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apachelogger, Kubuntu Core Developer and Master of the Minions.
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Originally posted by apachelogger View PostThis is not entirely accurate. Jonathan, Rohan and I (Harald) are currently working full time on Blue Systems projects (including Kubuntu). Aurélien is on a free software break and instead writing cool games for android http://greenyetilab.com/. Scott pretty much pulled out of development after the recent Kubuntu Council meeting https://skitterman.wordpress.com/201...-i-may-be-done. Actual volunteer developer at the time of writing is only Scarlett with Ovidiu having done some packaging but presently mostly doing web and marketing things as well as development in KDE.
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SOAPBOX:
Just reading more into it and the further releases by CC it is clearly a lawyer driven enterprise and because Jonathan was vocal about "IP" practices and that stepped on what Shuttleworth wants to do, charge for the use. It's all lawyer derived political $h!t. What I'm hoping is that Blue Systems can get the backing they need to take Kubuntu to the next level without the "buntu". Clearly the term Ubuntu has been twisted by lawyer drivel as always they do for anything. CC is a disgrace to the term.
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Originally posted by MoonRise View PostSOAPBOX:
Just reading more into it and the further releases by CC it is clearly a lawyer driven enterprise and because Jonathan was vocal about "IP" practices and that stepped on what Shuttleworth wants to do, charge for the use. It's all lawyer derived political $h!t. What I'm hoping is that Blue Systems can get the backing they need to take Kubuntu to the next level without the "buntu". Clearly the term Ubuntu has been twisted by lawyer drivel as always they do for anything. CC is a disgrace to the term.
Details on Incoming Funds - October 2012 to April of 2013. or what happened to them?.
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ub...ay/000548.html
donation to flavours in 2012
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ub...ay/000484.html
and a link for Canonical,
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/acco...=9780470246009Last edited by Danum; May 30, 2015, 06:04 PM.
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
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Originally posted by xennex81 View PostSomeone said that Shuttleworth wants to charge derivatives for the use of Ubuntu binaries. Is this true?
However, it's too easy to mix up licensing and trademark issues. Canonical own the *buntu trademarks, including kubuntu. That means they can attach pretty much any conditions they like to the use of the trademark, incluing a requirement to kiss Shuttleworth's feet and/or sacrifice your first born if they so desire. Free software projects in turn are free to decline those terms and not use the *buntu trademarks anywhere whilst still using the source code.
It's down to trademark issues, not software licensing, that you get iceweasel in debian rather than firefox.
What I don't get though is who can actually afford to pay for a binary license, even if Canonical agree something legal with the SFLC? Most free software projects are run on a shoestring and simply don't have the spare cash to pay. I bet that even Mint or Blue Systems could not afford to pay enough for a license to cover what Canonical must be paying in legal fees to sort the mess out.
My best guess with this binary licensing issue is that it is aimed at the cloud software market where ubuntu has had a lot of success and actually makes some money. Probably Canonical want to make sure no commercial company copies and exploits ubuntu for cloud servers and hence robs them of some income. *buntu flavours like kubuntu are probably just caught in the cross-fire with this issue.
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View PostShould it it be based on stable or Sid? I'd vote stable because a distro the is both polished and stable is, for me preferable to bloodshed. One of my pet peeves is development advancing to the next release without adequately addressing the nagging or annoying bugs in the current release. My experience with Kubuntu is that its LTS is STABLE.
Of course that would take significantly more resources.....
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The information I've been seeing is about charging for the use of their code. Trademark (which I do understand that to a degree) and other fees and such. If that information I've read is wrong then so be it but the amount of information seems to indicate that for the most part it's correct.
Now, it seems to me I remember a tiff with the Debian group not so dissimilar. Canonical wasn't communicating upstream there. So seems to be they want it their way only. No respect for Canonical.
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
- Jul 2011
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Originally posted by bendy View PostMy best guess with this binary licensing issue is that it is aimed at the cloud software market where ubuntu has had a lot of success and actually makes some money. Probably Canonical want to make sure no commercial company copies and exploits ubuntu for cloud servers and hence robs them of some income.
Interesting reading...
http://www.linux-magazine.com/Online...cial-statement
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My feeling is GreyGeek is writing something very solid here. My impression was that the discontent with Riddell stems from his disagreement. It seems political goals are being furthered. We may only know the tip of the iceberg. But it came to me across, earlier even, that the fight with Riddell is all about dismembering Kubuntu? It seems to match up. I feel so powerless but that is more my personal life. I have been disempowered, or allowed that to happen.
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I really don't think there is any real legitimate business in selling binaries (and/or charging distributors for licenses to use the binary repos), there are too many free options available and ubuntu doesn't really bring anything new to the table. It's been attempted before, without success.
But you can try to hinder competition to your existing business (support, server, cloud, etc.) with murky licensing terms of your binaries, which I think is Canonical's end game here (unless SFLC puts an end to it).
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The underlying fact is this: Unity and Gnome are crap. I'm not just expressing a personal preference here. The huge up take of Mate and Cinnamon are testament to that fact. Contry to what some people have said Mark Shuttleworth is totally correct to see Kubuntu as a threat. KDE was the dominant Linux Desktop before Ubuntu bigged up Gnome. KDE is the best desktop GUI to promote the growth of Desktop Linux. Its just not the best desktop to support Canonical's Phone / Tablet ambitions. Which is where they think the money is.Last edited by Rich Oliver; Jun 01, 2015, 01:33 PM.
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Originally posted by kubicle View Post... But you can try to hinder competition to your existing business (support, server, cloud, etc.) with murky licensing terms of your binaries, which I think is Canonical's end game here (unless SFLC puts an end to it).
Originally posted by Rich Oliver View PostThe underlying fact is this: Unity and Gnome are crap. I'm not just expressing a personal preference here. The huge up take of Mate and Cinnamon are testament to that fact. Contry to what some people have said Mark Shuttleworth is totally correct in see Kubuntu as a threat. KDE was the dominant Linux Desktop before Ubuntu bigged up Gnome. KDE is the best desktop GUI to promote the growth of Desktop Linux. Its just not the best desktop to support Canonicals Phone / Tablet ambitions. Which is where they think the money is.
Gnome, built on C, uses callbacks, whereas Qt uses a very powerful and easy to use Signals & Slots. Using QBLOCK as the first command in custom classes adds memory management, garbage collection and pointer cleanup automatically, among other things.
Michael de Icaza didn't like the Qt API because of its proprietary roots, claiming that it wasn't truly GPL, and wrote Gnome using GPL tools and releasing it under the GPL. Shuttlesworth adopted Gnome and the gtk+ API. Later, because of their tablet and phone plans, they dropped Gnome and created Unity, which they control completely. Although Unity is under a GPL license, AFAIK, the only platform it is usable on is Ubuntu.Last edited by GreyGeek; Jun 01, 2015, 07:48 PM."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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