Glad to see some life here! I also have been interested in getting Ubuntu on a 
tablet. As far as installing Ubuntu, that's relatively easy. You could look for 
something with an intel (x86 based architecture) processor, such as the Exopc, 
or one of the offerings from Ekoore, which also has a couple intel based 
tablets running Ubuntu natively. For development, either of these would be 
great options.

The problem of course with both of these options for me was use. All of them 
were fairly heavy devices with poor battery life, and several 'missing' 
features of many of the other arm based devices running android, etc. At my 
last time of looking, they were also fairly expensive. Not being a developer 
myself, I'm after something I can use as an everyday device while I help sort 
out bugs, etc. Neither of these options fit the bill.

Another possibility, at least unofficially, is the asus transformer. There 
already is a project running in which Ubuntu is installed natively on the mmc 
drive, often with an actual dualboot into android. The problem of course is 
that there is no graphics hardware acceleration, as the device uses a Nvidia 
Tegra 2 chipset, which last time I looked had very poor linux support from 
Nvidia. Battery life was great however, the device docks into a keyboard for 
increased use, and it seems fairly well supported by an active dev community 
using the unity 2d interface.

One of the main setbacks for me was the continued reliance on other developers 
to 'hack' versions of Ubuntu onto it, as well as the lack of hardware 
acceleration. In the end, I gave up, and have decided to wait until a decent 
arm device comes out I can hack Ubuntu on myself.

Another possibility is using something which has an omap4 chipset, which Ubuntu 
'officially' has images for, at least for the pandaboard dev kit. I'm typing 
this now on a hacked kindle fire, running a port of the android-based 
cyanogenmod 9. It's got a lot of great features, but I miss the full usefulness 
of Ubuntu. I think Canonical has a great vision, and I would love to see Ubuntu 
on a device such as this. There are chroot methods to run Ubuntu within 
Android, but they are clunky, and without the effectiveness of a full native 
system.

If anyone can come up with a way to wipe android from my kindle fire and 
install, or 'flash' Ubuntu on it, I'd love to help out with development. 
Otherwise, I'll have to wait until there's an easier development solution with 
a device that works well as a tablet, and won't cost me an arm and a leg to get 
one.

Anyone know if Canonical has any plans to help encourage a device like this?

Curious Mail - Sent via Linux
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