[access-uk] Re: A Software Populist Who Doesn't Do Windows interesting ideas here!

  • From: "Isaac Porat" <isaac@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2009 14:13:25 -0000

Ubuntu is accessible with some configuration using Orca the screen reader
which comes standard with Gnome the used Linux desktop.

A new customized Ubuntu distribution called Vibuntu is available which makes
Ubuntu talking out of the box.  The current version 1.2 already does the job
but within the next couple of months significant improvements will be made.
See:

http://blinuxman.net/projects/vibuntu.php  

Regards
Isaac

-----Original Message-----
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
Colin Howard
Sent: 12 January 2009 12:55
To: NTExpress@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; avios@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx;
access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] A Software Populist Who Doesn't Do Windows interesting
ideas here!

From: "Peter Altschul" <paltschul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <VICUG-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, January 12, 2009 3:36 AM
Subject: [VICUG-L] FW: A Software Populist Who Doesn't Do Windows


A Software Populist Who Doesn't Do Windows  By ASHLEE VANCE  New York Times
January 11, 2009

 http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/11/business/11ubuntu.html?th&emc=th

 THEY'RE either hapless pests or the very people capable  of overthrowing
Windows. Take your pick.

 In December, hundreds of these controversial software  developers gathered
for one week at the Google  headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. They came
from all  over the world, sporting many of the usual signs of  software
mercenaries: jeans, ponytails, unruly facial  hair and bloodshot eyes.

 But rather than preparing to code for the highest  bidder, the developers
were coordinating their largely  volunteer effort to try to undermine
Microsoft's Windows  operating system for PCs, which generated close to $17
billion in sales last year.

 All the fuss at the meeting centered on something called  Ubuntu and a man
named Mark Shuttleworth, the  charismatic 35-year-old billionaire from South
Africa  who functions as the spiritual and financial leader of  this coding
clan.

 Created just over four years ago, Ubuntu (pronounced oo-
 BOON-too) has emerged as the fastest-growing and most  celebrated version
of the Linux operating system, which  competes with Windows primarily
through its low, low
 price: $0.

 More than 10 million people are estimated to run Ubuntu  today, and they
represent a threat to Microsoft's  hegemony in developed countries and
perhaps even more so  in those regions catching up to the technology
revolution.

 "If we're successful, we would fundamentally change the  operating system
market," Mr. Shuttleworth said during a  break at the gathering, the Ubuntu
Developer Summit.
 "Microsoft would need to adapt, and I don't think that  would be
unhealthy."

 Linux is free, but there is still money to be made for  businesses flanking
the operating system. Companies like  I.B.M., Hewlett-Packard and Dell place
Linux on more  than 10 percent of the computers they sell as servers,  and
businesses pay the hardware makers and others, like  the software sellers
Red Hat and Oracle, to fix any  problems and keep their Linux-based systems
up to date.

 But Canonical, Mr. Shuttleworth's company that makes  Ubuntu, has decided
to focus its near-term aspirations  on the PCs used by workers and people at
home.

 The notion of a strong Linux-based competitor to Windows  and, to a lesser
extent, Apple's Mac OS X has been an  enduring dream of advocates of
open-source software.
 They champion the idea that software that can be freely  altered by the
masses can prove cheaper and better than  proprietary code produced by
stodgy corporations. Try as  they might, however, Linux zealots have failed
in their  quest to make Linux mainstream on desktop and notebook  computers.
The often quirky software remains in the  realm of geeks, not grandmothers.

 With Ubuntu, the devotees believe, things might finally  be different.

 "I think Ubuntu has captured people's imaginations  around the Linux
desktop," said Chris DiBona, the  program manager for open-source software
at Google. "If  there is a hope for the Linux desktop, it would be  them."

 Close to half of Google's 20,000 employees use a  slightly modified version
of Ubuntu, playfully called  Goobuntu.

 PEOPLE encountering Ubuntu for the first time will find  it very similar to
Windows. The operating system has a  slick graphical interface, familiar
menus and all the  common desktop software: a Web browser, an e-mail
program, instant-messaging software and a free suite of  programs for
creating documents, spreadsheets and  presentations.

 While relatively easy to use for the technologically  savvy, Ubuntu - and
all other versions of Linux - can  challenge the average user. Linux cannot
run many  applications created for Windows, including some of the  most
popular games and tax software, for example. And  updates to Linux can send
ripples of problems through  the system, causing something as basic as a
computer's  display or sound system to malfunction.

 Canonical has tried to smooth out many of the issues  that have prevented
Linux from reaching the mainstream.
 This attention to detail with a desktop version of Linux  contrasts with
the focus of the largest sellers of the  operating system, Red Hat and
Novell. While these  companies make desktop versions, they have spent most
of  their time chasing the big money in data centers. As a  result, Ubuntu
emerged as a sort of favored nation for  those idealistic software
developers who viewed  themselves as part of a countercultural movement.

