Web browsing on the Nexus 7, using Ubuntu and Firefox I love fiddling with things. Especially electronic things. I admit, I've fooled with ARM builds of Ubuntu on Android devices, or running them in a chroot environment. I read the comments and forums, so I know I'm not the only one. The problem is, that while it's fairly easy to do, if you're not comfortable with terminal commands you just won't be doing it. Canonical, who is using the Nexus 7 as a sort of reference for Ubuntu on ARM touch devices changed that today by releasing a simple one click installer. Now, anyone who can install Ubuntu on their computer can just as easily install it on their Nexus 7. It's not very practical, and you'll likely flash back to Android after a few hours of playing with it, but it is extremely cool to play with for a few. If you're the type who likes to hack and flash at your Nexus 7, you will want to try this. Read on. Verizon is offering the Pixel 4a for just $10/mo on new Unlimited lines

What you'll need, and where to get it The first thing you need to know is that this wipes everything off your Nexus 7. All of it. Your movies, your pictures, your Plague, Inc. progress, everything. You also have to use the factory images to restore. Know all the details before you step into this one. You'll need to be running Ubuntu on your computer. Yeah, I don't like that much either, as Ubuntu on the Desktop just doesn't suit me. But them's the facts. You can get the ISO here, and either the standard install or Wubi (that "easy way to install on Windows" mentioned at the bottom of the Ubuntu page) will work just fine. There's a good chance everything will just work when you install it. There's an even better chance that if it doesn't, you can Google the issue and find a clear and concise answer. Installing Ubuntu is easy, and the hardware recognition is top-notch. There's also a bunch of us nerds in the forums who can help. You'll also need to be sure Fastboot is set up. That's pretty simple, as there are no drivers to fool with. Just drop the fastboot executable (this is one I built, I'll vouch for its integrity) somewhere in your PATH, and make sure it's executable. If that sounds like gibberish, again a Google search or a trip to the forums will fix you up quickly. You need to have the bootloader of your N7 unlocked. Instructions for that are all over the 'net, but I think you'll find the best ones right here. And finally, you'll need the USB cable that came with your tablet or an equivalent. Got all that? Good. Carry on. How do I do it?

This is actually the easy part. Make sure you've got a good charge on your Nexus 7, and have a read. Open the terminal application on your computer that's running Ubuntu. Don't worry, you're not hacking at anything from there, you're just setting up a new software source for Ubuntu to use and installing the GUI for the flashing tool. Got it open? Good. Copy and paste this, one line at a time. sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-nexus7/ubuntu-nexus7-installer

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install ubuntu-nexus7-installer When asked for a password, it wants your user password. This will leave you with a fully working installer for Ubuntu on the N7, and one that will get OTA updates of its own when needed. Find it in your software menu. If you need to search for it, just search "nexus". Power your N7 down, and plug it in to your computer. After it's plugged in, hold the volume down key and power until it reboots into the bootloader, and set it aside. The rest is done on your computer. Since you should have already verified that Fastboot is working, all you need to do is run the app you opened earlier. Choose the right size for your tablet (8GB or 16GB), and watch it go.