Sascha Pallenberg from netbooknews and our very own Chippy had a nice little debate about the advantages and disadvantages of the MID vs. the Netbook, and they also touch a bit on the Atom Developer Program which will cross both device groups.
Sascha Pallenberg from netbooknews and our very own Chippy had a nice little debate about the advantages and disadvantages of the MID vs. the Netbook, and they also touch a bit on the Atom Developer Program which will cross both device groups.
If you are in the netbook or MID business and haven’t looked through the Intel IDF content catalogue yet, do so now. Download relevant PDFs before they are gone because they contain some real information gems.
For example, IDG are predicting that the netbook market will reach over 30m units in 2011 rising to 45m in 2012 and that the netbook market will represent just 15% of the overall market for laptops (staying steady at 15% from 2009 until 2012 at least.
Or how about that the average netbook price in the US is way lower, at just over $300, than anywhere else in the world where prices are nearer to $400.
On Linux, Intel says that it will DROP in market share between 2008 and 2012 with Windows 7 taking the lions share. That doesn’t stoke much confidence in Moblin does it!
Western Europe is currently the biggest netbook market at over 2x shipments compared to the US.
Source: SF09_MPTS007 (via the Content catalog.)
There are some interesting stats about users and buyers too. 85% of netbooks are bought for one’s own use and that person is in their mid-30s. Internet surfing is the most common use with video streaming coming in at a tiny percent of usage (2%)
Source: SF09_MPTS008 (via the Content catalog.)
There’s a nice set of study data too. Did you know that most smartphone, MID, laptop and netbook usage sessions are under 5 minutes long and that 70% of active time was to social-related applications?
78% of usage is through the browser.
Source: SF09_RESS008 (via the Content catalog.)
Other interesting presentations to check out:
Intel’s Next Generation System-On-a-Chip (CETS003) Find out about the CE4100 Atom processor targeted at IPTV applications. Interesting items: CivX certifications, jpeg decode acceleration, 1080p acceleration and more.
Mobile PC Power Sources: Li-Ion Battery Technology (EBLS003) In interesting presentation that will bring you up to date about what’s happening in the real world of Li-Ion technology. (My notes here)
Check out the set of MID-related presentations too. SF09_MIDS005 talks about the telephony stack and the SNRLabs connection management software that will be in Moblin 2.1 for handhelds.
On the Moblin side of things, at least take the time to check out MOBS001 which has an excellent diagram showing the breakdown of developers across mobile platforms and how Moblin will span MIDs, netbooks, nettops, auto and embedded markets. Did you know that gesture support is planned for 2.1, that sync and sensor support is planned for V2.2 and that later versions in the 2011 and 2012 timeframe should support intelligent multi-screen, multi-touch and context-aware software? Check out the Moblin roadmap.
There are other presentations about cloud computing, turbo-boost technology, Moorestown (my analysis here) and I’ve listed some more recommended sessions here.
If the links above don’t work, you can find the downloads on the IDF 2009 Content Catalog
I’m just a few posts away from completing my Intel Developer Forum 2009 related work now and it’s time to round-up and summarize the news and to try and work out what it means for 2010 and 2011. Power-gating, Mobiln 2.1 and the App Store are just three very important elements but for the full overview, check out an article I’ve just posted at UMPCPortal which goes over everything I learned. I can not deny that it was disappointing not to see more Moorestown prototypes but the news is more than enough to keep my excitement going until the next big event. See you at CES 2010 in January.
Many thanks to Intel and the Intel Insider program for the sponsorship of my MIDMoves work at IDF.
You may have already seen the video from IDF where Moblin 2.1 for handhelds was announced and seen the demonstration of Moblin 2.0 on Moorestown but in addition to that we were give a sneak peek at Moblin 2.1 for handhelds running on a (Menlow demonstration) platform. Pankaj Kedia from the Ultra Mobility Group also answers questions about the platform.
Key points to note are:
Part 1. Q&A With Pankaj Kedia
Part 2. Demonstration
Even if you couldn’t get to IDF in San Francisco last week you still have a chance to learn all about the mind-blowing technology that was covered at a very technical level. From cars to TV’s, MIDs to desktops, laptops to smartphones, there’s a huge range of markets that Intel addresses and for each segment there was at least one technical session at IDF. If you’ve got any interest in any of these areas (that leaves about 0.5% of you that landed on this by accident when searching for towns in the U.S. beginning with the letter M) you need to dive into some of the amazing content that’s been made available. Known as the content catalogue and used largely for session planning by attendees at IDF, it’s now populated with nearly all of the slides that were presented in those sessions. I’m working my way through the MID and Moblin-related PDFs but as I said before, there’s a lot of other markets and products covered.
We’re finally getting a look at what the Moorestown MIDphones of the future should offer us. Chippy has a short demonstration of Wind River’s interface running on top of Mobilin. This is designed for MIDs as compared to the standard Moblin which has an interface based around more standard input devices (ie: mouse and keyboard on a netbook). The demo you are about to see below is running on the Inventec MediaPhone that jkk went hands on with at Computex 2009.
While some of the demo looks pretty good, such as the smooth application opening animation, it is also quite disheartening to see that they couldn’t even get the app pages to slide smoothly at this point. Hoping that it won’t end up shipping like this (it doubtfully will).
[MIDMoves]
Spotted in a technical session yesterday, this is a live demo of a working Moorestown MID with a capacative touchscreen running Moblin 2 and a UI developed by Wind River. The device is the Inventec ‘MediaPhone’ seen at Computex 2009. In the first part of the video you’ll see a public demo. We managed to get a private demo and you’ll see that in the second-half of the video.
It looks extremely smooth, well thought out and gives you an example of the sorts of user interfaces and features we’ll see when Moorestown and Moblin 2.1 hit in the middle of 2010.
Chippy has a nice photoset of the upcoming Viliv S10 here in the ultra mobile PC gallery. Take a look. These were taken during Computex.
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
|