The new Ubuntu and Canonical sites went live today! We hope you like them. As well as the visual refresh to include the new brand, the objective was to bring the sites up-to-date and provide a framework for them to evolve. This is the first step in the life of the new sites… we have many grand plans and we hope you will help us execute them!
We conducted several rounds of user testing as part of the redesign. We tested with potential Ubuntu users, existing users and community members. We also tested with system administrators and business users. I will post more about our methodology soon but here are some of the key findings that came out of the research and the ways in which we have tried to address them on the sites.
Users wanted to see more of the desktop so there are lots of screen-shots of Lucid in all it’s glory! Users were amazed that an operating system which looked like this and allowed them to do everything they wanted to do was available for them to download for free. This sometimes created a barrier: “What’s the catch?” We have tried to address this by surfacing this question at key moments in the journey and explaining the concept of open-source software and the role of Canonical.
Other barriers to adoption included software. Users asked: “can I still do what I currently do on my computer?” On the features page we showcase the software that is included for each key task and also supported software such as Skype. We also introduce the Ubuntu Software Centre and feature sample applications.
For the download part of the journey, we wanted to make users options clear, including the wubi installer. The burning of the CD emerged as an issue during our tests: users were used to downloading applications -not operating systems – and running them without needing to do anything else. To overcome this we have explained this step in detail and provided instructions and step-by-step screen-shots on how to burn the CD or create a USB drive on the different operating systems. We have also done this for the trial and install parts of the process – to offer users visibility of how simple it is and what they will see along the way – rather than sending them into the unknown!
In terms of the information architecture a key goal was to disentangle the sites and make the relationship between Ubuntu and Canonical clearer. Everything about the project, Ubuntu products and the community remains on Ubuntu. Canonical’s services and company information live on the Canonical website but are featured contextually on the Ubuntu site to surface how the model works and provide users with the relevant options at the right point in their journey – without transferring them from one site to another unnecessarily.
We’re looking forward to your feedback and the next round of improvements.
The new Ubuntu and Canonical sites went live today! We hope you like them. As well as the visual refresh to include the new brand, the objective was to bring the sites up-to-date and provide a framework for them to evolve. This is the first step in the life of the new sites...we have many grand plans and we hope you will help us execute them! We conducted several rounds of user testing as part of the redesign. We tested with potential Ubuntu users, existing users and community members. We also tested with system administrators and business users. I will post more about our methodology soon but here are some of the key findings that came out of the research and the ways in which we have tried to address them on the sites. Users wanted to see more of the desktop so there are lots of screen-shots of Lucid in all it's glory! Users were amazed that an operating system which looked like this and allowed them to do everything they wanted to do was available for them to download for free. This sometimes created a barrier: "What's the catch?" We have tried to address this by surfacing this question at key moments in the journey and explaining the concept of open-source software and the role of Canonical. Other barriers to adoption included software. Users asked: "can I still do what I currently do on my computer?" On the features page we showcase the software that is included for each key task and also supported software such as Skype. We also introduce the Ubuntu Software Centre and feature sample applications. For the download part of the journey, we wanted to make users options clear, including the wubi installer. The burning of the CD emerged as an issue during our tests: users were used to downloading applications -not operating systems - and running them without needing to do anything else. To overcome this we have explained this step in detail and provided instructions and step-by-step screen-shots on how to burn the CD or create a USB drive on the different operating systems. We have also done this for the trial and install parts of the process - to offer users visibility of how simple it is and what they will see along the way - rather than sending them into the unknown! In terms of the information architecture a key goal was to disentangle the sites and make the relationship between Ubuntu and Canonical clearer. Everything about the project, Ubuntu products and the community remains on Ubuntu. Canonical's services and company information live on the Canonical website but are featured contextually on the Ubuntu site to surface how the model works and provide users with the relevant options at the right point in their journey - without transferring them from one site to another unnecessarily. We're looking forward to your feedback and the next round of improvements.
The toolkit

11 Responseshide comments
You’ve done a really great job! It looks professional and fresh. One of the best things about it is all the user testing you are doing, the most important factor in web developing. And of course it gives the findings.
