Ubuntu switches search back to Google
From: | Rick Spencer <rick.spencer-Z7WLFzj8eWMS+FvcfC7Uqw-AT-public.gmane.org> | |
To: | ubuntu-devel <ubuntu-devel-nLRlyDuq1AZFpShjVBNYrg-AT-public.gmane.org>, Ubuntu Desktop Discussion <ubuntu-desktop-nLRlyDuq1AZFpShjVBNYrg-AT-public.gmane.org> | |
Subject: | Follow up to Default Search Provider Changes for 10.04 | |
Date: | Wed, 07 Apr 2010 13:31:28 -0700 |
Each release we determine the best default web browser and the best default search engine for Ubuntu. When choosing the best default search provider, we consider factors such as user experience, user preferences, and costs and benefits for Ubuntu and the browsers and other projects that make up Ubuntu. Up until Ubuntu 9.10 these defaults have always been Firefox and Google. Earlier in the 10.04 cycle I announced that we would be changing the default search provider to Yahoo!, and we implemented that change for several milestones. However, for the final release, we will use Google as the default provider. I have asked the Ubuntu Desktop team to change the default back to Google as soon as reasonably possible, but certainly by final freeze on April 15th. It was not our intention to "flap" between providers, but the underlying circumstances can change unpredictably. In this case, choosing Google will be familiar to everybody upgrading from 9.10 to 10.04 and the change will only be visible to those who have been part of the development cycle for 10.04. Cheers, Rick
Posted Apr 8, 2010 14:14 UTC (Thu)
by bangert (subscriber, #28342)
[Link] (18 responses)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 14:36 UTC (Thu)
by leoc (guest, #39773)
[Link] (17 responses)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 15:30 UTC (Thu)
by colo (guest, #45564)
[Link]
Posted Apr 8, 2010 15:30 UTC (Thu)
by vonbrand (subscriber, #4458)
[Link] (15 responses)
Methinks the Yahoo! deal didn't go the way they wanted...
Posted Apr 8, 2010 15:36 UTC (Thu)
by JamieBennett (guest, #25846)
[Link] (14 responses)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 16:00 UTC (Thu)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link] (12 responses)
Sorry, but that is just the way it is. They are about the only Linux OS remaining that is focusing on popularizing Linux rather then concentrating on a servers or catering to their existing userbase.
See Also:
There is are good reasons for that. Occasionally killing sacred cows is going to be one of them.
Posted Apr 8, 2010 16:18 UTC (Thu)
by bboissin (subscriber, #29506)
[Link] (9 responses)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 18:53 UTC (Thu)
by fb (guest, #53265)
[Link] (2 responses)
Posted Apr 10, 2010 2:33 UTC (Sat)
by forlwn (guest, #63934)
[Link] (1 responses)
I made the following searches, now see what come out.
linux-2004 - 65.9 million hits
microsoft-windows-2004 - 32.6 million
Posted Apr 10, 2010 2:36 UTC (Sat)
by forlwn (guest, #63934)
[Link]
Posted Apr 8, 2010 19:32 UTC (Thu)
by jspaleta (subscriber, #50639)
[Link] (5 responses)
Without even getting into issues of cross-brand penetration and what that means for doing comparative Google trending...if we just look at Ubuntu as a brand you'll see that the Google trend doesn't really make sense. It's been essentially stagnant across 2009 and so far in 2010. That's in direct conflict with the public statements Canonical executives have made concerning their estimated userbase growth over the same time period.
Nor is Google trends a reliable measure of relative deployment popularity. For example Google Trends shows exactly the opposite relative relationship between blackberry and iphone that the latest market survey data shows. Google Trends would suggest Ipod is the market leader..when the more traditional market survey says its blackberry.
references:
http://www.google.com/trends?q=blackberry%2C+iphone&c...
Anyone holding up Google Trends data as a meaningful surrogate for product popularity is wasting your time and giving you a false sense of reality. Noone, anywhere, has a self-consistent testable market penetration interpretation of Google Trends that holds up to scrutiny as a valid analysis methodology. Its an easy thing to reach for, but it has no intrinsic value as a market penetration metric.
-jef
Posted Apr 8, 2010 20:19 UTC (Thu)
by bboissin (subscriber, #29506)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Apr 12, 2010 1:17 UTC (Mon)
by vonbrand (subscriber, #4458)
[Link]
What is the interest of the data, if no conclusions can be reached from it?
Posted Apr 8, 2010 20:36 UTC (Thu)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link]
I don't think that Google Trend is a accurate representation of deployments, but it is a somewhat telling marker for general interest.
