Hi all. I think everybody will agree that making ubuntu work well on tablet PCs is a Good Thing for the image of ubuntu itself. In fact, the very first thing people say when they see the orange bars on my desktop is "hey, linux on the tablet... why did you want to hurt yourself THAT much"? They usually say this in italian but I think you can understand what it sounds like.
>From edgy to feisty and gutsy, we had a very good progress on the tablet pc side, which always worked after using tricks in feisty, and worked out of the box in gutsy. In hardy, we also have cellwriter, a very good handwriting recognizer. However, regressions in hardy break tablet support and nobody seems to be taking care of this. This is not to accuse anybody, I just send this reminder to the devel-discuss list because I think that broader visibility is necessary for these bugs. The most important bug is: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/195953 this basically breaks usefulness of the tablet itself, and seriously damages its basic functionality, which is to write down notes. Using screen resolution, handwriting is almost unreadable and can in no way compete with the proprietary alternative which is pre-installed on most tablets nowadays. I tested the new release of linuxwacom and it works. Some developer has to take care of including the fix in the release. Another important problem is that last time I checked the installer does not recognise the tablet, and manual interevention in xorg.conf is required. This is a regression from gutsy. We waited for months on an open bug in feisty to get tablet support out-of-the-box, and now it seems broken for no particular reason. Third, this might be classified as a wishlist but actually it's disallowing me to use suspend-to-disk, which is necessary if you forget your laptop on without power supply, and the existing patch seems to work. As Tom illustrated in his latest comment, this is a rather complicated issue that requires developer attention. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/152187 Since last time I have been told that I test releases too late, I started very early, thus having to bear all the bugs and problems of early releases, just to be sure to report any regression. If nobody looks into issues, why should I do this anymore? I did that in time not because I wanted *my* laptop to be fixed. I can fix that myself and even release debs on my ppa. Point is that, if people asks me if it is wise to install ubuntu on a tablet pc, I can't write down a list of all the problems and how to solve those. Especially if patches for all problems mentioned exist. Vincenzo -- Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel-discuss
