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Operating Systems Cellphones Handhelds Ubuntu Hardware

The First Ubuntu Phone Is Here, With Underwhelming Hardware 177

A few days ago, Fast Company reviewer Jay Cassano was enthusiastic about Ubuntu's approach to apps for its new phone OS: namely, not relying on them, and instead interfacing seamlessly with existing websites and protocols. Now, new submitter ablutions (4006541) writes with a less than glowing review at The Daily Dot of the actual hardware that the OS is launching on. A sample that conveys the gist: Let's start with the good stuff: It sports a 4.5-inch multi-touch screen and a respectable 8-megapixel rear camera and 5-megapixel lens on the front. That's pretty much it. The list of negatives is a bit longer.
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The First Ubuntu Phone Is Here, With Underwhelming Hardware

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  • by Macrat ( 638047 ) on Saturday February 07, 2015 @10:27PM (#49008671)
    Didn't the "first" Ubuntu phone fail as a kickstarter?
    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      IndieGoGo.

      Likely still would had been a good purchase but it would had been better without the unfair pricing.

      Also if it ran Android too it would be a safer purchase (don't remember if it did.)

      Then again I guess OnePlus released close to what they intended to release (not necessarily at all the same phone but what I mean is a different premium phone) but the One wasn't not just premium priced (one could argue the Edge(?) deserved to have a higher price - since possibly the material selection would be closer

      • well were it open enough then it wouldn't be a big problem to port over dalvik for some android action. it's probably possible. with the current one as well.

        besides, the phone HAS apps. it's just that they decided to focus more on HOMESCREEN WIDGETS.

        the fucking "cards" are HOMESCREEN WIDGETS on limited home screen. limited, how so? their shape and positions are limited, so the copped out. cheaper and faster to make the home screen like that

        besides all that, you can get pretty decent android phones for sub 1

        • by aliquis ( 678370 )

          I don't really care if it have others.
          And I don't necessarily care for Dalvik VM either.

          What I meant was actual Android. So whatever the OS was good/flopped or not the phone would so to speak had been a no-risk purchase (Maybe they don't want to spend that time and effort moving over Android though.)

          I guess Dalvik is better than nothing. I don't know how good it's on the Jolla phone.

          Nokias MeeGo and last Symbian phones had USB OTG and MHL too. I didn't really see that as all that interesting (sure Ubuntu wo

    • No. Canonical has announced, then failed to deliver, a smartphone before that. IIRC, this is the 3rd or 4th attempt.
  • by Nyder ( 754090 ) on Saturday February 07, 2015 @10:30PM (#49008685) Journal

    Sure, the hardware sucks, but honestly I think people here are more interested in how the software works. At least I am.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Linux always underwhelms..

      Hence the need for extra hardware.

    • If it takes too long to boot, to switch appications, to accept input, has too short a battery life, or cannot keep with simple video applications due to hardware limitations, the architectural fanboys are not going to be enough of a market to keep it in business. Small sales won't bring down the cost of manufacturing to compete.

    • 1 GB of RAM is not that bad for a phone.
  • I wonder if Apple will pitch a fit about the fact that the design of the device is definatly based on the iPhone's visual form. I'm sure there are a zillion "industrial design" patents and copyrights involved...

  • I saw an "underwhelming post" must have been a -1. I was hoping to respond to it.
    some people want this to compete with an apple or samsung.
    Get a life!
    This is a cheap phone that works.
    Is it spectacular? Full featured?
    NO, but it works! too many idiots have no clue. this a a good phone, for the 3rd world.
    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      A 170 euro/$190 phone is cheaper than a flagship, but certainly not third world phone. For that you have manufacturers taking the cheapest SoC they can find, slapping the AOSP on it (free!) and selling it at cutthroat margins.

    • The article talks about their sales tactic, artificial exclusivity in Europe, which makes it likely that they are aiming for the tech enthusiast crowd.
    • shit CHEAP phone (Score:5, Insightful)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Sunday February 08, 2015 @12:56AM (#49009171) Homepage Journal

      some people want this to compete with an apple or samsung.

