--Steve Ballmer, 2001
THE launch of Vista 7 was not a success. Even Microsoft's CEO knows it. So what would a company like Microsoft naturally do? Well, its ecosystem of Internet trolls/AstroTurfers has been attacking Ubuntu 9.10 for several weeks now, both in Web sites and in Internet forums.
The Myth of the Bad Ubuntu Release
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OK, so there’s something that always disturbs me when release time comes around. Here’s a rough chronology of every Ubuntu release (at least since I’ve been involved, so that goes back to Breezy Badger) and what the “buzz” around the internet says:
1. Alphas come out: buzz says, “not much to see here folks, move along.” 2. Beta comes out: buzz says, “wow, great release, but where’s the new artwork?” and I’m thinking “How on earth can the pull this off?” 3. RC rolls around: buzz says, “new awesomeness right around the corner!” and I’m thinking “darn it, there’s a lot more to do.” 4. Release day: buzz says, “OMG I have to download this” and I’m thinking “phew, that’s over, I’m glad I rsync’d/zsync’d yesterday” 5. The week after a release: buzz says, “Noooooo, this is the worst Ubuntu release EVER!” and I’m thinking “wow, they really did pull it off” 6. Rinse and Repeat
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So my conclusion, for what it’s worth, is that while some Ubuntu releases are a bit better than others, this periodic buzz around the internet that the latest Ubuntu release is an epic FAIL is a self-perpetuating myth, mostly caused by people needing something to complain or write about.
“What happens with 9.10 is not much different than usual, but the reaction is biased and exaggerated.”What the above group of posts is about are reports which label Ubuntu 9.10 a failure. A lot of people who claim such an issue (without testing for themselves) are linking to Microsoft booster Gavin Clarke, who was probably one of the first to attack Ubuntu 9.10 (in The Register). Too many people are taking his words blindly and then parroting them; it's like an echo chamber.
Canonical has just responded in its blog, also naming Gavin Clark [sic] as one of the culprits. What happens with 9.10 is not much different than usual, but the reaction is biased and exaggerated.
The much misunderstood Ubuntu 9.10 upgrade poll
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I upgraded to 9.10 a while ago. Flawlessly. So I saw little need to go tell a forum. This is where people go when they have problems. Gavin and Serdar were shocked to find people with support issues on a support forum. I have no doubt the help line at Microsoft has taken a lot of calls recently, but I would not extrapolate from that a large percentage of Windows users are having upgrade problems.
Tellingly and almost the last word on this are the polls from our previous releases, none of which were considered or reported as upgrade disasters:
A very useful summary of these findings by Nicholas Ipsen is here. I am linking to these polls not because I want to provide evidence that the Karmic upgrade experience is or was good or bad, there are other more qualified to comment on that, but that there is nothing new here.
In the interests of keeping things in perspective, I just wanted to remind us all of some of the things going on in the background that I think are worth remembering. Take these for what they are, but I think they go a long way in helping to understand the picture before us.
My Kubuntu 9.10 desktop; Click for full-sized image (4.4 MB)
Comments
David Gerard
2009-11-07 20:57:04
FWIW, there's one real area where Ubuntu (and every distro) is going to have problems, and that's running newer versions of Xorg on ancient chips. There's a lot of ancient code falling off the edge as the Xorg developers desperately try to drag X into the 21st century, meaning (a) old chipsets break (b) the people with those chipsets don't find out until their distro uses that version of the Xorg Xserver, maybe a year later (c) there's about no-one who can actually fix it. This is less than ideal ...
That said, there's an Ubuntu PPA for Xorg daily builds, so you can catch breakage to your favourite chipset! https://launchpad.net/~xorg-edgers "We don't need to know what we're doing, except that we will break our X and put our computers on fire."
Yuhong Bao
2009-11-08 08:47:10
David Gerard
2009-11-08 10:33:58
Thankfully that sort of thing is fixable - it's not the problem I mean, where the driver has bitrotted and *just doesn't work any more* - but it requires the person with the crusty old driver to be a coder.