If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much
room. Say hello to the Ubuntu Edge, the first smartphone to use open-source
Ubuntu Touch software as well as Android -- and the people behind it want your
help with a multimillion-dollar crowdfunding campaign.
Ubuntu creator British company Canonical wants to bring the
dual-booting Edge to fruition by raising a whopping 21.5 million pounds ($32
million) in a month on Indiegogo. It claims this is the biggest target ever for
a crowdfunded campaign. The campaign intends to produce 40,000 units; if you
want to own an Edge of your very own, you'll get a handset if you pledge 394
pounds ($600) today, or 532 pounds ($830) thereafter.
You will have to wait until May 2014 to actually get your
hands on the Edge, however.
If the Edge raises the money, Canonical will be
"delighted" and could repeat the experiment as "a regular
thing." But if it doesn't raise the ambitious full amount before August
21, the Edge won't happen at all, and Canonical will merrily continue to
develop Ubuntu mobile software for carriers and manufacturers to add to their
own phones.
Canonical says it's adopted crowdfunding to see which
technologies early adopters are interested in paying for, without a
manufacturer having to spend millions on developing a product that then proves
to be a flop. The company highlights the Edge's battery and scratch-proof
screen as technologies that would be adopted more widely if they could be
proved by this project to be the sort of things people want from their phones.
But Canonical insists this is not a full move into the phone hardware market.
The Edge promises "the latest, fastest processor,"
with at least 4GB of RAM and 128GB of storage. It has a 4.5-inch, 720p screen
covered in pure sapphire crystal, which Canonical claims to be "the
hardest natural substance after diamond."
Although elements of the design and specs are still open --
possibly with input from phone fans who have backed the phone -- the Edge is
also planned to include 4G, NFC, and Bluetooth 4.0. It's designed to hook up to
a computer or a monitor via HDMI cable so you can use it just like the desktop
Ubuntu operating system. Although it sounds similar to the Motorola Atrix,
Canonical insists the Edge will be much more powerful and will give a much more
desktop-like performance.
Revealed in slick rendered images, the Ubuntu Edge runs the
version of open-source operating system Ubuntu designed for touch-screen gestures
on phones and tablets.
Ubuntu Touch open source software
The front of the phone has no home button: just the touch
screen showing off Ubuntu Touch software. Ubuntu Touch is controlled by swiping
in from outside the screen, different options appearing depending on which edge
you move your finger across.
Swipe in from the left and a sidebar of shortcuts appears.
Swipe in from the right and you scroll through the apps you have running. Swipe
down from the top for messages and notifications, or pull up from the bottom
for settings and preferences, unique to the app you're in.
Ubuntu Touch made its first appearance running on Google
Nexus 4 phone and Nexus 7 tablet earlier this year, so this is the first time
it's appearing on purpose-built hardware.
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