Advertisement
Promo

Desktop platforms Toolkit in association with http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;205413468;14699245;m?http://adfarm.mediaplex.com/ad/ck/2397-58840-22058-14

Ubuntu 9.10 brings karma to the market

Leader ZDNet UK

Published: 29 Oct 2009 14:52 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment
Ubuntu 9.10 brings karma to the market

Ubuntu 9.10 is the best desktop Linux yet. The eleventh Ubuntu in 10 years, it reflects the value in the evolutionary path chosen by Canonical under Mark Shuttleworth: regular, incremental upgrades, each focusing on different aspects of the OS experience.

There have been plenty of mistakes along the way, but the result is superb — usable, flexible, reliable and secure. It pays attention to real computer users doing real quotidian work — a rarity in IT in general and in OS design in particular. It is also unbeatable on price. Yet despite a decade of solid improvement and, of late, near-universal approval from the cognoscenti, it has a desktop market penetration in the low single digits. There is no technical reason for this, and so Ubuntu 9.10's technical advances will do nothing to help.

In the enterprise, the barriers to take-up for Ubuntu on the desktop are like standing stones, the legacy of the ancients. Most business IT is based on infrastructure policy decisions made decades ago, loved by the priesthood and highly resistant to change. Ubuntu may be a better class of stone, but it will take a move to the cloud to really move things on.

The consumer world is more interesting. Ubuntu gives retailers the chance to sell hardware with higher margins and more control. Logical economics suggests this would lead over time to a considerable presence. Instead, it is entirely absent. Whatever is keeping Ubuntu out of the retail channel is not technical, economic or practical, and not the result of an untrammelled free market.

It is instructive to compare the desktop with the mobile market. In the absence of any one actor maintaining a monopoly level of control over a channel, open source is flourishing alongside multiple proprietary options. There are many other factors that differentiate mobile and desktop, but none as striking — and as mobile, desktop and cloud converge, none that will get more important.

So while Ubuntu can be seen as a failure on the figures alone, it is succeeding in important ways. As an indicator of how badly broken the desktop OS market is, it is as vital as a canary in a coal mine. As a source of innovation, of community involvement and as a focal point in keeping Linux relevant to real people, it is unmatched.

Oh, and did we mention? It's also a very fine operating system.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
53 out of 61 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:









Video icon

Video

Microsoft Windows 7 Special Report Special Report

How Microsoft can make Windows 7 a success

How Microsoft can make Windows 7 a success

Comment Many businesses have given Vista a wide berth; Microsoft must focus on five areas to make sure Windows 7 doesn't suffer the same fate, argues TechRepublic's Jason Hiner

More Special Reports

Desktop Management Benchmarking

Test Your Desktop Management Systems

How good are your company's desktop management solutions? How do they compare with those of your peers?

Take two minutes to complete our new Desktop Management and Energy Consumption benchmark, and find out what issues your business needs to focus on.


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters