5/27/12

What Can You Get Out Of Linux For Tablets?

By Paul Barber


Yes, you read it right: there is hope for Linux for tablets and it may come sooner than you think. The Vivaldi Tablet is coming and it will include a true open-source Linux system software. First, what's Linux and what has it got to offer?



What is Linux for tablets?

If you are not all that geek-savvy and don't happen to be too familiar with Linux, then here are one or two basics. There are over 300 active Linux distributions, and each is a Unix-like O. S that works on top of a Linux kernel. Therefore due to Linux's free and open source nature, it has taken many forms and has been made to run on desktops, netbooks, tablet PCs, servers, PCs, and even mobile telephones. Linux is also light enough to be booted from a USB or CD, and its distributions come with free software applications bundled in. Android itself is based off the Linux kernel, though it can only be loosely called a Linux distribution.



Aside from having a lot of options from which to select, Linux distributions are often reasonable (read: free), light-weight, and very customizable. If you search the web for Linux for tablets though, you'd find various results: hobbyists ' how-to's on how to put Linux on a tablet, one or two tablets that come with Linux operating systems, and tablet PC news about upcoming Linux tablets.



Where do I find Linux for tablets?

As discussed, Linux has been implemented on tablets before, though it truly has not made the maximum amount of an impact as it probably did in net books during the past. There were tablets like the JooJoo tablet (formerly known as the CrunchPad), Shogo Linux Tablet, and FrontPath's ProGear, that were released with true open-source Linux, but both have been abandoned and failed to make an impact. One latest implementation of Linux for tablets is on the Archos 101, which offers twin boot between Android and Linux Angstrom.



According to tablet P.C comparison sites, another prominent implementation we'll soon see is on the Vivaldi Tablet (previously known as the Spark Tablet). It is reportedly powered by Mer Core, with the control panel supplied by KDE's Plasma Active. What do you get out of this tablet P.C? Well, it's now priced extraordinarily fairly at USD 265 (200 Eurodollars) and it promises a truly open source platform. It might take a while before we see tablet PC reviews of the Vivaldi Tablet, but most sources indicate it's indeed worth waiting for.






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