Posts Tagged ‘Tablet’

Spark: The first free-software, Linux tablet is on its way

February 2nd, 2012

Open-source software and Linux, thanks to Android, is well represented on tablets. But, if you didn’t want to deal with proprietary firmware and software, you were out of luck… until now. Aaron Seigo, one of the KDE’s lead developers, and his team are just about ready to roll-out the first tablet based entirely on Linux and free software: The Spark.

For those of you who are a little puzzled right now–”But, isn’t Android based on Linux??” let me start by explaining that yes, Android is Linux and open-source software. But, its implementations on various smartphones and tablets always uses some proprietary software, firmware, and/or shims to combine the code into a working device. Spark is different.

As Seigo explains, “We decided to go with Mer, the community continuation of MeeGo, as our base OSS [open-source software]. With the amazing help of the Mer community, we have been able to bring up a non-Android, built-from-source kernel on the device and even boot into Plasma Active. There is still work left, and we still do have some binary drivers, but this progress is already one massive crowbar that’s prying open the doors that have been shut on the world of ARM based devices.”

Seigo continues, “Right now we’re still stuck with a few binary drivers which is not a perfect situation. With time I’m confident we’ll get the binary drivers out of the picture, one by one, even if it takes time, effort and some pain. We’ve already managed to get source for some drivers that were not previously available so the trajectory is right. If we wait for perfection, however, we’ll never get anywhere because we need to release and push the status quo level of openness further inch my inch by making releases. It’ll be incremental, but we’re already further than others have gotten.”

Getting back to the tablet, the hardware is powered by 1GHz AMLogic ARM processor, Mali-400 GPU, 512 MB RAM, 4GB internal storage plus SD card slot, a 7″ capacitive multi-touch screen and 802.11n Wi-Fi connectivity. The list price will be 200 Euros or about $260. There’s no word yet though on where it will be available or even if it will be available in the U.S.

If the tablet is, as Kjetil Kilhavn, a SAP consultant and KDE user, speculates, is built around the A9 Zenithink ZT-280 C71 tablet, it has a 7″ (16:9) screen size with 800 x 480 resolution. It also would have a 1.3 MPixels front camera, built-in microphone and stereo speakers.

As for the software, on top of Mer, the Spark will use KDE Plasma Active for its user interface (UI). Plasma Active runs on the traditional Linux desktop stack, including the Linux kernel, Qt, and KDE’s Plasma Framework. The UI uses Plasma Quick, a declarative markup language. This, in turn, is based on Qt Quick, an easy to use interface software development kit and framework. Above that, as Seigo emphasizes, “All the code above the kernel and most of the kernel itself is already open and available for download right now.”

In addition, unlike some phone vendors and hardware manufacturers who are still fighting to keep you from booting your own operating system on their devices, in the Spark, according to Seigo, “openness and freedom goes a lot deeper in Spark than just using GPL and BSD licensed code. For instance, the boot loader isn’t locked so you can boot your own OS if you wish. You can install your own apps, you can even provide your own app delivery system. You can use the Open Build Service to deliver software on top of the Mer core. That is not a property of the open licensing, but of our desire to deliver devices that you not only purchase but wish you own.”

Seigo went on, “The content store is also going to be interesting. On release, the client will be free software and the APIs [application programming interface] openly documented so others can write front-ends. Most interestingly, however, is the server side. It has been designed in such a way that other people with other devices or concepts can use that same back end to make their own stores. It supports the idea of a single, large set of content which can then be curated into any number of different stores with different focuses and delivery targets.

But what if the project doesn’t take off, will you be left with an orphaned system ala HP and WebOS? Nope.

Seigo states, “On release, we will be providing a guarantee that if the project dies or we all fall over, the back-end code for the store will be made immediately available for download under a free software license. Hopefully it doesn’t come to that, of course. Once we are happy with the implementation and scalability of it, we will be making the back-end open as well. We have chosen to delay that release as we don’t want others setting up their own hosted stores before we are confident in the internal design ourselves.”

Want to know more? We’ll have to wait. Seigo promises he’ll answer more questions on February 2nd.

I think this is a very promising project. While the people who will immediately find it the most interesting will be open-source and free-software developers and gadget hounds, I can also see the Spark playing a role in the e-textbook of the future. As Seigo points out, the store back-end code itself could be very useful for schools “to set up a ’store’ with learning materials and content with access granted to their students.”

While no iPad killer, the Spark may be just what’s needed to ignite a fire under innovative free and open-source software tablets. I’ll be very interested in seeing where this project goes and what comes from others in response to it.

Source:http://www.zdnet.com/blog/open-source/spark-the-first-free-software-linux-tablet-is-on-its-way/10255

RIM PlayBook tablet gets software upgrade

January 10th, 2012

Research In Motion showed off a major update to the QNX-based software running its poor-selling PlayBook tablet and unveiled minor improvements to its legacy BlackBerry phone software at the Consumer Electronics Show.

But the Canadian company’s products were left off the list of hot new devices being touted by AT&T, the second-largest US carrier, highlighting the challenges for RIM in reinvigorating its flagging fortunes in that hyper-competitive market.

Instead, AT&T featured high-speed devices from such RIM rivals as Samsung Electronics, Nokia, HTC Corp and Sony at the Las Vegas gadget show.

RIM last month delayed the expected launch of its next-generation phones using QNX software, widely seen as a make-or-break overhaul for a company that once dominated the smartphone market.