Linux for years and years was just that something that people may have seen in a magazine article or saw mentioned in the news or something like that. Almost off-hand.
As time went buy a few people of the sort that tend to be interested in computers looked around and found out about Linux.
And Linux advocates combined with the netbook fad have actually gotten Linux out into the minds eye of the general public in a way that it never has before. It's gotten as close to mainstream as anything else.
And.... Linux has had VERY mixed results. This is not a result of Microsoft FUD or SCO or anything like that. This is just the average person is now exposed to Linux in the real world in ways that has never happened before.
Used to be if I was talking about computers in a group or talking about how to get rid of viruses or whatever and the subject came up and I would mention that I used Linux people would say: "Oh, what's that?"
Then I would have to awkwardly explain it in a quick way so as not to be a bore. Maybe tell them to download a Knoppix or something if they acted curious.
Nowadays those responses are mixed in with "You use Linux?! Oh, God; why?", to which I can only shrug and laugh and tell them it works for me.
Linux is the OS that refused to grow up. People who would be borderline interested are just starting to get tired of it due to chronic issues that never get seem to get solved on the desktop.
People that have had no interest to begin with still have no interest.
As far as professionals go, I think the majority of business IT folks are learning that Linux is a tool and there are very appropriate places to use it and thus the interest in the business sector is still going to increase as people's Linux skill sets continue to improve and systems becomes increasingly easy to manage and deploy.
But that sort of IT professional is only a tiny part of a potential market.
Posted Apr 8, 2010 22:05 UTC (Thu)
by jspaleta (subscriber, #50639)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 23:30 UTC (Thu)
by bboissin (subscriber, #29506)
[Link]
Posted Apr 8, 2010 16:56 UTC (Thu)
by clugstj (subscriber, #4020)
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Posted Apr 8, 2010 18:32 UTC (Thu)
by ariveira (guest, #57833)
[Link]
When threads like this turn out it always remind me of
Morrissey - We hate it when our friends become successful
Posted Apr 8, 2010 16:56 UTC (Thu)
by jspaleta (subscriber, #50639)
[Link]
Rick does however mention "unpredictable" circumstances? Are you implying that Canonical wasn't able to predict that current users who show a preference for Google? What's unpredictable about user opinion in this case? It should have been well known that Yahoo! provided less relevant for Ubuntu related search results than Google...that was something easily testable before Yahoo! was made the default. Something users tested for themselves. Did Canonical do that sort of testing internally prior to switching everyone to Yahoo!?
Now if there was only a way to estimate how many Ubuntu users are going to be using Yahoo! when its not the default...we could affirm whether that revenue deal is really still relevant or not.
-jef
Posted Apr 8, 2010 16:36 UTC (Thu)
by proski (subscriber, #104)
[Link]
Posted Apr 8, 2010 18:06 UTC (Thu)
by muwlgr (guest, #35359)
[Link] (35 responses)
These Ubuntu top-managers are as inconstant as women often are :>
Posted Apr 8, 2010 18:15 UTC (Thu)
by wingo (guest, #26929)
[Link] (34 responses)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 18:23 UTC (Thu)
by felixfix (subscriber, #242)
[Link] (25 responses)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 19:18 UTC (Thu)
by wingo (guest, #26929)
[Link] (24 responses)
This will be my last post in this thread.
Posted Apr 9, 2010 18:53 UTC (Fri)
by PO8 (guest, #41661)
[Link] (23 responses)
Yeah, and what's with "the absence of editorial deletions"? I, for one, am getting a bit tired of trash (see e.g. this off-topic rant) being allowed to persist in the comments lately. I'm a paying customer and would like to remain so; I strongly urge our esteemed editor to maintain at least nominal standards of professionalism in the comments, lest they descend into the mess that drove me out of /. . I understand that these are judgment calls, and that it's always easier to leave well enough alone. However, a major duty of an editor is to exercise editorial judgment. Compare and contrast the comment that started this thread with Leslie Hawthorn's comments in her LWN interview on gender in open source…there's more than a little irony there IMHO.
Posted Apr 9, 2010 18:57 UTC (Fri)
by corbet (editor, #1)
[Link] (20 responses)
Posted Apr 9, 2010 22:32 UTC (Fri)
by felixfix (subscriber, #242)
[Link] (2 responses)
Off-topic remarks are annoying. The original post was a mildly sexist joke which was still on-topic. It prompted a completely off-topic politically correct rant, and that provoked my completely off-topic rant about being adults and not on slashdot.
