Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Jane Silber
on 22 January 2008

Why a Canonical blog?


Welcome to the Canonical Blog. The goal of the blog is to provide a vehicle for people who work for Canonical to respond to some of the questions we get asked, to explore the issues we care about, and to expand on some of the initiatives in which we are involved. It is a companion piece to the Fridge, Planet Ubuntu and to Mark’s blog but it is different as it is not the voice of the Ubuntu Community.

It is the Canonical (capital C) voice. It is (we hope) the considered opinion of people within Canonical with a valuable perspective on a specific topic. It is here to address that gap where a press release is over the top but we want to respond to an issue or we want to provide more colour on an announcement, where we want to provoke debate or bring attention to something that we feel is important.

We live in interesting times in computing and at Canonical we are fortunate to find ourselves at the centre of a lot of the more interesting developments. We hope this blog develops into a useful perspective on these issues.

– The Canonical Team

Related posts


Hugo Huang
28 May 2026

Canonical announces optimized Ubuntu images for TPU virtual machines by Google Cloud

AI Article

Canonical and Google Cloud announced the availability of certified Ubuntu images for Google’s Cloud TPU Virtual Machines. ...


David Beamonte
28 May 2026

VMware hypervisor deployment using MAAS

MAAS Article

Most modern datacenters are inherently heterogeneous. VMware environments coexist with container platforms, databases, and other bare-metal workloads, often on the same hardware over several years. Servers are bought once, but their role changes as requirements evolve. However, ESXi (the VMware hypervisor) provisioning is often handled se ...


Rob Gibbon
28 May 2026

Migrating from Apache Spark 3 to Spark 4

Data Platform Article

The purpose of this guide is to highlight the key differences between Apache Spark 3 and Spark 4, and provide advice on how to plan a migration. Let’s get started. The biggest changes Let’s talk about the biggest changes between Apache Spark 3.x and Spark 4. Scala 2.12 no more First up, there’s no support ...