> Canonical paying Devs and all, it isn't a great way of influencing a community.
That's kind of the point of modern open source organizations. Let corporations fund the projects, and in exchange they get a say in terms of direction, and hopefully everything works out. The bigger issue with Ubuntu is that they lack vision, and when they ram things through, they give up at the slightest hint of opposition (and waste a tremendous amount of resources and time along the way). For example Mir and Unity were perfectly fine technologies but they retired it because they didn't want to see things through. For such a successful company, it's surprising that there technical direction setting is so unserious.
That's kind of the point of modern open source organizations. Let corporations fund the projects, and in exchange they get a say in terms of direction, and hopefully everything works out. The bigger issue with Ubuntu is that they lack vision, and when they ram things through, they give up at the slightest hint of opposition (and waste a tremendous amount of resources and time along the way). For example Mir and Unity were perfectly fine technologies but they retired it because they didn't want to see things through. For such a successful company, it's surprising that there technical direction setting is so unserious.
https://www.reddit.com/r/linux/comments/15brwi0/why_canonica...