2009/10/14 Rahul Sundaram <sunda...@fedoraproject.org>: > On 10/14/2009 07:51 PM, shirish शिरीष wrote: > >> I had sent a mail sometime back and they had responded saying at that >> some point they would make it cross-platform as well. The bit about >> proprietary is news to me. > > Cross platform (Assuming atleast Windows, Linux and OS X) would put them > in a competitive position to Dropbox since it would come integrated out > of the box. However the fundamental approach of a free and open source > client (the dropbox client has some binary bits in it as well) that is > connected to proprietary server side bits remains the same. > > With the complete open sourcing of Launchpad, I had hoped that > proprietary software as a point of differentiation was going away but > apparently not. > > I am reluctant to put my personal data on a proprietary cloud and it is > not clear to me why a pure service oriented business with the same > concept wouldn't feasible. I don't mind being charged for safe encrypted > backups and syncing across multiple systems via the cloud based on the > amount of disk space/bandwidth I consume. For example, Amazon EC2 runs > Xen VM's on RHEL on a open API and have been enormously successful doing > so. Not sure proprietary sauce makes enough business sense to risk > contaminating the brand value. Launchpad bugs referenced at > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubuntu_One has more details. > > On the other hand, they do have to make money *somewhere* and perhaps > the risk/benefit equation is not what I think it is. Hard to say since > Canonical is a private company. It should be interesting to watch this > unfold. > > Rahul > > _______________________________________ > Pune GNU/Linux Users Group Mailing List
I think one fine day Canonical will open source this service. -- Regards Amit. “One doesn't discover new lands without consenting to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.” Andre Gide _______________________________________ Pune GNU/Linux Users Group Mailing List