A year ago, netbooks were viewed as a good chance for Linux to finally break into the desktop computing mainstream.
That was until Microsoft belatedly reacted by making Windows XP available at a low cost to netbook makers.
[ For some business applications, netbooks do make a lot of sense. ]
Today, Windows XP-based netbooks comprise 90 percent of North American netbook sales.
That has shifted interest among Linux desktop proponents toward netbooks based on the alternative ARM processor. Popular with smartphones, ARM chips are cheaper and use less power than Intel's Atom processor for netbooks.
Also, Microsoft has shown no interest yet in porting Windows over to the ARM platform.
Canonical is porting its popular Ubuntu Linux distribution over to ARM.
And Xandros, whose Linux distribution was used in the original Asus Eee netbook, has already done so.
But Novell said no, for now. Markus Rex, acting senior vice president and general manager for open platform solutions at Novell, told Computerworld on Monday: "There certainly is a lot of hype around ARM-based netbooks, [but] at the moment, we don't do anything on ARM-based devices."
"Linux runs just fine on ARM," Rex said. "But we decided to focus on a couple of opportunities that are in the pipeline now."
Novell's Suse Linux appears to be one of the more popular versions of the open source operating system for netbooks.
Suse comes pre-installed on four netbooks: Lenovo's IdeaPad S10e, the MSI Wind from MSI Computer Corp., First International Computer's Intel Atom-powered CW0A1, and Hewlett-Packard Co.'s Mini 2140 business netbook.
Novell is currently readying the official launch of the next version of Suse Linux 11.
Computerworld is an InfoWorld affiliate
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