cross-posted from: https://piefed.social/post/1379850

Here is the full series available to read on Mangadex (under a CC license), and direct link to Chapter 1 (of 16).

If you had never heard of this series before, Ubunchu! was published in the Official Ubuntu Magazine Japan periodically between the years of 2008-2013 (with some digital extras afterwards found in chapter 16 on mangadex). The series was released using a CC license and subsequent translations are also CC (plus the translators have directly communicated with the original author).

Praise open licenses

Chapters 1-8 were translated years ago, but the final chapter was only translated just a couple days ago.

Due to when it was written and published, it is a bit of a time capsule. You can relive some of the formative linux and Ubuntu events of the 21st century such as:

Unity Desktop

Unity is an alien

The rise of linux mint

Linux Mint as a JK

OpenOffice & LibreOffice

Battle lines are drawn in the office suite war to come

Ubuntu Touch

Ubuntu Touch, the third pillar of the mobile OS ecosystem

  • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    If Microsoft had added an Android app runtime (even if it were slow), they would’ve had a much better argument for buying Windows phones. As it was, their sales pitch was “buy a phone with this new OS that doesn’t run any of your apps, from the guys who made WinCE” (Windows Phone) and “buy a phone with this new OS that looks exactly like the last OS but won’t run apps from that one or Android” (Windows 10 Phone).

    By the time Win10P dropped, nobody expected Microsoft to actually commit to it (so the enthusiast crowd stayed away) and its app ecosystem was literally a decade behind the competition (so casual users wouldn’t touch it). And then Microsoft didn’t see sales and promptly canceled the whole thing.

    • JayGray91🐉🍕@piefed.social
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      8 hours ago

      IIRC MS tried to add the big Google apps on WP, especially YouTube. I only remember for YouTube’s case but google stepped in to block MS’s efforts every time they fixed something broken. Clearly fair competition.

      Of course it doesn’t excuse no other apps that were mainstream are on there (or were but not supported for very long as MS stopped paying for them tp be on their platform IIRC).

      I do think by WP 10 they lost the plot. WP8 was peak but alas that time the market was going all app ecosystem.