I disagree a bit here.

Performance keeps increasing at a rapid rate. We are already at *quad-core* 
tegrat 3's!

the hybrid transformer prime was the first to get it.
http://www.androidcentral.com/asus-transformer-prime-review

When ubuntu for tablets/phones becomes available in 2 years we'll probably be 
at tegra5 (8 core?)

that's a lot power and they're only getting more powerful. Companies are 
already starting to plan these new/better concepts around that kind of power.

But hybrids still lack a good desktop experience and that is pointed out on the 
reviews. But that seems to be the opportunity and many of the old contenders 
will grab it if we dont.

This product category is exciting and becoming increasingly popular. It was 
predicted that mobile and desktop computing would start merging and is starting 
to happen.

From: [email protected]
Date: Sat, 10 Dec 2011 06:03:24 +0530
Subject: Re: [Ubuntu-phone] The best opportunity for the ubuntu multidevice 
concept will be on hybrid devices
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]

Just offering my unqualified opinion here: when docking a hybrid device, it 
doesn't become more powerful, so a desktop experience would have to be just as 
light as a portable one. That's why OSX or Ubuntu won't work in anything close 
to a full fledged form on such devices. Rather, the experience would have to be 
emulated by slightly altering the UI to fit the needs of a keyboard+trackpad 
input rather than a touch input.



On Sat, Dec 10, 2011 at 5:33 AM, Omar B. <[email protected]> wrote:







We have now the following hybrids:

Asus transformer (laptop / tablet hybrid)
Motorola atrix (phone / desktop / laptop / tv-media center); The jack of all 
trades.

And in the possible future:
To compete, Apple may be working on hybrid mobile devices with ios and full osx 
included (ipod/iphone that when docked turns into a desktop like a mac mini).




Now, the current hybrids are great concepts, and these devices will get more 
and more powerful, but what are their weakness ? their desktop experiences. 
They don't offer as good experience as a real desktop OS like ubuntu would 
offer.



As you can see from the Asus transformer review:
http://www.androidcentral.com/asus-eeepad-transformer-review


"This is what the ASUS EeePad Transformer really comes down to, isn't it. It's 
a perfectly capable Honeycomb tablet. But it should be, given Google's close 
watch over it's latest baby. But it's not enough for the Transformer to merely 
look like and pretend to be a laptop. We've tried that with with Motorola Xoom 
and a Bluetooth keyboard, and it's a pretty disconnected experience. Work a 
little on the keyboard, then you have to reach up and touch the screen. Type, 
reach. Type, reach. That's no good."




Similarly the moto atrix:
http://www.engadget.com/motorola/atrix-4g-review/

Awesome concept, super powerful phone, but the desktop experience is mostly 
limited to just a browser... which disappoints.




This will be the next trend in mobile computing and ubuntu will have quite a 
good number of advantages, so imo the announcement of a mutildevice ubuntu 
experience was on good timing but there's not much more time to lose.



Will be hard to compete directly with established platforms like ios/android on 
lone devices, so we have to look for newer areas in which they're not so strong 
yet. But in areas you can't compete, some type of partnerships would be an 
option too.


                                          

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