Canonical distributes Parallels via desktop update

Canonical, the commercial sponsor of the popular Ubuntu Linux distribution, will on Thursday begin making commercial applications available to Ubuntu users directly through the desktop, in a step designed to simplify software installation.

The company is making Parallels Workstation for Linux available to users via the operating system's built-in software update tool, using a feature called the Ubuntu Partner Repository. Parallels Workstation allows users to run Windows and Linux simultaneously on a single system.

The deal marks the first time Canonical has distributed commercial software through the repository, which has in the past only distributed free and open-source software. Because of the inherent diversity in Linux distributions, software installation can be a serious stumbling block for inexperienced desktop users of the sort that Ubuntu is designed for.

Free and open-source software can be tailored for a particular distribution and made available for automatic installation from online repositories, such as Linspire's CNR.com, but commercial software is often left out of the loop.

To install Parallels Workstation, for instance, users previously needed to go through a command line-based installation process. Under the new arrangement, installation is a matter of selecting the software from a list, and takes under a minute, according to Canonical.

"This is the first piece of software we have made available this way, which may make it look a bit odd," a Canonical spokesman told CNET News.com sister site ZDNet UK. "But, very quickly, we will make more commercial software available in that repository, and make buying through the store an option for users that want commercial software running on Ubuntu."

The version of the software available through the Ubuntu Partner Repository is a trial version, a Canonical spokesman said; users can buy a permanent key via the online Canonical Store.

The deal also gives Parallels direct access to users of the most widely used desktop Linux distribution.

Parallels, formerly SWsoft, first became widely known for Parallels Desktop for Mac, which allows users to run Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X side by side on Intel-powered Macs. The company recently renamed itself after its best-known product.

Last month, OpenVZ and Ubuntu developers released pre-built Ubuntu virtual machines designed to allow system administrators to deploy a specialized Ubuntu system in about a minute.

OpenVZ is an open-source project sponsored by Parallels, and forms the basis for the commercial virtualization software Virtuozzo. Parallels and Canonical worked together on the virtualized templates, which are based on Ubuntu 7.10.

Matthew Broersma of ZDNet UK reported from London.

More from News.com on this story's topics

Open source

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Linux

Create an email alert | RSS feed

See more CNET content tagged:
Ubuntu, OpenVZ, repository, Linux, distribution

2 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Anyone tried it?
by cjb8465 February 6, 2008 12:15 PM PST
Is parallels better than VMWare Server (which is free, and already in the Ubuntu repository)?
Reply to this comment View reply
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
RSS Feeds
Add headlines from CNET News.com to your homepage or feedreader.
Google
Yahoo
MSN
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Today's Top Stories
HelioVolt claims CIGS solar efficiency mark
Virtual worlds for pre-schoolers? They're here
Powerset brings the Semantic Web to Wikipedia
Flaw turns Gmail into spamming machine
Nvidia CEO denies buyout of Via
Most Popular Stories
Google to launch Friend Connect for the social Web
FBI probe nets counterfeit Chinese networking parts
Stolen Mac helps nab burglary suspects
A modest proposal to fix Dell's customer service
Did you get infected? Virus runs amok amid JavaOne
Resource center from News.com sponsors
You can do more when your phone runs Windows®
Windows Mobile

See it all at StartDoingMore.com Start Doing More

Start doing more
Get More Done with Windows Mobile

There's so much more you can do when your phone runs Windows. StartDoingMore.com>

Familiar Microsoft Software and Services

With a Windows Mobile phone, your easy-to-use Microsoft software go wherever you go.

Choose the perfect phone for you

Side, flip, qwerty, touchscreen? See More>

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (-0.94%) -120.90 12,745.88
S&P 500 (-0.67%) -9.40 1,388.28
NASDAQ (-0.23%) -5.72 2,445.52
CNET TECH (-0.64%) -11.13 1,724.28
  Symbol Lookup



advertisement
Click Here
On TechRepublic: 10 ways users mess up their computers
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CNET Networks sites: