Canonical Halts Ubuntu CD Free-for-all 324
Barence writes to tell us that Canonical plans on limiting the number of "free Ubuntu CDs" that people can mooch from the company. The growing popularity of Ubuntu has seen a dramatic increase in the number of CDs being shipped via the free "ShipIt" scheme. The only people able to take advantage of this program now will be the usual community teams, contributors, and first-time Ubuntu users. "'While these CDs are often referred to as 'free CDs,' they are of course not free of cost to Canonical. We want to continue this programme, but Ubuntu’s growth means that some changes are necessary. Therefore we are adjusting how we handle CD requests to try to find the right balance between availability of CDs and the continued viability of the ShipIt program,' [Canonical's chief operating officer Jane Silber] adds. Extra CD copies of Ubuntu will still be available for purchase through the Canonical store, although they need to be bought in bulk. Five copies of the open-source operating system will cost £5 exc VAT and shipping."
Well just download the ISO. (Score:5, Insightful)
I never got any of the free CDs because I never wanted to wait. I guess it was handy for people that couldn't burn ISOs like most windows users untill they installed an ISO burning program.
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:5, Insightful)
I never knew they actually shipped those for free and many more probably didn't know either. They're gonna love this slashdot story!
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:5, Interesting)
Are trying to build your own CD chair?
http://www.geeksugar.com/688643 [geeksugar.com]
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Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:5, Interesting)
Because handing a screen printed real CD in a full color printed sleeve looks far more professional than some dork giving you a burned one with marker writing on it.
Honestly, when you introduce a new os to someone, making it look really professional goes a very long way.
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Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Insightful)
I am still on dial-up, CD and DVD are pretty much the only way I could do this distro. Same with XP service packs. Spent the past two months to try to get DSL but the apartment's wiring is too old.
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Insightful)
LoB
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Informative)
This is about Ubuntu, it's Linux for Humans which often includes morons.
The free CDs were also great for advocacy. With their sleeves, pictures and artwork they look a lot better to a new or potential user than a shiny just burned CD-R. I have been unable to find the ISO image that actually corresponds to the CD I was shipped in the past, but it could be that I'm not looking hard enough.
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Funny)
This is about Ubuntu, it's Linux for Humans which often includes morons.
What kind of paradise do you live in which only 'often' includes morons? And where the hell do I apply for a visa?
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Insightful)
By morons, do you mean "Windows experts with no Linux experience", or "Complete beginners who just want to surf the net"?
Once the internet works, Ubuntu is fine for complete technophobes. It only gets to be high maintenance why you try to do interesting things.
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Hate to sound snarky...but the free ISOs were great for those who were not saavy enough to burn their own CDs.
Did you miss the part of the summary that said first-time users could still get free CDs? I would suspect that even the average moron could figure out how to burn a disc, or at least get instructions from someone on IRC or the wiki or forums, after using Ubuntu for 6 months.
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Insightful)
or, alternatively, people who lived in rural areas and who didn't have nearby high-speed internet access. It doesn't have to indicate some sort of insufficiently-technical person. Just how...difficult...do you think Ubuntu is to use as a desktop anyway?
At this point, it's far more useful to people who do events where they teach Ubuntu usage and hand out the free CDs. I've been in a couple groups in the past that would get boxes of the ubuntu cds, and then hand them out at such events.
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Insightful)
What a pompous asshole. Some of us don't have a high speed internet connection to download the iso.
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Well just download the ISO. (Score:4, Funny)
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good to see they've not given it up entirely.
LoB
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Hell, I never even bothered with CD's. You can make a live-USB version with minimal effort. If they really wanted to make it easy for people to install, they'd have a download packaged into a self-extracting executable which also writes a boot-record to the flash drive. That way even people who don't know how to burn CD's would be able to use it.
Of course, I suppose that anyone who doesn't know how to burn a CD would probably have a hell of a time trying to figure out how to make the computer boot from U
Probably people abusing the system (Score:5, Informative)
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Probably people that think it's some limited promotion to create buzz, then start charging once the demand coming it. They'd probably be very confused about the whole model. "It's free" "Now, yeah so I'm ordering a million" "No it'll stay free" "???" "It's free software" "But, but..." It's not just bean counters that throw a divide by zero error when they encounter free things.
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Probably people that think it's some limited promotion to create buzz, then start charging once the demand coming it.
