• Q&A?

    4
    0 Votes
    4 Posts
    346 Views
    FlaF
    The previous Q&A isn't available on the website at the moment, as a reminder for the mega-cool person who is writing down what has been said.
  • Unlock PIN.

    6
    0 Votes
    6 Posts
    397 Views
    grahamG
    Thanks @AppLee! I was just filling in the ticket when I spotted the "similar issues" and noticed you'd already beaten me to it.
  • Zuckbook competition is here.BRAX.ME

    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    268 Views
    No one has replied
  • Is Ubuntu Touch running on Halium?

    6
    0 Votes
    6 Posts
    542 Views
    L
    @UniSuperBox Understood.
  • What's Inside the Black Box of Ubuntu Touch?

    49
    5 Votes
    49 Posts
    10k Views
    dobeyD
    @rob said in What's Inside the Black Box of Ubuntu Touch?: The point of this exercise is to see if I can do normal Linux things on a UT device vs. let's say using PostmarketOS. This is a valid comparison and an often made one between the OS options. I think this is a poor distinction to make. Ubuntu Touch is not a traditional Linux distribution, so no, you cannot treat it like one. It is an OS designed with phone/tablet use in mind, and with security restraints to that effect. It's only a valid comparison for people who do not want a phone or tablet, but instead want something they can treat like a traditional Linux distro, in their pocket. And those are two very different things, for which making the comparison in such a manner, doesn't promote the benefits of such a system, and treats the traditional and less secure way as something inherently better. @rob said in What's Inside the Black Box of Ubuntu Touch?: Partly this ability to play with this stuff is why we're on Linux. Partly it's also because of privacy advantages. Android is still Linux. So far, the things you've talked about in terms of building and running an app directly on the phone, have absolutely nothing to do with whether there is a Linux kernel running on the device though. Linux is running on billions of devices in the wild. Simply because you can't ssh into those devices arbitrarily and do some traditional things you might be used to on Debian or Ubuntu on your PC, doesn't make those devices not be Linux. Android is the same. @rob said in What's Inside the Black Box of Ubuntu Touch?: In any case, I've concluded that Libertine isn't the answer but need more space on the host to do more experimentation. Hopefully the Pinephone will give that space. Libertine is the answer, as it is what provides a container for installing and running legacy apps. However, it doesn't magically make those apps responsive or usable on phones, nor does it enable a full traditional Linux distribution experience. Likewise, Pinephone is not an answer here, as it is not the only device that UT will be supporting. The rootfs contents (in terms of what is supported by UT) must remain consistent across devices, regardless of whether they use libhybris or not, and whether or not they are stuck with Android style partitioning. Doing anything different in this area across different devices will only make it harder to support, harder to build apps for UT, and harder for users to use UT. Those are all things we clearly do not want.
  • Considering OnePlus One for largest battery on T-Mobile

    3
    0 Votes
    3 Posts
    312 Views
    E
    I'm using OP3 on T-mobile
  • UBports UT, Mir and Wayland news

    3
    5 Votes
    3 Posts
    416 Views
    G
    Also reported (with a few inaccuracies, but close enough) by Phoronix.
  • Slack Client

    24
    0 Votes
    24 Posts
    6k Views
    bhdouglassB
    That is a good question, it does some hackery to get the login tokens so maybe not the services api.
  • Ubuntu Touch devices list on the website has some missing / false info.

    13
    0 Votes
    13 Posts
    951 Views
    L
    @Flohack Thank you so much for the work you have done for the project! Always take your time.
  • Does Meizu PRO 5 work well with Ubuntu Touch?

    10
    0 Votes
    10 Posts
    799 Views
    M
    good advice from Stefano
  • 0 Votes
    5 Posts
    526 Views
    lduboeufL
    https://github.com/ubports/utqemu
  • I want to ask some questions about Ubuntu Touch.

    Moved
    28
    0 Votes
    28 Posts
    4k Views
    ?
    For what it's worth, @linuxadopter, I'm very happy with my Nexus5 running UT.
  • Compile C++ on phone

    14
    0 Votes
    14 Posts
    2k Views
    arubislanderA
    I would like to add my voice in support of what @dobey said. I appreciate that the solutions we suggest are 'what worked for us' when we were facing a similar issue. And we feel it is better to give advice that we know will work from our own experience, because we can answer any follow-up questions about that. But we should consider the potential risk of our proposed solution to leave the device in a state needing a reinstall of the OS to resolve any mistakes. Not only is that a bad experience for the user, it also gives the impression that the OS is much more fragile than it actually is. So please, when questions come up where the answer is installing additional command line utilities from the standard repo's. Let's point them to the Libertine documentation first. Libertine works brilliantly for commandline utilities and apps. It's the graphical applications that are more of a hit or miss.
  • Calls on the pinephone

    3
    0 Votes
    3 Posts
    559 Views
    ?
    Ah! I see. Thank you for the clarification, @Flohack
  • Is it worth doing an update of UBPorts?

    5
    0 Votes
    5 Posts
    399 Views
    arubislanderA
    While I agree with those above that it is best to stay up to date, I also feel the OP should be aware that the two issues the OP mentions when using Ubuntu Touch will still be present in the lastest version. Bit that should not stop him from updating IMO.
  • Mycroft integration

    4
    1 Votes
    4 Posts
    1k Views
    M
    Maybe a dead thread but Rhasspy has become a new popular choice.
  • Ubuntu Touch and Linux Kernel Version

    14
    1 Votes
    14 Posts
    3k Views
    robR
    thanks dobey. I will test it out when I get the chance.
  • Unit Converter (Simple)

    Moved
    1
    1
    1 Votes
    1 Posts
    225 Views
    No one has replied
  • Pinephone - future camera capability

    5
    1 Votes
    5 Posts
    712 Views
    AppLeeA
    @Giiba RAW is the format used by the sensor. It's not really A format type, just how the sensor handle the data ; it's proprietary to the sensor even if some de facto "standards" exist. So any camera supports RAW because this is how they work. The camera chip is also able to encode the picture or video to several formats. That's up to the driver and the app on top of it to ask for the desired format. In my experience every camera sensor I worked with worked the same, but my experience is not law, so maybe it can be different.
  • Is it possible to change the username in Nexus 5?

    4
    0 Votes
    4 Posts
    502 Views
    LakotaubpL
    @chdslv Use the wipe option on the installer. It will remove everything though and give you a clean install.