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Instructions for flashing a phone or tablet device with Ubuntu

42 pointsby madmazeabout 12 years ago

6 comments

jrogers65about 12 years ago
I'm glad that ARM tablets are finally getting a decent operating system.<p>Android is a pain for productivity - only one visible window, applications are killed in the background when you want them to persist, switching windows is tedious if you have many applications open at the same time, various deficiencies in third party applications like waking the screen and draining your battery, a Google account is required to do basic things like download apps, it's not possible to download APK's from the market in case you want to perform offline installations, plugging in an external hard disk results in a crash and reboot too often, media sound volume is reduced whenever an email notification comes in. That last bug has been around for three years - <a href="http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=5012" rel="nofollow">http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=5012</a> - and this is a piece of commercial software, not someone's hobby OSS project!<p>Not to mention that it's based on GNU/Linux [EDIT: NOT GNU, just Linux] yet misses important features like a good package manager, X11 and alternative window managers. Things like Debian Kit For Android address some of these issues but it still feels like a compromise.<p>I understand that it was originally designed as a smartphone OS but it just doesn't scale well to tablets.<p>Another alternative which is looking extremely promising, even moreso than Ubuntu, in my opinion, is Plasma Active - <a href="http://plasma-active.org/" rel="nofollow">http://plasma-active.org/</a>
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yebyenabout 12 years ago
This might belong on AskUbuntu, but I thought I'd start here...<p>The ASUS Transformer EeePad ubuntu flash instructions have not been updated since 2011. Does this new method apply to ASUS Transformer pads? Is anyone trying to make it?<p>I haven't flashed Ubuntu since I was able to try it with OLife Prime (method for TF-101), and the included image was an ancient Natty, not upgradeable to current version without breaking everything, so I gave up and went back to using Android+Chroot. Is there any reason why these instructions would need to change?<p>Would appreciate a reply from any Transformer Pad users who have tried any method of installing a recent Ubuntu (or even Debian.) Where are the hangups? Kernel drivers? Touchpad?
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freehunterabout 12 years ago
The certifiate verification failed due to a common name mismatch. Host: wiki.ubuntu.com Common name: <i>.canonical.com Alternative subject names: regex([^.]</i>\.canonical\.com), regex(canonical\.com)<p>Looks like they're using the canonical.com cert on ubuntu.com, which it's not registered for.
ghrevabout 12 years ago
Has anyone seen mention of Ubuntu plans for it to work with the toro Galaxy Nexus (Verizon)?
chinchangabout 12 years ago
Oh man...only Nexus devices are supported :(
warfangleabout 12 years ago
Note that step #2 is currently illegal in the United States, and providing instructions to do so is similarly illegal in the United States.
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