As 2026 progresses, LLM-based tools are becoming more and more ubiquitous. Adoption across the tech industry has been mixed, both in terms of which projects are embracing “AI” technologies, and in how companies are structuring their adoption. As a result, I’m frequently asked about what Canonical and Ubuntu will do (or not) to incorporate AI. In this post I’ll detail how AI will play a part in both Canonical and Ubuntu’s future, my framework for classifying AI features in the OS, and how Canoni...
Technically, Ubuntu is behind the curve not at the forefront on this. Universal Blue already includes quite a bit of AI stuff and Fedora has had drafted plans for a while.
Cannonical is definitely not dodging the “enshittified part of the Linux Ecosystem” allegations.
Technically, Ubuntu is
behind the curvenot at the forefront on this. Universal Blue already includes quite a bit of AI stuff and Fedora has had drafted plans for a while.Universal Blue: https://hachyderm.io/@jorge/116476967711636491
Hah yeah I spoke to Jon about this stuff at KubeCon. I said something like “Try to keep up!” :)
Lots of common tooling in this space though and getting more attention to open models can only help.