Enterprise-level Ubuntu Linux due this week

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The developers of the popular Ubuntu Linux distribution plan to make a new landmark version of the software widely available this week.

Ubuntu's public schedule for releasing the software lists 1 June as the date for the new version, code-named "Dapper Drake", to be made public. The milestone release will be officially supported by the project for a longer period than previous versions, and will be billed as suitable for enterprise use.

Dapper Drake will be supported for three years for the desktop version and five years for servers, compared to 18 months for the current 5.10 "Breezy Badger" version.

The code release will come after the development process was extended by six weeks in order to improve the reliability of the software. Normally Ubuntu pushes out an official version every six months.

"In some senses Dapper is a first for us, in that it is the first 'enterprise-quality' release of Ubuntu, for which we plan to offer support for a very long time," Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth said in an email in March to the developer community.

"I, and others, would very much like Dapper to stand proud amongst the traditional enterprise Linux releases from Red Hat, Debian and SUSE as an equal match on quality, support and presentation," he continued.

Dapper Drake will be able to be downloaded from Ubuntu's Web site.

News.com's Stephen Shankland contributed to this story.

Talkback

Cue several hours of pointless sniping
between Windows and Linux zealots.

Here's a few to get you started:

"Linux will never beat Windows on the desktop"
"Windows will never beat Linux on the desktop"

After that we'll progress into a gentle discussion
of package systems, centralized installation and
configuration and hardware support. The whole
debate will be set to a distinctive background
score of frothing, wildly innacurate claims from
both sides.

After that, as post debate entertainment, we'll
wander into totally unrelated territory by disussing the pros and cons of open or closed
source, including the definitions of open and
closed source and even a few communist or
capitalist comparisons from those members
consumed by explosive dogmatic rhetoric.

Off we go then...

via Facebook 31 May, 2006 12:10
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