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    OpenBook is an open source hardware and software project which goal is to start a "light tablet" movement by designing a computer tablet that suits most user's needs and design an all-round (probably Linux powered) tablet.

    The future device could be a light, letter sized LCD or electronic paper display tablet with touch screen, Wi-Fi, few GB of flash memory, decent battery life and a price of under $500 - that could be the specs of the OpenBook. While aiming literally between MIT $100 laptop and a consumer Tablet PC the project wants to stop wasting both software and hardware resources and still be highly usable.

    The OpenBook initiative started because there is no product that would meet this requirements on the market today. The initiative's goal is to maintain an open specifications of the OpenBook. The project does not want to manufacture the tablet itself once the right specifications are ready but rather to create a market demand and let different manufacturers to produce it. Technology in usability does not change every two years to force you change the hardware. When software changes the device can be easily re-flashed gaining the new features.

    The OpenBook could ship in two display modifications - a normal LCD and an electronic paper display for long battery life performance. The OpenBook might look like the Electrovaya's Scribbler or TabletKiosk's products. However, a light keyboard is planned (probably similar to foldable Palm traveller keyboard) with a stand so that one could deploy the device conveniently on the table and write.


        OpenBook Project
            Competition
            Specifications
            See also

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    Competition
    The Pepper Pad 2 is not light enough in comparison to OpenBook aims. It still has a hard drive and does not feature a decently sized light keyboard (folding from the bottom) - like the Palm travel keyboard once was. The Pepper Pad already featured a Linux OS though.

    Another potential competitor in the ... of the tablet usage is the Microsoft's UMPC. However, the UMPCs again have hard drives by default and are too thick. They also have too small display and run mostly Celeron processor, which is in comparison to ARM architecture extremely ineffective.

    Another extreme is the iLiad from iRex Technologies - it is firstly an e-book reader and features only an e-ink display and no keyboard.

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    Specifications
    Current OpenBook hardware specifications:
      ARM9 CPU
      14" TFT LCD with touchscreen
      OpenBIOS
      256MB RAM
      1GB FLASH memory
      Wifi
      USB 2.0
      full-size-key thin attachable keyboard (Palm traveller style)

    Software:
      open source based OS

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    See also
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "OpenBook Project". link