At the time it said the delay was necessary so it could make use of more powerful and energy-efficient chipsets expected to arrive in mid-2012. The chipsets would enable the phones to operate on high-speed networks using a technology known as Long Term Evolution (LTE).

The US carriers are racing to build LTE networks and heavily promoting devices that can handle the emerging standard.

RIM’s PlayBook 2.0 software adds in-built email, calendar and address book functions and the ability to run Android applications.

RIM’s tablet was launched last April to scathing reviews complaining about its inability to handle email and other features associated with the Canadian company’s smartphones.

RIM also added a video store in the PlayBook upgrade with thousands of films and television shows available for purchase or rent, and said a BlackBerry smartphone paired to the tablet could act as a remote control or wireless keyboard and trackpad.

RIM did not provide an update on when it would make the free software update publicly available, repeating a planned February launch.

The Android advance – which RIM did not highlight in a statement but did confirm later – may be the most popular feature with consumers wary of a dearth of apps for the next-generation software, which will also run RIM’s future phones.

But the integration of core BlackBerry functions is arguably more significant – proving that QNX works with the RIM infrastructure that crunches and encrypts data sent out to its BlackBerry smartphones.

RIM says it will have a QNX phone by the latter part of 2012, after initially saying it would be ready by early in the year. The PlayBook software update was also delayed; it was initially due some time in the summer of 2011.

RIM sold just 850,000 PlayBooks from the tablet’s launch in April to the end of November, and took a $485 million hit to write down the value of unsold inventory it has discounted sharply.

The smartphone software upgrade – to version 7.1 – adds a function called BlackBerry Tag that allows two BlackBerry phones equipped with a near-field communications (NFC) chip to share information and content by being tapped together.

The upgrade also means a BlackBerry smartphone can be used as a mobile hotspot to share its Internet connectivity with up to 5 other devices including laptops and tablets.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/personal-tech/computing/RIM-PlayBook-tablet-gets-software-upgrade/articleshow/11433130.cms

H-P’s TouchPad tablet was doomed from start, experts say

January 10th, 2012

The TouchPad tablet from Hewlett-Packard Co. was one of the most closely watched new gadgets of 2011 and quickly turned out to be the one of year’s biggest flops. The TouchPad, designed to rival Apple’s iPad, lasted just seven weeks on the market before H-P killed it, citing weak sales.

Analysts point to a long list of factors behind the tablet’s demise. But some of the people involved in creating the tablet’s core software say the product barely had a fighting chance.

That software is called WebOS, an operating system built on the same technology used by many Web browsers. It promised to be more flexible and open than Apple’s tightly controlled iOS software and more beautiful than Google’s sometimes wonky Android system. H-P acquired Palm, the maker of WebOS, for $1.2 billion in 2010 so it could use the software in products like the TouchPad.

Several former Palm and H-P employees involved in WebOS say that there was little hope for the software from the beginning, because the way it was built was so deeply flawed.

“Palm was ahead of its time in trying to build a phone software platform using Web technology, and we just weren’t able to execute such an ambitious and breakthrough design,” said Paul Mercer, former senior director of software at Palm, who oversaw the interface design of WebOS.

The WebOS story also illustrates how hard it will be for anyone to mount a serious challenge to Apple and Google when it comes to mobile operating systems. Those two companies have won dominant market shares and the allegiance of thousands of app developers. By owning WebOS, H-P could control both the hardware and software and gain a more direct relationship with customers.

But WebOS had issues from the start, when it was first created for the Pre smartphone, former Palm employees say.

Mercer was well-known in the design world for his contributions to several of Apple’s most important products, and Palm recruited him. After some internal debate, the company chose to have WebOS rely on WebKit, an open-source software engine used by browsers to display Web pages. Mercer said this was a mistake because it prevented applications from running fast enough to be on par with the iPhone.

From concept to creation, WebOS was reportedly developed in about nine months. Programmers typically start by creating building blocks that can be reused and combined to create different apps. But with WebOS, Palm employees initially constructed each app from scratch. Later, they made such blocks, but they were overhauled by Palm and then by H-P, forcing programmers to relearn how to build WebOS apps.

Some former employees pointed fingers at Jon Rubinstein, then Palm’s CEO, saying he failed to steer WebOS in the right direction .

Palm put itself up for sale in April 2010 . But as H-P absorbed Palm, important members of the WebOS team were disappearing. Mercer was already gone, having lost confidence in the future of WebOS, he said.

In August 2010, Mark Hurd, H-P’s chief executive, resigned amid accusations of sexual harassment, and H-P named Leo Apotheker to replace him. Under his leadership, H-P raised its WebOS investments, announcing two new smartphones and the TouchPad.

The TouchPad shipped in July, months after Apple released the iPad 2, which was significantly thinner and faster, for the same price. The new tablet got lukewarm reviews.

But it shocked the tech world when H-P withdrew it from the market so quickly — and said it would stop making WebOS hardware altogether.

In September, H-P fired Apotheker, citing “weaknesses” in his ability to reach goals and to communicate. His replacement was Meg Whitman, the former eBay chief.

Three months into the job, Whitman said that H-P would release the WebOS code for anyone to use. If outside programmers end up improving the software, H-P could presumably reconsider its decision to get out of WebOS hardware.

Source:http://www.statesman.com/business/technology/h-ps-touchpad-tablet-was-doomed-from-start-2089703.html

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