Thanks for all the Alliteration

Welcome

Article from Issue 289/2024
Author(s):

"We should try to work with these guys. They are just getting started, but I think they might be going places, and it will be good to make the connection." These were the words of Brian, my publisher, 20 years ago, when talking about an upstart new Linux that had recently appeared on the scene.

Dear Reader,

"We should try to work with these guys. They are just getting started, but I think they might be going places, and it will be good to make the connection." These were the words of Brian, my publisher, 20 years ago, when talking about an upstart new Linux that had recently appeared on the scene. This group had a way of looking like a community, but they were strangely more organized and directed than the lovable but too-often chaotic community distros of the era. And the name of this newcomer? It was so unlikely, and yet so memorable – once you heard it, you couldn't forget it: Ubuntu. When you asked them what the name meant, they would say, "It sort of means togetherness, or 'I can be me because you are you,' but the concept is too beautiful to translate directly into English." It is hard to believe that it as been 20 years since the first Ubuntu release. (Yes, it is also hard to believe that I've been doing this job for 20 years, but seriously, I had just started when this happened – I guess that means this is my 20th anniversary also.)

There was so much excitement about Ubuntu in those first few years. Although they were owned and backed by a for-profit company, a lot of volunteers were working for them for free just for the chance to be part of something. But honestly, they didn't act like a for-profit company. They gave their full distribution away – not a scaled-down "community edition." They flew volunteers to exotic meetups in cool European cities. And they really dreamed big. I think they truly wanted to be as ubiquitous as Windows. They even had a crowd-funding effort to launch a mobile phone project at one point, with the dream of converging phone and PC technology.

[...]

Use Express-Checkout link below to read the full article (PDF).

Buy this article as PDF

Express-Checkout as PDF
Price $2.95
(incl. VAT)

Buy Linux Magazine

SINGLE ISSUES
 
SUBSCRIPTIONS
 
TABLET & SMARTPHONE APPS
Get it on Google Play

US / Canada

Get it on Google Play

UK / Australia

Related content

  • Welcome

    It is 2010, and Ubuntu is riding the crest of a wave. The distro named for a principle of African philosophy that is "too beautiful to even say in English" had legions of loyal users and, perhaps more importantly, legions of enthusiastic volunteers, even though the project was actually backed by a for-profit company called Canonical.

  • Welcome

    The free software community loves it when FOSS projects find a place in the IT cosmos. When people who have never used Linux start talking about tools like LibreOffice and MariaDB, we get a warm feeling of accomplishment. However, many open source projects are maintained by for-profit entities, and once in a while, they fall off the open source wagon.

  • Welcome

    As our industry evolves, we evolve to stay with it. The goal, of course, is to keep delivering exciting and thoughtful content to our readership, and we're proud of how we've managed to do that through the years.

  • Welcome

    I feel like we entered a new era earlier this year when Google scientist Blake Lemoine declared that he thought Google's LaMDA artificial intelligence is "sentient," and that the company should probably be asking LaMDA's permission before studying it.

  • Welcome

    It is no secret that Ubuntu isn't the coolest, new-kid-on-the-block distro sensation anymore – actually that news is already a few years old. Still, Ubuntu has kept itself in the headlines with community dramas, desktop debates, and a crowd-funding effort to launch a mobile phone. The Ubuntu vision is so vast and enthralling that it is hard for the press – and the Ubuntu management – to let it go: a single unifying Linux popping up on phones, tablets, desktops, servers, and other devices that no one has even invented yet.

comments powered by Disqus
Subscribe to our Linux Newsletters
Find Linux and Open Source Jobs
Subscribe to our ADMIN Newsletters

Support Our Work

Linux Magazine content is made possible with support from readers like you. Please consider contributing when you’ve found an article to be beneficial.

Learn More

News