Canonical gave up on operating its Ubuntu One cloud storage service more than a year ago, but this week it released the system's file-syncing code under an open source AGPLv3 license.
Though Canonical is primarily known for its open source Ubuntu operating system, it also has some closed source products and services, including Ubuntu One.
Ubuntu's desktop "on its own will die"—Shuttleworth [said, explaining] why Canonical must expand. "Today, we're happy to be open sourcing the biggest piece of our Ubuntu One file syncing service," Canonical Director of Online Services Martin Albisetti wrote. "The code we're releasing is the server side of what desktop clients connected to when syncing local or remote changes. This is code where most of the innovation and hard work went throughout the years, where we faced most of the scaling challenges and the basis on which other components were built upon."
Canonical hopes the code will be "useful for developers to read through, fork into their own projects or pick out useful bits and pieces."
What project ideas would you use this code for?
(Score: 2) by NCommander on Thursday August 13 2015, @11:43PM
Basically the same boat I'm in. Not too many places have my underlying @gmail.com address so I could theorically move it without *too* much issue. I know I could easily set up a mail server of my own, or just do a private cloud. While I don't trust Google, for the most part, they've kept to their philosphy of "Do No Evil", and I continue to be an Android user, so no matter what happens, they'll always have some data on me.
Still always moving