Ubuntu Linux: 8 Million Users and Growing
Tuesday, by civisThere is a business behind the popular Ubuntu Linux operating system and according to its lead commercial sponsor Canonical, that business is good. Canonical is set to debut its latest Linux release Ubuntu 8.10 also known as the Intrepid Ibex on October 30th. The new release will include networking, virtualization and user management improvements.
The Ibex release will also be a milestone for Canonical, a company that is barely four years old that is now challenging established Linux and proprietary vendors alike. Canonical is claiming that its users, contributors and revenues are all growing as Ubuntu aims to grow its overall share of the operating system market.
“In terms of numbers we’re very confident this is an 8 million plus user base of active users,” Chris Kenyon, director of business development at Canonical told InternetNews.com. “That is a hard thing to count and there are lots of issues about methodology for counting but I have seen nothing that sheds doubts on that.”
Other Linux distributions, like Red Hat’s Fedora, for example, use the Smolt system, which counts users based on the number of unique IP addresses that get updates. For the current Fedora 9 release, Smolt has counted 1.2 million unique IPs.
The Fedora 6 release in 2007 reported more than two million unique IPs. In a recent analyst event, Red Hat executive vice president Paul Cormier noted in a presentation that Red Hat currently has over 2.5 million paid subscriptions for its Red Hat Enterprise Linux offerings.
Both Fedora and Ubuntu are available for free, though Canonical also offers paid commercial support for Ubuntu users. Kenyon did not elaborate on how many paid users Canonical currently supports. That doesn’t mean that Canonical isn’t making money.
“We’re not sharing our revenues publicly but I will say revenue growth is extremely strong and we’re bullish across the board both at server side and desktop,” Kenyon said. “The difference between now and even 12 months ago in terms of size and volume of deals coming through is a big difference.”
More in: internetnews.com
Tags: Canonical, Linux, open source, Ubuntu




