Shuttleworth Answers FSF Call for Free Software Drivers on Edge
WebMink writes "In an interview at OSCON, Mark Shuttleworth of Canonical spoke about the vision behind the Ubuntu Edge phone as a concept device to test features the mobile industry is too conservative to try. Notably, he agreed with the Free Software Foundation's demands that the device should carry no proprietary software and have Free drivers (transcript): '... we'll ship this with Android and Ubuntu, no plans to put proprietary applications on it. We haven't finalized the silicon selection so we're looking at the next generation silicon from all major vendors. I would like to ship it with all Free drivers.'"
Although not a hard promise, it is a promising development.
This way we do not have to pay anyone anything !!
Win !! Win !!
We can't afford, sorry I can't afford to do all of this by myself. Help me please?
I know a lot of Ubuntu Fanboi's are foaming at the mouth at the prospect of getting their darling O/S on a phone.
As far as I'm concerned the farther my desktop is from my phone in terms of O/S the better. There is such a thing as 'putting all your eggs in one basket'
Canonical are in danger of making the same mistake that MS has done. History does repeat itself...
When you know you depend on silicon designed by others. Here's the thing.I bet Canonical would very much rather have everything on that thing be open-source because if something breaks it's way easier to debug than having to bang your head against the wall that a binary blob of anything represents.
Hopefully Mark can make it happen, he should add some of this own fortune if the IndieGoGo campaign doesn't receive enough funds, but $8M is fantastic already.
Seriously, you guys don't even read what you write, do you?
...free from an NSA backdoor too I'd imagine. In the current climate that may be a real selling point... something people would go out of their way to order online etc...
It's a development, not a developing.
Free drivers would be great, but it's pretty meaningless for Mark to promise them when the project obviously isn't on track to get funded anyway.
I find the fixation on wanting to use proprietary hardware with FOSS drivers rather counterproductive. If you are buying a graphics card where the vendor does not give you the source for the driver, you have sacrificed your freedom right at the point of sale, where you bought the hardware, so you might as well accept a driver that is closed as well. If you really insist on freedom, you ought to demand hardware that has open specs as well. I am NOT however saying that the effort to write free drivers for proprietary hardware is not admirable. I am just saying that FSF fixation on open software (driver) without insisting on open hardware as well, a contradiction.
You'd like wifi right? While there are wifi adapters that have free /open drivers, not many are in the ultra-low-power-cost SystemOnChip wifi adapters. Likewise the drivers for the telco data side of things are unlikely to be open/free, especially for sprint and Verizon in the US, can't speak for overseas.
I'm pretty sure that mark would like them to be free too. That doesn't mean that it's going to, or is likely to, happen.
You never know...
Again many accept without discussion that Firmware is proprietary but at the same time they demand the software to be open, I am not so much against having a few proprietary blobs for drivers and things like the SDR, all depending on a well defined interface with said blob or firmware.
There were great hopes around the Nokia N900 development even though it too had it's closed sections.
What I DO want is to be able to run a mature GNU/Linux (likely a KDE flavour but I'd give Unity a chance) on my devices so all the well known (and tested!) applications can be ported easily, Android just doesn't hack it.
This latest news from Mark brings me closer to wanting an Edge but more assurance is needed.
"The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
Does anyone know where duedil.com gets its Canonical data from?
If I am going to fork over $800, I want to perform at least some due diligence. Is Canonical simply going to use my money to pay downs its current liabilities, which were recently about 19,000,000 GBP higher than its current assets?
https://www.duedil.com/company/06870835/canonical-group-limited
I would vote for such a development with my wallet.
There are 19 days left, if you don't signup before that deadline you lost your chance. NOBODY else will try AND NOBODY else will come even close to giving you what you want. Get over your sense of entitlement that EVERYTHING need to be just the way you want it. This is the real world and your mommy ain't around to cut the crusts of your bread.
If this project does not exist, the message is clear, the linux world is to divided for anyone to cater for because no matter what you do, they always want more and not just give an existing project a chance right now.
It is not even that much a risk, if the project isn't funded, you get all your money back.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
The phone has global support but if you do NOT buy it now, you won't buy it later. The phone will ONLY be available if it is fully funded and you can't buy it afterwards.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
It sounds like the Ubuntu Mobile people are saying "hey, we want to ship this with no binary blobs but we recognize that in order to get certain features such as a cellular modem or a 3D-capable GPU we may have no choice but to go with a binary blob if we cant find hardware that is 100% open"
That means no Google apps by default. I'm guessing they'll manage it the same way as flash and mp3 support on Ubuntu desktop -- offer a way to install the troublesome applications quickly and with no fuss.
And the video's on youtube. I guess I won't be reading that transcript either. You know, there are other services online besides google?
Stop loving the Big Brother.
But I think at the very least the Ubuntu Phone OS should be open source
I can imagine somewhere along the line someone will get butt hurt about something and they'll be forced to use proprietary drivers. Shuttleworth can hope all he wants but he's in no position to bully people into doing what he wants.
Sorry, I'm not using anything the FSF had a hand in shaping.
From TFA: "An open letter from the Free Software Foundation asked if Canonical intended to make all the software in Edge free -- with emphasis on device drivers. The response: Of course, as far as that's commercially realistic."
Surely, nobody in this crowd, or at the FSF, is the slightest bit fooled by this.