In defense of Ubuntu reproach
In defense of Ubuntu reproach
Posted Aug 20, 2008 3:06 UTC (Wed) by jspaleta (subscriber, #50639)In reply to: In defense of Ubuntu reproach by dlang
Parent article: In defense of Ubuntu
Fedora makes use of an entirely open software stack for its infrastructure. People can replicate the entire build system and mirror manager and so on and so on. As long as people can find the hosting bandwidth and the iron, the software that grinds the sausage isn't proprietary and there is no secret sauce anywhere in the build system. In fact to grow out additional architecture support, people in the Fedora community do in fact find that additional hosting and bandwidth and iron. Why? because... its a community effort... whose entire framework is open so that motivated community members and even other business interests can contribute beyond the bounds of what Red Hat can sustain. Honest sustainable development where multiple interests can co-exist without anyone being asked to support more than what they feel they can sustain. I can just imagine the pressure some Canonical employees feel to make sure they continue to live up to the perception they've marketed...without a sustainable bottomline to build resource allocation budgets around. Fedora's build system is setup to allow motivated Fedora community to work on interests other than those that Red Hat feels it can sustain on its own. Doing things that way was a deliberate choice.. a sustainable choice made by Red Hat empower the community as partners in the process and not just consumers. How open is launchpad? How critical is it to the inner workings of Ubuntu distribution development? If the launchpad service disappeared with Canonical..would it be replicable? If Canonical decided to drop support for an arch(sparc or arm just as examples) because it was no longer deemed potentially profitable to support.. is the Ubuntu development framework flexible enough to allow the community to take over those sorts of things? Or would Canonical feel burdened to continue supporting arches even though it was a negative on their business? Very important questions for the Ubuntu community to ask of Shuttleworth. -jef
Posted Aug 28, 2008 19:58 UTC (Thu)
by maco (guest, #53641)
[Link]
That has happened. Canonical dropped support for PowerPC a few releases ago.[1] The community now handles the PowerPC port just fine, even releasing the same day.
[1] https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-announce/2007-Fe...
In defense of Ubuntu reproach
Canonical decided to drop support for an arch(sparc or arm just as examples) because it was no
longer deemed potentially profitable to support.. is the Ubuntu development framework flexible
enough to allow the community to take over those sorts of things? "