Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 14th Sep 2010 22:42 UTC
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Member since:
2007-09-25
Imagine Canonical was evil and selfish. What would be their objective? They would want their product to be successful (as is the only way to survive), so they need users, and the way to do that is with a good user experience.
Nobody is denying that they have done good things for Ubuntu. The observation is that its only for Ubuntu, which means Canonical is not a member of the linux community, and that's fine, but they shouldn't be pulling PR stunts trying to make believe like they are.
That is fine, but Fedora goes for the home run; a public, completely open source driver that has no license issues and can be used by all the distributions.
Same with many other distributions which you have obviously not tried; e.g Fedora, OpenSUSE.
This wasn't developed by Canonical, and in fact it was deployed first on Fedora IIRC.
Clearly you haven't tried PackageKit, which was developed by Fedora, for all distributions and all package managers, and eventually Ubuntu would also use it.
They do care, but doing things right takes more time.
There will be eventually a company that has the right talent to create good UIs and is a good member of the open source community. At that point Ubuntu would disappear into oblivion just like it came.
Canonical doesn't need to fix anything, they just need to make their code distribution agnostic, and perhaps push things in a truly open source way. See how Fedora made PackageKit available to everyone for example. But they simply don't care.
And you are mistaken, Novell closed Xgl, compiz is something totally different.