Ubuntu at 20

15 min read

Ubuntu at 20

A decade on from celebrating a decade of Ubuntu, Neil Mohr wonders where all the time has gone.

So, that Ubuntu logo with the three dots – it’s people holding hands, from the original Warty login.
CREDIT: Wikimedia/Ubuntu

Without Ubuntu, the current Linux landscape would be unrecognisable. Back in October 2004, the first 4.10 (2004.10) release of Ubuntu, with its intriguing Warty Warthog code name, leapt from obscurity to being one of the most downloaded Linux distributions of the year. And that’s in spite of it sporting a less-than-attractive brown wallpaper. Perhaps the motto of “Linux for Human Beings” might have been on to something – radical departures such as enabling user accounts to make system-wide admin changes flew in the face of the classic novice-baffling Linux behaviour of the time. Being backed by an actual for-profit organisation was another departure, rather than the rag-tag hacking teams or lone coders that had preceded it, with those successes coming more by accident than by design. It seemed Ubuntu was set up for success from the start. The vision came from Mark Shuttleworth, a Debian developer who benefited from the dotcom bubble, which turned him into a multi-millionaire and happy philanthropist. His passion to give back to the open source community that had helped establish him, helped establish Ubuntu – a Zulu word meaning humanity to others – a Linux distro made for humans.

He was clearly on to something, as this human-first approach created the most popular distro of all time, which went on to directly spawn more respins than anything before or since, alongside possibly more controversies than any other project has experienced, too! Fun times for all. So, after 20 years of gently shifting-hue backgrounds, let’s look at how Ubuntu has developed over the decades, the controversies that exploded with that and the players behind it.

Slack and snacks

Cape Town, South Africa, early ’90s. A young student is sitting late at night in the University of Cape Town’s computer lab, a pile of snacks on his right and a pile of Slackware install floppies on his left. He doesn’t know it yet, but he’s about to become a major force in the Linux open source world; he’s also going to be in big trouble, as he needs to reinstall Windows on the PC before the labs reopens, too. That student was Mark Shuttleworth, and like so many before and since, free access to open source changed his life completely.

Shuttleworth didn’t have his own PC, so the only way to try Linux was on university equipment. He got involved in a project to hook up the university to the internet and started using Debian. Realising Apache wasn’t available, he became a Debian developer, maintaining the first Apache package. By the mid-’90s Shuttleworth had graduated with a degree in finance and information systems and established his company,