OPERATING SYSTEMSOS Linux

Interview with Mark Shuttleworth at the Ubuntu Summit

On this episode of Destination Linux (353), Mark Shuttleworth joins us for an interview at the Ubuntu Summit to discuss Ubuntu, Ubuntu Summit, AI, the importance of open-source contributions and the positive impact it can have on industries.

SHOW NOTES ►► https://destinationlinux.net/353

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LINBIT = https://destinationlinux.net/linbit

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Ryan (DasGeek) = https://dasgeekcommunity.com
Jill Bryant = https://jilllinuxgirl.com

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SHOW NOTES ►► https://destinationlinux.net/353

Chapters:
00:00 Destination Linux 353 Intro
00:49 Community Feedback
07:47 NAMECHEAP
08:46 Interview: Mark Shuttleworth
27:40 LINBIT
28:58 Interview: Mark Shuttleworth Cont.
43:52 Gaming: MrBid an AI Generated game
45:33 Software Spotlight: Exercise Timer
47:34 Tips and Tricks: Alternativeto
49:13 Events
50:17 Outro

#Linux #OpenSource #Podcast

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6 thoughts on “Interview with Mark Shuttleworth at the Ubuntu Summit

  • Michael, Mark never mentioned you guys were close buddies all the times he and I went fishing and snowboarding. I'll have to ask him about that.

  • Happy and Healthy New Year to Michael, Ryan, Jill and all the all the Destination Linux viewers.

  • KDE is so powerful. Looking forward to Plasma. Left Windows over 2 years ago for many reasons such as security and privacy. Also KDE is so customizable. Best thing I ever did in terms of my computer was switching to Linux.

  • In mid 2008 I bought a new Dell Laptop with Windows Vista running of a 160GB HDD at 40MB/s. At that moment I remembered a try-out of Ubuntu 5.04 on spare Pentium II, that had impressed me. I still needed Windows for my work, so I started dual booting Ubuntu 8.04 LTS and Windows Vista, but often after a Vista update, it stopped working. In 2009 I started to use SUN's Virtualbox with Windows in a VM. The oldest VM I still use is Windows XP Home, installed and activated in March 2010. I still run Virtualbox and Ubuntu.

    I still use that Windows XP a few times per week, to play the wma copies of my CDs and LPs with WoW and TrueBass effects. It survived 2 VBox owners; 3 desktops and 4 CPUs. I've turned into a collector using VBox VMs, so I have all 17 Windows Releases from 1987 (1.04) to now (11 Pro) and all Ubuntu LTS releases from 6.06 to 24.04 Dev.Ed; the first 4.10 and my first 5.04.

    Currently I keep an eye on the latest releases of the more reliable distros like; Linux Mint; Zorin; Fedora; Manjaro; Peppermint; Debian and OpenSUSE Leap. I dumped more than 20 distros directly or mostly after a few months, because they created more than 2 or 3 problems for me. On the other side Manjaro is part of that reliable distro list since 2018.

    I used some of the Ubuntu Core Desktop alphas around August, but it stopped working for me. So I'm waiting anxiously for the first "official" development branch version.

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