Canonical has released tools for installing a developer preview version of Ubuntu 12.10 Touch on the latest Google Nexus phones and tablet. If you have a Samsung Galaxy Nexus or Google Nexus 4 ...
Find yourself with a new Amazon Fire tablet this holiday season? Amazon’s tablets offer pretty good bang for the buck if you’re looking for a device for reading eBooks, doing some web surfing, or ...
Yesterday, the Ubuntu 12.10 Touch developer preview was released. Canonical provided a method for the public to flash a preview build of the new operating system to the most recent Nexus devices: ...
If you just can't contain your excitement for Ubuntu's new phone and tablet OS, Ubuntu Touch, you can flash the developer preview on your Nexus phone or tablet right now. The developer preview (which ...
There's over 20 million people out there who use Ubuntu as their main operating system, and the number is steadily increasing due to its thriving community. While it's easy enough to download Ubuntu ...
One good thing about open source is that millions of people can share ideas to create better outcome. Google Android’s ever-growing community is the perfect example; almost every day new custom ROMs ...
Today Canonical announced that Ubuntu will soon come to tablets with a UI that mixes the smartphone and desktop Ubuntu experiences. The new Ubuntu for tablets is the same as Ubuntu for smartphones ...
Not too long ago, I wrote about my experiences using Linux on a tablet and how I came away unimpressed. While it worked okay, I just found it more frustrating than fun most of the time, and I couldn't ...
Tech Republic has five reasons why an Ubuntu tablet could do quite well in 2014. I truly believe that a tablet running Linux could really shock the naysayers in 2014. If you don’t believe me, I’ll ...
The BQ Aquaris M10 is the first tablet running Ubuntu. It’s also the first device in which Ubuntu delivers on the vision of convergence that started with the Ubuntu Edge campaign. Ubuntu fans will be ...
Good or bad, useful or not, implementation of the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface and Microsoft’s Secure Boot extension might well foul the fuel driving consumer migration to the Linux desktop.