pauldmps
Banned
Intel promises, teases MeeGo smartphone and tablet for MWC
Source: Intel promises, teases MeeGo smartphone and tablet for MWC -- Engadget
*www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2011/02/11x02138hmen.jpg
Fujitsu unveils world's first MeeGo netbook, world barely notices
Source: Fujitsu unveils world's first MeeGo netbook, world barely notices -- Engadget
*www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2011/02/2-12-11-meego-netbook-fujitsu-mh330.png
Source: Intel promises, teases MeeGo smartphone and tablet for MWC -- Engadget
*www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2011/02/11x02138hmen.jpg
Lookie here. Intel may have been the jilted bride left at the altar by Nokia, but it's not giving up on MeeGo just yet. The above poster has been hung up here in Barcelona, in the area us humble journalists still aren't in allowed yet, and shows a smartphone and tablet running Intel's Linux variant as their OS. There are plenty of details to pore over, such as the multiplicity of home screen items on the tablet that includes Big Buck Bunny -- a favorite for testing HD video playback -- in its top right corner. MWC is opening its doors tomorrow, so even if Intel doesn't announce these devices in full, we'll snoop its booth out and find out for ourselves.
Fujitsu unveils world's first MeeGo netbook, world barely notices
Source: Fujitsu unveils world's first MeeGo netbook, world barely notices -- Engadget
*www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2011/02/2-12-11-meego-netbook-fujitsu-mh330.png
It hasn't been a terribly good week for MeeGo, but there's a scant silver lining in the cloud -- the first MeeGo netbook has arrived in Singapore, courtesy of Fujitsu. Actually, to be precise, it's the first netbook to ship with MeeGo preinstalled, as Fujitsu's simply shoehorned the lightweight operating system onto its existing LifeBook MH330 machine. Sadly, the MH330's about as boring as they come -- it's a plain vanilla 1.66GHz Intel Atom N455 ultraportable with 1GB of RAM, a 250GB hard drive and a 10.1-inch 1024 x 600 LED-backlit screen. The company says it's customized MeeGo to take advantage of hardware buttons, but other than that there's nothing noteworthy here, just a (roughly $400) netbook that managed to find a place in the annals of history for being the first to preinstall an operating system that's already on the outs -- albeit a very pleasant, quickly-booting one. PR after the break.