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Hardware 2.0

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

Multitouch gestures coming to Ubuntu 10.10

By | August 17, 2010, 9:54am PDT

Multitouch gestures are coming to Ubuntu 10.10 “Maverick Meerkat,” or so says Canonical’s Mark Shuttleworth.

Multitouch is just as useful on a desktop as it is on a phone or tablet, so I’m delighted that the first cut of Canonical’s UTouch framework has landed in Maverick and will be there for its release on 10.10.10.

You’ll need 4-finger touch or better to get the most out of it, and we’re currently targeting the Dell XT2 as a development environment so the lucky folks with that machine will get the best results today. By release, we expect you’ll be able to use it with a range of devices from major manufacturers, and with addons like Apple’s Magic Trackpad.

It seems that Ubuntu has some sophisticated plans for gestures, where users will be able to chain together basic gestures together to form sentences.

The basic gestures, or primitives, are like individual verbs, and stringing them together allows for richer interactions. It’s not quite the difference between banging rocks together and conducting a symphony orchestra, but it feels like a good step in the right direction :)

The official Canonical blog has more details:

Canonical is pleased to announce the release of uTouch 1.0, Ubuntu’s multi-touch and gesture stack. With Ubuntu 10.10 (the Maverick Meerkat), users and developers will have an end-to-end touch-screen framework — from the kernel all the way through to applications. Our multi-touch team has worked closely with the Linux kernel and X.org communities to improve drivers, add support for missing features, and participate in the touch advances being made in open source world. To complete the stack, we’ve created an open source gesture recognition engine and defined a gesture API that provides a means for applications to obtain and use gesture events from the uTouch gesture engine.

Awesome news for Ubuntu users.

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Adrian Kingsley-Hughes is an internationally published technology author who has devoted over a decade to helping users get the most from technology.

Disclosure

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

All opinions expressed on Hardware 2.0 are those of Adrian Kingsley-Hughes. Every effort is made to ensure that the information posted is accurate. If you have any comments, queries or corrections, please contact Adrian via the email link here. Any possible conflicts of interest will be posted below. [Updated: February 23, 2010] - Adrian Kingsley-Hughes has no business relationships, affiliations, investments, or other actual/potential conflicts of interest relating to the content posted so far on this blog.

Biography

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes is an internationally published technology author who has devoted over a decade to helping users get the most from technology -- whether that be by learning to program, building a PC from a pile of parts, or helping them get the most from their new MP3 player or digital camera.

Adrian has authored/co-authored technical books on a variety of topics, ranging from programming to building and maintaining PCs. His most recent books include "Build the Ultimate Custom PC", "Beginning Programming" and "The PC Doctor's Fix It Yourself Guide". He has also written training manuals that have been used by a number of Fortune 500 companies.

Adrian also runs a popular blog under the name The PC Doctor, where he covers a range of computer-related topics -- from security to repairing and upgrading.

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It's a great addition to OS X
Ktroje 18th Aug 2010
@bobiroc I know multitouch had always been a gimmick, back when Asus, Dell, or whoever tried it on their cruddy netbooks and it failed miserably.

Then come Apple, and they make it near perfect. Pinch for zoom, multiple fingers (2) for scrolling, (2) for rotation and zoom - Preview, iPhoto, Finder, (3) for navigation - back/forth through Finder, Safari, iTunes, iPhoto, etc., (4) for Expos?, Show Desktop, and App Switcher. Now, I say "near-perfect" because I have an awful habit of accidentally enlarging Finder icons while trying to zoom. In that sense, I think that's user error - I'm somewhat alone on that front.

And, if you get adventurous enough, there are other tools out there that extend the multitouch trackpads (and now Magic Trackpad) to a remarkable level. For instance, I don't know when you'd use it, but the trackpads in Apple's MacBooks are capable of registering 11 touch points to the system.

BetterTouchTool, the trackpad extension I've come to love, adds so much functionality to my MacBook Pro I wish Apple had put in from the beginning. As an added bonus, BetterTouchTool adds window snapping (that Win7 system extension [read: that Win7 gimmick]), but to a greater level - full screen, left, right, and corners. For instance, I have my BTT setup so that when I drag a window within 30 pixels of the edge, it resizes to occupy 25% of my screen with a 5 pixel padding on all edges.