Where does one draw the line? The joke was at least related to the topic, and easily ignored. The complaint was 100% off-topic and reeked of political correctness run amuck. We readers have to carry part of the load for lwn's tone. I thought about it for a bit before responding, finally deciding that just as one can't help but make noise in shushing someone noisy in a library, one can't help but make an off-topic post to tell someone new to stop making off-topic posts. The next one to complain and suggest our grumpy editor start deleting posts made the same decision.
I have no idea how I would respond on a different day. I hope our editor is never forced to delete posts simply for being politically incorrect.
Posted Apr 11, 2010 8:09 UTC (Sun)
by njs (subscriber, #40338)
[Link]
But I'm not too worried, since they don't, well, *exist*. And even if they did, I trust our editor's ability to judge how to best exercise his, well, editorial powers -- is there some reason you don't? (Though you do seem comfortable assuming that external pressure is the only reason he would ever decide to delete sexist posts; on this point I am less convinced, and anyway isn't it rude to threaten him like that? I mean by implying that if he ever took a more actively anti-sexist stance then everyone would think he was a wimp.)
I'm sorry if you didn't notice, but sexist behavior is a fairly topical issue right now, and anyway, being "on topic" is not more important than treating other humans with respect. But it doesn't even matter, because you agree with wingo that "carry[ing] part of the load for lwn's tone" is in any case a good enough reason to make an off-topic post. So if you want to criticize wingo's doing that, I think you need to do more than just complain it was off-topic, or you just look like you're applying a double-standard.
I understand that fundamentally your argument is that the sexist joke was no big deal, and anyone who thinks otherwise is some mindless political correctness spouting drone. I disagree with both claims, wonder whether you actually have any support for either, and suggest that whether you found the joke "easily ignored" is not actually the final word on its importance.
Posted Apr 15, 2010 13:03 UTC (Thu)
by jschrod (subscriber, #1646)
[Link]
Maybe, in your part of the world, "critic of sexism" is "politically correct" and thus to be avoided -- in my part, it ain't so. (I'm not from the USA, to make that clear.) We criticize sexistic remarks because we want women to feel welcome in our circles, not because it is "politically correct" (whatever that means today and for you, I don't care).
And if you think such comments would not deter women, you might want to come out of your closet into the big blue room.
Posted Apr 9, 2010 23:25 UTC (Fri)
by jordanb (guest, #45668)
[Link] (12 responses)
I subscribe to LWN because its articles are valuable to me as a professional programmer, and I think the editors should try to bring the quality level of the comments up to the standards one finds in professional venues.
If it were up to me, I would:
1) Require that everyone who wishes to comment supply their real name. Have the real name attached to every post and police the use of aliases.
2) Provide a publicly viewable comment history for every member, indexable by real name and user name.
3) Allow people to edit or delete posted comments for a period of time. Give people a chance to fix their own enraged-posting mistakes.
4) Draft explicit guidelines for posting, requiring people be on-topic and avoid personal insults.
5) Delete all posts that violate the guidelines.
Of course it's you're site. But I think you overstate the 'slippery slope' or 'anti-censorship' argument. LWN is hardly the only place on the internet that blowhards can make themselves heard.
Posted Apr 10, 2010 12:32 UTC (Sat)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link] (9 responses)
If someone doesn't care that his reputation makes him out to be a destroyer of conversations, I can't see how having his real name attached would change things.
Posted Apr 10, 2010 15:04 UTC (Sat)
by epa (subscriber, #39769)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Apr 11, 2010 9:28 UTC (Sun)
by quotemstr (subscriber, #45331)
[Link]
Posted Apr 11, 2010 4:40 UTC (Sun)
by jordanb (guest, #45668)
[Link] (6 responses)
But really, I'm thinking that the potential role of the LWN comment section should be a professional discussion forum for our industry. If nothing else, using real names helps set the tone, and emphasizes the idea that isn't just another internet grandstanding platform.
Posted Apr 16, 2010 8:31 UTC (Fri)
by biged (guest, #50106)
[Link] (5 responses)
I notice that the comment page requests us to be polite, respectful, and informative: these are the values of the site, and comments should conform to those values.
I filled in the user survey, and hated having to note that I was considering not renewing. In fact I hope to remain a subscriber - the articles are excellent, as are the best comments - but if I have to wade through flame wars, if I can't shape what I see and if the editors can't help me, if I stop reading because it's not worth it, then at some point I'll stop paying.
