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posted by on Thursday April 06 2017, @05:24AM   Printer-friendly
from the translation:-we-aren't-making-money-from-the-ads-anymore dept.

Ars Technica reports that Unity, Ubuntu's controversial self-developed desktop environment, is no more.

Six years after making Unity the default user interface on Ubuntu desktops, Canonical is giving up on the project and will switch the default Ubuntu desktop back to GNOME next year. Canonical is also ending development of Ubuntu software for phones and tablets, spelling doom for the goal of creating a converged experience with phones acting as desktops when docked with the right equipment.

Mark Shuttleworth of Canonical posted online about the change to, as he put it, "Growing Ubuntu for Cloud and IoT, rather than Phone and convergence":

We are wrapping up an excellent quarter and an excellent year for the company, with performance in many teams and products that we can be proud of. As we head into the new fiscal year, it's appropriate to reassess each of our initiatives. I'm writing to let you know that we will end our investment in Unity8, the phone and convergence shell. We will shift our default Ubuntu desktop back to GNOME for Ubuntu 18.04 LTS.

[...] I took the view that, if convergence was the future and we could deliver it as free software, that would be widely appreciated both in the free software community and in the technology industry, where there is substantial frustration with the existing, closed, alternatives available to manufacturers. I was wrong on both counts.

Some love Unity; for others, it never caught on. Will it be missed, nostalgically and/or technologically?


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  • (Score: 2) by letssee on Thursday April 06 2017, @07:19AM

    by letssee (2537) on Thursday April 06 2017, @07:19AM (#489540)

    Amen to that! I'll miss unity, I rathe rliked it. But there are alternatovis for unity. The whole mir debacle was a serious hindrance to getting the graphics stack on linux modernized. Wayland seems way better thought out than mir, and splitting the effort over 2 display servers was a shame. Also the whole mobile phone idea was dead on arrival, so it was basically a waste of time (sadly, I'd love a non-android linux phone which actually works well).

    Sadly their announcement that they're concentrating on cloud and iot looks like they still don't (or can't, financially) do what they're ( or were) best at: creating a working desktop linux. I tried snappy core and found it to be a rather hostile environment, but maybe I'd need to actually learn how snappy works (sigh, re-learn everyting *again* )

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