      How about comparing it to a Motorola? It's no cheaper than a Moto G, which is twice the phone it is.

  • That is pure linux inside without any of the big corps "all your data are belong to us" thingys in the background.
    And so that user could actually, really, honestly, decide Him/Her self whats going on under the hood (on software side).....
    Slam it with some top end hardware, I'd be one of the first lining it up.

    Why ohh why, those hardware specs. Since this could have been the phone for geeks. Above specs met, I'd be happy to through in 500 or so €

    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      What says Ubuntu or Jolla or Firefox isn't that?

      Whatever you can modify it all that much after that I don't know.

      What for a new phone (though they sold the tablet with the old phone at a discounted price)?
      http://www.theverge.com/2015/1... [theverge.com]

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by JoSch1337 ( 1168265 )

        While many parts are open source, Sailfish OS is not completely free software and contains parts under a proprietary EULA.

        Firefox OS is mostly open source as well but contains binary android drivers.

        Without free drivers, there will always be a binary blob on your system which can then "phone home" or do other nasty things. Before a phone is created which does not require these blobs, there will be no phone completely running free software.

        The openmoko gta01 and freerunner were attempts at this.

        The gta04 by

    • For a phone without "all your data are belong to us" thingys in the background check out the neo900: http://neo900.org/ [neo900.org]

  • "5-megapixel lens" (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DavidinAla ( 639952 ) on Saturday February 07, 2015 @10:59PM (#49008827)
    I don't have any opinion about this phone — although I've long wondered why they were bothering — but I have to question the technical savvy of a reviewer who refers to a "5-megapixel lens." A sensor is rated in megapixels, but a lens is not.
    • technically, you are not correct. lenses do have a resolving limit and with good slrs and their lenses, you can see that the better lenses do resolve better on a given sensor. its very possible for your sensor to be 'better' than some cheap kit lens. otoh, its never a problem to have 'too good' of a lens even if the sensor is not high res.

      but we are talking about camera phones, so in that light, I take back everything I just said.

  • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Saturday February 07, 2015 @11:38PM (#49008957) Homepage

    I will buy one. My question is it going to be EASY to purchase? It's at a price point that is trivial and if Ubuntu runs on it decently, then I will mess with it. But I tried ubuntu on the Nexus 4 and it was unholy horrible and chunky, so I cant see this lesser phone being better.

    • According to TFA, it's not really "Ubuntu" in the sense that you might install on a phone with an unlocked bootloader. It's a heavily customized Android image. I don't doubt there's some Canonical-developed code that it has in common with the desktop Ubuntu bot not with either AOSP or, say, RHEL... but it's probably not the Ubuntu you tried on your Nexus 4.

  • by Rhys ( 96510 ) on Saturday February 07, 2015 @11:55PM (#49009009)

    I expected comments from someone who has, you know, maybe touched the device at least once.

    I'm not enamored with the phablet trend. I like my Galaxy Nexus, its about the idea size to me. Something smaller with touch could be exciting. I don't need a billion pixels on the phone, but it needs to have some grunt and a good way to get a big keyboard, mouse, and monitor attached.

  • sadly I rtfa (Score:5, Informative)

    by hilather ( 1079603 ) on Sunday February 08, 2015 @12:10AM (#49009045)
    And it doesn't say much of anything other than rambling off hardware specs. Is this what qualifies as a review these days?
  • by recharged95 ( 782975 ) on Sunday February 08, 2015 @12:55AM (#49009169) Journal

    Obviously Ubuntu devs thought the biggest selling point for this phone was that it was running Ubuntu/linux.

    We've been here before, it was called OpenMoko. Though that project blazed the trails for ARM-based Linux, it never got off the ground due to the lack of driver support (the chipset guys knew it) and underwhelming h/w. Once an openmoko developer, and seeing how ARM linux has evolved, we really haven't progress much aside from getting driver support and Android (though the biggest mobile player, has an OS that runs less efficient than iOS, BB, WP7).

    I'm starting to believe that Linux has finally hit a limit--it excels in the business (server, routers, robots). Forget the direct-to-consumer space--it's not gonna happen, and Ubuntu phone sort of solidifies it w/all the hype that came with it. Hi, FreeRunner 2....

