Goobuntu
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Not to be confused with Gobuntu, an official derivative of Ubuntu
Goobuntu is a Linux distribution based on Ubuntu that Google uses internally. Some have suggested that Google might plan to market the distribution more widely.[1][2][3] While both Google and Mark Shuttleworth, creator of Ubuntu, have confirmed that Goobuntu exists and is used internally,[4] both have strongly refuted suggestions that Google has any plans to market the operating system.[5] Almost half of the 20,000 employees of Google use Goobuntu.[6]
Mark Shuttleworth has confirmed that Google contributes patches to Ubuntu but noted that while some Google employees use this modified version of Ubuntu, others use modified versions of other Linux distributions. Google has supported Ubuntu through the Ubucon conferences and in other ways. Although Shuttleworth and Google representatives have denied any plans to release Goobuntu outside the company, it has nonetheless inspired ongoing speculation about Google entering the operating system business.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ The Register reports: Google at work on Linux
- ^ Slashdot reports: "GoogleOS Scenarios"
- ^ Slashdot reports: "Google Working on Desktop Linux"
- ^ Shuttleworth's Blog post: Absolutely no truth to the rumour
- ^ Ars Technica reports: Google denies plans to distribute OS based on Ubuntu
- ^ Vance, Ashlee (January 2009). "A Software Populist Who Doesn’t Do Windows". http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/11/business/11ubuntu.html?_r=2&th&emc=th. Retrieved on 2009-02-22.
[edit] External links
- A screenshot of the login screen in Goobuntu, snapped at an officewarming party held for Google's newly inaugurated Tel Aviv offices (Yaron Orenstein).
- Google's repository for Linux software, including Ubuntu packages.
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