I noticed one thing about style and script files; there are too many of them. You should compress them using Drupal’s built in optimizer to save some http requests.
You’re new branding is close to perfect, it’s an important part of Ubuntu’s road to success. Keep up the good work
It’s much better! The new design, the structure, all the screenshots and explanations… It’s great!
However, all the URLs have changed! That’s ok, it’s more consistent with the new categories… But! Every link to the ubuntu.com website (except the homepage) now return a 404!
It includes every release notes for every alpha/beta/final release, and most importantly, all the download pages (http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/download).
Now, the first Google result for Ubuntu shows 8 sub-links:
Download Ubuntu
Download Netbook Edition
Ubuntu 10.04 LTS Features | Ubuntu
Ubuntu Desktop Edition
Get Ubuntu
Download Ubuntu Server
Support
How to Upgrade
Every one of them (except “Support”) is now broken. :-/
And the second result is again a broken link to the download page.
So you might want to create redirections to the new urls, for the most used urls of the old website (like the download pages), at least.
There is also a CSS problem with this page: http://www.ubuntu.com/how-can-it-be-free
There is a “color: white;” on the whole text (the bloc with the “how-right” class), so it’s unreadable.
But again, it’s a great re-launch.
Is there anywhere we can submit patches? Is there a repository?
I know you are trying to be as concise and clear as possible, but I really dislike the way the download page tells you to download and install an ISO burning app (on Windows) without even attempting to suggest you might already have such an app on your computer.
Would it be so hard to say:
“1. If you do not have a CD burning application, or aren’t sure, then download and install Infra Recorder, a free and open-source image-burning program.”
IMO that is a lot less scary to newbies and much more informative than just saying ‘YOU MUST DOWNLOAD THIS EXACT CD BURNING APP!!!1111′
I realy like it. Wonder when/if http://ubuntuforums.org https://wiki.ubuntu.com and http://shop.canonical.com will get design update.
I really like it. Wonder when/if http://ubuntuforums.org https://wiki.ubuntu.com and http://shop.canonical.com will get design update.
I think the ubuntu site looks very nice but there is something missing from the canonical site. It needs a picture to offset the amount of text and purpleness. Its just missing something. I thought it was going to look a little more like design.canonical.com which is very nice looking but I suppose the rules are different for blogs.
I’m shocked the sites aren’t more media-centric and have more images. Also, where is the negative space? Too much information is crammed together without much room to breath. Lastly, the site designs use the new “dot” pattern _far_ too extensively. Dots behind as a background for some boxes, dots for the wallpaper, dots for underlining the footer links; it’s far too much and ends up eye-jarring.
Brett Alton
http://brettalton.com
I posted this 2 days ago but it didn’t appear… Is there a problem with the comments?
It’s much better! The new design, the structure, all the screenshots and explanations… It’s great!
However, all the URLs have changed! That’s ok, it’s more consistent with the new categories… But! Every link to the ubuntu.com website (except the homepage) now return a 404!
It includes every release notes for every alpha/beta/final release, and most importantly, all the download pages (http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/download).
Now, the first google result for ubuntu shows 8 sublinks:
Download Ubuntu
Download Netbook Edition
Ubuntu 10.04 LTS Features | Ubuntu
Ubuntu Desktop Edition
Get Ubuntu
Download Ubuntu Server
Support
How to Upgrade
(Well… now, these results have disappeared, but the following ones are still there.)
Every one of them (except “Support”) is now broken. :-/
And the second result is again a broken link to the download page.
So you might want to create redirections to the new urls, for the most used urls of the old website (like the download pages), at least.
There is also a CSS problem with this page:
http://www.ubuntu.com/how-can-it-be-free
There is a “color: white;” on the whole text (the bloc with the “how-right” class), so it’s unreadable.
But again, it’s a great re-launch.
Is there anywhere we can submit patches? Is there a repository?
Yann
Will planet.ubuntu.com get a face lift as well?
I have a computer that was made for me computer with an ADM 64 in it. How can I install ubuntu,and what do I need to do it.
Has anyone else run in to this?
Great story and Great sharing this.I really appreciate it!