Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 22 October 2012

The UDS Design Track


One week to go! We’re looking forward to UDS. For me personally it will be my first and I’m thrilled to check out all the interesting sessions and hear your stories about Ubuntu and design. There will also be a very exciting design track in which we hope to work together on many cool topics, such as fonts, Juju GUI, Danish toys, the theater and many more!

For example, we will run some very interesting sessions on Ubuntu font guidelines and error states. We will organize real user-testing with the brand new Juju GUI. According to tradition, we will again organize the design theater. And we also invited two external speakers – one from LEGO and one from a design company – to talk about their experience with co-creation and their work with communities.

We’ll send out a more detailed schedule later this week.

Hope to see you at the Bella Center in Copenhagen next week!

On behalf of the design team,

Ivo

Related posts


Kola Ojoodide
26 June 2026

Challenges designers face in open source (and how to fix them)

Design open source

Open source powers up to 90% of modern software, yet many projects lack usability. Canonical’s Design team surveyed 115 cross-functional professionals to uncover the 4 core challenges UI/UX designers face when contributing, and how maintainers can solve them. ...


Nina Rojc
16 June 2026

Template: Streamlining open source design contributions

Design Ubuntu tech blog

As designers working at Canonical, we’re always thinking about open source. We believe that encouraging more designers to contribute to open source  benefits everyone, from the project maintainers to the end users themselves.   In the 2025 edition of FOSSBackstage conference, we presented our research findings on  why designers don’t get ...


Miguel Divo
22 May 2026

Decoding design: How design and engineering thrive together in open source

Design Ubuntu tech blog

Open source thrives on engineering-driven processes. Fast feedback loops, terminal tools, Git workflows: they’re the lifeblood of how we build software in the open. But for software to truly excel, we need to create user experiences that empower people to use them. I wanted to bring this conversation into the spotlight as part of Canonica ...