Personally, I read the RSS feed, and that works well if the noise level is tolerably low. Previously I read the comments in context, but that works best if I wait for a week or ten days, which is not a good bargain.
So, two ideas, not new:
Keep the noise level down: by suitable in-band prompting, private messaging or selective defacement.
Help the subscriber to read the comment stream in context: Support a kill-file, have a per-user RSS feed to allow per-article feeds, have a per-user per-article last-read date to offer a per-user page of articles with new comments.
Posted Apr 16, 2010 9:22 UTC (Fri)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link] (2 responses)
Posted Apr 16, 2010 9:27 UTC (Fri)
by biged (guest, #50106)
[Link]
Posted Apr 19, 2010 12:41 UTC (Mon)
by nye (subscriber, #51576)
[Link]
Posted Apr 16, 2010 17:05 UTC (Fri)
by corbet (editor, #1)
[Link] (1 responses)
Stay tuned for other stuff...
Posted Apr 16, 2010 17:17 UTC (Fri)
by biged (guest, #50106)
[Link]
(For the personal new-comments page, I see it's mentioned in the FAQ, which of course I hadn't read.)
Posted Apr 16, 2010 8:17 UTC (Fri)
by branden (guest, #7029)
[Link]
It was funny as hell and I love ya for it.
Wheat that good is worth sifting through some chaff for, even chaff that includes moronic and hackneyed semi-jokes like muwlgr's.
Posted Apr 17, 2010 16:32 UTC (Sat)
by paulj (subscriber, #341)
[Link]
I disagree with Nix below that "real" names don't matter. A "real" name can definitely make it easier to recognise people.
+1 on 2 and 3.
0 to -1 on 4. I don't think there's any point having LWN waste energy formulating policies. I don't think there's any point in anything beyond guidelines like:
"Try add value with your comments. Try be polite, especially in the face of disagreement or perceived insults."
Completely disagree on 5, except to the extent required by court orders (or other similarly hard-to-not-comply-with orders).
Posted Apr 10, 2010 18:08 UTC (Sat)
by PO8 (guest, #41661)
[Link] (1 responses)
Honestly, if I had posted either of the examples under discussion, I would both expect and hope that they would be deleted. You would be doing me a favor by helping to protect my reputation, and yourself a favor by helping to protect the reputation of LWN.
IMHO (having been involved with open source since before the beginning, and in my capacity as a college CS professor who deals with open source newbies on a regular basis) the "Wild West" nature of open source conversations is not helping us. I think it is a big part of what drives away women, people of under-represented ethnicities, older adults, and frankly a lot of really deep thinkers with a lot to contribute to our work. I would like to think of LWN as, among other things, a haven for those people. The comments should be an accompaniment to the measured and thoughtful LWN articles; failing that, they should at least not be an embarrassment and a source of discomfort and dismay.
Posted Apr 11, 2010 22:52 UTC (Sun)
by fyodor (guest, #3481)
[Link]
That being said, I'd welcome a community moderation system which hides downvoted posts, while allowing people to view them if desired. This can help highlight exceptional posts too. I'm not holding them up as shining examples, but Slashdot, Digg, and Youtube all have systems like this. I'd downvote this whole thread (including the original sexist joke), and certainly the healthcare rant PO8 mentioned too.
Posted Apr 15, 2010 20:27 UTC (Thu)
by zooko (guest, #2589)
[Link] (1 responses)
Apparently, that was a big success for that crowd. People hated getting devowelized and started modifying their behavior to avoid it.
I would suggest "remove the vowels" for lwn.net, but what about some sort of "fold it out of sight by default"? I guess the important part is a consensus among the community that this thing should be ignored and not responded to, and ideally not seen at all unless you are morbidly curious. If this consensus is visible to the original poster as well then this might motivate them to change.
Just brainstorming. I think you'd probably better do *something* before too long, because status quo probably won't continue to work, and it might be easier to manage before it gets bad than after.
Heck, maybe you should just try what worked for Boing Boing. Editors get a button that removes the vowels. :-)
Posted Apr 16, 2010 18:23 UTC (Fri)
by dmarti (subscriber, #11625)
[Link]
Trolls will always be with us, but we can at least train people not to feed them. What I want on each LWN comment is a "get back under your bridge, troll" button (icon of a little bridge with a green arrow pointing underneath) that would fold the poster's comments, and the comments of everyone who replied, for a week. (Anyone running LWN Comment Improvement?
