VIDEO: Meet Intel and Nokia's Love Child OS

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outacontrolpimp

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Cool, but is it enough to compete?

Seeing that its made by Intel, I'm sure they will be wanting to charge a lot for this. Google Chrome OS will offer some of the same things but for free. I don't remember reading about any pricing in the past few articles about Intels OS.

How hard will it be to make apps, and will companies even want to make apps for it if it doesn't take off.
 

Kelavarus

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I think this on a tablet would be pretty cool. Looks like it needs some optimization though, but it is still pre-alpha. Pretty darn good for pre-Alpha.
 

JMcEntegart

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[citation][nom]outacontrolpimp[/nom]I don't remember reading about any pricing in the past few articles about Intels OS.How hard will it be to make apps, and will companies even want to make apps for it if it doesn't take off.[/citation]

No pricing yet. Very little information up until today, in fact. I'll let you know as soon as I hear anything. :)
 

remyj123

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All very nice but if the apps that run on it have to be specifically set up for MeeGo, they are doomed. We just do not need yet another app store and another format of apps.
 

Repelsteeltje

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It looks nice, but tightly controlled... I wonder if you could break free of this control and really make the interface more to your own liking instead of these pretty, well arranged but undoubtedly restricting widgets.

Another thing is that making screenshots of pictures and internet activity, while pretty and user friendly, doesn't really make me feel comfortable. I don't want banking information, login credentials or hardcore pornography to show up unintentionally. These devices are made to offer your data everywhere, all the time, allowing you to work and "live" efficiently; but this data-centered modus operandi restricts your privacy as anyone with access to the device (or even just having the screen in sight) has also access to all your data, interests, activities and contacts as easily as you do.
 

Dkz

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Looks good, hope they won't charge too much and be able to compete with Chrome OS and all the other free linux based OS that will come for tablets.
 

GeoMan

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For Pre Alpha that looks pretty good. The UI looks good, could use a tiny bit of polish but it looks well thought out and intuitive. I like the current Nokia OS’s, they’ve been able to properly multi task, copy paste, support flash and have open source development for years now. MeeGo looks like it’s going to carry on Nokia’s tradition of running the most functional and open OS’s for mobile devices and with hardware and OS optimization coming from Intel’s side I think this will be an awesome partnership. It even looks like it’s going to have terminal as standard, how awesome is that :)
 

SneakySnake

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Looks pretty good, but the guy talking about it was probably the worst guy they coulda found.

Monotone, and sounded like it was his first time reading a script
 

slob

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kelemvor4

It's Linux based and open source. If they charge anything for the software I'm guessing it will be very little as they will have to abide by the GPL.

edit: MeeGo is free. Download it here: http://meego.com/downloads/releases/netbook According to the roadmap, the release shown in this video will be available in October 2010.

I was about to say, I've downloaded and been playing with MeeGo on my netbook for almost a week now, I sure hope it's free!
 

Ridik876

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Why do ALL interface demos including concepts always involve manipulating photos? Because that's what I do...sit in my room zooming in and out of photos.
 

kelemvor4

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Apple fanboys are proud of the iPhone's greatest feature. Don't steal the wind from their sails ;)
 

johnny tremaine

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It looks very nice and slick, but I think the OS is a dead end for Nokia and Intel.

Yes, yes I know about Qt and all that jazz, but they'll have a difficult time getting developers on board.

An even bigger hurdle for them, and all future tablet makers, is the 800-pound gorilla that mp3 player manufacturers had faced for years: the iTunes content store, which now includes the App Store.
 

kelemvor4

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[citation][nom]johnny tremaine[/nom]It looks very nice and slick, but I think the OS is a dead end for Nokia and Intel. Yes, yes I know about Qt and all that jazz, but they'll have a difficult time getting developers on board.An even bigger hurdle for them, and all future tablet makers, is the 800-pound gorilla that mp3 player manufacturers had faced for years: the iTunes content store, which now includes the App Store.[/citation]
Yup. It comes down to content. Content (software/games/etc) is what won the OS war for Microsoft on the desktop even though there were numerous competing os's that were vastly superior. Steve took a note from what made Bill successful and applied the same scheme to portables.
 

mkrijt

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[citation][nom]smlong426[/nom]Man... I thought MeeGo was going to be their new phone OS ..[/citation]
It's going to be a "(ultra-)portable device" OS, netbook/tablet/Smartphone
 

kronos_cornelius

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The electronics and PC market is huge right now and only getting bigger. I think many operating systems will thrive and coexists, it is not a one man show anymore, I don't care what Jobs thinks.

However, as far as the tablet is concern, I don't see a place for it at the moment. I think most people are buying for it novelty of it, but will end up letting it collect dust in the desk somewhere and use their cell phone instead.
 

Blessedman

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Well one thing that most don't understand about OS's is standards. Without standards there is no communication. There are many bad things to say about monopolies but there are is one great thing, standards! Having a single OS dominate a given market has insured advancement in applications and to a lesser degree games. Many different OS's is not necessarily a good thing, which one do I develop for, how many different ones do I develop for? Having a single platform to develop for trims cost and increases productivity to add features and function. This is one reason why Apple is doomed to fail (again). Sure it's winning (almost) right now, but because Android doesn't limit the hardware side of things it will over take most of the market share. Not sure how MeeGo will work out but because it's not trapped behind a closed hardware door it will compete with Android on a level that iOS cannot.
 
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What's the use case? What does it bring to the table that iOS, Andriod and WM7 doesn't. Not broarder support, not ease of use, not price...
 
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Concerning app development, it will probably be based on C++ / Python & Qt... this means that there is already hundreds of thousands developers that master these standard technologies so app development will probably not be a big concern... It will be much easier for developer to learn how to code for MeeGo than for Apple's Ipad and Iphone (who learned Objective C?) or Android (relatively strange java-like framework); especially if the OS & SDK are given away in GPL!! Just look at how many apps you have on a recent Linux distro like Ubuntu ... you can spend hours just scrolling through the list of their package manager!
If they manage to sell enough devices, they will have a lot of devs porting apps easily.
 
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