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Linux Business Handhelds Hardware

Internet Devices Get Their Own Ubuntu Version 87

Barence writes "A version of Ubuntu targeted specifically towards mobile internet devices (MIDs) has been released by Canonical, although there is presently only one product on the market which can use it. According to the company, the pithily titled Mobile Internet Device Edition 8.04 has been optimized for use with handheld internet platforms, and designed to run smoothly on Intel's Atom chips as well as with small touchscreen displays. This follows Canonical's announcement earlier this month that it would be creating a version of Ubuntu for netbook devices such as the Asus Eee PC and the Acer Aspire One called Netbook Remix."
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Internet Devices Get Their Own Ubuntu Version

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  • by adona1 ( 1078711 ) on Wednesday June 25, 2008 @08:22PM (#23943369)
    In fairness......Leopard - an incremental upgrade. Apple tend to release them (comparatively) frequently.
    Vista - worst OS since Windows ME? There has been one release between ME & Vista (not counting 64 bit versions). So...worst out of 2 OS'? Eh.
    Hardy Heron - I've not personally come across many bugs, YMMV there I suppose.

    No good operating systems in 8 or 9 months? Man, they should be releasing new versions weekly!
  • by Brian Gordon ( 987471 ) on Wednesday June 25, 2008 @08:27PM (#23943411)
    First of all, Windows Server 08 is rock solid and fast. So you're already wrong. Hardy is a sloppy release but includes upgrades for LOTS of packages trying to get into LTS so that's to be expected. Leopard and Vista were both kind of crappy, but so were their predecessors. Vista's better than the playskool stressfest that was XP.
  • by Xygon ( 578778 ) on Wednesday June 25, 2008 @08:33PM (#23943469)
    ZOMG, they're working on their next version, this one must have sucked! "Leopard=fail, Apple is already working on 10.6" Since when is working on the next version of your OS a sign of failure, and not a sign of good business sense and continual development?
  • by pembo13 ( 770295 ) on Wednesday June 25, 2008 @09:04PM (#23943747) Homepage
    I still hold that I like Windows ME, at least a user had a lot of control over what it did and did not do.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 25, 2008 @09:13PM (#23943817)

    Time to test your RAM.

  • Hardware (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 25, 2008 @09:38PM (#23943977)

    You got some hardware probs on that Dell it sounds more like.

  • Re:this is great (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Wednesday June 25, 2008 @10:02PM (#23944143) Journal
    I could certainly be wrong; but I'm strongly inclined to doubt the viability of Symbian on the MID. Symbian is, to be sure, superior to Linux in terms of small footprint and low resource demands. However, Linux is far more general in terms of design and body of available software.

    Looking at the history of Palm OS, I am inclined to believe that expanding a specialized OS is harder than slimming a general one. Back in the day, Palm OS was hilariously superior as a handheld system. It ran practically forever on pitiful hardware and a couple of AAA's, and the system of "conduits" was a fairly elegant structure by which a handheld could function as an extension to a desktop computer. Over time, though, Palm OS didn't grow very well. Features like a network stack(sync over network was a nice feature; but just wasn't the same thing as actual network access, which never really meshed with the Palm OS structure) and interaction with mass storage devices with user visible filesystems just didn't fit with the old structure of tying data directly to applications.

    Even now, with the benefit of significant advances in silicon and battery technology, it would be hard to get a linux system to match the old Palm OS devices in their areas of strength; but the fact that Linux has by nature features that Palm OS could never really integrate properly has proven to be more important. In the case of Symbian, I would also note that Nokia's own N770, N800, and N810 "Internet Tablets" are Linux, rather than Symbian, devices.

    Since the purpose of a MID is to bring a limited number of the functions of a full computer to a handheld device in as close to their full form as possible(e.g. webbrowsing, not general purpose apps; but full webbrowsing, not cut down mobile phone crap), Linux is a pretty natural candidate; being, as it is, modular enough to shrink down while offering pretty much any computer function ready for the taking.
  • by queldor ( 1184789 ) on Wednesday June 25, 2008 @11:09PM (#23944669)
    What about Freebsd 7.0, they did a wonderful job of that.
  • by this great guy ( 922511 ) on Thursday June 26, 2008 @01:03AM (#23945399)

    If only Emacs came with a decent text editor...

  • by indi0144 ( 1264518 ) on Thursday June 26, 2008 @02:33AM (#23945751) Journal
    I agree with you and I have seen this kind of input all around: Ubuntu 8.04 it's great on old hardware, specially laptops.. so, getting on topic, An Ubuntu release for PID's/NETBooks should be a killer. Anyone know If this release works on old laptops or it's just intended for NEW specific machines?

    Maybe that it's what I like about Ubuntu, it's Linux, it's mostly FOSS but they manage to do it in a commercial and asertive way, I mean, they release specific version that works on a variety of platforms, it's easy on Joe Beigebox and teaches to develop the community way of thinking, so you know somewhere on the intertubes theres an answer or some dude ready to help, also it teaches you that computing it's way more than start button and Ctrl+Z.

    Don't bash Ubuntu for being so user friendly or the "bloat" in the GUI.. think that most of the people starting on Ubuntu will move forward to another distros as they advance in their knowledge, someday I will make the step to Slackware I love it, but I just don't feel ready, but hey! I'm loving learning this stuff as many people out there. No one of them are 1337s, maybe some will become.. lend a hand to the little brothers, you just don't know what ta13nts are coming in the way.
  • Microsoft's error (Score:3, Insightful)

    by DrYak ( 748999 ) on Thursday June 26, 2008 @06:51AM (#23946731) Homepage

    However, Linux is far more general in terms of design and body of available software. {...} Linux is a pretty natural candidate; being, as it is, modular enough to shrink down while offering pretty much any computer function ready for the taking.
    And this is where Microsoft somewhat missed the point with their offering.
    On one hand they have a windows vista which is a large resource hog and just can't be crammed inside a small device.
    On the other hand they have WinCE/Pocket PC which, well has *windows* in the name, and has some related elements in its API, but well, is just an entirely different beast which : both doesn't give the advantage that a derivative of an OS has in terms of features and is a descendant of a handheld system which limits its possibility of evolution.

    Linux' best advantage is its hackability and its scalability.
    Yes, granted, as regularly mentioned on /. trolls, Joe Six-pack and grand ma Tillie don't need to recompile their kernel each other day, just to get WiFi working.
    On the other hand, industry will like the possibility to take linux and hack it to fit some very specific and unusual needs, that conventional OS couldn't fit. And the best part : at the end it's still Linux and still related to the full blown system running on the desktop.

    Cannonical with this kind of Ubuntu flavors is doing exactly what is best to enable more of such things to happen.

  • Comment removed (Score:2, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday June 26, 2008 @09:02AM (#23947661)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion

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