Linked by Howard Fosdick on Mon 30th May 2011 22:04 UTC
Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Xubuntu Canonical Ltd., the company behind Ubuntu Linux, estimates that the product has over 12 million users worldwide. And why not? Ubuntu is free and it runs more than ten thousand applications. It has a vibrant user community, websites covering everything you might ever need to know, good tutorials, a paid support option, and more. Yet I often hear friends and co-workers casually criticize Ubuntu. Perhaps this the price of success. Or is it? In this article I'll analyze common criticisms and try to sort fact from fiction.
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RE[2]: The price of success
by jbauer on Tue 31st May 2011 08:42 UTC in reply to "RE: The price of success"
jbauer
Member since:
2005-07-06

How do you define success then? Considering that Ubuntu is one of the most widely used distros around, they have a huge number users ranging from complete novices to advanced users... wouldn't that be success?


Ubuntu is the one-eyed man in the land of the blind. No one else is even trying to take Linux to the masses anymore. Showing good judgment, I might add.


Success doesn't mean being the biggest or reaping the most money in, it means reaching a goal. And gee whiz; one of Ubuntu's goals was to become one of the most popular distros among non-advanced users, and they've reached that goal.


See above, that wasn't particularly difficult. Ubuntu is failing miserably at meeting the main goal that was set for it:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+bug/1

Maybe the real issue is that goal was never realistic in the first place. That's the difference between hype and hard facts.

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