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      I'm starting to believe that Linux has finally hit a limit--it excels in the business (server, routers, robots). Forget the direct-to-consumer space--it's not gonna happen, and Ubuntu phone sort of solidifies it w/all the hype that came with it. Hi, FreeRunner 2....

      Linux does fine in direct to consumer space, actually.

      You just have to abandon the notion of "a Linux box" as acting how Linux does on the server and other things you know and love.

      Replace the upper level guts with something more reasonable and y

    • by Kludge ( 13653 )

      we really haven't progress much aside from getting driver support and Android (though the biggest mobile player, has an OS that runs less efficient than iOS, BB, WP7).

      WTF? Well, Android is Linux, and well, it is the biggest mobile player, but... Linux will never amount to anything.
      Who modded up this shit?

      • When people say Linux they mean GNU/Linux. Most people dont call it GNU Linux because it give Stallmen too much credit. But they never really came down to a better name.
        Linux is the kernel. GNU/Linux is the operating system. Ubuntu is the distribution.
        Linux is the kernel. Android is the operating system. The vendor provides the distribution.
        GNU/Linux has trouble getting into the end user space. Mostly due to the community belief in GNU licensing, where companies are not on board with, as they want to make m

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      I'm starting to believe that Linux has finally hit a limit--it excels in the business (server, routers, robots). Forget the direct-to-consumer space--it's not gonna happen,

      We have it, and it's called Android. It has an even more radical departure of an interface and userland than Ubuntu, proving that this is not the problem with Ubuntu's phone effort — the problem is that theirs sucks. Shuttleworth's vision of Linux is a dumb one, coated with candy but devoid of function. Android is candy-coated for easy swallowing, yes, but it actually does stuff. And if you really want to, you can run pretty much any Linux software you want which is available for your architecture. Yo

    • If only BBQ opened QNX / blackberry os to be a competitor instead of a dead end road.
  • by bug1 ( 96678 ) on Sunday February 08, 2015 @01:01AM (#49009183)

    Do we get all the source code ?
    Are they happy for people to make custom images for it ?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The fact that Ubuntu Touch can run on low-spec hardware is a great thing which also saves consumers a lot of money when buying new phones... Give it time and an all singing all powerful phone will appear with Ubu Touch pre-loaded...

  • If the Ubuntu phone isn't too overpriced for its hardware, it's fine.

    I still don't understand why anyone who isn't wealthy would pay $1000 for an iPhone.

    Ok, I'm poor so I have a small, cheap samsung. For 1/6th the cost of an iPhone it runs Android and does everything just fine with a tiny screen and crumby cameras.

    It's my music source 100% of the time.

  • Articles like these are absolutely worthless. Sure, it's always interesting to see some numbers, but what matters is how it works. Saying the entire phone is bad purely based on its technical specifications says a lot about the reviewer. Quote: "[The Ubuntu phone is] ... a phone that is so middle of the road it could be arrested for loitering". Is this journalism?

    Can anybody please tell my how such an article is able to reach the Slashdot front page?

  • Here's a comparison: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Sunday February 08, 2015 @05:01AM (#49009651) Journal

    running a Big Boy's OS. You know, a device that gives its user a lot of freedom and power. A phone that could be connected to a keyboard and monitor to do the same or similar things my 6 year old desktop can do.
    These specs are not a good match for that vision. I can live with the poor resolution, the mid-range camera and the relatively small screen size (though I'm definitely a fan of phablets). The slow CPU and limited amount of RAM are killers, though, and not in the good sense of the word.

  • Instead of offering 3 different models of a phone based on the memory it contains, I'd prefer an option for faster processors.

    It's no longer the century of the fruitbat, we live in the centrury of streaming, we don't give a crap about memory.

  • i'm looking at this phone, and the only thing that is so-so is the screen resolution.
    All other things just look fine, 1.3Ghz quad core, 1Gb ram, 8Gb storage (expandable), ... and running a real linux, all for less then 200 euro.
    What is not to like? I'm buying this.

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