All News | Boards | Chips | Devices | Software | LinuxDevices.com Archive | About | Contact | Subscribe
Follow LinuxGizmos:
Twitter Facebook Pinterest RSS feed
*   get email updates   *

Ubuntu gets closer to debut in Meizu MX4 phone

Sep 19, 2014 — by Eric Brown 18,256 views

The Ubuntu project announced a stable build for Ubuntu Touch phones, a week after Meizu tipped an Ubuntu version of the Meizu MX4 phone due in December.

The Ubuntu for Phones team at the Canonical’s Ubuntu Project announced the arrival of the first image from the ubuntu-rtm (release to manufacturing) distribution for phones. The announcement followed last week’s tease from Meizu, saying a version of the Android-based Meizu MX4 was on schedule for shipping with Ubuntu in December.

The RTM image of Ubuntu Touch “seems to be the most stable ubuntu-rtm image we ever had,” writes Łukasz ‘sil2100’ Zemczak of the Ubuntu Phones team. “Most blockers have been resolved (along with the no-input unity8 lockup bug), with only more minor issues remaining.”

— ADVERTISEMENT —


Major enhancements of the ubuntu-rtm build are said to include:

  • MTP server fixes
  • Facebook chat notifications
  • Mir 0.7.1 (overlay enabled back again)
  • Unity8 support for nested prompts
  • New Ubuntu UI Toolkit
  • Tons and tons of fixes for core applications, main UI, scopes and internal components

 
Meizu MX4 to ship in Ubuntu version

The Ubuntu release will likely first arrive in a Meizu device, now revealed to be a custom version of the Meizu MX4, which is shipping this month with Android. It’s possible however, that BQ — the other phone vendor partner announced by Canonical last February — could also arrive with an Ubuntu phone by the end of the year, as promised. The Meizu MX4 with Ubuntu will indeed ship in December, as tipped by China-based Meizu through Meizu’s Italian blog (translated).



Meizu MX4, as shown on the Meizu Italia blog
(click image to enlarge)

It is unclear where the Meizu phone will be released, but the choice of Italy for the leak suggests Meizu may range beyond its traditional focus on China. It’s also unclear whether this will be a dual-boot phone or will only be available in separate Ubuntu and Android versions.

The Meizu and BQ phones will run a version of Ubuntu 14.10 (Utopic Unicorn), which entered beta last month, and is expected to reach final beta on the same day the Pro will be revealed: Sept. 25. The final release is expected on Oct. 23. The previous release, which added tablet support, was Ubuntu 14.04, which was released in April.

The Ubuntu version of the Meizu MX4 will be a “Pro” version that will not be revealed until Sept. 25, says the Meizu Italia blog. The standard version of the Meizu MX4 was available for pre-order for $489, but sales have halted until the formal launch on Sept. 22. The MX4 runs Meizu’s Android-based Flyme OS on MediaTek’s MT6595 system-on-chip, a Big.Little, octa-core SoC that combines four 2.2GHz Cortex-A17 cores with four 1.7GHz Cortex-A7 cores.

The phone is further equipped with a 5.36-inch, 15:9 display that uses a new Nega liquid crystal technology and LED backlight module developed with Sharp that together are claimed to provide 85 percent increase in NTSC color gamut, 1100:1 contrast ratio, and brightness of up to 500 nits. The phone supports the latest TD-LTE and FDD-LTE 4G networks. Additional Meizu MX4 features include 802.11ac WiFi, a 20.7-megapixel camera with 4K video capture support at 30fps, and a 3100mAh battery.

The Pro version of the MX4 that will apparently offer Ubuntu was recently rumored to use a Samsung Exynos 5430 SoC. This 20nm-fabricated Cortex-A15/A7 Big.Little octa-core SoC is clocked to 1.8GHz and 1.3GHz, respectively. The MX4 Pro is rumored to offer a 5.4-inch screen with 2560 x 1536 resolution, plus 20.7- and 13-megapixel cameras, and up to 64GB of storage.

In either case, it appears Canonical is aiming high for its flagship device. This makes sense considering that Ubuntu Touch is being billed as a desktop-like convergence Linux distribution that can run equally well on smartphones, tablets, and laptops. Fortunately for Canonical, among the other mobile Linux contenders in the hunt, Samsung’s first Tizen smartphone has been postponed indefinitely. The most successful of the new mobile Linux OSes is Mozilla’s Firefox OS, but it’s squarely aimed at the low end, as indicated by the $35 Firefox OS phones that shipped recently in India from Intex and Spice.

 
Jolla Expands to India

Jolla’s Jolla phone, which runs the Linux-based Sailfish OS, has been mostly limited to European sales, and has few major partners. However, earlier this week, Jolla announced it was following Mozilla by expanding into India with the help of retailer Snapdeal. This is a mid-range phone, however, and is expected to have a fairly high price when it ships on Sept. 23.
 

(advertise here)


Print Friendly, PDF & Email
PLEASE COMMENT BELOW

4 responses to “Ubuntu gets closer to debut in Meizu MX4 phone”

  1. werewolfc says:

    Hope to see more Ubuntu phones (even cheaper ones …mid range i mean).

  2. Surja says:

    If Ubuntu wants to become popular with the masses, they have to release phones which cost less. It is possible to sell good phones at low price, as the Xiaomi Redmi 1s has demonstrated in sales for India, where 40,000 phones sold out in around 4 seconds. It was purely because the Redmi 1s was priced at a very affordable Rs. 5,999.00 and the specs were really good.
    The market for smartphones is huge in the third world countries like India. But the products have to be priced right for the phones to sell. Most people would not be able to afford the Ubuntu phone at $489 price tag. Ubuntu could have chosen to be released on a lower specced phone and perhaps released it in China and India. I’m quite sure that sales would have rocketed.

  3. heldeman says:

    The decision what the phone will cost and the specs is not for Canonical to make. The phone manufacturer will decide the hardware and pricing. Canonical/Ubuntu only supply the Software. There should be mid range to high range Ubuntu phones. The top range phones will be the ones that will make businesses decide to switch over or not. After all the top range phones will be able to dock and be your computer at work and at home. If businesses adopt this Canonical/Ubuntu will be made.

  4. oleksa says:

    I updated a new version on my Galaxy S7. After that, I couldn’t turn it on. The first Samsung logo mark appeared but it was only flickering. I fixed the problem by flashing the phone. On this site https://sfirmware.com I found the firmware file I needed and a tutorial on how to do it.

Please comment here...