The Ubuntu team has been busy working on a phone OS,
but it decided to take an intermediate step and create a tablet OS. The
timing of the launch coincided exactly with the HTC event (leading us
to question if the two are related, turns out it wasn’t) and while the new HTC One got all of the attention yesterday, it’s time to meet Ubuntu for Tablets.
Ubuntu’s interface started off as a desktop UI, but Canonical – the
company behind Ubuntu – has a vision similar to that of Microsoft. They
want one interface to conquer all screen sizes, from a pocketable phone
to the 60” TV on your wall.
The tablet OS itself uses the app launching and switching that we saw
demoed on the phone OS.
The tablet OS shares even more with the phone OS – you can use phone
apps, docked to the side of the screen. This is called Side stage.
It may look similar to what Windows 8 is doing, but the idea here is
that phone apps don’t scale well to tablet screens. Instead, they feel
right at home occupying a small section of the screen, leaving the rest
for tablet apps for a fresh take on split-screen multitasking.
The tablet supports multiple users with secure accounts plus a guest
account. Canonical is getting into the voice command business too and
are offering devs an SDK to easily tap into all the advanced features of
the OS easily and develop for both phones and tablets.
Mark Shuttleworth, Canonical’s founder, has a vision that steps on
the toes of the Asus Transformer Pad. A phone would be able to go into a
tablet dock and display a tablet UI – with the phone apps going into
the Side stage. With a keyboard and mouse, you get closer to desktop
Ubuntu, while hooking it up to a TV turns it into a media center.
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