The Importance of Free Software in the Cloud

Do you think that free software is important to cloud computing? I personally think it is crucial, and here is why.

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Atlanta Linux Fest: Top 9 Ubuntu Highlights

atlanta-linux-fest-ubuconMore than 600 people registered to attend Atlanta Linux Fest, which was held Sept. 19. Many of the standing-room-only sessions focused on Canonical and Ubuntu. Here are nine Ubuntu-oriented highlights from the event.

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Canonical’s Private Ubuntu Cloud Strategy: Partners Welcome?

Canonical has launched Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud Services, an effort to help customers build and support private clouds. The announcement, leveraging Ubuntu Server Edition, caught The VAR Guy’s attention for two key reasons.

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Landscape 1.3: Can Canonical, Ubuntu Partners Profit?

canonical-ubuntu-moneyIt’s another small step for Canonical’s Ubuntu business, and a giant leap forward for the company’s Landscape management platform. The new Landscape 1.3 release allows IT managers and resellers to remotely administer physical or virtual servers within a corporate network or on the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). But this is more than a technology story. Landscape could play a critical role in Canonical’s effort to build revenue-generating services.

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Cloud Computing: What Can It Do for Ubuntu?

When Mark Shuttleworth announced the future Ubuntu 9.10 release, Karmic Koala, the goals he outlined for the server version were all to do with cloud computing but you might be asking ‘What is cloud computing ?’ I answer this question and investigate what it can do for Ubuntu?

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Evaluating Google Apps and Amazon Cloud Applications

WorksWithU’s sister site, The VAR Guy, is taking a close look at Google Apps, and open source applications running in Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). What works? What doesn’t? What are the financial benefits? What are the hidden risks? To learn more join The VAR Guy Live webcast on April 15 at 2:00pm eastern. Check out these three guest speakers and then register now.

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RightScale Puts Ubuntu Server In the Cloud, Too

RightScale Puts Ubuntu Server In the Cloud, TooThe Ubuntu Server revolution is starting but it doesn’t involve traditional on-premise systems. A few hours ago I mentioned Turnkey Linux was putting Ubuntu Server software appliances in the cloud. But I overlooked another major story: RightScale — a well-known cloud computing company — today announced “full support” for Ubuntu as part of the RightScale Cloud Management platform. It’s big news. Here’s why.

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Canonical’s Two Most Important Ubuntu Partners

A blog entry over on ZDnet makes the case that Amazon.com and Dell are Canonical’s two most important Ubuntu partners. I firmly agree. Here’s why.

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Canonical’s April 2009 Surprise: More Than Ubuntu 9.04

Canonical Ubuntu Landscape SaaS
When Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope) arrives in April 2009, Canonical plans to introduce a separate surprise as well — a new version of Landscape (image courtesy of Canonical). Never heard of Landscape? That will change in April 2009. Here’s why.

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Amazon.com: The Key to Ubuntu Server Edition’s Success?

Amazon Web Services and Elastic Compute CloudAs you may have heard, Ubuntu is leaping from desktop computers all the way to Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Although Ubuntu Server Edition 8.10 on Amazon EC2 remains in beta, the Amazon relationship could energize Canonical’s server strategy, WorksWithU believes. Here’s why.

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