A new tablet called the Spark is on the way. At first glance it looks like most of the cheap Chinese tablets weve seen in the past few years, but the Spark wont run Google Android. Instead it will run an open source Linux-based operating system with the
KDE Plasma Active interface running on top.
KDE Plasma Active team member Aaron Seigo unveiled the tablet on his website this weekend. It features a 1 GHz AMLogic CPU with Mali 400 graphics and a 7 inch capacitive multitouch display. The tablet has 512MB of RAM, 4GB of storage and a microSD card slot.
The Spark is expected to ship soon and it will sell for about 200, or just under $265 US.
Its certainly not the most powerful tablet to hit the scene. Weve seen plenty of devices with more memory or storage or faster processors. But the tablets software is what sets it apart.
While Google tends to release the source code for most new versions of Android, the software is developed behind closed doors and released to the public only after Google decides its ready. Google doesnt accept community contributions to the code and the company never released the source for Android 3.0 at all.
KDE Plasma Active is a community driven free software platform. For folks that arent interested in developing software, the development team is working to make the tablet as usable as possible. There will be a content store that allows users to download free or paid apps as well as digital books from Project Gutenberg.
Primarily though, I expect the Spark tablet and future devices based on this platform to appeal primarily to open source and free software enthusiasts at least initially.
The Plasma Active development team has been working on tablet-friendly software for a while. We got a first look at a touch-friendly version of the software last April, and by October the team was showing off a pretty functional demo of Plasma Active on tablet hardware.