Canonical, the sponsor of Ubuntu Linux, has announced that Mark
Shuttleworth will be stepping down as CEO of the company and will next
year be replaced by Jane Silber, who is currently Canonical's chief
operating officer.
In a call with press and analysts on Dec. 17, Shuttleworth said he
will be stepping down from his CEO role to focus more on specific
projects within Canonical, including the company's move to support
cloud computing.
"Ubuntu remains my primary focus," Shuttleworth said. "I have been
working on the cloud initiative we put in place. So I'll be doing
product design and working with partners." Shuttle worth added that he
will focus on working with some of Canonical's larger partners and
taking advantage of this opportunity "to focus on the things I enjoy
most."
In a written Q&A about the transition, Shuttleworth said:
"I will focus on my passions of product design and development. I
want Ubuntu to succeed as the open platform of choice for almost all
use types whether on netbook, notebook, desktop, server, embedded
device or wherever people compute. That is a large undertaking and
being able to focus on that, thanks to Jane, is a great privilege. I
will also spend more time talking to and visiting partners and
customers about what they demand from an open platform and feeding that
back into the product through the community and Canonical."
Shuttleworth said this move does not indicate a change in strategy
or direction for Canonical or Ubuntu. "This change is not a change in
strategy," he said. "Over the last couple of years Jane and I have
shared the leadership of Canonical," he added. And with the company
continuing to grow and beginning to focus more on the enterprise
market, Shuttleworth said he wanted to be able to focus more on
tightening up the product and leaving the running of the company to
Silber.
"Our focus on enterprise customers has been growing over the last
couple of years, but not to the exclusion of our consumer customer
base," Silber said.
Also, in the written Q&A, Silber said:
"As Mark Shuttleworth has announced I will have the privilege of
leading Canonical from March of next year. I am excited about the role,
energized by the opportunities in front of us, and humbled by the
collection of amazing and talented individuals in Canonical and the
Ubuntu community. Mark will continue to play a major role in
Canonical, and we expect this to be a smooth transition. "
Silber says she has held many positions at Canonical since joining
the company in 2004, including her current role as COO and director of
online services. Silber's skill set, which includes engineering and
management experience, led her to assume functions including the
management of Ubuntu One, OEM services, corporate services, marketing,
finance, legal and other matters at the company.
Silber noted one change to expect from this transition. "One thing
this move will bring about is a clearer separation of the role of CEO
of Canonical and the leader of the Ubuntu community," she said. "It
will be two different people now, which I think will be helpful in both
achieving their joint and individual goals more quickly."