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10:12:00 AM
valgeo
Canonical, Ubuntu Linux's parent
company, is hinting in big, bright letters that's its about to release a
fully touch-enabled version of Ubuntu Unity. The site's banner headline
now reads "So close, you can almost touch it." with a clock counting
down to 1 PM Eastern time, January 2nd. If this is indeed what Canonical
is planning, can Ubuntu-powered tablet and smartphones be far behind?
Canonical has been planning to bring Ubuntu to tablets since it first introduced its controversial Unity interface in 2010. Then, in conversations with Mark Shuttleworth, Ubuntu's founder, I was told that Unity was meant to be Ubuntu's master interface for desktops, netbooks, and tablets.
At the time, while a tablet version of Ubuntu wasn't in Canonical's
immediate plans, Jono Bacon, the Ubuntu Community Manager, told me that
"all the pieces are in place to create an Ubuntu tablet." Even then,
before Unity was launched, I was shown the first baby steps to
multi-touch Unity.
Since then, Ubuntu has been working hard to incorporate full-featured touch functionality into Unity. In late 2011, Shuttleworth confirmed that Canonical would be bringing Ubuntu Linux to smartphones, tablets, and smart TVs.
Shuttleworth said at the time that, "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 out community on these platforms. So, we'll embrace the
challenge of how to use Ubuntu on smartphones, tablets and
smart-screens."
In a December 2012 Slashdot interview, Shuttleworth made it clear that Ubuntu on mobile was still in their plans.
"Let's make one OS that runs on the phone AND on your supercomputer.
We're close to that now - we know Ubuntu makes a great cloud OS and a
great server OS and a great desktop. So I think the next frontier is to
create a seamless experience from the embedded world to the cloud," said
Shuttleworth.
Shuttleworth continued, the "mobile world is crucial to the future of
the PC. This month, for example, it became clear that the traditional
PC is shrinking in favor of tablets. So if we want to be relevant on the
PC, we have to figure out how to be relevant in the mobile world
first."
He plans to do this by focusing on establishing "a great story around
Ubuntu and mobile form factors - the tablet and the phone - on which we
can build deeper relationships with everyday consumers. All the major PC companies [such as Dell] now ship PC's with Ubuntu pre-installed.
So we have a very solid set of working engagements in the industry. But
those PC companies are nervous to promote something new to PC buyers.
If we can get PC buyers familiar with Ubuntu as a phone and tablet
experience, then they may be more willing buy it on the PC too."
So what can we expect tomorrow? I think Shuttleworth already told us
part of it in the Slashdot interview. He said, "we've said clearly that
the phone and tablet are key stories we need to tell by 14.04 LTS [Long
Term Support]."
It that wasn't clear enough for you, on his own blog Shuttleworth recently wrote, "Unity in 2013 will be all about mobile--bringing Ubuntu to phones and tablets."
That's all well and good, but I think Canonical will actually have
bigger news than just fully embracing phones and tablets with the April
2014 release of Ubuntu. First, I expect Ubuntu to announce that it will
more fully support the ARM processor. Today, only the older Ubuntu 12.04 is fully supported on the ARM architecture.
The big news I hope to see tomorrow, and here I'm speculating, is the
announcement of Ubuntu hardware tablet and smartphone partners. I feel
pretty certain we'll see such news.
After all, without ready-to-run Ubuntu mobile devices, only hardcore
Ubuntu hackers will bother with it, and Shuttleworth clearly has much
bigger plans for Ubuntu on mobile than to be another alternative
firmware such as Android CyanogenMod.
Shuttleworth wants Ubuntu on phones and tablets to be as big a player
as Android or iOS, not a mere hobbyist operating system. It won't be
easy, but I'm sure that's his goal.
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