By Dan Sung
The Ubuntu phone operating system is set to join the ever-increasing ranks of smartphone platforms in 2013 and looks to be offering something worth grabbing hold of. Pocket-lint was at the global launch of the software to get hands-on with the beta version.
Straight off the bat, what strikes you is that this is a good-looking system. Appearing and operating almost exactly the same as the Ubuntu OS on both PC and TV, one of the big selling points of the platform, according to company CEO Mark Shuttleworth, is that - unlike Google with its multi-OS approach to its ecosystem - what you get with Ubuntu is the same full version of the software as on all your devices.
So there's the same Lenses approach on Ubuntu phone that desktop users will be used to. There are the same apps and the same look and feel. What's different, by necessity, is how you interact with it. On your smartphone, Ubuntu is all about touch.
The lockscreen is designed as more than a barrier to the rest of your
phone. You can set it to unlock direct to any app or feature of the
system that you like. Slide your thumb in from the left edge and you get
a dock of around 10 apps to navigate to. The thinking was that people
only really use about 10 apps on a regular basis, so that's why there's
only space for 10 at once. You can scroll the list up and down if you
want to add more.
Another aim of the software is to provide as much desktop space as possible and the way that Canonical is looking to accomplish that is with up and down scrolling for each screen. So it's rather like Windows Phone in that aspect, except that the virtual space is vertical instead of horizontal.
As for other edge activity, a slide from the bottom brings up a contextual menu, a slide from the right takes you back to the last app you were looking at and, if you slide from the top, you also get direct access to your phone settings.
There are the clear Music, Videos, Apps, People and Events sections
you would expect and a universal search accessed by a swipe from the top
edge of the frame at all times. Apps-wise, there's already excellent
coverage thanks to the thriving Ubuntu developer community and the phone
OS will also support native ones and web apps. An example of the latter
can be seen with Facebook which, to all intents and purposes, looks the
same as the Android offering. What's more, gaming industry standards
such as OpenGL have been promised, in order to bring top end games to
Ubuntu phone mobiles.
There was no voice control support in the beta version of Ubuntu that we saw but it's been promised for when the OS becomes available at the end of the year. There are currently no interesting keyboard input methods at present, but the likes of Swiftkey and Swype-types are expected to arrive.
There are two main groups that Ubuntu phone is aimed at. The first is those on low-end smartphones looking for a lighter and slicker experience. The minimum spec required is a dual-core Cortex A9-type CPU with 1GB of RAM and an 800x480px screen. At the other end of the scale are those after an Ubuntu superphone that can act as a desktop computer when docked with a keyboard, mouse and monitor - as shown off by Canonical at MWC 2012 with Ubuntu for Android. The spec there needs to be a quad-core A9-type processor, 1GB of RAM and either a 720p or Full HD screen.
Ubuntu will be coming to mobile phones this year. You'll be able to
buy them first as Ubuntu for Android phones which have an Android face
while out and about, but serve up Ubuntu when docked for desktop use. By
the end of the year, there will also be the straight Ubuntu phone
experience from as yet undisclosed OEMs. The better news is that users
will also be able to put Ubuntu on their own mobile phones themselves,
with an image available for Nexus phones in the coming weeks.
The OS wasn't quite as smooth to the touch as we were expecting 100 per cent of the time but, given it's currently in beta form, that's not such a big surprise. If Ubuntu phone can deliver what Canonical is promising - which, just maybe, it looks like it might - then these could be very interesting times for the whole platform from PC to TV too. One to watch.
The Ubuntu phone operating system is set to join the ever-increasing ranks of smartphone platforms in 2013 and looks to be offering something worth grabbing hold of. Pocket-lint was at the global launch of the software to get hands-on with the beta version.
Straight off the bat, what strikes you is that this is a good-looking system. Appearing and operating almost exactly the same as the Ubuntu OS on both PC and TV, one of the big selling points of the platform, according to company CEO Mark Shuttleworth, is that - unlike Google with its multi-OS approach to its ecosystem - what you get with Ubuntu is the same full version of the software as on all your devices.
So there's the same Lenses approach on Ubuntu phone that desktop users will be used to. There are the same apps and the same look and feel. What's different, by necessity, is how you interact with it. On your smartphone, Ubuntu is all about touch.
Another aim of the software is to provide as much desktop space as possible and the way that Canonical is looking to accomplish that is with up and down scrolling for each screen. So it's rather like Windows Phone in that aspect, except that the virtual space is vertical instead of horizontal.
As for other edge activity, a slide from the bottom brings up a contextual menu, a slide from the right takes you back to the last app you were looking at and, if you slide from the top, you also get direct access to your phone settings.
There was no voice control support in the beta version of Ubuntu that we saw but it's been promised for when the OS becomes available at the end of the year. There are currently no interesting keyboard input methods at present, but the likes of Swiftkey and Swype-types are expected to arrive.
There are two main groups that Ubuntu phone is aimed at. The first is those on low-end smartphones looking for a lighter and slicker experience. The minimum spec required is a dual-core Cortex A9-type CPU with 1GB of RAM and an 800x480px screen. At the other end of the scale are those after an Ubuntu superphone that can act as a desktop computer when docked with a keyboard, mouse and monitor - as shown off by Canonical at MWC 2012 with Ubuntu for Android. The spec there needs to be a quad-core A9-type processor, 1GB of RAM and either a 720p or Full HD screen.
The OS wasn't quite as smooth to the touch as we were expecting 100 per cent of the time but, given it's currently in beta form, that's not such a big surprise. If Ubuntu phone can deliver what Canonical is promising - which, just maybe, it looks like it might - then these could be very interesting times for the whole platform from PC to TV too. One to watch.
No comments:
Post a Comment