• On MovieTome: The 10 worst movies of 2009 so far!
August 29, 2008 5:11 PM PDT

Intel acquires Linux mobile developers for Atom

by Tom Espiner
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 1 comment

Intel Corp. has acquired Opened Hand, a London-based company which specializes in mobile Linux development and services.

Opened Hand will focus on participating in the Moblin Software Platform community, which is developing a Linux software stack for Intel's Atom processors. The software will be optimized for low-power Netbooks and "mobile Internet devices."

"Opened Hand brings great expertise and technology in the area of user-interaction frameworks, improving Intel's ability to address the unique challenges of enabling cutting edge UIs for these new class of devices," a spokesperson for Intel told ZDNet.co.uk.

Intel will continue to support existing Opened Hand projects, including software library Clutter, used for GUI creation, and Matchbox, an open-source base environment for the X Window System. These projects will become part of the Moblin project.

Describing itself as "kind of like the 'Millenium Falcon' of Floss, or worst case, an Ewok village," Opened Hand employs numerous core Gnome developers, and is a member of the Gnome advisory board.

Opened Hand, which has Nokia Internet Tablets, One Laptop Per Child, Openmoko, and Vernier as clients, will join the Intel Open Source Technology Center.

Tom Espiner of ZDNet UK reported from London.
Recent posts from Business Tech
Eclipse tells ex-community director to 'go away'
Practice overtaking theory in cloud computing
Microsoft actively urges IE 6 users to upgrade
eBay fined $2.5 million in French perfume case
Latest Firefox beta offers file-handling feature
EC reshuffle bumps antitrust chief Kroes
HP Envy eclipses the Apple MacBook
EU hearing on Oracle-Sun set for Dec. 10
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by tenc21 September 1, 2008 12:30 PM PDT
this can only be a good move for those interested in the new super small notebooks. I don't necessarily like Ibtel, but they're a smart business decision.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

S.F. hacker space: Heaven for the DIY set?

The Noisebridge hacker space offers sewing and Mandarin classes, soldering workshops, Internet-controlled front door access, and a server room with no door.
• Photos: Circuits, code, community

The browser battles go on and on

roundup From Firefox to IE and from Chrome to Opera and Safari, there's no sitting still for browser makers looking to keep their products fresh and competitive.

advertisement

About Business Tech

Your destination for the latest news on enterprise-level information technology, from chip research and server design to software issues including programming, open source and patents.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Business Tech topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right