Since the machine is new, it is much better supported in later versions of Ubuntu. I get mine on 21 October, which is one week after the release of Ubuntu 13.10, and I am going to install 13.10 right away. I already read from others who installed the beta that it works quite well, but you need to adjust all the touch settings to your liking (they are set to conventional operation after install).
Thanks but I had tried out a few of the Ubuntu board solutions before coming here...
In case anyone else with an XPS 12 is having this problem... one thing I tried that has helped was to create a UUI USB stick for the live install. Now I can boot into Ubuntu 13.04 with the USB plugged in... and if I were willing to completely wipe my HDD, I could do a clean install. But I'm still not able to dual boot yet.
ieee488
4 Operator
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11.1K Posts
0
October 3rd, 2013 18:00
You'll get better answers over at http://www.ubuntuforums.com
I would go with 12.04 because the security updates are supported until 2017.
emk2203
3 Posts
0
October 9th, 2013 05:00
Since the machine is new, it is much better supported in later versions of Ubuntu. I get mine on 21 October, which is one week after the release of Ubuntu 13.10, and I am going to install 13.10 right away. I already read from others who installed the beta that it works quite well, but you need to adjust all the touch settings to your liking (they are set to conventional operation after install).
bakinmola
2 Posts
0
October 10th, 2013 09:00
Thanks but I had tried out a few of the Ubuntu board solutions before coming here...
In case anyone else with an XPS 12 is having this problem... one thing I tried that has helped was to create a UUI USB stick for the live install. Now I can boot into Ubuntu 13.04 with the USB plugged in... and if I were willing to completely wipe my HDD, I could do a clean install. But I'm still not able to dual boot yet.
The instructions for creating the UUI are here: http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows