Posted by : Unknown
Saturday, 12 April 2014
Project Novena is alive and kicking, promising to bring you the
world’s “almost” fully open source laptop. And it doesn’t just have open
source software, but open source hardware. Hardware with open designs
for anyone to manufacture and implement as they deem fit.
That’s what Project Novena’s Andrew “bunnie” Huang and Sean “xobs”
Cross, two Singapore-based engineers, who care enough about open source
products so as to go ahead and build something like Project Novena --
not just laptops, as we mentioned in the headline above, but other form
factors of computing devices. The Project Novena laptop looks like a 13-inch hobbyist device with
a full-HD 1920x1080 display, 240 GB SSD, and 3000 mAh battery. It
weighs just 1.36 kgs, according to the Project Novena laptop’s claimed
specs.
According to the project’s page on Crowd Supply,
Novena is claimed to be “a 1.2GHz, Freescale quad-core ARM architecture
computer closely coupled with a Xilinx FPGA. It's designed for users
who care about open source, and/or want to modify and extend their
hardware: all the documentation for the PCBs is open and free to
download, the entire OS is buildable from source, and it comes with a
variety of features that facilitate rapid prototyping.”
Project Novena’s currently offering its open source motherboard,
all-in-one desktop, laptop, and premium laptop labelled Heirloom. Right now, the Project Novena laptop is priced at US $1,995, which puts it out of reach from most mainstream customers.
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