Ubuntu Tablets: Less Jarring Than Windows 8?
Following up on yesterday's news that Ubuntu for Tablets has been announced, Mark Shuttleworth answered questions about the purpose of the new version of Canonical's OS and what its intended strengths will be. He made special note of how Canonical wants the transition between desktop-Ubuntu and mobile-Ubuntu to be smooth. "When you transition from the tablet to the desktop, things don't move around. Your indicators, things like network status and time, they don't jump around on screen, they stay in the same place. That's what's really different certainly between our approach to convergence and for example Windows 8, where when you're in the desktop mode, which looks like Windows 7, and suddenly you get the new tile-based interface, it's a stark transition that can be jarring for users. In our case, you can almost think of those as gentle phase changes. When you go from phone to tablet you're stretching the device in very obvious ways. People who've used iOS on both phones and tablets would expect that. What's nice about Ubuntu is the phase change to the PC experience up from the tablet really just introduces window management, and it also introduces things like menus and dialog boxes. You aren't moving things around in dramatic ways." He added that they expect the user experiences to converge in Ubuntu 14.04. Shuttleworth also addressed the fragmentation problem faced by Android. He says manufacturers and carriers don't want to fall into that trap again, and that they've been receptive to the idea of leaving the core of Ubuntu alone while tweaking their individual services instead.
So, what they're saying is that, the Ubuntu POS is less of a POS than the Windows POS.
However, they(Ubuntu and Win8 tablets) each remain a POS that no one wants.
> Unity is not that bad, let's not exaggarate
Not that bad? I used Ubuntu for 2 or 3 years as my main desktop OS. It was my first Linux I used that way, previously using Windows (for many years). As soon as Unity turned up, I hated it. For one release it was an option, so I went back to stock. On the next release it wasn't an option, so I left for Mint.
So, no exaggeration at all. Like many, many other people it was the single reason we left in droves for another OS.