The notebook motherboard has a name and it is
Powerboard Tyche, and no, it does not reach the point of launching U-Boot, yet.
Calling it simply the "ACube notebook" is fine, but technically not quite right, so here a little clarification of the somehow complex situation, for those of you that love the details.
The entire notebook project of the motherboard is coordinated by the not-for-profit organisation called
PowerProgressCommunity, that finance the initiative via its
notebook project website.
We at the PowerProgressCommunity (I am part of it) defined all of its specifications.
Being a not-for-profit organisation under the Italian law, we are not allowed to produce anything, we are limited to perform an intellectual work only.
Our goal is to publish all the electronic schematics of the board using an
Open Source Hardware certification, so that potentially anybody could make it.
ACube Systems is being paid (hired) by PowerProgressCommunity to design the board, in their turn they hired an electronic engineer firm to do the job. Apparently it seems unusual to subcontract like this, but within our association we are all volunteers, and none of us has the expertise to be able to deal with the technical requests of the electronic engineer, so we are forced to rely on the ACube expertise to do so.
Once the prototypes will proved to work, we will publish all schematics, and the PowerProgressCommunity will reach its goal.
At this point, we all hope that ACube Systems will be enough motivated to make the boards based on the public schematics, which is a risky business for them given the small market.
Long story short: the
more donation we receive, the faster we can pay ACube to finish the prototypes.