No, it's just some of us weren't able to complete our "AOL trial CD" thrones [cynical-c.com] before AOL got stingy.
Re:Probably people abusing the system (Score:5, Interesting)
Stopping the shipping of free CDs is a long overdue but unfortunate move.
CDs were absolutely the only way to obtain a linux distro for me, and canonical's generous free shipping saved me(and countless others in 3rd world countries) by providing the discs.
However i have seen enough rampant abuse of this, so much so that i would rather see a few thousand people unable to use linux because they cannot obtain CDs than canonical shutting down because of the greedy unscrupulous jerks.
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Ubuntu seems to have hit the big time (Score:5, Interesting)
Ubuntu seems to have hit the big time, riding off the Win7 release.
There's half-a-dozen mainstream news sources that are mentioning Ubuntu in their coverage of Win7, some are even holding it above MS's OS
Eg.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/26/kellner-linux-hits-user-nerve/ [washingtontimes.com]
9.10 is really nice (Score:3, Informative)
I have it running on my old D610, it's very nice. They have improved the software center, a lot. Much faster and easier to use. Imported all my settings and desktop from 9.04, no problems. Boot up seems about the same to me, but overall it seems faster. The default theme is very nice and the fonts are clear and legible.
Overall I like it a lot. Good timing for release of 9.10, too. If you're going to change everything, might as well try something else first. What do you have to lose?
It's reasonab
Re:9.10 is really nice (Score:4, Informative)
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I just installed 9.04 this weekend! I didn't bother burning a copy. I just pointed VMware at the ISO and it installed it on the VM.
Re:9.10 is really nice (Score:5, Interesting)
It occured to me that it would be fun (and possibly significant) to ship ubuntu with a tool to make new ubuntu CDs. Of course you can do that with the built in CD burning tool but I mean making the process a bit more explicit with a prominent menu option (Make new Ubuntu CD) which asks for the install CD, extracts the ISO, burns a new CD ancd optionally prints the official CD label.
Its the kind of functionality you won't be seeing in Windows 7 any time soon.
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That's a really good idea. I hope someone from Canonical is reading. A SHARE button somewhere that burns a Ubuntu disk.
Bonus points if it has the ability to burn the same desktop theme and layout. Some when someone says, "Hey, your desktop is really cool." You can click a button and hand it to them, minus your data hopefully.
You won't see that in Windows 7 any time soon, either.
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Agreed. Even cooler, especially considering the clusterfsck that the XP-to-7 "upgrade" process is: be able to put the CD in a dri
Re:Ubuntu seems to have hit the big time (Score:5, Interesting)
Ubuntu seems to have hit the big time, riding off the Win7 release.
Maybe we can help Ubuntu a bit this week, burning and giving away Ubuntu 9.10 CDs through places like craigslist.
I haven't figured out the ad text yet, but I think a title along the lines of "free upgrade for Windows users" would get people to read the ad.
I figured the text could mention the ability to try it before installing, the ability to dual boot, the included memory tester (something that would avoid one of the problems with Win7 installs), the speed boost seen on some machines due to it being leaning and not having the overhead of antivirus software, the great free apps included, the easy of finding adding/removing apps, freedom from registration keys and ads, freedom to copy.... great additional effects/features with a modern GPU... should include something about minimum RAM requirements. Maybe mention that Mac switchers could keep the old PC around to run Windows games, and be safely used for net access through Ubuntu.
Something simple looking, like a list format might be easily understood?
A bunch of us working on this could have an impact.
Ubuntu : The New Efficiency (an MS slogan that fits Ubuntu much better)
Get it in the stores (Score:4, Interesting)
One of ubuntu's (and Linux in general) main obstacles is the lack of public awareness. You go to a computer store and everything on offer is pre-loaded with windoze...it's as if no other O/S exists. What Canonical really need to try to do (and I appreciate that this would not be without cost) is get the CD's in the stores so that punters buying a new computer will see it as a viable alternative to M$ products. Ideally, of course it would be nice if manufacturers could offer it pre-installed across their ranges as well. Also, as many people are hugely suspicious of anything 'free' and anything 'new', packaging it with a (sensibly priced) support service might be another way of 'selling' Linux to the masses.
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They NEED to charge for it too. People see free and they think "it must be crappy if it's free".
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Unfortunately, it is impossible to get something in stores without charging for it. Because the stores will surely charge you for the privilege of having anything in there.
