Mandriva leaps into the netbook market with the Gdium

Published by awilliamson on Friday, July 18 2008 @ 10:31:49 CEST
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Lately it's hard to avoid the buzz about netbooks - the small, cheap laptop systems that were popularized by the Asus Eee PC (which, of course, Mandriva Linux 2008 Spring supports very well). Many in the community have asked if Mandriva is going to get directly involved in this market. Well, the answer is yes! Mandriva is providing the innovative operating system for the upcoming Gdium netbook system, produced by Emtec.

http://www.gdium.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/black-34front-ecran_500.jpg

The first Gdium will be a netbook with a 10", 1024x600 resolution display and a battery life of four hours, weighing in at 1.1kg. The Gdium itself is an interesting system: it uses the MIPS-derived Loongson CPU by ST Microelectronics, which helps to deliver the long battery life. Most interesting, though - especially for Mandriva! - is the way the operating system and data are stored. The Gdium has no internal storage at all. The operating system and all user data are stored on a USB key, known as the G-Key, which plugs into a USB port under the keyboard, in the middle of the machine. This system lets you keep your system and data with you and use it on any Gdium system, so it's ideal for any environment where several systems will be shared among many users - like many office and education environments. There's no need to keep one particular laptop with you, just plug your G-Key into any Gdium and it will work just the same.

The operating system on the G-Key is a specially customized Mandriva Linux, developed exclusively for the Gdium. It has a customized fast boot process, just like the Eee, so the Mandriva desktop will boot up in seconds. It uses a customized, lightweight desktop environment to keep the system speedy and make the most common tasks easily accessible. It also comes with a set of licensed multimedia codecs to make sure playing music and videos won't be a problem.

At first, you will be able to plug the G-Key into any normal system and access all your personal data. In future, with larger capacity G-Keys, a standard, x86 Mandriva Flash-type system will be incorporated into the key alongside the specialized Gdium OS, so if you find yourself with your G-Key but no access to a Gdium system, you can plug your G-Key into any normal PC system, boot up a Mandriva environment, and work on your data that way. The G-Key system makes the Gdium the most flexible netbook around!

The Gdium is also designed to provide access to an online environment where users can securely engage into their digital life, build their community and find relevant, authoritative educational, knowledge content. The web portal will also allow for user-generated, peer-reviewed content, complementary services, open-source applications for download, etc. This is known as the 'Gayaplex' and you can read more about it on the GDium site. This reflects one of the Gdium's targets, the education market.

The Gdium will be available in Europe, North America and China starting in September 2008. Pricing is not yet finally confirmed but can be expected to be less than 400 Euros in Europe.

Main - Mandriva leaps into the netbook market with the Gdium
Version 1.15 last modified by cversch on 30/07/2008 at 11:43

Comments (8)

Linegod | 19.07.2008 at 08:42 PM
That G-Key sounds cool…

Risto.s | 19.07.2008 at 09:23 PM
But Mandriva is not the OS. Mandriva is distribution of Linux OS. And Mandriva includes Linux OS and applications what makes Mandriva as system, not just a OS ;)

Check my typing a sysinfo:/ to konqueror addressbar or typing a "uname" to command line, it will print POSIX standar name of OS by default.

Mandriva just rocks, I'm waiting a 2009 version of it and I hope the laptop support gets even better!!


djenning Jennings | 20.07.2008 at 05:50 PM
Looks interesting. What is especially innovative is the fact it is a non x86 processor to get very low power consumption.

judland_sk | 21.07.2008 at 02:08 AM
I think it's wonderful to see Mandriva taking initiatives like this. This distribution has so much to offer and I hope this leads to more manufacturers offering products that run Mandriva software.

Natitou | 21.07.2008 at 12:53 PM
C'est bien que l'on puisse avoir Mandriva sur des Ultra-portables, mais je trouve que le Gdium n'est pas le meilleur choix avec cet appendice de clé USB OS/Stockage. Je préfère des Ultra-portables Linux sur lesquels il est possible d'installer Mandriva et qui disposent de disques durs SSD de 20 Go comme le Eeepc 900 ou 901. Finalement Mandriva va équiper un matériel déjà dépassé !

walker.ar | 21.07.2008 at 02:13 PM
'Gayaplex...?'

Sitwon | 23.07.2008 at 08:28 PM
@Friiduh: If you want to get technical about it, Linux is just a kernel. It would be a Linux-based OS (not 'Linux OS') since the kernel alone does not equate to a complete OS. In fact, since you brought up POSIX you would need GNU+Linux or Busybox+Linux to POSIX compliant. That means (much as I dislike the name) GNU/Linux OS. Then you have to take into account that Mandriva is using their own patched version of the kernel and compiled and packaged it and all the userland tools and provided you with an installer to load it onto your system so calling the operating system Mandriva (after the entity who had final control over every aspect of the system prior to handing it over to you) is fairly accurate. It's Mandriva OS. Live with it.

Lehmann Oskar | 30.07.2008 at 11:43 AM
Mandriva Spring läuft auf meinen Aldi-Netbook Medion E1210 ausgezeichnet.Habe es über einen Stick installiert und keine Pobleme.Das vorinstallierte XP-Home habe ich runtergeschmissen und es läuft jetzt auf der Vbox.Bin mit dem Kleinen sehr zu frieden!!!!

 


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Creator: awilliamson on 2008/07/18 22:31
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