[126002770010] |iPad Lookalike Dual-Boots Ubuntu and Windows [126002770020] |Hard on the heels of the news earlier this month that Taiwanese firm Tenq has an Ubuntu-powered tablet on the way comes word of yet another iPad challenger running Canonical's popular Linux distribution. [126002770030] |It's a dual-booting machine, this time--running both Ubuntu 10.10 and Windows 7--and it's reportedly even closer to being an iPad twin. [126002770040] |Featuring a 9.7-inch screen, the new device is reportedly much thinner than the Tenq machine is, according to a Friday report on Giz-China. [126002770050] |It also features a dual-core, 1.6GHz Atom Z530 CPU, 1GB RAM--expandable to 2GB--and an SSD hard drive, reportedly 16GB on the model Giz-China spotted [126002770060] |Compared with Tenq's P07, the new tablet is "based on a design more similar to an iPad," the publication reported. [126002770070] |Shenzhen Ruixin is the manufacturer of the device, Chinese Newpad noted on Thursday. [126002770080] |Newpad also features a number of photos of the new tablet. [126002770090] |The Dual-Booting Trend [126002770100] |It's not yet certain whether this dual-booting device will make it to market, of course, as Giz-China points out. [126002770110] |What is becoming increasingly certain, however, is the growing interest among tablet makers in the free and open source Ubuntu operating system. [126002770120] |In addition to these two latest tablets, we also saw last fall Augen's dual-booting Gentouch Espresso Doppio, which takes a different approach by dual-booting two Linux-based operating systems: Android 2.2 and Ubuntu. [126002770130] |Dual-booting, I believe, is a growing trend for 2011, and will be seen on an increasing number of devices this year. [126002770140] |A Natural on Tablets [126002770150] |But while Windows has been slow to adapt to ARM and the era of tablets, Linux-based Android has been on the forefront, posing the first real competition to Apple's market-leading iPad. [126002770160] |Now, it's particularly exciting to see Ubuntu stepping up as another mobile-friendly and Linux-based alternative. [126002770170] |With its open source nature, its low resources requirements and its free price, Ubuntu may just prove to be the next tablet winner.