Video Jono Bacon Talks About Ubuntu Phone Progress (Video) 55
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Timothy Lord caught up with Ubuntu's Jono Bacon at OSCON and got a nice update on the state of the Ubuntu Phone, which Canonical first announced in January, 2013. Tim interviewed Jono about it on camera at CES in February. Look at the "Related Stories" attached to this intro and you'll see a bunch more Ubuntu phone stories. DISCLOSURE: At least two Slashdot editors currently run Ubuntu or Kubuntu, so we have at least a mild pro-Ubuntu bias. Bias or no, It's interesting to watch the Ubuntu phone development process, even as those who are satisfied with Android phone or iPhones, ask, "Why?" We could ask the same about the Firefox OS Phone, too. Maybe the most realistic answer in both cases is, "Because we could." But who knows? These new phone operating systems might turn out to be more useful than Android or iOS. We'll see.
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Nothing about it is groundbreaking. Everything about it is either evolutionary spec bumps and cobbling together features from prior phones. Docking a phone and having it change GUIs or change to a desktop OS is not a Canonical innovation despite all their back patting.
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That's great. I was aware that I can plug my current phone into a TV. I didn't know that they had full pc desktop apps for it. I'm off to Google Play to go get them
you're probably a ubuntdroid being sarcastic, but yeah, full debian was there(android app market) almost two years ago or so..
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...and Openmoko phones (and recently OpenPhoenux), which can run OpenEmbedded, Debian, Slackware, OpenWrt, Android and many many more. Some of those distros are even usable as a phone. Heck, you can even use Emacs as phone interface!
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Heck, you can even use Emacs as phone interface!
But what my phone really needs is a good text editor.
*ducks*
Re: Years after the Debian phone... (Score:3)
The difference is, a Debian phone would probably be able to save camera images in every meaningful format to have existed since 1980 *EXCEPT* Jpeg unless you rebuilt the whole thing from scratch for some *unfathomably* stupid & pedantic reason (install ImageMagick under Debian sometime, then go through hours or days of pain getting Jpeg support to work, and you'll know what I'm talking about).
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And a WebM/MP4/Downloadable material too, please...
Introducing the new SlashPhone! (Score:1)
Get hourly updates featuring
-Vague laws misinterpreted by engineers to be threats to privacy/civil liberties
-The latest release of every obscure Linux distro and its shortcomings compared to 10 other distros
-Factually spurious articles about the death of the IT industry
-Philosophical flame wars about the validity of alternative energy/electric cars
-Mental masturbation regarding drones/macs/climate change
-Hypothetical discussions of Rasberry Pi created by Arduino driven 3-D printers purchased with BitCoins
-W
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No, I didn't. And after counting the letters, I realize that I still don't know that.
How shocking!! (Score:4, Funny)
DISCLOSURE: At least two Slashdot editors currently run Ubuntu or Kubuntu,
How shocking! You guys are total rebels!
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I think there was Gentoo for Openmoko Neo Freerunner at some point. Never tried it though.
open firmware or its pointless (Score:1)
i really dont feel i need to elaborate on this anymore.
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Isn't the ad the only important part to Dice?
Baiting readers (Score:5, Funny)
That headline has to be one of the starkest attempts on Slashdot to bait potential readers for a story that I've seen for a very long time. Look at that headline! Linux and Bacon!! Why it's enough to .... mmmm ... bacon. Excuse me....
Desktop Replacement? (Score:2)
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If all you do is web browsing, sure.
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Even a dual-core Atom can best a Krait or a Cortex-A15. An i3 totally embarrasses them.
ASICs can do the trick (Score:2)
Most of the time probably. But ARM SoCs have an advantage over even an i3 that tries to brute force every operation. ARM SoCs have special chips to do certain tasks (ASICs). So I wouldn't be too surprised if a high-end smartphone can actually encode certain videos faster than an ATOM. I know, for one thing, that my dual-core off-brand China tablet can play h264 videos smoother than my ATOM-based "HTPC".
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i3s since Sandy Bridge have had QuickSync Video which does both encoding and decoding. Welcome to 2.5 years ago.
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My laptop is a work-supplied core i7. The phone has better battery life.
My home desktop is a dumpster-dived 2004 era P4 3GHz, adequate for most tasks. A modern phone's internal storage would better a 4200rpm drive and its GPU would spank 9yo intel graphics and decode video in hardware.
So the answer is, on raw computing stick with Intel/AMD. For everything else, the day is fast approaching. But how does docking work? Micro-USB is hardly convenient if, heaven forbid, you want to use the device as a phone (san
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Yes, I have used machines weaker than my current phone in the past. I have tried it today and again it is reasonable as long as you move the heavy lifting to another machine. 90% of the time my laptop only shows webpages and xterms. My phone can handle that job just fine.
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60 second commercial? (Score:1)
Problem is.... (Score:2)
the MOST IMPORTANT PART is not what they are working on.
It needs to be a phone and phone calls need to be the absolute most reliable part of the phone. The last tow attempts at this Open Source phone crap has yielded phones that barely work as phones.
I dont want a pocket tablet/PDA running linux, I can get one of those, I want a PHONE that the phone part works perfectly.
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Because unlike the unemployed street bum I make money with my phone. so every missed or failed call is lost money.
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They have been out for a decade.
Look for a used sharp Zaurus. there are tons of very killer models to choose from that are 100% open and run linux.
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Then go buy one instead of commenting on an article about something that is of no interest to you.
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Oh sorry, I thought this was about a PHONE.. Someone needs to contact the article writer and tell them to stop calling it a phone.
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How about... (Score:1)
How are they going to do this? (Score:2)
Doing it for the buzz? (Score:2)
Editors? (Score:2)
Slashdot has editors?
Ubuntu doesn't want to be Linux (Score:2)
As a side note, it's been interesting to note how much Canonical wants to distance Ubuntu from being known as just-another-Linux-distro. Yes it's still Linux, yet it still runs Linux programs, but Ubuntu doesn't mention the word Linux at all in most of its literature unless it's of a technical nature (heck, the word Linux doesn't even appear on http://www.ubuntu.com/desktop [ubuntu.com] except as a keyword in the page's source).
This Slashdot article isn't even in the Linux category here, which I find telling.