Ubuntu Edge — a duo Smartpone and PC in your hands
Had it succeeded, the Ubuntu Edge would have been one gigantic duo smartphone-PC mobile device a 4.5-inch screen,a quad-core processor, 4GB of RAM and an unprecedented 128GB of storage. It’ would be LTE-ready and would run both Android and the touch-optimized version of Ubuntu Linux desktop operating system. The phone would also operate as a computer by plugging an external keyboard, mouse and monitor to it turning it into a fully fledged desktop PC. This conceptual device targeted towards super users would have hit the market by early 2014.
Breaking the Android, iOS duopoly
Currently, the smartphone market is dominated by the Android-iOS duo with current stats from IDC indicating Android clocking 80% Market Share In Global Smartphone Shipments. iOS, though it has slowed down follows closely after and then Microsoft’s Windows Phone then the rest(Black berry, Symbian). Canonical, the company behind the project with its Ubuntu Edge project hoped to change this dominance by providing carriers and mobile users alternatives to Android and iOS. Canonical isn’t alone. There are other smartphone Operating Systems like Firefox OS by Mozilla, the much delayed Tizen by Samsung and Sailfish by Jolla.
Ubuntu Mobile still lives on
Shuttleworth, speaking to the Guardian, insisted that despite the failure, carriers and handset makers are definitely interested in building handsets which will run the mobile Linux – but that they will not be the top-end “superphones” which the Edge project hoped to produce. In a statement on the campaign page, Mark Shuttleworth and his Canonical team wrote: Taking Android or iOS head-on is a tough bite. Canonical needs to cave out a niche market and mean its demands. It could for instance focus on the Enterprise segment like Blackberry did or on the emerging markets where billions of people still lack affordable smartphones. “All of the support and publicity has continued to drive our discussions with some major manufacturers, and we have many of the world’s biggest mobile networks already signed up to the Ubuntu Carrier Advisory Group. They’ll have been watching this global discussion of Ubuntu and the need for innovation very closely indeed. Watch this space!” Image: Canonical