This Year,we have smart year with Ubuntu,and their fabulous start with this Operating System.
First the identification of Ubuntu ,is a Unity sign which recognize,Yes this device is having a Linux Version.Identified by the circle in middle of device.
Unity Design "Ubuntu"
Last month at LeWeb conference in Paris, Mark Shuttleworth confirmed
the existence of an upcoming Ubuntu phone. No information was given
regarding who was making the device. This announcement came shortly
after the release of Ubuntu Touch 1.0, the mobile OS Canonical revealed
just over a year ago, and was the first anything has been mentioned
about an actual Ubuntu phone since the Edge campaign.
Apparently, that’s not all we’ll be seeing in 2014.
So, 2013 was an intense year with lots of work, some tough decisions,
and lots of late (and sometimes stressful) nights, but it laid down the
core pillars of what our future holds. But what about 2014?
This time next year we will have a single platform code-base for
phone, tablet, and desktop that adapts to harness the form-factor and
power of each device it runs on. This is not just the aesthetics of
convergence, it is real convergence at the code level. This
will be complemented by an Ubuntu SDK in which you can write an app once
and deliver it to any of these devices, and an eco-system in which you
can freely publish or sell apps, content, and more with a powerful set
of payment tools.
It's all about the Touch
What has made and will continue to make Ubuntu the distro to watch in 2014 is not desktop Ubuntu: it is Ubuntu Touch.
What made 2013 a really exciting year for Ubuntu fans was the revelation that Canonical was going to put a real Linux distro on a phone.
You could argue that Android is Linux – peel back the virtual machine
layers and technically Android runs atop a Linux kernel – but Android
pales next to the full power of Linux on your phone.
When
Shuttleworth announced Ubuntu Touch, he didn't just move Canonical into a
new market, he reignited the nerd fantasy of real Linux-based phones,
which taps a market well beyond Ubuntu's usual share of the Linux
desktop. Like many, I don't use Ubuntu on the desktop, but I will be
lining up when the first Ubuntu phones hit the market.
Ubuntu 13.10: A desktop tour (Demo)
On the software side, Jono Bacon, Ubuntu Community Manager, wrote recently on Google+ that by "This time next year we will have a single platform code-base for phone, tablet, and deskto that adapts to harness the form-factor and power of each device it runs on.
The end result will be one Linux-based operating system for smartphones,
tablets, and desktops and single applications that will work on all
three platforms.
Ubuntu 2014,comes with some smart and interesting HD Wallpapers