MeeGo Linux will need considerable investment to succeed, according to a report from market research company Ovum. Novell plans to release SUSE MeeGo for netbooks.
Despite new support from Novell, the fledgling
MeeGo
Linux project needs "major investment" to catch up to other competing
solutions, according to a report by market research company Ovum.
On June 1, Novell announced that it would "release SUSE MeeGo as a
fully supported operating system for netbooks. Novell expects SUSE MeeGo to be
preinstalled on a variety of devices from [OEMs] in the next twelve months.
"SUSE MeeGo is built on the codestream from the MeeGo Project, the new
Linux-based operating system established by Intel and Nokia and designed for
next-generation netbooks and other mobile devices," Novell continued.
"MeeGo will effectively combine Intel's netbook-focused
Moblin platform with Nokia's cross-platform
application framework, Qt, and the cellular integration work Nokia has done in
its own Maemo Linux flavor," wrote Ovum Principal Analyst Tony Cripps.
Novell said in its news release:
"The planned shipment of SUSE
MeeGo with multiple hardware OEMs further extends Novell's leadership in this
rapidly growing market, and gives users a powerful and affordable alternative
to existing desktop computing environments.
"Our commitment to ship SUSE
MeeGo further extends our position as the leading OS vendor in the desktop
Linux market," said Guy Lunardi, director of Client Preloads at Novell.
"Novell is passionate about providing users with a better computing
experience and MeeGo will deliver on that promise. Our experience as the
leading commercial provider of desktop Linux environments-from thin clients, to
workstations, through netbooks, notebooks and desktop devices-puts us in a
great position to deliver SUSE MeeGo to a broad base of original equipment and
device manufacturers."
SUSE MeeGo builds on the longstanding
collaboration between Novell and Intel to encourage OEMs and original design
manufacturers (ODMs) to adopt Moblin. This effort has met with strong success,
as large ODMs, including Samsung and MSI, have
shipped netbook and mobile devices powered by SUSE Moblin. A leading
contributor to the Moblin project, Novell is now also a key participant in the
development of MeeGo. To support the development of new Linux-based operating
systems, Novell has established Novell OpenLabs in Taiwan, in conjunction with the local government
there.
"Novell's support of MeeGo only
further establishes their commitment to enhancing the mobile Linux
experience," said Doug Fisher, vice president of the Software and Services
Group and general manager of the Systems Software Division at Intel
Corporation. "SUSE MeeGo together with Intel Atom processor-based
platforms will provide consumers choice for Linux operating systems on netbooks
and emerging mobile devices.""
According to the MeeGo project
Website, "MeeGo currently targets platforms such as netbooks [and] entry-level
desktops, handheld computing and communications devices, in-vehicle infotainment
devices, connected TVs and media phones. All of these platforms have common
user requirements in communications, application and Internet services in a
portable or small form factor. The MeeGo project will continue to expand
platform support as new features are incorporated and new form factors emerge
in the market."
However, "MeeGo needs major investment in order to claim the big prize
in the battle of the platforms," Cripps said in the Ovum report.
Cripps acknowledged that "MeeGo devices will likely become commonplace"
in short order.
"However, Ovum doubts MeeGo's ability to upset the 'increasingly
vertically integrated, vendor-driven offerings' from Apple, Google and
Microsoft," Computerworld wrote.
Computerworld also attributed to Cripps the remark that "the volume and
variety of devices on which MeeGo is deployed may prove meaningless unless the
consistency in the underlying OS is not matched by its ability to provide a
true multiscreen application platform for developers.
"'The reality is that Nokia and Intel need to sell more MeeGo devices
if they want access to the potentially lucrative seam of tools, consulting and
systems integration surrounding cross-platform, multiscreen application
development that Qt offers,' Cripps said."
In the report, Cripps continued, "For the wholesale leveraging of Qt to
become a reality, developers must ultimately be persuaded that it is a better
cross-platform, cross-device application and UX [user experience] platform than
the alternatives. This is a big ask. From the perspective of most third-party
developers, MeeGo remains an unknown and unproven quantity that is entering an
already highly competitive and crowded landscape."
Computerworld concluded by saying, "In the short term, Ovum believes
Nokia and Intel should ignore smartphones and push the case for cross-platform
Qt development in other devices. They can then capitalize on any successes to
'cross-sell' the benefits of Qt development onto Nokia's Qt-enabled feature and
smartphones."
'Doing so may not prove easy, and will require considerable investment,' Cripps
said. 'We have yet to see whether MeeGo and its backers have the stomach for
the fight, but it would be wrong to write off its chances until we see the
merchandise.'"