New Ubuntu Foundation Announced 315
AccUser writes "Mark Shuttleworth and Canonical Ltd, founders of the popular Ubuntu
Linux-based operating system, have today announced the creation of The
Ubuntu Foundation with an initial funding commitment of US$10m. From the article: 'The Ubuntu Foundation will employ core Ubuntu community members to ensure that Ubuntu will remain fully supported for an extended period of time, and continue to produce new releases of the distribution. As a first step, the Foundation announces that Ubuntu version 6.04, due for release in April 2006, will be supported for three years on the desktop and five years on the server.'"
This is exactly what is needed (Score:5, Insightful)
If Linux ever becomes mainstream, it will be because of distributions like Ubuntu.
I see a problem (Score:3, Insightful)
They freeze a version of Sid. Then make it really stable, then release it. More Ubuntu developers != more Debian progress.
Ubuntu is built of Debian and therefore if Debian continues to worsen it will be a bad thing for Ubuntu. This is why it is one reason all those thousand of Debian based distros are bad, too man developers doing the same thing - polishing a frozen Debian release for their own distro.
Hopefully, Ubuntu and Debian can become closer linked and Ubuntu
Re:I see a problem (Score:4, Informative)
Ubuntu is a Debian derivative, but they are not mooching off of Debian. Ubuntu is providing value to its users and Debian. If you look at the Debian Gnome 2.10 packages, you see Ubuntu finger prints all over it.
Also Debian is not worsening. Its changing. THe project has become too large for the old, informal ways to work. Debian is evolving and though there are growing pains, its getting better. With the rise of teams and more formalization, Debian is looking healthier and healthier every day. They finally released Sarge, and now it looks as though Etch will be out in a timely manner.
Seriously, Debian isn't sick, its just changing. Ubuntu and Debian also already work very well together. Reference the Gnome 2.10 packages and the upcoming switch of debian to xorg. Both have Ubuntu Developers deeply involved because they are also Debian Developers and as Ubuntu Developers have already gone through it.
Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:4, Insightful)
Isn't it time that some of those efforts were combined to get some kind of weight behind Linux as a whole, or are companies like IBM and Novell already moving into their respective trenches when linux on the {Desk, lap, floor}top takes off? While i can understand these companies having their own distro as has been traditionally the case, but do we REALLY need another non-profit foundation that thinks it can topple the 800 pound Red Gorilla on it's own while trying to reinvent the wheel and juggling a mix of community support and paid support? I'm not trying to be an anti-linux jerk, i'm just wondering what Ubuntu has to offer that isn't in another distro already.
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:5, Interesting)
Obviously in the real-world (!) we all just want something that works the way we want it to, without having to scratch around every distribution. Personally, I think that Ubuntu [ubuntu.com] does it for me.
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:5, Insightful)
Today, things have basically contracted to Ubuntu, Gentoo, Novell/SuSe, Debian and Mandrake on the desktop and the Red Hat family and Debian on the server. The other desktop distros (Turbo, Caldera, Lycoris, Xandros, Lindows/Linwhatever, and the rest) have mostly faded. In the next few years Ubuntu will cannibalize the remaining Debian desktop share, and Mandrake has been spinning its wheels since version 7. The consolidation you're looking for has already happened -- remaining niche players like Yellow Dog don't affect the overall picture.
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the answer is that DistroWatch rankings are completely meaningless. KANOTIX is more popular than Red Hat? PHLAK is more popular than SuSe? Who the hell reads those pages at all? Is somebody getting up every morning and checking to see what version of Postfix is current on Mandows or AGNULA?
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
I just wish somebody would bloody well advertise the stuff properly. I keep seeing ads for Windows on the TV set - where are the ads for Linux? Surely SOMEBODY has enough money to put out at least a couple of ads to raise awareness...
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Re:Huh? Terminology please (Score:3, Informative)
The apt suite is Debian's package management system.
Re:Careful about those one line summaries (Score:3, Funny)
Give me some credit, it's a pet robot turtle.
With fricken laser beams shooting out of its leg holes.
Perhaps they could merge (Score:5, Funny)
Ok, so now we have Ubuntu, Gentoo, Suse, Red hat, Mandriva, colinux, Yellow dog, Caldera
If they merged we could have UbunTuseYellowCoDrivaDeraDogHat.
If nothing else the domains should be readily available.