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You go to a computer store and everything on offer is pre-loaded with windoze...it's as if no other O/S exists
The OEM system install has been the gold standard in the consumer market for the better part of thirty years.
Hardware and software ships as a factory-tested and generally well-balanced system for its intended - advertised - use.
The buyer has a warranty - the toll-free number for support. He doesn't need to google for a solution. He doesn't need his son-in-law.
The DIY Linux OS install is never goin
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I'm foreign, so you'll have to explain,
what is a moonie? (sounds like some '70s kids show)
Re:Ubuntu seems to have hit the big time (Score:4, Informative)
He is referring to Sun Myung Moon who is a self described messiah and the leader of one of the largest cults in the world -- the Unification Church. They are famous for their mass weddings.
Anyways, Moon owns the Washington Times newspaper.
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A while back they bought the Washington Times.
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The others who have chimed in are correct.
The Washington Times also skews distinctly conservative in its political coverage, which isn't particularly relevant in this case, but it does serve to illustrate the distinct difference between the Washington Times and the Washington Post .
Oh no. (Score:2)
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I just got an AOL CD in the mail this past weekend.
First time in ages.
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Reasonable (Score:2)
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If you install Ubuntu on a hackintosh, doesn't it stop being a hackintosh?
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UNetbootin (Score:2)
If they offered a quick "Load Installer on CD/USB" program (would take some programmer, what, ten minutes to write something like that?..), I think they'd get a lot more people giving it a try.
Does UNetbootin count?
Just torrent it (Score:3, Interesting)
I just used the torrents. This way I get a disk in under two hours and shared the bandwidth.
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I just used the torrents. This way I get a disk in under two hours and shared the bandwidth.
Don't let the RIAA hear about this. They'll sue you from orbit, and let God sort it out.
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Shows what little you know about software piracy. It's the BSA that sues you for downloading Linux torrents. Well, I suppose those conga drums when you log in could be considered a recorded performance.
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Shows what little you know about software piracy. It's the BSA that sues you for downloading Linux torrents. Well, I suppose those conga drums when you log in could be considered a recorded performance.
What, the merit-badge guys? I'm not buying it.
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Sending the CD via post might be good for those on really bad internet connections or with transfer limits that might want to try it out.
Otherwise the 4-6 weeks wait most likely makes other people to just download or torrent ISO.
Re:Just torrent it (Score:4, Funny)
You damn pirates think you get can everything for free, even things that are free to begin with!
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Do YOU use tap water? Why? Why aren't you supporting American bottled water business like a good capitalist?
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Two hours? It's just a CD isn't it? That takes 18 minutes on my slow connection here. Tops.
*raises his share ratio to 94% of upload rate* Here, I hope that helps. :)
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Two hours? It's just a CD isn't it? That takes 18 minutes on my slow connection here. Tops.
I was thinking DVD, and was being generous. 2 hours is still an order of magnitude less that 2-4 weeks.
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Served it's purpose (Score:2, Informative)
Why not start a donation fund for these? (Score:5, Interesting)
I would think they'd have some success starting a fund people can optionally donate a few bucks to, to help offset shipping and production costs on the free CDs they send out. Then simply tell people that if the fund runs dry, shipping of CDs gets halted until more donations are made.
I suspect the majority of people requesting the free CD are doing so because they're in a situation where downloading and burning the ISO image is too troublesome (limited bandwidth like some corporations have, or someone using satellite broadband where they have a transfer cap before getting charged per K downloaded, etc.). Asking them to kick a few dollars back into the fund after they install and start using the product doesn't seem like a big deal.
Obviously, it'd still be a good idea to track addresses and enforce a "one copy per mailing address, per release" rule....
Ubuntu CD's (Score:4, Interesting)
I would happily buy them from Amazon, if Amazon had up to date Ubuntu CD's. Its especially useful when you need a DVD and don't want to wait
Offer some Value added options (Score:2, Funny)
Make available via outloets like Netflicks? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Outdated System is Outdated (Score:2, Funny)
Netbook remix on USB? (Score:2)
I have 9.10 running off a flash card and everything is working properly - with no email setup, encrypted home, and browser history deleted on exit it's now my internet banking appliance, but I'm getting close to putting it on the HDD too.
This once again proves the old adage... (Score:3, Insightful)
"Freedom isn't free"...
(It costs $1.05...)
Gee.... (Score:5, Informative)
....What a wonderful problem to have.
