@s-roesgen; cars are a great example.  When designing a car, different
manufacturers aim for different markets, different users, different
pricepoints, have different development budgets, different strategies,
etc, etc... And these different constraints and objectives produce
widely differing results, from cars with no doors to cars with 7+ doors.
Designing and building a OS is exactly the same, there are many, many
different trades we are choosing as we work to divine what we hope will
be an optimal strategy.  Remember we are trying to compete with
Microsoft and Apple, and for all of Apple's talent and success they have
been unable to displace Microsoft from their dominant position in the
desktop OS market.  And Ubuntu has only a fraction of the developers,
apps, etc.. that OSX has.  So how are we going to succeed where even
Apple has failed?  By taking a different strategy, making a whole load
of different trades, and executing this strategy as efficiently as
possible.  Think about Ubuntu as a gorilla fighter, it will never win by
playing by the conventional army's rules, to win it has to invent its
own rules.

So coming back to your car analogy.  The strategy we are taking involves
making a different set of trades, and these decisions eventually drill
down to result in a car coming out of the factory *today* that has only
has only two doors.  And is electric, goes 0-60 in 2.5 sec, has a range
of less then 200 miles, and takes 10 hours to recharge.  But this is
only looking at the car coming out of the factory door *now*.  In two
years the car coming out of the factory door will look very different,
and in eight years there is a small but fighting chance that this car
company could be the the most successful car company in the world, and
in the process of making electric cars mainstream brings massive
ecological benefits.

So we are taking a very different strategy, and making a different set
of trades, and this results in the product we have today being
different.  But doing this gives us a chance of winning, and in the
process represents a chance for fully open sourced GPLed software to
become the dominant force in desktop computing.   It might or might not
work out, but I am very glad to be part of those trying.

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Title:
  Movement of Unity launcher

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