First Chrome OS systems to come from Acer, Dell, and HP?

Last month at Computex, Acer's rumored Chrome OS netbook was nowhere to be found. Of course, I'd already said it wasn't going to be on display -- and Acer backed up my prediction days later with an official press release. Computex has come and gone, and while we still haven't seen Chrome OS hardware prototypes we may have a clue as to who's working on them.
Officially, Google has only stated that Chrome OS devices will be arriving late this fall "from select partners." So who might those partners include? If the files I spotted in the Chromium OS Git repository are any indication, Acer, Dell and HP are good bets. The overlay-x86 bits take care of configuring Chrome's hardware support during the build process -- so these would seem to indicate that Dell, Acer, and HP might be at the point where they're building the OS for specific configs.
Apart from the conspicuous files, all three have already been connected to Chrome OS in some way. Dell engineers put together a customized build for their Mini 10V netbook shortly after Google opened the Chromium OS code. As Sebastian wrote recently, HP is tinkering with Cloud Print -- which will feature prominently in Chrome OS. They're also not averse to trying different things with their netbooks -- like their heavily-customized Ubuntu remix.
As for Acer... Well, if anyone's willing to try cramming a Chrome OS dual boot option onto a netbook, it's Acer. They already tried an Android/Windows combo with the AOD250, but that didn't turn out so well.
Acer and HP were, of course, mentioned in Google's initial "so who's working with us on Chrome OS?" post. While Dell was left off the list, I'm not surprised to see their name in the project files. Who better to help sell your OS to consumers than the top 3 OEMs in the game?
First Chrome OS systems to come from Acer, Dell, and HP? originally appeared on Download Squad on Sun, 13 Jun 2010 10:00:00 EST.
- 1960 reads
- Feed: Download Squad
- Original article


I think Windows is in
I think Windows is in trouble. Chrome OS is still in development but if what Google sais is true, it can boot up and have you on the internet in seconds. This type of OS can function on really basic hardware - computing power from years ago. They will penetrate netbooks in a big way. I can foresee a netbook going for sub $200 which would do what 90% of people want. The OS would be free but much more user friendly than Linux - it has linux power and simplicity with a proper interface. Chrome could be a serious long term competitor for Windows. I have a computer at home and don't really need a 2nd one BUT if i know i can get an very fast netbook for between $100-200 I will be tempted. If the user experience is as good as i think it will be, users may not see the need to owning a pc with windows ever again. Microsoft should be scared....very scared. This is just the beginning. http://twitter.com/jeryjons
Post new comment