Is Canonical the Next Apple?
An anonymous reader writes "With the release of 11.04 Natty Narwhal, Canonical is taking Ubuntu in a new direction, which puts cloud services and content like music at the forefront of the Ubuntu experience. Ubuntu is no longer 'Linux,' or 'desktop' or 'netbook'; it's just Ubuntu for clients and servers. Ubuntu has its own desktop in Unity, app store (Software Center), music service and personal cloud. If Ubuntu takes off, will it make Canonical the next Apple? Of course, Canonical doesn't sell computers, but then again Ubuntu can be used on any computer, even Macs."
Ubuntu are the best Linux distribution. That puts them some place between Windows 3.1 and Windows 95. I'm sorry, but it is 2011, and their attempts just aren't cutting it. Clutter is still king, the terminal is still in common usage, the dialog boxes are fugely, and they're still building a experience which is aimed at geeks and elitists instead of average joe.
I don't care what Ubuntu's mission statement is. When they reach Windows 95 levels then let me know. The problem they have is that the entire Linux community seems dead set on keeping normal people out.