Why do we need CDs at all? (Score:2)
There has got to be some way to install Ubuntu without having to boot from a CD (regardless of whether said CD is obtained by mail or by burning an ISO).
Why can't there be a software program that is run in Windows, and it creates a partition and a installs a boot loader, so that you can install ubuntu in windows, restart and boot in ubuntu? I know there are already partition makers that run in windows, how hard would it be to put an ubuntu image in a newly made partition.
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It may be possible to do this through the "do cool stuff during boot up" API (which is used for scandi
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Wubi? http://wubi-installer.org/ [wubi-installer.org]
Re:Why do we need CDs at all? (Score:5, Informative)
scratched (Score:2)
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Wasn't there a site that sold cheap CDs with a lot of Linux distros?
I bought a couple of them until I got broadband...
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Try Gentoo -- if you have the patience for it. Gentoo offers the, by far, best community with detailed HOWTO's on almost anything. It takes a little reading and practice but once you get the hang of it it'll be worth it.
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Nah, I would recommend Gentoo to this guy. After all, he did say:
Whatever OS I run, I run to get work done, not to tweak or play around with crap (I got enough of that in the early 90's).
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Gentoo?
He said we wants to get work done, not tweak or play around with crap. Any major distro would be better suited than Gentoo.
That's only the initial Gentoo installation. Once you have it up and running there's no tweaking or playing around -- unless you want to. He seems disatisfied with some choices of Ubuntu, if he switched from Debian my guess is that there was something he felt was better elsewhere. My point is if you run Gentoo you set up whatever you want, and after that if you want to change it to become something you want it to be -- there's simply no need to change dists. You'll do that with Gentoo. I know, I know, it's
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I've been using Ubuntu 9.10's prerelease for about a month or so and it's been so stable I have no desire to go distro hunting again.
Re:Ubuntu or Debian? (Score:4, Insightful)
No OS is one size fits all, so a little tweaking is inevitable. Debian is intended for everyone, so it's fairly easy to get set up the way you want it, and then forget about forever. Ubuntu is targeted towards the lowest common denominator, so if your needs are different from most you might have a little more hassle getting it the way you want it.
Re:Ubuntu or Debian? (Score:5, Funny)
You should try UnixWare, imo it's a lot better than Fedora. And it's backed by SCO, which is a lot larger and older than Red Hat. :p
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The even have a new Small Business Edition [sco.com] with support for up to "1 USERS" and "1 GB" of RAM. Imagine, a billion bytes of memory, all in a single PC!
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You should try Fedora, imo it's a lot better than Ubuntu/Debian. And it's backed by Red Hat, which is a lot larger and older than Canonical.
Horses for courses. I love Fedora, but you don't get long term support. Don't forget CentOS [centos.org] which is also an RPM based free distro.
Actually, CentOS/Fedora and RHEL together make quite a nice solution since they have many similarities and you can just switch between them according to the particular needs of a particular application.
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In my experience Fedora is a bit faster and easier to customize but does take some work to get set-up. Ubuntu by contrast is almost guaranteed to work correctly as soon as you install, but expect pain if you stray too far from the beaten path.
I would say that because of this, Ubuntu is a closer match to the GP needs -- "I run to get work done, not to tweak or play around with crap".
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Fedora doesn't suck, but last time I tried it, Ubuntu was better. And, I'm not sure being backed by RH is a good thing. ;)
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Fixed that for you.
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Re:Remember kids...Canonical is a private company (Score:5, Informative)
It's also a tax shelter country that the founder was born and raised in.
I've always though the Ubuntu folks were particularly generous giving those CD's away. I mean it's not like they were demos or trialware or something.
Re:Remember kids...Canonical is a private company (Score:5, Informative)
It should be quite hard to confuse Isle of Man and South Africa, so maybe I'm missing something...
Could someone explain how this is informative?
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Hint: neither are in the US.
tax sheter country!! (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah, man. Parents these days!! I mean, they had to go and give birth to a child in that country just so that when he grows up and creates a company, he will get tax benefits!
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Well, they've got "Canon" in their name... (the "boom" kind, not the "say cheese!" kind).
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The boom kind has two 'n's in the middle. The "say cheese" kind, I assume, is the one that has roots in the same word, as it implies accuracy and permanence.
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*whoosh*
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what I wonder is how will they enforce this? what if any identifying information will they ask for to ensure two accounts are not the same person?
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