David Flynn02 April 2009, 3:23 AM
Asus and HP are both looking into Google’s Android as an alternative to Windows 7 for a new wave of netbooks.
Is 2009 set to be the year that Android makes the leap from mobile phones to low-cost netbooks? HP is eyeing off the open source smartphone OS as an alternative to Windows 7 in its Mini netbook line.
In an interview with
The Wall Street Journal, HP vice president Satjiv Chahil revealed that Android is on the table. “We want to assess the capability Android may have for the computer and communications industries, and so we are studying it” Chahil said.
Last month, Asus revealed that it’s already working on adapting Android for the Eee PC. The project is only ‘proof of concept’ at this stage said Samson Hu, head of Asus’ Eee PC line in an interview with news service Bloomberg.
Asus has an inside line on Android, as it’s one of the OS consortium members and is already working with Garmin to launch a line of new GPS-equipped smartphones, some of which will run Android.
Market research firm Ovum tips that Android will become the Linux distro of choice for netbooks in 2009, displacing fully featured desktop-class builds such as Ubuntu and Xandros (although Ubuntu is promoting its own tweak known as
Ubuntu Netbook Remix to manufacturers).
Laurent Lachal, Ovum’s director of open source research, says that although sales of Linux netbooks are lagging behind Windows, Android could reverse the trend if netbook makers “focus on specialised distributions, especially Android”.