Multitouch, when applied properly, is a wonderful experience. M$ will never built it nicely until they understand the concept of smooth scrolling, my biggest pet peeve about being a Mac user by choice, Windows user by school's demand.
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ubuntu
Stan57 17th Aug 2010
ubuntu doing what it does best copy lol. And i am amazed zdnet never picked up on the story that dell removed ubunto from its web site hmmmmmm
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RE: Multitouch gestures coming to Ubuntu 10.10
Loverock Davidson 17th Aug 2010
One word for this news: BORING. Let us know when linux does something that is actually exciting. Although I do have to admit its fun watching Shuttleworth dump money into his project to give the illusion that linux is still relevant.
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@Loverock Davidson Agreed. This is boring. I feel I must respond too happy
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Actually it's one more feature added to the mix
Dietrich T. Schmitz, ~ Your Linux Advocate 17th Aug 2010
There isn't any way for Microsoft to maintain the same development pace x.04/x.10 that Ubuntu has adopted.

And I have to laugh at just how ridiculously well Ubuntu Netbook Edition 10.04 runs on my new Acer Aspire One D260.

Acer enthusiasts will note that the D260 has an interesting twist in its design, a new bios and support for dual-boot to Android out of the box.

On top of all the other excellent features, I decided to reformat the spindle and go with UNE running a VM of Windows.

Is Acer's Aspire One D260 with an Atom N450 up to the task? You betcha and I might add it's running the GNOME ui with compiz 3D effects.

It's really too funny that most Windows Folk (around ZDNET) don't seem to grasp what is happening--a wholesale switch from Windows to Linux-based devices is well underway. I might add, the growth of the Netbook market has only just begun. These netbooks are well-suited to Linux and exceptionally versatile.

I've got this netbook running optimally with the N450 hyperthreading 64-bit Atom. There were no configuration issues with UNE and everything worked correctly after install.

That my friends is impressive.

So, those who are yawning better take another look. Otherwise, we Linux folks will be giving you a morning wake up call very soon.

Be smart. IT smart includes Linux in your topology.
Ubuntu Linux: The safest operating system on the Planet.

I stake my reputation on it. wink
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Wow, that IS impressive!!
NonZealot 17th Aug 2010
@Dietrich T. Schmitz, Your Linux Advocate
I've got this netbook running optimally with the N450 hyperthreading 64-bit Atom. There were no configuration issues with UNE and everything worked correctly after install.

That my friends is impressive.


How about that, you got Linux working on a computer. Even more astounding is that everything worked correctly after install. That is impressive!! With monumental achievements like being able to install the OS on a netbook and having it work correctly, Linux should be approaching 95% marketshare in just a few months!
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RE: Multitouch gestures coming to Ubuntu 10.10
Loverock Davidson 17th Aug 2010
@NonZealot
LOL the simple minds of a linux user. Bragging that they installed an OS. This explains why the linux UI always treats the user like they are an idiot.
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RE: Multitouch gestures coming to Ubuntu 10.10
Loverock Davidson 17th Aug 2010
@Dietrich T. Schmitz, Your Linux Advocate
It must suck to have to wipe your data and upgrade every 6 months then restore it. I'm glad I don't have to go through that hassle. Also glad I don't have to add 3rd party code just to make my OS secure.
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@Loverock Davidson Yeah, it does suck. I had to do that every three months on my Windows box before I got my Mac.
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Yeah
Cylon Centurion Updated - 17th Aug 2010
@Dietrich T. Schmitz, Your Linux Advocate

There isn't any way for Microsoft to maintain the same development pace x.04/x.10 that Ubuntu has adopted.

Yet that still hasn't mattered at all. Microsoft's development of Windows has surpassed that of Linux. In fact, there is so little development with Linux for me to safely say that nothing in the OS sticks out enough for me to even care using it outside of a VM, which I only have it there to dabble with. Windows still supports the healthiest eco-system out there.

