An interesting comment I've read from a Linux Pro Magazine post about
this:

http://www.linuxpromagazine.com/Online/Blogs/Off-the-Beat-Bruce-
Byfield-s-Blog/A-Disturbing-Dialog-About-Ubuntu-and-Unity/

A simple solution for Ubuntu

francesco44 Nov 05, 2011 12:08am GMT
I have been a happy user of Ubuntu for the last 4 or 5 years.

All of what I have tried, seen or heard about Unity does not convince me
to say the least. But Mark Shuttleworth has the right to try to
innovate, maybe that's is duty or his Karma. As I switched back to the
LTS 10.04, i will eventually try to upgrade to the future LTS or install
Mint or Debian.

This position of uncertainty regarding th future is not very
comfortable. I am not alone in that case. We are a lot of
"professionals", that is people with a demanding job (eventually in
research, university or teaching..or industry...) and not necessarily
"power users" who need an efficient OS, stability, continuity. We have
not the time, usually, to "play" with a new interface, nor to "try" it
for the pleasure of knowing if we like it or not. For many of us, when
we adopted Ubuntu, there was some kind of a "silent contract" between us
and the Ubuntu community. The type of contract that Debian, or the Linux
Foundation has with the community: seriousness and continuity.

Reading the answers to that questions (continuity) by Jono Bacon and
Mark Shuttleworth in different blogs gives the bad impression that these
"professional users" are left in the middle of the river. "If you do not
like Unity, there is plenty of other distros that might satisfy you".
For me this is not a very "professional" answer. What will be the next
whim of the Canonical team? If I was in charge of 1000 computers in a
university or any community I would think twice before installing
Ubuntu.

If Mark Shuttleworth wants to keep the reputation he has, rightly,
gathered for the development of Ubuntu, he would rather listen to people
who followed him and also participated in the extension of the
community. And above all he would secure and eventually promote a simple
interface (like Gnome2) for the sake of continuity and stability. This
is not too complicated as many participants of this debate have
illustrated.

The interest (and certainly the financial interest) of Canonical, Ubuntu
and the community is without any doubt to "care" of the people who
followed you and not to try to discourage them. It would be sound to
listen of the innumerable voices who criticize Unity, usually for the
same reasons. If Mark Shuttleworth was really confident in Unity...he
would provide the necessary continuity of a "Gnome2" equivalent
desktop....and he would just wait for "hard boiled power users" to be
convinced by his new UI.

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