Posted Apr 16, 2010 13:49 UTC (Fri)
by ccurtis (guest, #49713)
[Link] (1 responses)
I haven't heard of any court cases for "community moderation" but I expect it to be treated more like graffiti and less like a published newspaper. TED seems to have a reasonable moderation system where comments that are voted below some threshold aren't expanded by default. Personally, I think I would like to see the entire thread from that point forward be abridged, excepting perhaps comments modded above some threshold.
[N.B. I am not a lawyer and do not claim to have kept up with legal precedents in this area.]
Posted Apr 16, 2010 14:12 UTC (Fri)
by ccurtis (guest, #49713)
[Link]
http://www.citmedialaw.org/legal-guide/immunity-online-pu...
... at least for now.
According to their summary sheets, editors ARE NOT responsible if they:
* Screen objectionable content prior to publication.
However, editors ARE RESPONSIBLE if they:
* Edit content that materially alters its meaning.
Of course, this is U.S. law any may vary by jurisdiction, yadda yadda.
Posted Apr 8, 2010 19:52 UTC (Thu)
by Adi (guest, #52678)
[Link] (4 responses)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 21:26 UTC (Thu)
by njs (subscriber, #40338)
[Link] (3 responses)
Posted Apr 9, 2010 21:26 UTC (Fri)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link] (2 responses)
Actually, no, a particular kind of male. I'm male and I found it thoroughly winceworthy.
Posted Apr 11, 2010 7:15 UTC (Sun)
by njs (subscriber, #40338)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Apr 16, 2010 8:26 UTC (Fri)
by branden (guest, #7029)
[Link]
"These Ubuntu top-managers are as inconstant as women often are"
Oh, God forbid, we don't qualify the assertion with "often". The statement is completely nutless because now it's not even clear whether he's saying women are more inconstant than men. Why not just leave the word out? Afraid he might offend someone?
If you're going to enter the terrain of sterotyping, you've got to march forcefully and with conviction. And you'd damn well better be funny.
To do any less is just gay.
(Ubj'f zl vebal?)
Posted Apr 8, 2010 21:50 UTC (Thu)
by proski (subscriber, #104)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Apr 9, 2010 7:20 UTC (Fri)
by muwlgr (guest, #35359)
[Link]
Posted Apr 12, 2010 15:01 UTC (Mon)
by lacostej (guest, #2760)
[Link]
In this case, the inconstancy can be seen as positive. They tried something, found out it couldn't work, and reverted. I find this very good.
So actually, the inconstancy in that case could be seen as a positive aspect of Canonical and thus women. I'll remember the quote as a sexist joke against men, that are unable because of their constance to try out new things.
Posted Apr 8, 2010 18:35 UTC (Thu)
by orabidoo (guest, #6639)
[Link] (7 responses)
I'm not particularly a fan of Ubuntu (my allegiance, as far as there is one, is with Linux in general, and even more generally open and unix-like systems), but from where I stand, it sure looks like the Ubuntu folks are the most active, at the moment, in improving the Linux experience.
Which means fixing problems (as in the 100 papercuts project), and also trying new things. Of course not everything they try is going to turn out to be good, but so far I'd say their track record is fairly good, with Upstart, the new notification system, integration of 3d effects, and yes, even the switch to PulseAudio (which apparently didn't originate with Ubuntu anyway, but people still yell at them for it).
Obviously they need to find ways to fund their company... can't really blame them for that, and so far I don't see any of their commercially motivated changes to be a problem. The switch to Yahoo Search would have been just a slight annoyance that gets changed in all of 2 seconds, and they just reverted it.
So personally I'd rather be constructive and give the benefit of the doubt to things that people try, whether it is Ubuntu or Fedora or GNOME or Debian. One of the beauties of Open Source is that things that turn out to be bad ideas get quickly reverted, or someone comes up with an easy way to change them.
PS: note to the Ubuntu folks: get someone else to write your announcements. Sounding like a big bad impersonal machine (a la Apple) is not the right tone.
Posted Apr 9, 2010 0:34 UTC (Fri)
by endecotp (guest, #36428)
[Link] (1 responses)
Yes. I must say, LWN often sounds like the "WeHateUbuntu Weekly News" these days. This doesn't seem like a good direction to go in.
Posted Apr 9, 2010 16:31 UTC (Fri)
by bronson (subscriber, #4806)
[Link]
Or, if you're talking about comments elsewhere, then I'm not sure how you would think that LWN has any control over the direction they go in. Do you think they should be censored?
