Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

An error occurred while submitting your form. Please try again or file a bug report. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 15 October 2019

Grace Hopper Conference 2019


We are so excited about what just happened that we felt we should tell everyone about it!

A group of 24 of us at Canonical from various teams including Sales, HR and Engineering, attended the Grace Hopper Celebration in Orlando, Florida. This year, it was an epic gathering of more than 26,000 people from all over the globe interested in tech. Despite its start as women’s work, the tech industry has gained a reputation of being dominated by and mostly suited for men. In reality, this only made the Grace Hopper conference feel more impactful, especially knowing that in its very first edition in 1994, only 500 women were present at the event. The Grace Hopper Conference was an awesome celebration of women; diverse, multi-talented, and deeply skilled!

Both women and men, mostly students, interested in everything from security to machine learning came by the Canonical booth to hear about Ubuntu. We brought along an Orange box so we could demo MAAS, OpenStack, and other incredible technologies happening on Ubuntu at Canonical.

We rotated attending informative and inspiring sessions; exploring an exhibition hall pulsating with energy and booths as far as the eye can see; and discussed Canonical offerings and job opportunities at our Canonical booth.

There were so many best parts to the week. We discussed various technologies with others in the industry, scoped out exceptional talent for Canonical job opportunities, visited various booths and found out who uses Ubuntu and what for. We also gave out Ubuntu trinkets and collected bags of trinkets from others. Perhaps our favourite was just hanging out and getting to know fellow Canonical’ers on the various teams and what they worked on.

All of us had the opportunity to share what we do and what we love about working for Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu. It was interesting for us that most of the people we met did not know the name ‘Canonical’, but knew and worked regularly with Ubuntu. Someone even said: “Ubuntu is the reason I chose this career!” and were very excited to talk to the people behind it.

Meeting that many smart women in tech made us realise that we are not alone. Every one of us has the capacity to contribute and drive change. #WeWill make a difference. See you next year at GHC 2020!

Related posts


Jehudi
22 August 2025

A complete security view for every Ubuntu LTS VM on Azure

Compliance Article

Azure’s Update Manager now shows missing Ubuntu Pro updates for all Ubuntu Long-Term Support (LTS) releases: 18.04, 20.04, 22.04 and 24.04. The feature was first introduced for only 18.04 during its move to Expanded Security Maintenance. With this addition, Azure highlights where Ubuntu LTS instances would benefit from Expanded Security M ...


Gabriel Aguiar Noury
20 August 2025

Canonical is now a platinum member in the Open Source Robotics Alliance

Robotics Article

Ubuntu is the home of ROS. The very first ROS distribution, Box Turtle, launched on Ubuntu 8.04 LTS, Hardy Heron, and since then, Ubuntu and ROS have grown hand in hand. With every Ubuntu LTS release, a new ROS distribution follows, an intentional alignment that ensures ROS works out of the box on Ubuntu Desktop, ...


ijlal-loutfi
19 August 2025

AMD SEV-SNP host support available on Ubuntu 25.04

Confidential computing Article

Ubuntu 25.04 introduces full AMD SEV-SNP host support, making Ubuntu the first production-grade Linux distribution to deliver end-to-end confidential computing , from host to guest , without out-of-tree patches or experimental builds. With this release, enterprises can deploy confidential virtual machines on fully Ubuntu-based stacks in b ...