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Netbooks spark Linux redesigns

By Agam Shah , IDG News Service , 08/08/2008
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The sparsely populated floor at Linuxworld was a disappointment, but netbooks made an impact at this year's show, a sign that these lightweight machines may bring the Linux OS to a larger audience.

Crowds flocked the booths of companies like Canonical and Good OS, which showed off special versions of Linux designed for netbooks, low-cost laptops designed to run basic applications for Web surfing and e-mail.

The Linux versions have been redesigned to work properly with netbooks, which are characterized by limited computing resources, lightness and small screen sizes.

Netbooks are neither mobile phones nor standard laptops, and there is ongoing development to improve the Linux experience for netbook users, said Stormy Peters, executive director of the Gnome Foundation. Netbooks will increasingly bring Linux to the average consumer, and a better user experience could boost adoption of the OS, Peters said.

Standard Linux distributions could work on netbooks but they are mostly designed for standard laptops, Peters said. For example, the Linux footprint could be reduced as the limited netbook resources -- including processing power and storage capabilities -- are not the same as in standard laptops, Peters said. Gnome hasn't come out with a new desktop interface for netbooks, but mobile Linux developers are working on it, she said.

A number of other organizations, including Canonical and Good OS, have readied distributions that make Linux friendlier for netbook users.

Canonical showed off netbooks with Ubuntu Netbook Remix, a Linux distribution that includes a touchscreen interface to take advantage of the lightness and small screen sizes of netbooks.

Users can turn netbooks into tablet PCs with the OS, holding the laptop and accessing applications by just touching large icons on the screen.

Handily carrying a netbook with a few fingers, software engineer Adilson Oliveira showed off the interface, accessing applications like games and instant-messaging applications by pressing the large icons on the screen. The OS centralizes application icons in one interface to reduce reliance on the keyboard.

The touchscreen interface makes better use of the vertical space of smaller netbook screens, said Oliveira, who works at Canonical, the commercial sponsor of Ubuntu.

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