News
[Adam Outler] shows us how to expand the Linux tools available on Android without rooting the device. He does this by installing BusyBox. The binary is copied to the device using the Android Develo… ...
The newest Linux kernel, version 3.3, includes code from Google's Android project. That should help both Android and other Linux-based projects.
Discover how Google's new virtualization framework is bringing Linux apps to Android devices for enhanced flexibility.
The Linux terminal comes to Android with the help of a simple, easy-to-use app called Termux. Here's how to install and use Termux to give your Android a taste of Linux.
The Register on MSN1d
Linux Mint 22.2 polishes the desktop, but kernel updates are the real deal
Point release brings Cinnamon tweaks, shiny apps, and Ubuntu's Hardware Enablement stack The latest point release to the ...
Linux on DeX did not. Update: Apparently there are some third-party Linux-on-Android apps that do not require root access, including AnLinux and UserLAnd. Thanks Dominic!
Google's Android operating system can trace its roots back to a rather humble newsgroup post by Linus Torvalds in 1991.
Less than a year after launch, Samsung has announced that they're discontinuing the Linux on DeX program, coinciding with the update to Android 10.
In Canonical's latest move, the company purposes bringing its Ubuntu Linux desktop to high-end Android phones.
A lead software engineer at Ubuntu-maker Canonical has released a tool to run Android apps on Linux desktops without using emulators.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results