whatever. maybe they just plan on doing android for units sold/subsidized by wireless carriers.

RE: Question
by ichi on Wed 3rd Jun 2009 22:20 UTC in reply to "Question"
ichi Member since:
2007-03-06

Isn't Moblin basically a fedora with some new pieces of software stuck all over it?

Maybe they'll skip some parts of the moblin core, but adding the clutter interface and the apps to say Suse, you'd have kind of a "moblinized" Suse.

Anyway, there's already a Moblin repository for Suse so it'd be a matter of checking what's in there.

And us poor early adopters
by lopisaur on Wed 3rd Jun 2009 22:32 UTC
lopisaur
Member since:
2006-02-27

OK, but what about us poor saps who got stuck with Linpus on the AAOne? Will Acer give us an official option to upgrade? Moblin 2.0 Alpha sucked on the Aspire One, by the way. Since I installed Ubuntu NBR I haven't looked back and I actually enjoy using the One once in a while now.

RE: And us poor early adopters
by bosco_bearbank on Thu 4th Jun 2009 00:06 UTC in reply to "And us poor early adopters"
bosco_bearbank Member since:
2005-10-12

I've got an AOA150-1570 (120GB HDD 1GB RAM), and have run the Moblin beta off a live USB stick. It doesn't do xD cards; it doesn't even recognize hot-plugged SD cards. Maybe it works better on the D-series netbooks. At least Linpus worked with all the hardware.

AlexandreAM Member since:
2006-02-06

Good thing this is sill a BETA we're talking about, right?

RE: And us poor early adopters
by ichi on Thu 4th Jun 2009 08:06 UTC in reply to "And us poor early adopters"
ichi Member since:
2007-03-06

Beta works great on the AAO.

Some things would still use some polish (others are just far from being finished, eg. the media player or the default browser), but all the hardware works and it's quite fast.

v Comment by Naynay
by Naynay on Thu 4th Jun 2009 06:39 UTC
RE: Comment by Naynay
by ichi on Thu 4th Jun 2009 08:14 UTC in reply to "Comment by Naynay"
ichi Member since:
2007-03-06

If you just want an internet, email experience


And p2p, office, watching videos, listening music, reading ebooks, watching your holiday photos, ssh (-X) to your servers at work...

There aren't that many "niche apps" that would fit a netbook and are lacking on linux.
And when it comes to hardware support you would expect the OEM to get all your hardware running out of the box.

"Linpus"
by Moochman on Sat 6th Jun 2009 12:39 UTC
Moochman
Member since:
2005-07-06

Please PLEASE Acer scrap the name!!!! Every time I see it I just see "pus" as in the gross stuff that comes out of wounds.....

RE: "Linpus"
by Vinegar Joe on Sat 6th Jun 2009 13:12 UTC in reply to ""Linpus""
Vinegar Joe Member since:
2006-08-16

Linpus is the name of the company and the distro. Acer has nothing to do with it. I was using Linpus when they first started in Taiwan back in the 1990s.

RE[2]: "Linpus"
by Moochman on Sat 6th Jun 2009 17:36 UTC in reply to "RE: "Linpus""
Moochman Member since:
2005-07-06

Ah, I see... well then, I guess I can't complain too much...