Ubuntu founder urges Linux desktop to rival Apple
Shuttleworth also pushes services as a new revenue model to fund free software
July 23, 2008 12:00 PM ETInfoWorld - Ubuntu Linux founder Mark Shuttleworth urged development of a Linux desktop to rival what Apple Inc. has done and aired a vision of software changing the world.
Shuttleworth, speaking at the O'Reilly Open Source Convention (Oscon) in Portland, Ore., yesterday, also urged development of a new revenue model to fund free software and set his sights on a services-based mechanism. He also stressed the importance of interoperability with Windows.
Shuttleworth, CEO of Canonical Ltd., emphasized development of the Linux desktop as well as mobile development.
"Can we go right past Apple in the user experience we deliver?" Shuttleworth asked the audience. "Certainly, on the desktop experience, we need to shoot beyond the Mac, but I think it's equally relevant [in] the mobile space," Shuttleworth said.
"The challenge for us is to figure out how to deliver something which is crisp and clean" without sacrificing the community process, he said.
An audience member mentioned issues that would emerge in developing an Apple-like desktop in the free software world.
"It would be hard to do from a free software point of view, I think, because so many people have so many different opinions," said Brad Cavanagh, data reduction software engineer at the Joint Astronomy Centre in Hilo, Hawaii.
"That's not to say you can't get good things out of open source. Obviously, you can, but it's going to be tough," Cavanagh said.
Shuttleworth cited the need for new business models beyond advertising for free software.
"We had the Web for quite a long time before we figured out how [to do] ad-funded Web businesses," Shuttleworth said. But he said he didn't see how advertising could fund Web-based and free applications. He instead noted an emerging emphasis on services, calling them the engine for funding investments in free software.
"I think advertising works very well in the search case, but I don't think it's the sort of final solution in terms of business models to drive investment in free software," Shuttleworth said. "A more general view of services is required."
There will be tremendous innovation and experimentation with services, he said.
The free software world is in a quest for a complementary economic model. "When we look back at this era, we'll be looking at economics" as much as factors such as technology, Shuttleworth said.
Technology, he said, provides the opportunities to drive economic change, create wealth and change society. "The way we run our lives today, software determines more and more of it," Shuttleworth said.
"In a very real sense, everything is becoming software," he continued. "There have never been better opportunities to create wealth, better opportunities to change the world."
Reprinted with permission from
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Mark Shuttleworth
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