Hey guys I have a quick question
What is the difference between having full Ubuntu vs Debian in Webtop?
I kinda know the differences when looking at it on a laptop but not in Webtop
Which of the two offeres more value/performance and what can one of the distro do that the other cant.
Thanks
Related
Hai guys
got a silly question - I was posting here and i was thinking, if thats possible (most likely if proper drivers available), and if somebody tried that already - especially considering that the Atrix has hardware specs like a netbook with SSD.
comments?
I mean that would be the ultimate show-off, plug your Atrix into a standard desktop Monitor, and windows 7 Boots up!!!!
cheers
@
atlana said:
Hai guys
got a silly question - I was posting here and i was thinking, if thats possible (most likely if proper drivers available), and if somebody tried that already - especially considering that the Atrix has hardware specs like a netbook with SSD.
comments?
I mean that would be the ultimate show-off, plug your Atrix into a standard desktop Monitor, and windows 7 Boots up!!!!
cheers
@
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You could never run the full OS of Windows 7, it is made for x86/x64.
The Atrix is ARM. The only Windows 7-series OS that COULD work is Windows Embedded Compact 7. It is the latest evolution of Windows CE. Any desktop windows apps would need to be ported to this OS to work anyway.
Does anyone know of some good IDE's that can compile C and/or Java well in our ubuntu setup?
Sent from my alien
s1mpd1ddy said:
Does anyone know of some good IDE's that can compile C and/or Java well in our ubuntu setup?
Sent from my alien
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Considering the limited CPU and memory on webtop compared to a full blown desktop, i'd look at something lightweight, like a text editor, or maybe geany? http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/geany-great-lightweight-code-editor-linux/
Geany looks good.. I'll have to grab it when I get this Ubuntu fully installed and running on webtop. Thanks!
Hi everyone !
I've got few question about the lapdock for the Atrix. Especially the OS that we could put on the Atrix for use with it, can we put any ubuntu or linux versions on it ? Is it difficult tu adapt a linux distro on it ? And have we all functionnality as a netbook ? (Like for exemple download library to program some kind of application (In java/PHP/C....) I'm a computer scientist student so it could be interesting for me to have a computer with a 11.6 inch display, an autonomy of 8 hours and a little weight...
Thanks for your answers
And happy new year !!
there is a hack to do this in ATRIX ROM DEVELOPMENT section. you can try and do a search there.
I'd try posting this is questions section, more people will properly see and be able to help you out
blackmario said:
I've got few question about the lapdock for the Atrix. Especially the OS that we could put on the Atrix for use with it, can we put any ubuntu or linux versions on it ? Is it difficult tu adapt a linux distro on it ? And have we all functionnality as a netbook ? (Like for exemple download library to program some kind of application (In java/PHP/C....) I'm a computer scientist student so it could be interesting for me to have a computer with a 11.6 inch display, an autonomy of 8 hours and a little weight...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So after spending the last Month on my Lapdock, trying every combination I could, I settled on using WebTop2sd. It takes the Webtop and copies it to the External Sdcard and allows you to create whatever partition size you have room for. This only uses the Ubuntu Jaunty (9.04) Distribution that comes with the webtop. Jaunty has been deprecated and no longer has any updates coming from from Canonical. I looked at some of the other ways of changing to newer version of Ubuntu and Debian, but did not find anything that I thought was usable at this point. Or at least as usable as Webtop2sd. So even thought it is an older Distribution, I find it very usable and extemely fast to be running off of a MicroSD card. The latest Webtop (2.3.6) has Firefox 8 which is fast and you can use most all of the normal addons with it. I have the full Open Office 3 package running on mine along with XFCE-4. So right now, you would need to see if what apps you need as a Computer Scientist are available on Jaunty Armel (Have to be made to run on the Arm processor, cannot be X86 or X64) There is a lot of information on the webtop in the Development thread, so just read up on it there. I am a Sales Engineer and I travel quite a bit. I got this for that purpose, it gives me a decent size screen that I have fast web access anywhere, I can work on Docs anywhere, I have movies, music and Books (Firefox ePubReader addon) with me to pass the time. For that it is it works really well. It is not a full on linux laptop though. It has its limitations, but works very well despite of those. Just my opinion.
I think of it more along the lines of a netbook in terms of performance.
i would just like to know what the majority of people here use operating system wise for developing android apps.
♪neXus♪ §⁴G • AØKP B³⁴ • Air Kernel 4.∅
The distro you use is irrelevant to developing Android apps, all that matters is that it can have Java, Eclipse (if you want everything to be streamlined) and the Android SDK running on it (which is most if not all distros). However, I like the look Of Unity so Ubuntu.
You could even run Windows
thats true for the most part.. certian distros run certian things faster and other things slower.. i should have narrowed my question cuz there are too many variables lol.
♪neXus♪ §⁴G • AØKP B³⁴ • Air Kernel 4.∅
I like Linux Mint 12 vKDE
Cheers
I have been using Ubuntu since past 3 years now. and I strongly recommend you also using Ubuntu if you're new to linux. It isn't like I haven't had my hands on other Linux distros. But, the reason I always recommend Ubuntu to Linux newbies is, Ubuntu has the biggest online community out of all linux distros which will help you out in lot of ways when you're facing some OS related problems and troubleshooting. Even googling any problem of Ubuntu will give you solutions right away on your hands. At last but not least, when it come to the installing application/software section, not matter whether from online repos or from specific packages from sites, most sites include separate installation guide for specific ubuntu when it comes to the Linux distros.
LMDE + XFCE!
Sent from my SPH-D700 using Tapatalk 2
Questions or Problems Should Not Be Posted in the Development Forum
Please Post in the Correct Forums & Read the Forum Rules
Moving to Q&A
Debian based distros (or even debian itself) are the best.
So, ubuntu seems to be the most recommended one. Big online community, most problems and answers are already posted somewhere, it's fast enough (I haven't heard otherwise at least).
If you're feeling geeky, Slackware
Well, however, you only need Eclipse, Java, and Android SDK, which pretty much every distro supports. However you don't wanna loose most of your time worring about the distro itself since you're using as a tool for you to work. Go for Ubuntu
danieldmm said:
I like Linux Mint 12 vKDE
Cheers
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linux mint ftw
Ubuntu or any other distribution based on it (Because of the Software Repository).
I recommend Ubuntu 10.04 lucid lynx for dev android it is what I use it is noob friendly and have ywr to really see Amy problems with it not to mention the great community support
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I too recommend using ubuntu
sent from worldz best x 10mini
Tha TechnoCrat said:
I too recommend using ubuntu
sent from worldz best x 10mini
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Well, in my opinion... I would recommend Fedora. Fedora is always the leading Linux distro with all the recent technologies. I wouldn't change Fedora for Ubuntu in a million years... at least that's my opinion. Currently running Fedora 20 with Eclipse & Android Studio flawlessly...
To all those who say Ubuntu,
Ubuntu is laggy (on my PC).
Kali-linux has built in Java and Eclipse.
But I say use Builduntu or Mint (64 bit).
There are about 600 distros you can try. Try googling and you may just find the best distro for you. Keep on trying.:laugh::laugh:
For the sake of people looking for the same i was
Ubuntu (for the aformentioned reasons), but in Lubuntu or Xubuntu flavors... Offers the cleanest, fastest and less resource hunger experience in the ubuntu ecosystem.
Lubuntu being the lightest.
Example Given:
I'm currently developing not so heavy android apps (data capture, and so on) in a xubuntu 14.04, celeron dual core based pc with 3 gigs ram and 120 gb hdd, intel hd 3000 machine...
BBQ Linux - http://bbqlinux.org/
Is anyone looking to port Ubuntu Touch to our TF201? I really want to see how this works with the Dock.
+1! I would love to test such a port!
Me 2
We run Ubuntu 12.04 on two desktops and one laptop. I would also like to see Ubuntu (touch or desktop) running ontop of Androwook 2.2. Maybe it already is. I tried three different versions of 12.04, but they weren't happy with Android 4.2.1. The desktop came up but no icons. Can someone point me to Ubuntu that works with Androwook 2.2? Thanks
Same here
It's been a while since I'm looking into Ubuntu Touch to TF201 and we have nothing yet? I would love a dual boot...
It would really be nice to have a port of ubuntu for my TF201. Does anyone have any updates on this? I have seen some tutorials on how to get ubuntu touch on tablets but seems kinda difficult to do it on the prime..
Thanks.
Touch on prime
imanustmai said:
It would really be nice to have a port of ubuntu for my TF201. Does anyone have any updates on this? I have seen some tutorials on how to get ubuntu touch on tablets but seems kinda difficult to do it on the prime..
Thanks.
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Ok so while searching i found this thread...http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1603921
But the DL links are broken so use this one: http://lilstevie.geek.nz/ports/
I will be trying this after work tonight......:laugh: