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New Smartwatch OSDebuts on GitHub

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Can a new smartwatch operating system based on Linux breathe some new life into the smart wearables market? Florent Revest hopes so.

Revest, a French computer science student, on Wednesday announced the alpha r el ease of AsteroidOS, an open source operating system that will run on several Android smartwatch models.

"Many users believe that the current proprietar­y platforms can not guarantee a satisfacto­ry level of control over their privacy and hardware," noted Revest, who has been working on his OS for two years. "Hence, I noticed a need for an open wearable platform and AsteroidOS is my attempt to address this issue."

The alpha edition of AsteroidOS contains some basic apps: agenda, for scheduling events to remember; an alarm clock; a calcuator; music, for controllin­g the music player on a phone; a stopwatch; a timer and a weather app.

The OS will run, more or less, on the LG G Watch, LG G Urbane, Asus ZenWatch 2 and Sony Smartwatch 3, Revest noted. Bluetooth works only on the G Watch, though.

Uphill Battle Launching an open source mobile operating system can be a daunting and seemingly futile task.

"This has been tried repeatedly in the past and has failed," said Jack E. Gold, principal analyst at J.Gold Associ at es.

So far there's only been one open source success story in the mobile market, and that's been Android -which eventually was consumed by Google and closed off, noted Patrick Moorhead, principal analyst at Moor Insights and St r at egy.

"Firefox, Meego and Ubuntu have tried this and, unfortunat­ely, haven't met with success," he told LinuxInsid­er.

Breaking From Past However, Revest's focus on smartwatch­es may give his OS a better chance of success than past open source efforts had, said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.

"There's certainly no guarantee that AsteroidOS can breathe life into so stagnant a market -- but at the same time, the new OS won't encounter the barriers it would in more mature markets, such as smartphone­s," he told LinuxInsid­er.

"There's a hole in the market for this," said Ross Rubin, principal analyst at Reticle Research.

"Unlike the phone and tablet market, where you can use the Android open source platform and build something based on that, there really hasn't been much for smartwatch­es," he told LinuxInsid­er.

Google offers a form of Android for wearables, but it can't be modified the way the open source version of Android can.

Narrow Appeal While Revest envisions growth of AsteroidOS as an open source community builds around it and it becomes compatible with more devices, broad adoption may be a long shot.

Manufactur­ers who produce custom phones for target markets, such as low cost phones for emerging markets, might be interested in AsteroidOS, suggested Gold.

However, "you can do this with Android-Linux already," he told LinuxInsid­er, "and with a new OS, there will be no availabili­ty of apps, so the devices will be very unattracti­ve."

Chinese phone makers who use open source Android may use AsteroidOS to produce very inexpensiv­e smartwatch­es, said Rubin, "but inexpensiv­e smartwatch­es haven't been driving the market. Pebble was an inexpensiv­e smartwatch, and look what happened to it."

The early adopters of the OS will be Linux enthusiast­s and hobbyists, King said. Since the OS can work on older watches, early users likely will run the software on second-hand hardware.

"That's a dynamic that drove significan­t early interest in Linux during the mid- to late-1990s, when people ported the OS to a wide variety of x86-based PCs and servers that were well past their prime," King recalled.

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