Posted Apr 9, 2010 4:14 UTC (Fri)
by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946)
[Link] (4 responses)
That's because of
Posted Apr 9, 2010 10:01 UTC (Fri)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link] (3 responses)
(That the Ubuntu bug triagers actually *did* find the kernel patch is impressive.)
Posted Apr 10, 2010 6:08 UTC (Sat)
by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946)
[Link] (2 responses)
Posted Apr 10, 2010 7:47 UTC (Sat)
by hppnq (guest, #14462)
[Link] (1 responses)
That it worked as intended in Fedora from the beginning should not be a huge surprise because the "Audio Terrorist" (???) is the main PA developer, works for Red Hat, is the Fedora maintainer and wrote the kernel patch. Even if you have every reason to point out that Ubuntu themselves prevented a painless integration of rtkit because, for instance, they choose to include non-free kernel modules -- I don't know about that, haven't followed it closely -- it would be good to realize that wherever there is integration, some kind of conflict is inevitable. Indeed, it happens all over the place.
All that makes your comment to the OP's message and your follow-up somewhat ironic, especially given your affiliation with the Fedora project. That's not marketing, that's just creating noise.
FWIW, like orabidoo I am not particularly favourable of any distribution. If I appear to defend Ubuntu it is because some people feel the need to pick on it without providing correct or logical arguments; I remember doing the same for Red Hat ten years ago.
Posted Apr 10, 2010 17:23 UTC (Sat)
by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946)
[Link]
Posted Apr 11, 2010 8:16 UTC (Sun)
by njs (subscriber, #40338)
[Link]
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Is Google now shelling out more than Yahoo!? Why else would they change
back.
When they originally made the switch, they cited the revenue sharing deal. It definitely smells fishy to me that they are not giving a reason for switching back.
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
preferences, [...]) reeks of total bs - but I can agree with
your way of putting it, I guess.
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
http://www.google.com/trends?q=ubuntu%2C+fedora%2C+redhat...
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
http://www.google.com/trends?
q=ubuntu,+fedora,+redhat,+debian,+linux&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all&sort=0
This is quite a (sad) picture as well
http://www.google.com/
trends?q=linux,+windows,+mac&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all&sort=0
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
linux-2009 - 173,0 million
microsoft-windows-2010 - 106.0 hits
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
http://www.e-gear.com/article/blackberry-leads-smartphone...
http://www.google.com/trends?q=blackberry%2C+iphone&c...
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Since the Yahoo logo is purple, it could be a better fit with the new theme. Maybe it's a wrong shade of purple?
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
But do you really want us to start deleting comments from LWN? That's really only something we do in cases of overt spam. Trying to shape the conversation by pruning comments is a most slippery slope; I think it rarely leads to good things.
Editorial deletions
Getting off-topic
Getting off-topic
Getting off-topic
Editorial deletions
Editorial deletions
Editorial deletions
Editorial deletions
Editorial deletions
Shaping the conversation
Shaping the conversation
Shaping the conversation
Shaping the conversation
FWIW, we have per-article RSS feeds now. They're in the metadata headers, so your browser should make it easy to subscribe to them.
Shaping the conversation
Shaping the conversation
Jordan, you made one of the most ornery, curmudgeonly, off-topic comments on LWN I've ever seen. Or rather, you made such a comment sandwiched in between two paragraphs of on-topic bread.
Editorial deletions
Editorial deletions
Editorial deletions
Editorial deletions
Editorial deletions
Trolls
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Oh, why not ...
* Correct, edit, or remove content.
* Select content for publication.
* Solicit or encourage users to submit content.
* Pay a third party to create or submit content.
* Provide forms or drop-downs to facilitate user submission of content.
* Leave content up after you being notified that the material is defamatory.
* Engage with users through drop-down forms to create discriminatory content.
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
"La donna รจ mobile" ("Woman is fickle") is the cynical Duke of Mantua's canzone from Giuseppe Verdi's opera Rigoletto (1851). The inherent irony, of course, is that it is the callous playboy Duke himself who is mobile ("inconstant")...
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
Ubuntu switches search back to Google
What's up with the Ubuntu hating?
What's up with the Ubuntu hating?
> Ubuntu, at every single time they do anything?
What's up with the Ubuntu hating?
What's up with the Ubuntu hating?
What's up with the Ubuntu hating?
What's up with the Ubuntu hating?
And decided not to apply it. In the meantime, the patch was picked up in the mainline kernel, allowing Ubuntu to integrate rtkit with PA in a way that works for them.
What's up with the Ubuntu hating?
What's up with the Ubuntu hating?
Ubuntu switches search back to Google