Sharp Unveils Plans for a Linux-Based PDA
Device will be on display as early as next week, but won't be available in the U.S. until October.
Martyn Williams, IDG News Service
Tuesday, May 29, 2001
Sharp is set to take the wraps off of its long-awaited personal digital assistant. The device, based on the Linux operating system, will be unveiled at the JavaOne conference beginning in San Francisco on June 4, according to a company source.
The new PDA will be based on Lineo's Embedix embedded Linux, will support Sun Microsystems' Java and is scheduled to go on sale in the U.S. from October, says the source. Sharp, which announced plans last year to ship a Linux-based PDA, has yet to decide a price for the product.
Launch of the new device marks a shift up one gear in Sharp's PDA strategy. Until now it has confined its operations to the domestic market where its Zaurus range of machines became early market leaders. Last year, Zaurus PDAs had a 36 percent share of the Japanese market, according to recent data from market research company IDC Japan.
Sharp's position in the domestic market has been under increasing threat recently as a wave of new machines, many based on the Palm operating system, have been providing growing competition.
Palm, Handspring, and Sony, Sharp's biggest consumer electronics competitor, have all launched Palm OS-based machines. A number of other companies, including Casio Computer, have launched machines based on Microsoft's Windows for Pocket PC. Toshiba will shortly join them with its first PDA.
With this as a backdrop, Sharp is now heading overseas to take on some of its competitors in their own backyard and has designed the new PDA for the U.S. market. The company has plans to sell the device in Europe and Japan, although it is expected to launch first in the U.S.
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