The Ubuntu Touch project was started in 2011.
Mark Shuttleworth announced on that by
Ubuntu 14.04, the goal was that Ubuntu would support smartphones, tablets,
smart TVs and other smart screens (such as car
head units and
smartwatches), but to date has only been supported by vendors on a few smartphones, one tablet and a number of third-party devices which hobbyists have ported the operating system to. The initial goal set by Shuttleworth for Ubuntu was to reach full convergence (same platform and libraries on all devices). The Ubuntu platform for phones was publicly announced on . The Ubuntu Touch Developer Preview was released on . On 22 July 2013 Ubuntu announced a crowdfunding campaign for the
Ubuntu Edge smartphone that would run Ubuntu Touch, but it did not reach its funding target. , showing the lockscreen Canonical released Ubuntu Touch 1.0, the first developer/partner version on 17 October 2013, along with Ubuntu 13.10 that "primarily supports the
Galaxy Nexus and
Nexus 4 phones, though there are images available for other phones and tablets", and released a "relatively 'stable' build for wider testing and feedback" on 17 April 2014, along with Ubuntu 14.04. A preview version of the software is available for installation on certain additional
Android handsets including the
Samsung Galaxy S4 Google Edition as a Developer Preview as of 21 February 2013. Developers have access to all of the source code under a license allowing modification and redistribution of the software.
BQ Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu Edition, the world's first Ubuntu-based smartphone went on sale in Europe on 9 February 2015. In April 2016, the world's first Ubuntu-based tablet, the
BQ Aquaris M10 Ubuntu Edition, was released. In August 2016, OTA-3 was announced to support
Android 6.0 BSP. In August 2018, UBPorts released its OTA-4, upgrading the Ubuntu Touch's base from the Canonical's starting
Ubuntu 15.04 "Vivid Vervet" to the nearest, current long-term support version
Ubuntu 16.04 LTS "Xenial Xerus".
Ubuntu for Android Ubuntu for Android was a variant of Ubuntu designed to run on
Android phones. It was expected to come pre-loaded on several phones. An
Ubuntu for Android mock-up was shown at
Mobile World Congress 2012. As of April 2014, this project is no longer under active development by Canonical. It would contain different graphical interfaces: when the device is connected to a desktop
monitor, it features a standard Ubuntu Desktop interface (
Unity). When the device is connected to a TV, the interface featured is the
Ubuntu TV experience. and also the ability to run Android applications on the Ubuntu Desktop. which includes apps to make and receive calls and SMS messages directly from the desktop. Developers will be able to create one app, with two interfaces: a smartphone UI, and, when docked, a desktop UI. A phone running Ubuntu for Android has to meet several requirements such as a dual-core 1 GHz
CPU, video acceleration through a shared kernel driver with associated
X driver;
OpenGL,
ES/
EGL, 2 GB storage,
HDMI for video-out with secondary frame buffer device, USB host mode and 512 MB RAM. Ubuntu Mobile ended active development in 2009 after 9.10 Alpha 6. Equipment producers would have been able to customize their distributions, including options such as
Flash,
Java, or custom interfaces. According to Canonical, Ubuntu Mobile would provide an "uncompromised
Web 2.0 experience". It was to include features such as Web browsing, email, media, camera,
VoIP, instant messaging,
GPS,
blogging,
digital TV,
games, contacts, and calendars, with regular software updates. == Features ==