Re:Perhaps they could merge (Score:3, Funny)
If nothing else the domains should be readily available.
Hah. I've been sitting on that one for a while. My pot of gold is so close I can feel it.
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:5, Informative)
Mandriva was doing pretty good about your request, merging Mandrake, Connectiva, and Lycoris... It seems to be more aimed at the desktop than the server, although Mandrake has good server products too.
However, after being a Mandrake user for 3 years, I switched to Ubuntu for its easy install and upgrade path, in addition to maintaining more recent software. I hope that Ubuntu abosorbs some Debian distrobutions (Knoppix, knoppmyth, etc.), while maintaining their simplicity.
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2, Insightful)
News flash: they wont.
Most users only care that their desktop works for 1-3hrs some evenings and weekends, not weeks of uptime, so they don't always have the problems with stability that more demanding users encounter.
They don'
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
While I understand your point, I don't think the distro has much to do with the way in which a given GUI toolkit is used. Gnome can be abused every bit as much as KDE. It all boils down to whether or not the contributors to open source software are willing to go the extra milw when it comes to how they set up their UI.
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Why does every country and every
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Some countries / or smalltows make their own distros because they prefer to support a "home made" project than a forein one. I know that at the end it is an International project, but it "feels" like made in X (where X is the country in question). Hardware compatibility is another issue. In Southamerica we have another hardware not found elsewhere. Sure, most top US brand hw are available, but mid/low-range hw are characteristic of a region. Lo
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Doesn't Ubuntu have its roots in Debian? Why should we ditch Mandrake or Slackware? I happen to like Mandrake a lot.
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Yes Ubuntu has roots in debian but so does like 90 other distro's out there. Problem with this crowd is in 3-4 years when ppl are tired of ubuntu they'll switch to the next latest and greatest thing. This community changes too much. I would bet 50k (if i had it) that Ubuntu will be forked into a project that initially has some support then dies taking have of ubunto's users with it who even
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2, Insightful)
Isn't it time that some of those efforts were combined to get some kind of weight behind Linux as a whole
Yeah, and isn't it about time that Mac OS X, OpenBSD, FreeBSD, Darwin, and NetBSD all consolidated their efforts? After all, they are all BSD.
Yeah, and isn't it about time that Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris and SCO Server all consolidated their efforts? After all, they are all UNIX.
Yeah, and isn't it about time that Linux, Mac OS X and Windows all consolidated their efforts? After all, they are al
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Suse and Redhat are going after the enterprise market, and are out to profit by providing enterprise level support.
Lycoris and Linspire seek to take over the desktop market.
Ubuntu and Gentoo are free, open distros, and AFAIK Gentoo isn't really something that's commercially available....
Caldera - isn't that SCO??? Do they even matter?
It's all about choice my friend.
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not trying to be an anti-linux jerk, i'm just wondering what Ubuntu has to offer that isn't in another distro already.
I haven't tried Ubuntu yet, but I think they must be doing something right, given they're the fastest growing Linux distro [distrowatch.com].
It does seem unoptimal though to have so much fragmentation, so much reinventing of the wheel. OTOH, each new company that tries their hand at the market, potentially improves Linux in some way permanently. Development would probably be faster if companies/gover
Re:Oh crikey, not another one! (Score:2)
Actually I think it's great to have so much to choose from. I don't know if Linux will ever rival Windows on the desktop, but it certainly won't die. Even if PCs as we know them pass away replaced by video game consoles and cell phones, Linux will still be there. Go Ubunt
Great News (Score:5, Interesting)
Long live Ubuntu! (And Kubuntu too)
Re:Great News (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Great News (Score:2, Interesting)
Developers, What?? (Score:3, Interesting)
While yes, we can grep through apt-cache and try to find all of the development packages we need, why can't they just provide a pseudo-package "ubuntu-devel" that has everything (gcc, make and friends, gtk2 dev libraries and docs, etc) wrapped up into a neat little package? This is one of the things I loved about UserLinux that hasn't quite made it into Ubuntu yet.
Re:Developers, What?? (Score:3, Informative)
'informational list of build-essential packages
If you do not plan to build Debian packages, you don't need this package. Moreover this package is not required for building Debian packages.
