Now I am all for trying new
distros and netbooks are a place where I feel Linux truly outshines all
other operating systems, so when a new netbook focused distro comes to
maturity I always like to take it for a test drive. MeeGo, the joint
operating system between Nokia's Maemo and Intel's Moblin, has been
getting alot of hype recently
in the Linux community and the world at large. I can understand why,
personally I was very excited when MeeGo was first announced. Nokia and
Intel are both very large names that bring substantial financial backing
to the table, beyond this they are also allowing the Linux Foundation
to manage the MeeGo project.
After having used the 1.0 release of MeeGo that is targeted for netbook devices I really must say: I'm really not impressed.
Late last year I did a review
of Intel's Moblin Linux 2.0 and this MeeGo 1.0 release is so similar to
Moblin that is really doesn't even feel like a different distro. Don't
believe me? Well lets start with the interface, this first screen shot
is Moblin 2.0:
This second screen shot is MeeGo 1.0:
See
what I mean? Now don't get me wrong, I don't think MeeGo is a poor
distro - in fact all the positive things I said about Moblin also still
apply here. The only issue is most of the negative things also still
apply.
Software:
MeeGo
fails to ship with an Office Suite still and the software selection
from their package manager is still decently limited. Two things that are improvements in MeeGo are the default webrowser and media player. For all your media needs Banshee
is at your service. Banshee is a full featured, matured, media player
with plenty of features that should keep most all users happy. In terms
of webrowsing, MeeGo ships two different .img files - the first uses the
open source Chromium as the stock browser, the second requires you to
agree to an EULA as it uses Google's Chrome browser.
Customization:
Another
nice addition is the ability to customize the top bar where you switch
between your different applications and zones. A piece of customization
that is still lacking however is the ability to change which messaging
client is integrated with the operating system (empathy is alright, but I
am a die hard pidgin user and prefer to use it whenever possible).
Socialization:
MeeGo
still integrates well with twitter (just as Moblin did), but unlike the
latest Ubuntu release (which has Gwibber), MeeGo still lacks Facebook
integration. As I mentioned above empathy is still the default messaging
client and it does support facebook chat by default.
Issues:
The
only real issue I had with MeeGo was the fact that it's network manager
was unable to connect to my WPA encrypted network. It did connect to
un-encrypted and WEP encrypted networks without a hitch though.
Usage:
The
MeeGo desktop, just like the Moblin desktop, is snappy and responsive
(just as much as lightweight desktop environments such as LXDE or E17).
The operating system boots slightly faster than Ubuntu 10.04 does on my
hardware (7 seconds versus 9 seconds). Over all MeeGo makes for a great
"webrowsing" operating system, but for anything beyond this I would
recommend something else.
Final Thoughts:
One of the reasons I was so excited about MeeGo was because it was the merging of Moblin with Maemo. I have been using Maemo on my N900
for over six months and I must say, I can't find a trace of Maemo
anywhere in the MeeGo 1.0 release. Now, perhaps there is some of the
Maemo core hiding behind the scenes in the MeeGo code, but personally I
am just hoping Moblin did not simply swallow up Maemo.
Honestly
while I am hopping the MeeGo project takes off (especially as a
competitor to Android), at the same time I have to wonder what this
could do to the public opinion of what Linux is. I say this because the
way MeeGo is designed it does not feel like a full blown operating
system as distros like Ubuntu or Fedora do (or Windows does). I would
hate to see the general opinion of Linux become the idea that the
operating system is limited to netbooks and hand held devices and not
for "real" work/computers
No comments:
Post a Comment