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In meego related news, intel has published the "Tablet UX" for MeeGo.
I've been trying to download the iso image to try it out on my ideapad, but it's been cutting out for me.
http://appdeveloper.intel.com/en-us/blog/2011/02/06/hands-meego-tab...
http://appdeveloper.intel.com/en-us/meego-swype-esla
Fujitsu is moving is moving a chess piece and launches a MeeGo-powered netbook
http://www.thinq.co.uk/2011/2/11/fujitsu-launches-meego-powered-net...
Intel Giving Away Lots of Cash, Trip to Antarctica, Jet Flight & More for MeeGo Developers
http://thenokiablog.com/2011/02/16/intel-meego-prizes-developers/
With the ability to suspend and resume, plus the fact that most modern oses boot pretty fast (I mean seriously, what's 15 seconds) I still don't see the point of Splashtop. I no sooner fire up Splashtop then try to browse a web page and find out that it won't render properly, or that I can't view that video, or that I need to edit a document... at which point, I just have to fire up my main os anyway. Device manufacturers need to get smart about this. If they want faster boot times, that's great. Achieving them with a slimmed down os that becomes useless with the slightest push is not the way to do it, however.
Your optimized properly handled PC may boot in 15 sec, but average, fragmented antivirus ridden windows machine rarely will. Add a cost of logging in, starting all "indispensable" services , and then firefox to that and you have a different story.
As for suspend, you usually catch yourself needing that quick access to WEB when the computer have been shut down or ran out of a battery yesterday.
You'd be surprised. I'm talking about Windows 7 Ultimate when I say that my netbook has a 15 second boot time. I haven't even done much optimization, though I did start out by wiping the disk and putting a fresh installation on it. If I can get it to do this with very little optimization, imagine what the OEMs could achieve if they wanted to. As for suspend/resume, I never shut the thing down. I suspend it and, if left that way for over two hours while on battery, it will hibernate itself (I didn't even do anything to configure that). The machine also hibernates once the battery reaches 10%. So, no dead batteries, yet a machine that's ready to use within 5 seconds of hibernate. With a setup like this, why bother with Splashtop? Imagine what we could have if the OEMs got smart... not that they'll ever do that, of course.
[quote]With a setup like this, why bother with Splashtop? [/quote]
You also have to remember that most BIOS's are written mainly with Windows in mind. So while suspend / hibernate work on Windows, other OS's aren't that lucky. We can all thank Bill Gates for that. He didn't want other OS's to be able to take advantage of all the innovations made in the BIOS that support Windows.
The idea behind MeeGo is that it's up to systems integrators to license codecs, non-free applications, etc. So if these don't function as you would hope then you might want to pass your feedback along to Splashtop, Inc. I've actually found that the MeeGo netbook distribution by itself comes with a pretty slim base install and even the package repository doesn't have everything I might use on a regular basis. For example, I had to compile rdesktop which is GPL licensed but I couldn't guess as to why it's not in the package repo. Getting a fully functional dev environment takes a bit of work as well...
What would be really useful is for a small OS with full hardware support including 3D and sound, loaded with an rdp client and spice. Make it into a slim hardware thin client for VDI. Especially if you could load different client software. That would be awesome. But that is probably asking too much.