 "It is the same thing companies like Apple and Google  have done well,
which is build not just a community but  a passionate community," said Ian
Murdock, who created  an earlier version of Linux called Debian, on which
Ubuntu is based.

 Mainstream technology companies have taken notice of  the  enthusiasm
around Ubuntu. Dell started to sell PCs and  desktops with the software in
2007, and I.B.M. more  recently began making Ubuntu the basis of a software
package that competes against Windows.

 Canonical, based in London, has more than 200 full-time  employees, but its
total work force stretches well  beyond that, through an army of volunteers.
The company  paid for close to 60 volunteers to attend its developer  event,
considering them important contributors to the  operating system. An
additional 1,000 work on the Debian  project and make their software
available to Canonical,  while 5,000 spread information about Ubuntu on the
Internet. And 38,000 have signed up to translate the  software into
different languages.

 When a new version of the operating system becomes  available, Ubuntu
devotees pile onto the Internet, often  crippling Web sites that distribute
the software. And  hundreds of other organizations, mostly universities,
also help in the distribution.

 The technology research firm IDC estimates that 11  percent of American
businesses have systems based on  Ubuntu. That said, many of the largest
Ubuntu customers  have cropped up in Europe, where Microsoft's dominance
has endured intense regulatory and political scrutiny.

 The Macedonian education department relies on Ubuntu,  providing 180,000
copies of the operating system to  children, while the Spanish school system
has 195,000  Ubuntu desktops. In France, the National Assembly and  the
Gendarmerie Nationale, the military police force,  rely on Ubuntu for a
combined 80,000 PCs. "The word  'free' was very important," said Rudy
Salles, vice  president of the assembly, noting that it allowed the
legislature to abandon Microsoft.

 Without question, Ubuntu's rapid rise has been aided by  the fervor
surrounding Linux. But it's Mr. Shuttleworth  and his flashy lifestyle that
generate much of the  attention Ubuntu receives. While he favors casual
attire  matching the developers', some of his activities,  including a trip
to space, are hardly ordinary.

 "Look, I have a very privileged life, right?" Mr.
 Shuttleworth said. "I am a billionaire, bachelor, ex-  cosmonaut. Life
couldn't easily be that much better.
 Being a Linux geek sort of brings balance to the force."

 The first installment of Mr. Shuttleworth's fortune  arrived after he
graduated from the University of Cape  Town in 1995 with a business degree.

 He had been paying bills by operating a small technology  consulting
company, setting up Linux servers for  companies to run their Web sites and
other basic  operations. His business leanings and technology  background
inspired him to try to capitalize on the  rising interest in the Internet.

 "I'm more of an academic than a cut-and-thrust wheeler-  dealer," he said.
"I was very interested in how the  Internet was changing commerce and was
determined to  pursue it."

 Mr. Shuttleworth decided to start a company called  Thawte Consulting
(pronounced like "thought") in 1995  that provided digital certificates, a
security mechanism  that browsers use to verify the identity of companies.
 As a 23-year-old, he visited Netscape to promote a broad  standard for
these certificates. Netscape, then the  leading browser maker, bought into
it, and Microsoft,  which makes the Internet Explorer browser, followed.

 As dot-com mania surged, companies became interested in  this profitable
outfit, based in South Africa. In 1999,  VeriSign, which manages a number of
Internet  infrastructure services, bought Thawte for $575 million.
 (Mr. Shuttleworth had turned down an offer of $100  million a few months
earlier.)

 Having owned all of Thawte, Mr. Shuttleworth, the son of  a surgeon and a
kindergarten teacher, became very  wealthy at just 26.

 So what's a newly minted millionaire to do? Mr.
 Shuttleworth looked to the stars. Paying an estimated  $20 million to
Russian officials, he secured a 10-day  trip to space and the International
Space Station on the  Soyuz TM-34 in 2002 and became the first "Afronaut,"
as  the press described him.

 "After selling the company, it wasn't a blowout yachts  and blondes
situation," he said. "It was very clear that  I was in a unique situation
where I should choose to do  things that were not possible otherwise."

 In the following years, Mr. Shuttleworth set up venture  capital and
charitable organizations. Through  investments in the United States, Africa
and Europe, he  says, he has amassed a fortune of more than $1 billion.

 He spends 90 percent of his time, however, working on  Canonical, which he
considers another project that  challenges what's possible.

 "I have done well with investing, but it has never felt  very fulfilling,"
he said. "I fear getting to the end of  my life and feeling you haven't
actually built  something. And to do something people thought was
impossible is attractive."

