This, folks, is Ubuntu on Android. An
honest-to-goodness, not janky or
VNC'd, full build of the Linux distro powered by an Android smartphone.
We'll let that sink in.
Canonical
-- the company behind Ubuntu -- today announced that it's bringing the full
Ubuntu experience to multi-core Android phones in the same way that Motorola has
attempted to extend its hardware to a more traditional computing experience with
Webtop. That is, you'll
connect your phone to a keyboard and display, and from there have full control
over a proper Ubuntu experience, all powered by the phone. Because your Android
smartphone is already running a Linux kernel, the marriage between your phone
and Ubuntu is darn near seamless. The Ubuntu build actually shares the kernel
from your phone and boots in parallel.
Canonical gave us a walkthrough of the experience, and it
really couldn't be more simple. Dock the phone, and Ubuntu Unity fires up.
Photos and videos are instantly available in the desktop experience.
But photos and videos are chump change. You've got full
Chromium and Thunderbird apps. VLC. The Ubuntu Music Player. If it's on Ubuntu,
it can be on your phone.
But the real power is in the ability to launch your Android
apps within that desktop experience. Same goes for contacts. Or your network
settings. Or your notifications. It's Android within an Ubuntu experience. And
it's pretty slick.
As for hardware requirements, you'll need a dual-core
smartphone with at least a 1GHz processor and 512MB of RAM. You'll need 2GB of
storage free as well, plus USB host mode and HDMI out (MHL adapters will work,
Canonical tells us), plus video acceleration. Older phones need not apply,
basically.
It's worth repeating that this is your phone powering Ubuntu --
not the Ubuntu desktop on your phone. We're going to get a close look at Mobile World Congress next week in
Barcelona, Spain. Stay tuned. For now, we've got Canonical's full press release
after the break.
More: Ubuntu


10:17 AM
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