Moblin: 6 key things to know
Moblin tries to revolutionize Linux for mobile devices, including netbooks
By
John Fontana
,
Network World
, 06/16/2009
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Moblin, short for mobile Linux, is a free open-source operating system originally developed by Intel for its low-power Atom processor and designed to run on devices, including netbooks.
Moblin is a collection of open-source projects, including the Linux kernel, and made available in the Linux Standard Base
(LSB) RPM packaging format. The beta of the Moblin 2.0 operating system was released earlier this month, and supports netbooks
and nettops. But the target is much broader, including personal devices, television, and in-vehicle automotive computing.
“With versions 2.1 and 2.2 we are looking at embedded systems,” says Guy Lunardi, director of client pre-loads at Novell.
The hope is that the project, now under the direction of the Linux Foundation, can begin to define Linux on the client, a
place where the OS has yet to find its bearings. Here are six things you should know about Moblin.
Why is the core important?
The central piece of the Moblin architecture is a common layer called Moblin Core, which provides services such as third-party
cellular stacks, VoIP, presence, synchronization, media services and telephony APIs. Core also includes UI services anchored
by Intel’s open-source Clutter 3D interface project. Core is built on a Linux kernel and a set of device drivers. In the end,
it provides a consistent development environment that allows applications to run on Moblin no matter what form it takes on
a device.
What about application support?
Moblin runs almost any Linux application, which means that most applications today such as Skype and Open Office along with
others run on Moblin, according to Jim Zemlin, Linux Foundation CEO. Moblin’s attractiveness to developers, who can build
applications for the platform that run wherever Moblin shows up, could be the feature that powers acceptance. The flexibility
gives developers a wide-audience and could stimulate an explosion of applications that attract end-users to Moblin-based devices.
In addition, Google Android applications run on the platform.
What’s slick about the Moblin interface?
The UI, a combination of open source graphics technologies such as Clutter, DRI2, and KMS, supports 3D animation. The myzone
[stet-lowercase] dashboard is an on-ramp to synchronized calendar, task, appointments, and recently used files. It appears
as a toolbar at the top of the screen. Myzone also features links to the user’s social networking sites and aggregates content
from sites, via the Mojito social data store, to give a single view into conversations and status update controls. In 2.0,
Twitter and Last.fm are supported sites but more will be added. The Web browser is adapted from Mozilla technology for Clutter
and includes video capabilities and Flash.
What about stuff IT would care most about?
Moblin supports features such as power management, connection management as part of Moblin Core, and fast boot technology
that has the UI up and running in seconds. It also has a full-featured Bluetooth service, and users can boot Moblin from a
USB image without touching the existing installed OS. In future versions, the project will introduce device synchronization,
Web services connectivity and security features such as policy-based access controls, applications sandboxing, secure booting
and package isolation. “This is very compelling,” says Zemlin. “It is entirely open source, it has a compelling UI, it runs
on low-powered devices in a highly effective way, anyone can take it and make any product they want out of it. It's the low
cost alternative to Windows.”
Comments (2)
Moblin not USABLE from USB imageBy Anonymous on June 17, 2009, 12:24 pm"...and users can boot Moblin from a USB image without touching the existing installed OS." is not a completely correct statement. The only options currently available...
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Moblin app storeBy Anonymous on June 17, 2009, 2:51 pmMoblin needs a smartphone-like app store that supports free & paid apps. This will make Moblin more compelling to commercial software companies, since they know...
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