 CANONICAL'S model makes turning a profit difficult.

 Many open-source companies give away a free version of  their software that
has some limitations, while selling  a full-fledged version along with
complementary services  for keeping the software up to date. Canonical gives
away everything, including its top product, then hopes  that companies will
still turn to it for services like  managing large groups of servers and
desktops instead of  handling everything themselves with in-house experts.

 Canonical also receives revenue from companies like Dell  that ship
computers with Ubuntu and work with it on  software engineering projects
like adding Linux-based  features to laptops. All told, Canonical's annual
revenue is creeping toward $30 million, Mr. Shuttleworth  said.

 That figure won't worry Microsoft.

 But Mr. Shuttleworth contends that $30 million a year is  self-sustaining
revenue, just what he needs to finance  regular Ubuntu updates. And a free
operating system that  pays for itself, he says, could change how people
view  and use the software they touch everyday.

 "Are we creating world peace or fundamentally changing  the world? No," he
said. "But we could shift what people  expect and the amount of innovation
per dollar they  expect."

 Microsoft had an estimated 10,000 people working on  Vista, its newest
desktop operating system, for five  years. The result of this
multibillion-dollar investment  has been a product late to market and widely
panned.

 Canonical, meanwhile, releases a fresh version of Ubuntu  every six months,
adding features that capitalize on the  latest advances from developers and
component makers  like Intel. The company's model centers on outpacing
Microsoft on both price and features aimed at new  markets.

 "It feels pretty clear to me that the open process  produces better stuff,"
Mr. Shuttleworth said. Such talk  from a man willing to finance software for
the masses -  and by the masses - inspires those who see open source  as
more of a cause than a business model.

 In his spare time, Agostino Russo, for example, who  works for a hedge fund
at Moore Europe Capital  Management in London, created a program called Wubi
that  allows Ubuntu to be installed on computers running  Windows.

 "I always thought that open source is a very important  socioeconomic
movement," Mr. Russo said.

 Ultimately, however, parts of Mr. Shuttleworth's venture  continue to look
quixotic. Linux remains rough around  the edges, and Canonical's business
model seems more  like charity than the next great business story. And  even
if the open Ubuntu proves a raging success, the  operating system will
largely be used to reach  proprietary online services from Microsoft, Yahoo,
Google and others.

 "Mark is very genuine and fundamentally believes in open  source," said
Matt Asay, a commentator on open-source  technology and an executive at the
software maker  Alfresco. "But I think he's going to have a crisis of  faith
at some point."

 Mr. Asay wonders if Canonical can sustain its "give  everything away" model
and "always open" ideology.

 Canonical shows no signs of slowing down or changing  course anytime soon.

 "We already have a sense of where we need to compete  with Windows," Mr.
Shuttleworth said. "Now the question  is if we can create something that is
stylish and  stunning."

 In his personal life, he continues to test what is  possible, requesting
that a fiber-optic connection be  installed to his house on the border of
London's  affluent Chelsea and South Kensington neighborhoods.

 "I want to find out what it's like to have a gigabit  connection to the
home," he said. "It is not because I  need to watch porn in high-definition
but because I want  to see what you do differently."

 He says Canonical is not just a do-gooder project by  someone with the
time, money and inclination to tackle  Microsoft head-on. His vision is to
make Ubuntu the  standard for the next couple of billion people who  acquire
PCs.

 _____________________________________________

 Portside aims to provide material of interest  to people on the left that
will help them to  interpret the world and to change it.

 Submit via email: moderator@xxxxxxxxxxxx  Submit via the Web:
portside.org/submit  Frequently asked questions: portside.org/faq
 Subscribe: portside.org/subscribe
 Unsubscribe: portside.org/unsubscribe
 Account assistance: portside.org/contact  Search the archives:
portside.org/archive


    VICUG-L is the Visually Impaired Computer User Group List.
 Archived on the World Wide Web at
    http://listserv.icors.org/archives/vicug-l.html
    Signoff: vicug-l-unsubscribe-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
    Subscribe: vicug-l-subscribe-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----



Colin Howard, who lives near Southampton in Southern England, hopes you had
a very happy Christmas and will follow with a peaceful, joyous and
prosperous New Year. 

** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:-
** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe]
** If this link doesn't work then send a message to:
** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
** and in the Subject line type
** unsubscribe
** For other list commands such as vacation mode, click on the
** immediately-following link:-
** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=faq]
** or send a message, to
** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the Subject:- faq


** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:-
** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe]
** If this link doesn't work then send a message to:
** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
** and in the Subject line type
** unsubscribe
** For other list commands such as vacation mode, click on the
** immediately-following link:-
** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=faq]
** or send a message, to
** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the Subject:- faq

Other related posts: