Canonical announced on Tuesday that the popular open-source Ubuntu
operating system will soon be coming to multi-core Android devices.
Users will be able use Android on their smartphones and Ubuntu as a
desktop once the device is docked with a keyboard and monitor. Both
operating systems will run simultaneously on the same device and have
the ability to share contacts, messages and other common services. “The
phone experience is pure Android – it’s a normal Android phone,”
Canonical stated. “When the device is connected to a computer screen,
however, it launches a full Ubuntu desktop on the computer display. It’s
exactly the same desktop used by millions of enterprise and home users
on their Ubuntu PCs, and includes hundreds of certified applications,
from office productivity to photography, video and music.” The company
plans to give live demonstrations of Ubuntu running on Android devices
later this month at the Mobile World Congress trade show. Read on for
Canonical’s press release.
Ubuntu for Android at MWC – world’s first full-featured desktop on a docked smartphone
Carry less, do a lot more. All the productivity and apps of the full Ubuntu desktop, built into your Android phone.
London, 22nd February, 2012: Canonical today unveiled Ubuntu for
Android, bringing the world’s favourite free desktop experience to
multi-core Android smartphones docked with a keyboard and monitor. Use
Android on the phone and Ubuntu as your desktop, both running
simultaneously on the same device, with seamless sharing of contacts,
messages and other common services.
The phone experience is pure Android – it’s a normal Android phone.
When the device is connected to a computer screen, however, it launches a
full Ubuntu desktop on the computer display. It’s exactly the same
desktop used by millions of enterprise and home users on their Ubuntu
PCs, and includes hundreds of certified applications, from office
productivity to photography, video and music.
All data and services are shared between the Ubuntu and Android
environments, which run simultaneously on the device. So Android
applications such as contacts, telephony and SMS/MMS messaging are
accessible from the Ubuntu interface. Indeed, all data on the smartphone
can be accessed at any time, docked or not.
Ubuntu for Android gives mobile workers a company phone that is also
their enterprise desktop. Government and private institutions have
embraced Ubuntu on the desktop because of its ease of use, security,
manageability, superb range of native applications and excellent support
for web browsers like Chrome and Firefox. The desktop can also include
Windows applications, using thin client and desktop virtualisation
tools. Today’s IT departments commonly support a PC and at least one
desktop phone for every employee. Many also provide and manage mobile
phones. Ubuntu for Android presents a compelling solution to IT
complexity by reducing that burden to a single device.
The first PC for the next billion knowledge workers could be a phone –
but they won’t just want to use it as a handset. They will want all the
flexibility and productivity of a full desktop, as well as the
convenience of a smartphone on the move. Ubuntu for Android represents
the first opportunity for handset makers and network operators to
address this growth opportunity in emerging markets.
“The desktop is the killer-app for quad-core phones in 2012″ says
Mark Shuttleworth. “Ubuntu for Android transforms your high-end phone
into your productive desktop, whenever you need it”
Manufacturers targeting the corporate phone, as well as the
next-generation enterprise desktop and thin clients can easily add
Ubuntu for Android to their smartphones. The customized version of
Ubuntu drops in cleanly alongside the rest of Android, and the necessary
Android modifications are designed for easy integration. Hardware
requirements include support for HDMI and USB, standard features in
high-end handsets planned for late 2012.
Ubuntu for Android justifies the cost to enterprise customers of
upgrading to higher bandwidth 4G connections and contracts. Cloud apps
like Google Docs work best with a full desktop, and shine with the lower
latency of LTE. Network operators can deliver their own branded
applications and services as part of the Ubuntu desktop, in partnership
with Canonical.
Canonical leads the traditional Linux ecosystem in support for the
ARM architecture, having co-founded Linaro (linaro.org), the consortium
dedicated to the unification of Linux on ARM and the simplification of
Android integration and delivery. That industrial experience, combined
with Canonical’s long-standing leadership in desktop Linux and deep
relationships with global PC brands enables Canonical to deliver an
ARM-optimised desktop tightly integrated with Android, on silicon from a
range of ARM vendors.
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