I have become recently aware that Kubuntu development is now being handled exclusively by Blue Systems, and I believe a name change should be in order as it isn't really Ubuntu at all anymore short of the repositories and generic kernel (which all debian distros use the generic kernel) so herein lies my thoughts:
1) It is feature complete enough outside of Ubuntu to actually be a new distribution.
2)Canonical no longer develops this, nor provides support for it.
3)Canonical has their own agenda with Unity and doesn't want KDE associated with Ubuntu. (More on this in a minute)
4)They are closing their doors while developing their OS.
5)KDE Plasma Desktop itself is almost an entire OS, short of package management, xorg, and the Linux Kernel
6)You have to be very explicit with Xorg and other under the hood services when compiling KDE that changes core values of the OS
7)Lastly but certainly not least the name "Kubuntu" was an ongoing joke and I believe this to be a very serious choice for people
More to the Canonical agenda:
They want Unity development and with them closing their development doors to the public eye for 13.04 proves this. They have absolutely no interest in KDE whatsoever, and this is completely fine, the awesome folks at KDE are prime at developing such a strong desktop that little needs to be done to have a fully complete desktop. Canonical is obviously selling your information to Amazon and other partners and records all of your activity in Unity, and afaik, KDE and Kubuntu does no such thing.
Now for my cornered view:
Ubuntu is a trademark of Canonical, Kubuntu makes it sound like a "me too" distribution, which this is far from it. Linux Mint uses the Ubuntu repositories and their name stands on it's own. Now before you go on saying how I don't understand what goes on under the hood, you are entirely right. What I do understand, however, is marketing. This needs to be it's own brand rather than a spinoff me too product. Comparing KDE to the likes of Unity/Gnome Shell is like comparing apples to oranges really, and Linux Mint changed less about their flagship OS and has it's own brand. And I may not fully understand what Blue Systems specifically does, but from the looks of it, they spread themselves thin, they need to focus on one single KDE desktop entity like Canonical focuses on Ununtu with Unity.
Call it something new, something fresh, something that captures the essance of the purity of how it feels, how it flows when using it. Like a gentle breeze. The theme name is Oxygen, call it something like Haire OS, where the H is silent or something nifty and new, and soft sounding, not a hard A sound but like it sort of flows into the name when reading it. Something that captures the pure love that is KDE with the ease of use that Ubuntu brings to the table.
You could have differing opinions, but this is what I do for a living and I am quite successful at what I do.
1) It is feature complete enough outside of Ubuntu to actually be a new distribution.
2)Canonical no longer develops this, nor provides support for it.
3)Canonical has their own agenda with Unity and doesn't want KDE associated with Ubuntu. (More on this in a minute)
4)They are closing their doors while developing their OS.
5)KDE Plasma Desktop itself is almost an entire OS, short of package management, xorg, and the Linux Kernel
6)You have to be very explicit with Xorg and other under the hood services when compiling KDE that changes core values of the OS
7)Lastly but certainly not least the name "Kubuntu" was an ongoing joke and I believe this to be a very serious choice for people
More to the Canonical agenda:
They want Unity development and with them closing their development doors to the public eye for 13.04 proves this. They have absolutely no interest in KDE whatsoever, and this is completely fine, the awesome folks at KDE are prime at developing such a strong desktop that little needs to be done to have a fully complete desktop. Canonical is obviously selling your information to Amazon and other partners and records all of your activity in Unity, and afaik, KDE and Kubuntu does no such thing.
Now for my cornered view:
Ubuntu is a trademark of Canonical, Kubuntu makes it sound like a "me too" distribution, which this is far from it. Linux Mint uses the Ubuntu repositories and their name stands on it's own. Now before you go on saying how I don't understand what goes on under the hood, you are entirely right. What I do understand, however, is marketing. This needs to be it's own brand rather than a spinoff me too product. Comparing KDE to the likes of Unity/Gnome Shell is like comparing apples to oranges really, and Linux Mint changed less about their flagship OS and has it's own brand. And I may not fully understand what Blue Systems specifically does, but from the looks of it, they spread themselves thin, they need to focus on one single KDE desktop entity like Canonical focuses on Ununtu with Unity.
Call it something new, something fresh, something that captures the essance of the purity of how it feels, how it flows when using it. Like a gentle breeze. The theme name is Oxygen, call it something like Haire OS, where the H is silent or something nifty and new, and soft sounding, not a hard A sound but like it sort of flows into the name when reading it. Something that captures the pure love that is KDE with the ease of use that Ubuntu brings to the table.
You could have differing opinions, but this is what I do for a living and I am quite successful at what I do.
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