Summary: KDE, one of the leading Linux desktops, is taking dead aim at Android and Apple’s iOS on smartphones and tablets
.
If
another group was trying to take on Android and Apple’s iOS on
smartphones and tablets, I’d dismiss them. RIM, BlackBerry’s parent
company, is having a heck of a time getting anyone to buy into PlayBook and while HP TouchPad users loved it,HP killed the TouchPad after only a few weeks. So, why should anyone think that KDE, makers of one of the two most popular Linux desktops, should stand a chance with Plasma Active? Well, because KDE has a long history of delivering the goods with minimal resources.
So what is it? Plasma Active is not, like Android, iOS, or webOS, an
operating system. It’s a KDE 4.x style interface and application
programming interface (API) designed for touch devices. The Plasma
Active Team states that “Plasma Active is innovative technology for an
intelligent user experience (UX). It is intended for all types of
tablets, smartphones and touch computing devices such as set-top boxes,
smart TVs, home automation, in-vehicle infotainment. The goals for this
KDE open source project are:
- A fast embedded UX platform with minimal memory requirements
- Customizable and modular to support different form factors
- An interface that adapts as users change Activities.
In their GrandMaster Plan,
the developers go into more detail about how they’ll do this: “Plasma
Active runs on the proven Linux desktop stack, including the Linux
kernel, Qt and KDE’s Plasma Framework. The user interface is designed
using Plasma Quick, a declarative markup language allowing for organic
user interface design based on Qt Quick. Plasma Active uses existing
free desktop technology and brings it to a spectrum of devices through a
device-specific user interface. Classical Plasma Widgets can be used on
Plasma Active as well as newly created ones. The key driver for the
development of Plasma Active is the user experience. Collaboration is
made easy through high-level development tools and a well defined
process. ”
“The first release of Plasma Active fully focuses on tablet
computers. Plasma Active Tablet’s user experience is designed around the
web, social networks and multimedia content.” Today, Plasma Active runs
on MeeGo and the openSUSE-based Balsam Professional
(German language site). There are also OS images for Intel-based
tablets, and package builds for ARM and x86 platforms. The group is
working flashable images for ARM platforms. The interface will also run
on Oracle’s VirtualBox virtual machine. If you want to try it you can find downloads and instructions at the Plasma Active Installation page.
According to Sebastian Kügler, one of Plasma Active’s leading
developers Plasma Active is “certainly meant as a replacement for iOS
and Android, a completely open, community-driven project with strong
backing by a group of (SMB-sized) businesses. We hope this appeals to
many hardware vendors, and have in fact already started talking with
some. The feedback so far was very good, and the concepts seem to appeal
with potential partners. There is definitely demand for an open system
without lock-in in the market for devices.”
Kügler also told me that they “have started investigating Tizen, [Intel and the Linux Foundations' proposed replacement for MeeGo]
but at this point, there is too little information out, and too many
unknowns. We do see Tizen as a potential and likely target platform, but
before Intel and Samsung release an SDK, our hands are tied. It’s not
stopping us, since in the meantime, we can still run our stuff on MeeGo
and Balsam, and we are investigating, together with the Mer team [Another mobile Linux operating system] how to get Plasma Active onto Mer.
That’s all well and good but does KDE have any industry support for this? Kügler replied, “My employer, open-slx
backs this project, and we are actively working towards creating a
wider ecosystem of companies around Plasma Active, to make good
commercial support available, next to the community resources. This
includes OEMs, ODMs and companies that can deliver support around Plasma
Active, for example integration with new hardware platforms, support
for custom-build OS images, 3rd party software, end-user support, etc.”
To that, I might add that unlike other such mobile projects, KDE
starts with a large number of open-source applications that already run
with it. That’s an advantage that neither RIM nor HP had. Personally,
it’s hard for me to see a competitor to Android or iOS getting traction,
but I’ve learned over the years not to bet against the KDE team.
No comments:
Post a Comment