Linked by Jordan Spencer Cunningham on Thu 12th Mar 2009 05:32 UTC, submitted by caffeine deprived
Hardware, Embedded Systems One Laptop Per Child is planning to end the production of its XO-1 laptop as well as drop AMD's x86 Geode processor. OLPC intends to replace these with a low-powered ARM alternative in the XO-2 laptop, which is slated for release in about 18 months. Even though the current XO-1 model consumes a mere five watts, OLPC feels thats the biggest problem. "We're seeing some very impressive system-on-chip designs that provide both fundamentally low-power demands and the kind of fine-grained power management ... in the XO-1," said Ed McNierney, chief technology officer at OLPC. Though using ARM architecture will reduce power consumption, it puts using the full-fledged Windows OS on their laptops in jeopardy. The company is currently wrestling Microsoft in order to try to get them to develop a full version of Windows to be able to run on ARM processors. It's not likely Microsoft will budge on the subject as ingrained as x86 is and how seemingly little there is in it for them, but we've been surprised before.
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Well
by Xaero_Vincent on Thu 12th Mar 2009 15:00 UTC
Xaero_Vincent
Member since:
2006-08-18

Wine and Crossover wont help ARM-powered netbook users access Windows applications because they are essentially Win32/DX API re-implementations with a WinPE binary executer not emulators.

Running Windows on a processor emulator (QEMU) would be feasible but the performance will be pretty bad; plus it appears ARM host CPU support is still in the testing stage.

http://www.nongnu.org/qemu/status.html

I don't think Microsoft really cares because they have upto 90% marketshare on x86 netbooks now. It was bound to happen when OEMs chose crappy distributions like Linpus or Xandros with highly unusual desktop environments. IIRC, these distributions repositories are limited and contain outdated packages. In addition, little awareness of software like WINE, Crossover, or Cedega was present among new netbook purchasers.

http://www.netbookdigest.com/2009/03/03/sad-day-for-linux-windows-n...

Edited 2009-03-12 15:18 UTC