Ubuntu plans desktop raid

More than 150 developers of the recently released Linux distribution Ubuntu are in Sydney working on storming the desktop market.

Developers at the Ubuntu Down Under conference are laying down the next stage of the distribution's evolution. The talkfest -- organised by Canonical, a company that sponsors the development of the distribution and funds a number of other open source initiatives -- kicked off yesterday.

The event comes after the April release of version 5.04 of Ubuntu. Ubuntu essentially takes a snapshot of a subset of Debian's 'Unstable' Linux distribution every six months and improves upon it for commercial use.

Debian does not formally support Unstable and advises against using it on commercial systems as it receives daily updates which can cause instability. However, Unstable is used widely within the open source community as a Linux desktop because it contains more recent versions of software than Debian's Stable distribution. In addition, Debian's Apt tool allows for easy software upgrades.

Laptop computers, multimedia, educators and original equipment manufacturers are the areas which Ubuntu will target with its current and upcoming releases. Ubuntu chief technology officer Matt Zimmerman said "there will be a very big focus on laptop support [and] better support for wireless networks including Wi-Fi and Bluetooth".

Canonical founder and ex-astronaut Mark Shuttleworth launched the six-day conference with an informal keynote that emphasised the importance of targeting multimedia users as a way to gather new end-users for the distribution and crack the education market.

The conference features many sessions dedicated to the evolution of 'Edubuntu', a new strand of Ubuntu designed to ease deployment of the operating system in thin client configurations suited to the cash-strapped environments prevalent in schools and developing nations.

Ubuntu developers are being joined in their efforts by members of the Linux Terminal Server Project, a prominent open-source thin client environment.

Another important strand of the conference aims to develop a 1.0 specification for Ubuntu's Launchpad project, that Zimmerman said aims to "bring together all the elements that apply to open source development. We want a single tool for package management, translation, bug tracking and code management that allows people to collaborate more efficiently than ever before," he said. "Launchpad is going to change the way the open source world works".

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Talkback 4 comments

    Ubuntu ruins the reputation of ...Anonymous -- 27/04/05

    Ubuntu ruins the reputation of Linux. On the surface Ubuntu looks VERY GOOD. Unfortunately they have decided to deliberately damage the spatial file manager. When you double click a folder it opens and the folder where it resided closes. The result is a nerveous dancing windows feel, where you combine the worst traits of navigational and spatial file management.
    If you are going to try Linux, try SuSe 9.3 instead.

    I have just recently installed ...Anonymous -- 28/04/05

    I have just recently installed Ubuntu 5.04 and LOVE IT! I haven't had the problem that anonymous has with Nautilus closing file windows when you open new ones. I realize that there is a steep learning curve for any Linux but I have gotten VERY tired of Windows crashing all the time, especially when I'm in the middle of an important project. I have been using Windows since ver 3.0 and DOS since ver 2.0. I have avoided Linux in the past because it looked too much like mainframe programming and there wasn't much software for it.

    After trying several times to ...Anonymous -- 29/04/05

    After trying several times to install it, it crashed during setup each time. On the same pc hardware, just installed another linux, Lycoris, and installed first time with not one issue...

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