Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 1 August 2013

A successful (and busy!) week at OSCON


Last week, we attended OSCON in Portland, Oregon and had a jam-packed event! We presented seven sessions throughout the week, including Community Management Training, Service Orchestration In The Cloud With Juju, Ubuntu Phone and Tablet – Intro to Design and Development, Burnout and Bickering: a Community Manager’s Guide to Conflict, Hacking Embedded Linux: The Caffeinated ARM Course and Arduino Hacking 101: Importing the Universe.

One of the major highlights was Mark Shuttleworth’s keynote on Redefining What’s Possible On Mobile and Cloud. Mark discussed how, with open source, we’re able to redefine what’s possible in personal computing and how the device in your pocket (your phone) will, in the future, be your desktop device (your PC). It’s all about cloud-enabled convergence – bringing all computing experiences to one device. As such, the device itself will stretch what’s possible in your hand to a class of computing that would’ve traditionally been relegated to personal computers. Ultimately, we want to put enough RAM, GPU, etc. on this next-generation phone to drive a full desktop experience and its what we’re striving to do with our Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign for the new Ubuntu Edge phone.

Mark also explained that this initiative will send a profound signal to the industry at large too, to essentially crowdsource a movement for real innovation that matters – as we’ve done with open source now for years. We haven’t even scratched the surface in terms of imagining what’s possible if we’re able to create a completely open device that is uniquely accessible and transferable via the cloud, and can do everything a laptop can do.

Be sure to check out the 20-minute video of Mark’s keynote.

At OSCON this year, we also announced our new Charm browser and GUI experience for our Juju orchestration tool, making it even faster and simpler to use. While this announcement was dwarfed a bit (okay, a lot) by the Ubuntu Edge news, we still saw a lot of interest around this new Juju experience, both at our expo stand and in ongoing discussions. But, as a whole, I think it’s safe to say that the atmosphere at this year’s show was fantastic. Especially compared to years past, it was clear that Juju and the wider Ubuntu cloud story was more prominent and recognised. We can’t wait to see what develops and look forward to another successful OSCON event in 2014!

 

Related posts


ijlal-loutfi
6 March 2026

Sovereign clouds: enhanced data security with confidential computing 

Confidential computing Article

Increasingly, enterprises are interested in improving their level of control over their data, achieving digital sovereignty, and even building their own sovereign cloud. However, this means moving beyond thinking about just where your data is stored to thinking about the entire data lifecycle.  In this blog, we cover the differences betwe ...


Massimiliano Gori
2 March 2026

Supporting more identity providers on Ubuntu with the new Authd OIDC broker

Cloud and server Article

Today we are announcing the general availability of the new generic OpenID Connect (OIDC) broker for Authd. With enterprises needing to centralise access management controls, the ability to choose your own identity solution is paramount. This new broker snap is our answer to that need, allowing Ubuntu Desktop and Server to integrate with ...


Bertrand Boisseau
2 March 2026

Cloud-native Android™ infotainment: your CI pipeline shouldn’t depend on hardware

Automotive Article

More and more often, infotainment systems are being developed and delivered like software, yet often they are still tested and validated using hardware-centric processes. This is far from ideal: access to devices is limited, environments are difficult to reproduce, and iteration slows down as soon as multiple teams need to work in paralle ...