On Sun, Dec 16, 2012 at 9:19 AM, pirast <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Ma, thanks for your commitment :) > The Dell support does not have a clue, and on the Ubuntu-side I only have the > option to rely on community based support.
That's probably the case for many Linux OEM systems. I once bought a desktop computer with Linspire pre-intsalled. I cannot find a way to start X so I gave up soon and installed Ubuntu 10.04. One guy asked a question about SUSE Enterprise Linux on his laptop the other day in local LUG mailing list, no one has a clue since no one used that distribution before. Ubuntu is a little better since there is a community. > Personally, it really saddens me because I've been a free software advocate > and have been using Ubuntu since 4.10. > Now I think that some things are going into the wrong direction : > - Amazon integrated into search I hope you can discuss this issue somewhere else. > - bad hardware support for "certified" systems, while manpower goes into supporting Google Nexus (!! what for if even normal laptops are not supported well) That annoys me also. We are using, contributing, advocating Linux distributions but we have no clue what kinds of laptop is fully supported, even those with Ubuntu brand. I'm not aware of a well maintained hardware knowledge base for Linux or Ubuntu. There is no graphical hardware listing still, newbies still need to understand what is terminal and what is lspci/lsusb/... I tried to help solving a bug of hardware issue but I didn't get very active response. > - manpower used to develop multiple desktop environments (GNOME 3, Unity, none of it being perfect), while I know much more severe desktop bugs that might be worth looking into This problem somehow belongs to Red Hat I believe. They develop GNOME Shell that make many people unhappy. I don't think Ubuntu's decision to shipping a different DE is a problem. The problem is that Unity seems quite buggy. I use and contribute MATE, a GNOME 2 fork, now. > - little given back to upstream (i.e. for GTK, there is one person full-time working on it, and hes not employed by Canonical) That guy probably works for Red Hat? I'm not a fan of GTK3. http://igurublog.wordpress.com/2012/11/05/gnome-et-al-rotting-in-threes/ For upstream contribution, I don't think Canonical actually developed that many things different from upstream of GTK. Are you a fan of Overlay scrolling? I'm not. > - still (since 2006) no results in making third party software easier to install and manage on all products of the Linux platform (see https://wiki.linuxfoundation.org/en/Packaging) Use Ubuntu Software Center if a third-party developer focus on Ubuntu. For distribution agnostic packaging, there is an interesting research work: http://www.pgbovine.net/cde.html > I'm not really requesting any help, because for sure there is a way to > somehow compile a newer mouse driver supporting my alps touchpad, to take a > newer kernel improving fan control and run it with tweaked power options (I > guess I'd somehow figure it out). > But after installing Windows and having it almost running perfectly after 30 > minutes (while I miss apt/yum package management), I have given up. Maybe I > will have a look at Ubuntu/Linux in 1 year again, and I would be really happy > if those things would be fixed, but I'm not that positive about it to be > honest. I do dual-boot on my MacBook now. You may consider this option too. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu 4 dz, which is subscribed to the bug report. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1 Title: Microsoft has a majority market share Status in Club Distro: Confirmed Status in Computer Science Ubuntu: Confirmed Status in LibreOffice Productivity Suite: New Status in dylan.NET.Reflection: Invalid Status in dylan.NET: Invalid Status in EasyPeasy Overview: Invalid Status in Ichthux - Linux for Christians: Invalid Status in JAK LINUX: Invalid Status in LibreOffice: In Progress Status in The Linux Kernel: New Status in The Linux Mint Distribution: In Progress Status in The Linux OS Project: In Progress Status in The Metacity Window Manager: In Progress Status in The OpenOffice.org Suite: In Progress Status in Tabuntu: Invalid Status in A simple player to online TV streaming: Invalid Status in Tv-Player: Invalid Status in Ubuntu Malaysia LoCo Team Meta Project: In Progress Status in Ubuntu: In Progress Status in Arch Linux: Confirmed Status in Baltix GNU/Linux: Invalid Status in “linux” package in Debian: In Progress Status in Fluxbuntu: The Lightweight, Productive, Agile OS: Confirmed Status in openSUSE: In Progress Status in Tilix Linux: New Bug description: Microsoft has a majority market share in the new desktop PC marketplace. This is a bug which Ubuntu and other projects are meant to fix. As the philosophy of the Ubuntu Project states, "Our work is driven by a belief that software should be free and accessible to all." "Ubuntu software is free. Always was, always will be. Free software gives everyone the freedom to use it however they want and share with whoever they like. This freedom has huge benefits. At one end of the spectrum it enables the Ubuntu community to grow and share its collective experience and expertise to continually improve all things Ubuntu. At the other, we are able to give access to essential software for those who couldn’t otherwise afford it – an advantage that’s keenly felt by individuals and organisations all over the world." * http://www.ubuntu.com/project/about-ubuntu/our-philosophy Non-free software leaves users at the mercy of the software owner and concentrates control over the technology which powers our society into the hands of a few. Additionally, proprietary software stifles innovation, maintains artificial scarcities, and enables malicious anti-features such as DRM, surveillance, and other monopolistic practices. This bug is widely evident in the PC industry. Steps to repeat: 1. Visit a local PC store. 2. Attempt to buy a machine without any proprietary software. What happens: Almost always, a majority of PCs for sale have Microsoft Windows pre- installed. In the rare cases that they come with a GNU/Linux operating system or no operating system at all, the drivers and BIOS may be proprietary. What should happen: A majority of the PCs for sale should include only free software. * http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html * http://www.debian.org/social_contract#guidelines * http://www.opensource.org/docs/osd To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/clubdistro/+bug/1/+subscriptions _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~algeriatul Post to : [email protected] Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~algeriatul More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

