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    Powers that be holding alternatives back | Conspiracy?

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      • M Offline
        mrlen @Emphrath
        last edited by

        @emphrath My original post had nothing at all to do with politics. My responses did, because bossy boots came along trying to tell me what I can and can't say on the Internet.

        However, I vow not to mention anything other than Ubuntu Touch on this forum. I have been assimilated now. I am Borg like you guys. I have no personality.

        I apologise for having a personality -- and for wondering why a perfectly useful Linux OS has been suppressed.

        I know, I'm sick. I need help.

        Please forgive me.

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        • alan_gA Offline
          alan_g
          last edited by

          @mrlen said in Powers that be holding alternatives back | Conspiracy?:

          I reckon Canonical stopped Ubuntu Touch because they plain out got told not to continue.
          I think that's the reason a lot of companies are not supporting Linux phones.
          Kind of like how the oil industry held electric cars back fro 100 years.
          That's why it's going to take private funding and grass roots initiatives to get Ubuntu Touch working better.

          There is no need for an conspiracy theory.

          Markets tend to a small number of dominant players for good reasons and once that happens there are barriers to entry. You can see this is pharmaceuticals, cars, power, etc.

          In the case of phones, there needs to be tie-in with regulators, cell service providers, phone manufacturers and app developers.

          Canonical have stated that they couldn't make the project viable. There's plenty of evidence that they tried to set up the necessary tie-ins. But, even in markets where there was a clear desire to avoid the dominant supplier, the costs of entry were clearly too high for the expected return.

          All of these tie-ins naturally concentrate on the players that make up most of their business to the detriment of unproven newcomers. That's not a conspiracy, that's emergent behaviour and there are lots of examples in economics and elsewhere. The only things that could change this are financial, legal or political incentives.

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          • M Offline
            mrlen @alan_g
            last edited by

            @alan_g Then the obvious question is: How can Canonical not be able to make it viable, when a few people with passion and no budget can pick up where they left off and create such an awesome Linux OS? I'm not buying it.

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            • alan_gA Offline
              alan_g @mrlen
              last edited by

              @mrlen I didn't say they couldn't make it work. For a company "viable" means something they could make money from.

              UBports is a non-profit, and (I strongly suspect) does not pay its employees what they could get elsewhere. That is not viable for a commercial organization.

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              • M Offline
                mrlen @alan_g
                last edited by

                @alan_g Look at all the people they're hiring? And that's not taking into account all the staff they currently have:

                https://canonical.com/#careers

                They can't throw a couple of programmers over here to look after what they started?

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                • M Offline
                  mrlen @mrlen
                  last edited by

                  @mrlen They're "partnered" with the largest fortune 500 companies on planet earth.

                  https://canonical.com/#partners

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                  • M Offline
                    mrlen @mrlen
                    last edited by

                    $358,000,000 worth of assets..

                    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonical_(company)

                    ..and they can't throw a programmer over here to figure out how to make sure GPS works better and get a video chat app running?

                    Not buying it at all.

                    They got told by one or more of their "partners" to stop creating a tool that can't be monetised.

                    I'm convinced.

                    Kind of like how Tesla invented free electricity but Edison (when he wasn't electrocuting elephants) wanted to charge. Tesla died in a hotel room, lonely and broke.

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                    • K Offline
                      kugiigi @mrlen
                      last edited by

                      @mrlen Canonical isn't really big compared to the giants they have more products and projects that they think more sustainable. Also, you are talking to a Canonical employee, lead of mir actually and he's been helping with UT. It's not official though but I'm pretty sure Canonical doesn't discourage them to do it.

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                      • M Offline
                        mrlen @kugiigi
                        last edited by

                        @kugiigi Ah, the apologists have come out. Now we have a REAL conspiracy on our hands...

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                        • M Offline
                          mrlen @mrlen
                          last edited by

                          ..the plot thickens.

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                          • ? Offline
                            A Former User @kugiigi
                            last edited by

                            @kugiigi @alan_g Could you guys stop playing his game and reply? He's got nothing better to do and he doesn't look for AN ANSWER. He's probably drunk or sick...

                            alan_gA M 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • alan_gA Offline
                              alan_g @Guest
                              last edited by

                              @c0n57an71n sure. I was about to suggest locking the thread.

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                              • M Offline
                                mrlen @Guest
                                last edited by

                                @c0n57an71n Why don't you change your name to C0n7r0lFr33k ?

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                                • M Offline
                                  mrlen @mrlen
                                  last edited by

                                  It's ok. Lock the thread. My job is done here.

                                  Gotchya's...

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                                  • E Offline
                                    Emphrath @mrlen
                                    last edited by

                                    @mrlen I'm gonna assume one last time you really want to have a discussion here. Canonical's business model has always been weird / hybrid - that is, relying on a trademark and selling server solutions all the while trying to cater to its open-source community. Back then, they didn't have the ressources they have now, for one good reason: the failure of unity and the reverting to gnome desktop is a result of their choice to focus on the server side of affairs, because it was money-worthy.

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                                    • E Offline
                                      Emphrath @alan_g
                                      last edited by

                                      @alan_g i had no idea you came from Canonical. Huge thanks for involving in the project. Tell me if my post above is wrong. Anyway, @mrlen if you want absolute proof that there is nothing preventing an linux solution from happening, free of google and ios, check into SailfishOS. It works perfectly. On four/five officially supported devices, no more. That's the maximum a company with expperience (ex-Nokia) and ties in the busines was able to achieve. That should put things into perspective.

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                                      • ? Offline
                                        A Former User @Emphrath
                                        last edited by

                                        @emphrath Not just him, and Alan Pope https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_XcoWKoubjE and Mark Shuttelworth https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDHL3youjIY still show a love for Ubuntu Touch. But business is business. You can't put food on the table when no money's coming in and loosing millions..

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                                        • M Offline
                                          mrlen @Emphrath
                                          last edited by mrlen

                                          @emphrath okies, I'll check it out. I've been trying to figure out the best way to get Google out of my life. That's the main thing I am after. I've researched pretty much everything and anything -- and I've purchased over 7 phones trying different stuff out. But actually, I haven't come across sailfish OS. I'll go look that up now.

                                          I will say though, before I toddle off.. my main problem with alternative OS's is that when it comes to installing them, and the instructions I am presented with -- it literally gives me brain damage. Therefore, I've been looking for solutions that I can buy off the shelf. But they are very few and far between. I think from memory, you've for fairphone /e/ and pinephone.

                                          At the end of the day, I just want to be able to use technology, without becoming a product. Or being tracked everywhere. I don't consent to any of that.

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                                          • E Offline
                                            Emphrath @mrlen
                                            last edited by

                                            @mrlen And you're very right ! SailfishOS is what you need I think. It's a no-hassle solution. It's not free, though ^^

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                                            • M Offline
                                              mrlen @mrlen
                                              last edited by

                                              @mrlen wow, after a cursory look. Sailfish OS looks pretty cool...

                                              You can use Android apps up to 8.1 too. Not bad.

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