Slashdot Mirror


Ubuntu Heads To Smartphones, and Tablets

First time accepted submitter GuerillaRadio writes "Mark Shuttleworth is to announce that Canonical will be taking Ubuntu Linux to smartphones, tablets, and smart TVs at the Ubuntu Developer Summit in Orlando, FL starting today. Shuttleworth said, 'This is a natural expansion of our idea as Ubuntu as Linux for human beings. As people have moved from desktop to new form factors for computing, it's important for us to reach out to our community on these platforms. So, we'll embrace the challenge of how to use Ubuntu on smartphones, tablets and smart-screens.'"

16 of 281 comments (clear)

  1. This is clearly what he was always planning... by JustNiz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...since Unity has made Ubuntu completely suck on anything with a mouse and keyboard.

    1. Re:This is clearly what he was always planning... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Exactly.

      But one can install KUbuntu instead. KDE 4.7 is slick, the best mouse/keyboard oriented desktop I've seen so far.

      It's too bad that Unity is the bloody *default* thing people get on desktops. It should be the default on mobile devices. The desktop default should not be Unity or Gnome3 or other mobile-oriented environments.

    2. Re:This is clearly what he was always planning... by Bill+Hayden · · Score: 3, Informative

      Apple hasn't even tried to make the iOS and OSX interfaces look similar.

      I have to assume that was a joke, or else you haven't used Lion yet.

      --
      Protect your browser with the Force Safe Search add-on
    3. Re:This is clearly what he was always planning... by AdamJS · · Score: 5, Informative

      I want a desktop environment that plays well with multiple monitors and several open applications (each of which having multiple windows that I will want on screen at the same time, and selectable from a central location in the fewest clicks possible, with the task of exact identification handled without needing a click on most instances). You know, what Gnome 2 did quite well and what MS/Explorer has handled fine enough for over a decade.

    4. Re:This is clearly what he was always planning... by HopefulIntern · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I am trying to understand what people miss from KDE, Gnome 2 or other DEs that Unity doesn't have

      Familiarity.

  2. Re:Good by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Funny

    Having a tablet oriented linux distro is going to open up the linux market. Ubuntu has a reputation for working out of the box, let's see if they can keep it with such unusual hardware.

    So we can look forward to the "year of Linux on the Tablet" just after the "year of Linux on the Desktop"?

  3. Re:Good news - Android minus Google's crippleware. by Yvan256 · · Score: 4, Funny

    They modified Linus? What did they do to him? I bet he's pretty angry about that!

  4. Re:The Difference by Chrisq · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft doesn't have a monopoly there. That's the big difference. They're competing mainly with Apple/Google, and I think they can take them on.

    You might be right, but Apple has proved to be as unscrupulous as Microsoft. Expect all the ridiculous patents (e.g looks like a tablet) that they have used against Android to be used against Ubuntu.

  5. Re:Good news - Android minus Google's crippleware. by plunderscratch · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't worry, it wasn't the real Linus, they forked him first.

    --
    Guns don't kill people! Admins do!
  6. Re:Unity's table look and feel by MrHanky · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I thought it was just a half-assed imitation of OS X with the dock moved over to the left side and inconsistent application menus. Unlike Gnome3, it doesn't seem like something that would work on a tablet (nor anywhere else). I'd like a Gnome3 version of the Asus Eeee Pad Transformer.

  7. Re:The Difference by Kjella · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft doesn't have a monopoly there. That's the big difference. They're competing mainly with Apple/Google, and I think they can take them on.

    No, only:
    - A long history of locked down devices
    - A lot of custom hardware on each phone/tablet
    - No tradition for dual boot
    - Covered by a ton of silly software patents

    Just look at how many problems Linux has had, and still to some degree has, with basic functionality even on fairly standard desktop gear. Like sound, network, wifi, suspend/resume, bluetooth, power management and so on. Now try this in the phone/tablet world where a lot of the hardware is used exactly once in one generation and there's lots of magic values and toggles. I predict the YotLT is even further away than the YotLD.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  8. They should shut up until it ships. by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative

    Canonical previously announced that their distro was being preloaded on three ASUS netbooks. That was in August. Didn't happen.

    Canonical issued that Linux press release, but Asus never said they were going to ship those machines with Linux. Canonical has no credibility.

  9. Re:Can you dual boot a phone? by slim · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Can you dual boot a phone?

    Yes. The basic way of installing Cyanogenmod (etc.) puts a recovery bootloader on your phone, such that you can select what OS to boot.

  10. know your market by t2t10 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ubuntu's traditional market niche is the technical and professional market, people who used to use UNIX workstations. Unfortunately, with 11.10 and the upcoming move away from X11, Ubuntu is hell-bent on leaving that market: Unity is already nearly useless for power users (it doesn't work well at all on large or multi-screen setups), tools like Synaptic are becoming non-standard, etc.

    Unfortunately, Ubuntu doesn't have a chance in the tablet and smartphone market either. That market is already well service by Android and iOS. Ubuntu has virtually no mobile developers. And if it manages against all odds to even get a small market share, Ubuntu will face the kind of patent feeding frenzy that Android is being subjected to.

    Too bad Shuttleworth couldn't leave good enough alone. He's going to kill Ubuntu and seriously hurt Linux as a whole.

    1. Re:know your market by CalcProgrammer1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah, Ubuntu's users were typically new Linux users, but often they were still experienced PC users with other OS (Windows/Mac) knowledge. Ubuntu is trying to impress users who have zero knowledge of how PC's work and make it super intuitive for those who haven't used any other OS, but these people aren't ever going to install Ubuntu in the first place. Meanwhile, Ubuntu's maturing userbase has finally decided to ditch the training wheels and move to another distribution after the horrendous 11.10 release. What were they thinking!?! I have Debian on my Archos 43 4.3" tablet. With GNOME2 and Bluetooth mini-keyboard. It's awesome. I seriously would rather have a classic interface even on a tablet, if you have a stylus you don't need obnoxiously wasteful buttons that take up 2-3 times the space they need to, and fitting more stuff on the screen gives more functionality (compare LibreOffice to tablet office apps and you'll see a big difference in the number of features provided).

  11. Re:Unity's table look and feel by tomhudson · · Score: 3, Funny

    No (sic) we know why Unity looks the way it does.

    Learn how to type you moron.

    Please go easy on them - they obviously typed that using Unity.