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UbuntuEdge on Indiegogo = FAIL

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40hz:
It's official:



Here's Ubuntu's farewell message. Makes me wonder of this wasn't really just a ploy to do some market research, "test the waters," generate some press buzz, and mobilize some unpaid evangelists (ala Apple) with that ridiculous $32 million target they set. I'm half convinced Shuttleworth really didn't want it to fly - and priced the campaign accordingly. Especially since they're using this campaign to bolster their position with certain hardware manufacturers to build Ubuntu-based phones. Also interesting is their comment about how they'll be personally contacting their "biggest referrers" in the upcoming weeks. Sweetheart deals, or job offers, anyone?


Canonical posted an announcement 4 days ago

Hi everyone

So ends a crazy month. We’ve broken records, we’ve been written and talked about across the world, we’ve worn out our F5 keys, and we’ve learned a lot of invaluable lessons about crowdfunding. Our bold campaign to build a visionary new device ultimately fell short, but we can take away so many positives.

We raised $12,809,906, making the Edge the world’s biggest ever fixed crowdfunding campaign. Let’s not lose sight of what an achievement that is. Close to 20,000 people believed in our vision enough to contribute hundreds of dollars for a phone months in advance, just to help make it happen. It wasn’t just individuals, either: Bloomberg LP gave $80,000 and several smaller businesses contributed $7,000 each. Thank you all for getting behind us.

Then there’s the Ubuntu community. Many of you gave your time as well as money, organising your own mailing lists, social media strategies and online ads, and successfully reaching out to your local media. We even saw entire sites created to gather information and help promote the Edge. We’ll be contacting our biggest referrers personally.

Most importantly, the big winner from this campaign is Ubuntu. While we passionately wanted to build the Edge to showcase Ubuntu on phones, the support and attention it received will still be a huge boost as other Ubuntu phones start to arrive in 2014. Thousands of you clearly want to own an Ubuntu phone and believe in our vision of convergence, and rest assured you won’t have much longer to wait.

All of the support and publicity has continued to drive our discussions with some major manufacturers, and we have many of the world’s biggest mobile networks already signed up to the Ubuntu Carrier Advisory Group. They’ll have been watching this global discussion of Ubuntu and the need for innovation very closely indeed. Watch this space!

As for crowdfunding, we believe it’s a great way to give consumers a voice and to push for more innovation and transparency in the mobile industry. And who knows, perhaps one day we’ll take everything we’ve learned from this campaign -- achievements and mistakes -- and try it all over again.

Thank you all

Mark Shuttleworth, the Ubuntu Edge team and everyone at Canonical

P.S. We’ve been assured by Paypal that all refunds will be processed within five working days.
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It's all just a little too neat... :-\

rgdot:
The market could use more entrants, whether they are hardware, software or service providers. From this standpoint it's a good thing. Questionable marketing has happened before and will happen again too.

40hz:
The market could use more entrants, whether they are hardware, software or service providers. From this standpoint it's a good thing. Questionable marketing has happened before and will happen again too.
-rgdot (August 26, 2013, 12:50 PM)
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True.

But as long as the telcos continue to have a stranglehold on the hardware, and deliberately dumb-down what these phones can do to preserve their antiquated business model, it's mostly moot.

Compare a smartphone you get from ATT or Verizon with a completely unbuggered and not deliberately crippled version straight from the manufacturer and you'll swear they're completely different pieces of hardware.

Renegade:
The market could use more entrants, whether they are hardware, software or service providers. From this standpoint it's a good thing. Questionable marketing has happened before and will happen again too.
-rgdot (August 26, 2013, 12:50 PM)
--- End quote ---

True.

But as long as the telcos continue to have a stranglehold on the hardware, and deliberately dumb-down what these phones can do to preserve their antiquated business model, it's mostly moot.

Compare a smartphone you get from ATT or Verizon with a completely unbuggered and not deliberately crippled version straight from the manufacturer and you'll swear they're completely different pieces of hardware.-40hz (August 26, 2013, 01:41 PM)
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It's rather sad how the whole thing works. Consumers would definitely benefit greatly if there were real competition, and not the massive regulation and collusion that we have now.

The buggery in the devices isn't entirely the fault of the manufacturers though. The telcos exert a lot of power, and collude with the manufacturers to "compromise" on just exactly how they'll bugger the consumers.

There's a telco debate going on in Canada now. The level of insanity is deafening. And nothing that addresses the consumer is remotely relevant there, though it's being disguised as though it is.

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