Mark Shuttleworth On Ubuntu's Lack Of Marketing 28
The LugRadio team writes "In the latest episode of LugRadio, the fortnightly Linux radio show, the team interview Mark Shuttleworth, head of the Ubuntu project. Mark talks about where Ubuntu is going, how (and whether) Canonical plan to make any money on the Ubuntu project, his role in the project, and (most importantly) why marketing isn't a good thing and what they're doing instead."
be easy to use.. (Score:2)
for what's it worth, one non-geek friend of mine finds ubuntu easier than mandrake.
Marketing 101 (Score:4, Insightful)
Marketing 101:
Some marketing is a good thing. For example:
Who is Mark Shuttleworth, and why should I care.
Who/what is Ubintu, and why should I care?
What's Lugradio? Do I really need to download and listen to a big audio file to find out why I should care?
Re:Marketing 101 (Score:2)
Re:Marketing 101 (Score:2)
Whatever happened to the interview? (Score:1)
ubuntu's theme (Score:1, Troll)
I found myself so distracted by the strange mesh of the African name, earthy color scheme, and "we are the world" esque startup screen that I immediately couldn't help but be turned off to the product.
To me, and maybe I am being incredibly anal (I dunno), computers and "tribal" go about as well together as shrimp and licorice. I simply don't like a product that--despite its si
Re:ubuntu's theme (Score:3, Informative)
Or if you simply don't like the theme, you can change it.
Re:ubuntu's theme (Score:1)
I have to admit that the name and colour scheme put me off, but on the other hand langoustines flambed in sambuka is a really great dish -- you should try it sometime!
WARNING (Score:3, Funny)
Re:2004 (Score:3, Insightful)
It depends on your expectations. Nobody expects Windows to be toppled for a very long time. I finished the switch from Windows to Linux early last year. I only use Windows at my job now, but I still have it installed in case I ever get the urge. I'm currently running Ubuntu, and I'm pretty impressed. For example, I run this program called Synaptic and I get to browse through a repository of 14000 packages (most from Debian), including the latest
Romans (Score:1)
Exactly. It's not something that happens on some specific date. What date did the Roman Empire fall? But it was falling, for an extended period of time, and that's what we're seeing with MS and Windows. It's observable, though like the Romans it's easier to recognise in hindsight.
It may well not be the case, anyway, nor be desirable for MS to be utterly wiped out - it will be sufficient for the OS market to bec
Re:2004 (Score:2)
Thats funny you said that. I just switched to Linux last year, mostly because of the creation of Ubuntu. I liked it so much that I am tempted by no OS, and this "new craze" is lasting. I am using the Hoary development version, and it does everything I wish with minimal headache. Thats just what I want out of an OS. Not something odd like brand trollish loyalty.
First Impressions (Score:1)
Now my thinkpad 600X is no one's power machine, but with 320 meg of ram it certainly met the requirements for the Ubuntu Live CD. The hadware is many years old and should not be a mystery either. SuSE 9.0 instal
Re:First Impressions (Score:2)
It was a new AMD Athlon desktop with an NVidia 6xxx card.
I needed to format an external USB drive as FAT, and could not do it under XP (long story... read about it on MS's site: FAT cannot do > 32Gb by default...)
So I decided to give Ubuntu Live a test... and it cored.
Mandrake Move worked.
-shrug-
Ubuntu has a friendly cover... should do well regardless then.
Re:First Impressions (Score:2)
Re:First Impressions (Score:1)
However, Ubuntu itself is a different matter. And it works fine on my Thinkpad T41
Re:First Impressions (Score:2)
However, this is being typed on an Ubuntu system. I get a bunch of "fatal" errors when I boot, but haven't encountered any problems as a result. Its choice in packages and Synaptic
Re:First Impressions (Score:2)
Re:First Impressions (Score:2)
Re:First Impressions (Score:1, Informative)
My Favorite Distro (Score:1)
It is now my desktop of choice. Previously my choice was windows:(. I fell in love with Gnome because of Ubuntu(or was it the other way around). It reminded me of a Mac how smooth ev
Snyde Remark (Score:2)
On the other hand I've tried ubuntu - I like it I've not really switched yet but Im certainly watching out for it as it seems to be quite a fast moving project.
Nick