This package contains an informational list of packages which are considered essential for building Debian packages. This package also depends on the packages on that list, to make it easy to have the build-e
Re:Developers, What?? (Score:3, Insightful)
And develop what kinds of software? Most developers know what tools they require and install their toolchain. You have your developers for C++, C, perl, python, ruby, java, haskell, ocaml
Any developer that can't install their own toolc
Re:Great News (Score:3, Interesting)
For this to happen a couple of things need to be included in the distro. I took a look around the Ubuntu home page a couldn't tell if they were included or not, but:
For the mainstream to accept a Linux desktop, it needs mpeg3 playability out of the box. And flash. And Java. To my knowledge, no Linux distro ships a decent video player (well, the player's are there, just not the codecs - you have to go download them).
I'l
Re:Great News (Score:3, Insightful)
My response was to the "going mainstream" comment, so no, I don't really think it's unreasonable to expect those in a "mainstream" distribution.
When someone tells me "it'll be mainstream" that means it has to compete with not just Windows XP, but a computer purchased at the loca
Happy to hear it (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Happy to hear it (Score:2, Interesting)
Point, somewhat taken, as I started on Red Hat 5.0 - but I never felt they had a connection with the users like Ubuntu/Cannoncial has had, they always felt like a big company *trying* to be what OSS compaines should be. I feel Ubuntu is the real deal, and I stand by my statement.
I wonder if ... (Score:4, Funny)
How does Debian fit in? (Score:3, Interesting)
I am a bit confused because I see some people here give high praise for Ubuntu over Debian, things like how Debian is way too slow to release while Ubuntu is up to date, while others have pointed out that Ubuntu has the advantage where they can cherry pick the best things out of the x86 code that have gone through the rigorous testing in Debian.
From a support standpoint, when a security flaw is found, does Ubuntu fix it themselves (and thus make it available for Debian), or do they have to wait for the Debian packages to be fixed?
Re:How does Debian fit in? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:How does Debian fit in? (Score:5, Interesting)
I was going to mod you up so we could see a healthy discussion on this topic, but I'll reply instead.
I have to respectfully disagree. I run Ubuntu on my laptop, and I have switched the
Re:How does Debian fit in? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ubuntu strives to put together a cohesive distro without the infighting that happens so frequently. You must remember, time is money for these people. All the improvements on software that Ubuntu makes are available for Debian to pick up. Usually even submitted into Debian's bug system.
Re:How does Debian fit in? (Score:2)
"I am the black O/S in the woods with 10,000 young... IA ft'agn..."
and all that.
Re:How does Debian fit in? (Score:3, Interesting)
By keeping their incredibly slow support cycle, by not listening to other distributions that rely on Debian's apt system, they're really shooting themselves in the foot when it comes to keeping up.
While Debian I'm sure will continue exist, desktop Debian is certainly dead, and Ubuntu will most definitely take its place, especially with their new endowment and resolve. If you really want to think about it, Ubuntu really i
Start of Something Special (Score:5, Interesting)
Longer lifespans for Linux provides a level of security that will allow many users wary of switching over from Windows to start looking at a Linux distro as a serious replacement for their current OS. Just think: there IS an alternative to warning users that they have to buy a new OS for new features and security updates.
I'm only worried that theyll spend all $10m on pretzels and beer.
Re:Start of Something Special (Score:2)
Pizza! You forgot pizza!
Or am I splintering the Ubuntu Foundation in a bazillion different flavors now?
Re:Start of Something Special (Score:3, Funny)
Let's see... Ubuntu is based on Debian, which takes about three years to put together a new release. Coincidence?
Ubuntu is catching up (Score:2)
Asides from installing software, which is easier in Ubuntu, RHEL 4 or Fedora 4 should be easier than the current Ubuntu, as there's more system-config-* tools than Ubuntu GUI config apps.
Really impressed with Ubuntu (Score:5, Informative)
I've used Ubuntu as a rescue cd at work very reliably.
Can't wait until October for the next release.
What more could a company want? (Score:5, Insightful)
From my experience with Ubuntu (installed it with a friend on a brand-new powerbook), it is easy to use and works well. I really hope that the momentum Ubuntu is generating will continue... it is quickly becoming the best option for converting new users over to linux.
longer support period (Score:2, Interesting)
One thing I'd like to see is a looser coupling of the apps. and the O/S. I'm happy with a five year-old version of Windows, because I can trivially install new applications. Linux distributions encourage one-stop shopping, which is nice at first, but I shouldn't have to upgrade the entire O/S to get a newer version of Emacs. You can upgrade components piece meal; however, you lose some of the benefits of a tested
Re:longer support period (Score:2)
gamble or smart move? (Score:2)
Debian (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Debian (Score:2)
The reason is because they have a completely different structure and somewhat different goals. Same with Ubuntu vs. Debian. One is based off the other, but I'll bet if you compare the default package lists for both stable releases side by side, you'll see quite a few differences. Therein lies your answer.
about them bugs (Score:3, Interesting)
But with that out of the way, I really think there's room for improvement in the bug-squashing/support department.
For example, I reported a bug about three months ago that made it impossible to enable DMA support on devices connected to my ATA controller(i knew it wasn't a hardware problem, or bios misconfiguration since i had a gentoo install on another partition where everything worked fine).
Several users promptly confirmed the issue, and a nice person linked to a thread on the forums where the issue was debated. The issue wasn't too complicated, and was bacially a hotplug bug that was fixed by blacklisting the ata controllers driver module and then adding it to
The "problem" is, that it seems this bug is relevant for most i875 based motherboards(when the distro is installed on a sata disk, its then impossible to enable dma on the ATA devs), and its still not fixed in the repositories. To this day you still need to fix it manually, eventhough the bug is confirmed and very easily fixed.
Thats not very impressive if you ask me.
Re:about them bugs (Score:2)
Wrong link to Canonical, Ltd. (Score:3)
Ubuntu review (Score:5, Interesting)
Sound. I have to kill -9 the ESD process to get some applications to work. A lot of applications had to be tweaked individually after install.
Synaptic. Synaptic does its job, I can say that. But the user interface leaves a lot to be desired. I upgraded to Hoary yesterday. Why did that have to involve editing sources.list by hand?
Applications. Why the hell do newly installed applications need to be added to the menus manually? This is Ubuntu's biggest flaw. When you install a new program, you'd better know how to invoke it from the command line -- and good luck finding that out from Synaptic's description, which disappears after install anyway.
Firefox. Ubuntu's web browser of choice, Firefox, is unresponsive after opening new tabs. Firefox is much nicer in Windows. And IE for Windows is far more responsive than either.
Menus. I like the start menu organization. The "Places" menu is great. I was beginning to think that Linux was congenitally incapable of setting up the most important bit of UI on the system. The menu is even better in Hoary.
Folder Navigation. I don't like the fact that there is no back or up arrow when exploring file folders. This is massively stupid UI design.
All in all, it's a nice system. It's a million years behind Windows in usability; there is clunkiness present everywhere. But there are lots of free applications. As usual with Linux, it is so impossible to install or change anything without expert knowledge that you can safely recommend the system to your grandmother without the slightest fear that she will be able to mess anything up.
Re:Ubuntu review (Score:2, Interesting)
Sound. I have to kill -9 the ESD process to get some applications to work. A lot of applications had to be tweaked individually after install.
Synaptic. Synaptic does its job, I can say that. But the user interface leaves a lot to be desired. I upgraded to Hoary yesterday. Why did that have to involve editing sources.list by hand?
Applications. Why the
Re:Ubuntu review (Score:3, Informative)
Sound: That's a really crappy bug. I've not experienced it myself, but I can quite believe it. I believe that Desktop Linux is gradually converging on ALSA (I know at least that ARTS is dying off) as the "one true sound system", so hopefully this will be less of an issue as time goes by.
Synaptic: Agreed, that's pretty lame. The unfortunate thing is that it would probably be just an evenings work to add a GUI for selecting r
Re:Ubuntu review (Score:4, Interesting)
Granted, this can be a little intimidating for newbies. But after the first time, it's not that hard. The only tricky part is remembering to sudo.
Applications. Why the hell do newly installed applications need to be added to the menus manually?
Er, they don't. Give it an hour or two, and they will magically appear on their own. I know this from repeated experience (I'm on Ubuntu right now).
This is Ubuntu's biggest flaw. When you install a new program, you'd better know how to invoke it from the command line -- and good luck finding that out from Synaptic's description, which disappears after install anyway.
You can uncheck that option.
Firefox. Ubuntu's web browser of choice, Firefox, is unresponsive after opening new tabs. Firefox is much nicer in Windows. And IE for Windows is far more responsive than either.
This is true. On the advice of another Ubuntu user, I installed Galeon, and I've been much happier since. I'm perplexed as to why Firefox chews up so much processor time.
Folder Navigation. I don't like the fact that there is no back or up arrow when exploring file folders. This is massively stupid UI design.
In the preferences, on the Behavior tab, click "Always open in browser windows."
All in all, it's a nice system. It's a million years behind Windows in usability; there is clunkiness present everywhere.
Gotta disagree with you there. Windows seems far clunkier to me. I work for a non-profit, so I don't have much experience with XP, but the versions I see look like they're held together with baling wire. Ubuntu is the picture of elegance in comparison.
But there are lots of free applications. As usual with Linux, it is so impossible to install or change anything without expert knowledge that you can safely recommend the system to your grandmother without the slightest fear that she will be able to mess anything up.
Er, I think this is the first time I've heard dificulty of use discussed as an advantage. I'd phrase it as "You don't need to learn all that much to make changes, and if you don't want to learn anything, it will still work fine as is."
Re:Ubuntu review (Score:4, Insightful)
I have had three applications total appear on the menu out of the many I've installed. Nvu, VLC, and Bittornado (but not Bittorrent which I installed first). Freecraft, which I installed yesterday, did not show up on the menu (and had the sound problem) even after an X restart. In fact, no game that I have installed from Synaptic has shown up on the menu.
I agree that old versions of Windows are just as clunky as Ubuntu. But Windows XP came out years ago now. It's secure (keep it updated and don't be stupid), stable (on good hardware), and usable. Linux isn't competing with a monster with gaping flaws anymore. It's competing with a well-made product.
Re:Ubuntu review (Score:3, Informative)
Sound - fixed in FC4. ALSA dmix takes care of this for sound cards that can't do hardware mixing. It works for every ALSA app, which most programs now support. The "aoss" program can be used for apps which still use OSS (though it should be applied automatically ... expecting users to know this is silly)
Synaptic was never designed to have a good UI, it was designed as a frontend to apt-get. Try autopackage [autopackage.org] if you want software installs wi
Re:Ubuntu review (Score:2)
I have assumed that there is some way to get better navigation. But, as Joe user, why should I have to read up on how to do it? Besides, I've had more important things to waste my time fixing -- the broken sound mainly.
10m$, huh? (Score:3, Funny)
Oh... 10M$!!! Well then.
I am Ubuntu's target audience (Score:2)
Since then I've put Ubuntu on my main desktop as well, because my experience has been so positive. Did Ubuntu stop two potential installations o
Re:I am Ubuntu's target audience (Score:2)
After a few reinstalls with 2 experienced friends(had problems with the ATA100 drive), it finally works.
The Age of Ubuntu (Score:3, Insightful)
Debian's biggest problem, by far, is how long it takes to relase a new version (years). That's a packaging problem, because the new version is just a package of the packages already tested/debugged by the time the distro package is ready. Which means the bottleneck is testing the packages. Debugging is what consumes time, but testing and repackaging is what holds up the process.
Ubuntu now has the most agressive developers and distro team. And now it has $10M to work with. That goes a long way towards project management, getting Ubuntu releases every 6 months (their promise), rather than Debian's 3 years. All on top of Debian's base work. Many of Ubuntu's founders came from Debian core team members; more will likely join the better-funded project with the sparkling new brand name. I expect Ubuntu's pitch to their funders went quite along these lines.
The funders probably see a chance to take over as Debian's successor. They can get Debian's developers and userbase - that's practically all there is to Debian. Of course they won't get all users, because the Debian brand has loyalty, unless Debian terminates. And some users will leave a crippled Debian for a distro other than Ubuntu.
So unless Ubuntu can generate more users than Debian has, their move will result in a Debian2 smaller than Debian1. Quicker releases and a new start give them a chance. But that will really just let them stay the course.
Ubuntu needs a project that really takes off in their platform, the way APT did with Debian. I suggest an autoapt (easier)
or closely hyperlinked documentation (harder, but consolidates value much better). The autoapt, installed during the OS install, would subscribe users to patches, which would send email with recommendations, a changelog and hyperlinks to the source and installer. Making upgrades a snap, and reducing the TCO of the distro. As well as making that sysadmin task so easy that any user can do it, even if they aren't even expert enough to install the OS. Which will expand manifold the market of users skilled enough to use it, while making it more valuable to them. And to package developers whose SW will be "marketed" better. And to everyone using the platform, as security patches are more up-to-date in the field.
If Ubuntu replaces Debian, I want it to be better than Debian.
It's been a long while since Deb and Ian were an item. I wonder how long Debian itself can hold it together.
How Did These Guys Get $10M? (Score:2)
Just curious.
Re:How Did These Guys Get $10M? (Score:3, Informative)
What is the big deal about Ubuntu? (Score:2, Insightful)
I'll tell you what is the big deal about Ubuntu. (Score:3, Informative)
Disclaimer: I know a pretty good bit about the project seeing as how I'm a moderator (and one of the largest posters) on the forum.
For me personally Ubuntu just does a lot of the little things correctly. Its based off of Debian, so it has access to the what might be the biggest package repo
A Rose By Any Other Name (Score:2, Informative)
Re: The smiling women with the pokey nipples (Score:3, Funny)
Great! I can't wait to "employ" the "core" of certain Ubuntu community [ktown.kde.cl] members [rospot.com]!
Jesus wept...and puked... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll just lay some points down once and for all, and I don't care what anybody says, these are the facts as I observe them with my own eyes and the common-sense that logically concludes from those observations:
(a) More Linux = Big Win for everybody! I don't care what it is, how it works, how narrow it's market is, who funds it, who writes it, what they believe, or whether they make money. More Free/Open software enriches us all.
(b) Bill Gates must surely be laughing his fat moneycat ass off watching all the Linux tribes bicker and flame each other. Just try to keep this in mind, when Linux fights Linux, Bill Gates wins.
(c) Every distribution I've tried that was derived from/based on Debian worked for me. I've never heard the complaints about Debian-based distros that I've heard (and experienced) with Debian itself. It is indeed in Debian's best interest to take a backseat and continue maintaining the base packages, but leave assembling them into released operating systems up to other distros.
(d) If the above statement makes your blood pressure pop your eyeballs out of your head and steam shoot out your ears, the person you are mad at is the Debian founder as I read in his own personal blog. And you have no right to be mad about that, it's his distro and he speaks much good sense about it and I am agreeing with him and emphasizing his point. If Debian is that precious to you, then just download it's packages and make your own system, because that's all anybody else has ever done, anyway! Isn't that the selling point, you can customize it?
(e) Linux wouldn't be Linux if everybody doing something with Linux didn't have the right to do it. If you're mad at all the distros, there's nothing to stop you from downloading the tarballs and building it yourself. You can even call your arrangement the One True Linux, and say everybody else is a hypocrite and a poser and a lamer. I can download the exact same tarballs and say the same thing about my arrangement and about everybody else. The point being: The source and kernel are GNU/Linux. United! Completely! Steady as a rock! Everything else is what we make out of it, because Linux is and will always be a ball of clay. You can use that clay to build an idol to worship, or a toilet bowl, but you also can't stop anybody else from doing the same. Don't be surprised if somebody pisses on your idol or worships your toilet bowl.
(f) This has been a Public Service Announcement. Flames will be printed out and shredded into hamster litter, because /dev/null is mailing me bounce messages.
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:4, Informative)
I ordered 20 x86 versions and 15 x86_64 versions, and they arrived in a semi-timely manner.
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:2)
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:3, Informative)
dodgy delivery appears standard for "free" OS's (Score:2)
Amazon.com these guys are not.
When I downloaded Mepis, I paid a bit extra for the high speed
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:2)
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:2)
I got 8 x86 disks, 1 PPC disk, and 1 AMD64 disk.
the AMD 64 was the only one I really wanted, but I was able to pass out all the others...
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:2)
It came with a live cd and an install cd. I've been handing them out. You might want to reapply for the disks. Shit happens
Re:It would be nice if they actually sent out CD's (Score:2, Informative)
It's a great help for getting installation CDs since few people there have high-speed internet yet.
Re:Time for a name change? (Score:2)
Re:Time for a name change? (Score:2)
At least there's unlikely to eb an old lady's group that starts calling themselves the Ubuntus - as opposed to the Red Hat ladys...
How about Suse? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Time for a name change? (Score:4, Interesting)
I realise you're saying this tongue in cheek, but Ubuntu is an extremely fitting name. The concept of Ubuntu embodies exactly what the FOSS movement is/should be about.
Being South African myself I'm also very proud that someone like Mark Shuttleworth is putting us on the FOSS map.
Thanks Mark!