In
this article, Linux entrepreneur Mark Shuttleworth says, “We've started to use [Croquet] for planning and building Ubuntu.”
Linux works well. One of the hard parts with delivering on “Linux” (generically) is that there are a lot of variations. Croquet works on some combinations of kernel, libraries and device drivers, but not on others. I don't have a Linux box myself, so I haven't spent any time on it. (The
Croquet Collaborative runs on FreeBSD, and does so as a graphicsless server.) It's tough to be trying to
accomplish something while wrestling with configuration issues.
But
Plopp offers a consumer-market product on many flavors of Linux (as well as Windows/Mac), but it doesn't (yet?) make use of the full collaborative Croquet SDK. Once it runs, it runs. I guess the Ubunto folks have got real Croquet running with their developer and business configurations, and are now starting to explore its use for doing real work.
eNews travels fast. I had actually pre-posted this a while back, but I sometimes post-date entries so that they don't all come out at once. Now it's all over the place.
As far as I can tell, all the citations of this stem from one paragraph in the Economist article. So it's probably wise not to make more of it than is warranted.
eNews travels fast. I had actually pre-posted this a while back, but I sometimes post-date entries so that they don't all come out at once. Now it's all over the place.
As far as I can tell, all the citations of this stem from one paragraph in the Economist article. So it's probably wise not to make more of it than is warranted.