> I think this is actually a legitimate excuse. I’m not interested on number of new installs, but people running applications.īecause committed users often become contributors. A lot of times I hear about people leaving Ubuntu and going back to Windows. Every now and then you hear about people leaving Fedora, trying another distro. But how many people stick with it, through several upgrades? I see a lot of long-term users on Fedora. It’s great that people install Ubuntu regularly. I’ll take Anaconda Preupgrade (and even Fedora’s YUM-RPM repos) over Ubuntu’s APT-DPKG repos any day when it comes to upgrading. Ubuntu when it comes to upgrades? Sometimes people argue Debian APT-DPKG, and the strong Debian Packaging Guidelines, not realizing that Ubuntu can’t leverage them. I deal with Ubuntu desktops for my friends regularly. Because I’m running more and more into people who are running Fedora and saying, “I cannot believe I didn’t use this simply because I didn’t try it.” Luckily the stigma has died over the last 7 years, and most naysayers are largely ignored. I personally think the stimga on Fedora is that Red Hat is involved, and people mis-quote from third-hand comments back in 2002-2003. Marketing in the red or producing GPL code in the black? Which probably explains why Red Hat has a billion dollars of cash in the bank, while Canonical is still continually reinventing itself to make any profits at all.Īnd with distros that come and go, which is more important …Īnd finally, what is more important from a long-term, GPL producing standpoint … The world is full of talkers and doers, and in the long haul, people are usually smart enough to figure out which is which. If anyone at Canonical even bothers to respond to this analysis (which I doubt they will), I’m sure it’ll be the same old song-and-dance about how everyone collaborates, and everyone competes, and everyone wins, and the strength of the open source model, and not a fair comparison because Red Hat is so much bigger, and distro wars are bad, and can’t we all be friends, and yadda yadda yadda. In the ONE area where Canonical claims to have the MOST customer focus and the MOST engineering expertise, Red Hat still outproduces them ***16 TO 1***. They’ve done an exceptionally good job with this sleight of hand, but the facts are the facts, aren’t they? Not only that, but they then have the gall to suggest that Red Hat should change its release schedules to make it even easier for them to ride the gravy train (while at the same time making the spectacularly outrageous claim that Red Hat is actually a proprietary software company - LOLWUT?) Canonical has been riding on Red Hat’s coattails for years - not just down in kernel land, but also, we now learn, all the way up to the tippy tippy top of user space. They’ve been very successful at positioning themselves as the Eternal Champion of the Linux Desktop, and positioning Red Hat as the boring old has-beens who long ago abandoned the Desktop fight, and just do backroom server work that Real Linux People don’t care about. They’ve certainly given the impression, over the last several years, of having put a lot of work into GNOME. I mean, I always knew that Red Hat put in a lot of work into GNOME, because I saw it every day - but until now, I thought that Canonical *also* put a lot of work into GNOME. “You’re just mad because Ubuntu’s cooler than you,” the masses would say, and to be fair, there’s always been something to that. Of course, Red Hat engineers, being the upstanding sort of chaps that they are, never said a word about it, because they’ve always been too busy carrying the load - and it’s really never made sense for Red Hatters to complain much about it anyway, because it’s not the sort of discussion that ever benefits the complaining party. One of the most irritating things about working at Red Hat was watching Canonical take credit for code that Red Hat engineers wrote. If you doubt, for a nanosecond, that Canonical is a marketing organization masquerading as an engineering organization, then you’re either an unapologetic Ubuntu fanboy or you’re not paying attention. I’m just another cranky dude with a blog. Thanks, Dave Neary.Īn upside of not working for Red Hat anymore: I can speak frankly about this kind of issue, since no one really cares what I think anymore. In case you missed it: $SUBJECT is the percentage of contribution to the GNOME codebase.
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