KDE's Plasma Active Ported To Nexus 7
sfcrazy writes "KDE developers have succeeded in running the touch-optimized Plasma Active Linux Distribution on Nexus 7. Earlier Ubuntu developers managed to create a installer for Nexus 7, but those builds also showed that Unity, in its current form, is not ready for touch-based devices. KDE has an edge here as they have optimized versions for netbooks, desktops and touch-based devices so a user doesn't have to make any compromises as one has to do with other DEs or shells which are focusing more in touch-based devices only." Here are detailed instructions on how to install it.
Well, it isn't ready for desktops either! :D
If not, forget it as a temporary workaround.
Just a FYI: this is not like the other "Ubuntu on Android" solutions that exist. Android is actually wiped out of this tablet and replaced with Mer (formally MeeGo) with KDE Plasma running on top. You also get "real" multi-tasking with this distro.
I've been a KDE fan for a long time (sans the brief periods of horror, but the KDE guys at least can learn from their mistakes). The thing is, the user experience on the Nexus 7 is already downright decadent out of the box. If I install Plasma (which I have seen earlier), my Nexus 7 will be brain-meltingly awesome.
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
... all I want to run is Android. That being said, I'm interested to see that KDE tablet they've been announcing. There I'm sure plasma active will make all the sense in the world. Unity per se was not bad on a laptop, but they really blew it with that Amazon thing. That rendered Ubuntu totally ridiculous and unusable.
"Well, it isn't ready for desktops either! :D"
Well, Windows 8 sucks even more on desktops. The ENTIRE WORLD KNOWS that...
KDE is cool with touch-based devices, not perfect, yet better than Win 8! :)
KDE is probably the best option for anyone using mouse and keyboard.
I would guess that the underlying graphics support is not using hardware acceleration. It's certainly not optimized for the device and the KDE desktop in general is far more full featured than any of the tablet OSes. It's going to take both to be usable on that hardware.
I'd put KDE in the same category. Maybe E17 does it better ... I don't know, I haven't tried it, but I will.
> KDE is probably the best option for anyone using mouse and keyboard.
Ford is the best option for anyone needing transportation for use on the road.
This isn't desktop KDE, it's software specifically designed for touch screens.
Well E17 is designed for desktops, no? This is KDE re-designed specifically for a touchscreen interface.
The chief of enlightenment is working on Tizen if you want a tablet interface based on the same libraries.
Well, Windows 8 sucks even more on desktops. The ENTIRE WORLD KNOWS that...
I don't know that.
I am sixty five years old. living quietly in a small town in upstate New York. Geeks are thin on the ground here and I have never seen one in the wild. That is what attracted me to Slashdot.
I was almost fifty when I was gifted with a hand-me-down P75 Packard Bell and went online with Win 95, a 14K modem and dial-up AOL.
I completed the upgrade-in-place thing to Win 8 Pro on the desktop late last Sunday night.
I have since been moving freely and comfortably between Metro, Media Center, the Desktop and AMD's Android AppZone Player.
It has been easy and it has been fun learning the new system.
Why would you want to port an inferior desktop (KDE) to a Nexus 7
Perhaps because it doesn't have Google's pawprints all over it?
Correct - the videos were done using xrender - software based compositing. Once they get a workable 3D driver for the Tegra 3 then they'll be sweet.
Yeah, I've got the Transformer Pad Infinity. I'll definitely be setting up dual boot. Since the specs of the Nexus 7 and the Pad Infinity are so close, I don't imagine it will require that much hackery to get it working....
Unortunately multiboot does not (yet) work with this.
(Posted from Ubuntu on Nexus 7)