And I have to laugh at just how ridiculously well Ubuntu Netbook Edition 10.04 runs on my new Acer Aspire One D260.

And I could say the same for Windows. Your point?

It's really too funny that most Windows Folk (around ZDNET) don't seem to grasp what is happening--a wholesale switch from Windows to Linux-based devices is well underway. I might add, the growth of the Netbook market has only just begun. These netbooks are well-suited to Linux and exceptionally versatile.

Uh-huh. Yet Linux market share has stayed the same for how long now? While XP decreases and is replaced with Windows 7, which by the way is gaining more traction with 3rd party developers as well.


Be smart. IT smart includes Linux in your topology.

Linux in the backend, Windows in the front.
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@Dietrich T. Schmitz, Your Linux Advocate

"..I stake my reputation on it"

What's left to stake?
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That is what I have heard from so many Linux Advocates for years. Maybe in the right scenarios it can be useful? Not for everything but some things it can prove to be quite useful and not just on phones and other portable devices either.
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It's a great addition to OS X
Ktroje 18th Aug 2010
@bobiroc I know multitouch had always been a gimmick, back when Asus, Dell, or whoever tried it on their cruddy netbooks and it failed miserably.

Then come Apple, and they make it near perfect. Pinch for zoom, multiple fingers (2) for scrolling, (2) for rotation and zoom - Preview, iPhoto, Finder, (3) for navigation - back/forth through Finder, Safari, iTunes, iPhoto, etc., (4) for Expos?, Show Desktop, and App Switcher. Now, I say "near-perfect" because I have an awful habit of accidentally enlarging Finder icons while trying to zoom. In that sense, I think that's user error - I'm somewhat alone on that front.

And, if you get adventurous enough, there are other tools out there that extend the multitouch trackpads (and now Magic Trackpad) to a remarkable level. For instance, I don't know when you'd use it, but the trackpads in Apple's MacBooks are capable of registering 11 touch points to the system.

BetterTouchTool, the trackpad extension I've come to love, adds so much functionality to my MacBook Pro I wish Apple had put in from the beginning. As an added bonus, BetterTouchTool adds window snapping (that Win7 system extension [read: that Win7 gimmick]), but to a greater level - full screen, left, right, and corners. For instance, I have my BTT setup so that when I drag a window within 30 pixels of the edge, it resizes to occupy 25% of my screen with a 5 pixel padding on all edges.

Multitouch, when applied properly, is a wonderful experience. M$ will never built it nicely until they understand the concept of smooth scrolling, my biggest pet peeve about being a Mac user by choice, Windows user by school's demand.
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I'm still not convinced as to the value of multi-touch on the desktop in the first place. Especially since I'm still cleaning my nephew's grubby finger marks off my laptop screen after just playing "World of Warcraft" with him!

The multi-touch device would have to be lying flat on the desk before it could even begin to be an option, because there is simply no way I am going to spend my entire working day with my arms stretched out in front of me to reach my monitor.
As an aside, I have a friend who lost an arm in a car accident: do any of these multi-touch stacks assume that the user has two hands?
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Desktop multi-touch
Cylon Centurion 18th Aug 2010
@Zogg

Is meant more for convertibles than desktop PC's.
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@NStalnecker

The market does not seem to agree with you. Multi-touch monitors exist!

http://accessories.us.dell.com/sna/products/Displays/productdetail.aspx?c=us&l=en&cs=19&sku=320-1172

It has an integrated webcam too! This monitor must be intended for desktop use!
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Yeah
Cylon Centurion 18th Aug 2010
@NStalnecker

But, like yourself, I feel as if desktop touch is rather uncomfortable to utilize, and is best suited for notebooks or netbooks that can convert to a tablet.
@NStalnecker

I looked at the smeary mess left by just casually pointing to things in the game, and I thought "Yeugh!". The thought of what he might achieve on a screen designed to have both of his grubby little hands constantly wiping over its surface fills me with abject horror!
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Ahahaha
Cylon Centurion 18th Aug 2010
I guess that makes me different. I for one, welcome our new smudge overlords. Mainly because I do own a tablet convertible. But before I touch, I always make sure my hands are clean. happy

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