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Compiz Gets Thumbs-Up for Gutsy Gibbon

Posted by Zonk on Thu Sep 13, 2007 01:47 PM
from the cheeky-monkey dept.
Da Chronic writes "After a vigorous debate at the last Ubuntu Technical Board meeting, the board decided to ship Ubuntu 7.10 with Compiz enabled by default. The decision was made despite the fact that Compiz still has some significant issues relating to drivers and Xorg. 'For instance, there are some problems — like accelerated video playback issues with Intel drivers — that can only be resolved by using the EXA accelerated rendering framework which is still not ready yet. When asked why Intel isn't addressing the driver issue, technical board member Mathew Garrett explained that "Intel are working on the basis that composited desktops won't be ready for rolling out until EXA is stable enough anyway, so it's not a concern [for them].' In the end, all but one member voted to include Compiz in Gutsy."
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  • by ickypoo (568859) on Thursday September 13 2007, @01:53PM (#20592433)
    Here's your wikipedia. Thanks, submitter.

    Compiz is one of the first compositing window managers for the X Window System that uses 3D graphics hardware to create fast compositing desktop effects for window management.
    • by pebs (654334) on Thursday September 13 2007, @03:50PM (#20594689) Homepage
      Look at how long the submission is. Why would you make it even longer by including a definition of what a relatively popular software component is? You might as well include definition for Ubuntu, Gutsy, and Xorg while you're at it.

      Keep up with the times or use Google/Wikipedia when you don't know what something is (like you just did).
        • by xenocide2 (231786) on Thursday September 13 2007, @04:17PM (#20595129) Homepage
          Actually, I'd say the technology is being tried by nearly every desktop user. And subsequently disabled. My roommate turned it off because it was too distracting. I keep it off because it tends to freeze X on me on feisty.

          It's neat, but I suspect that it's not very well engineered. [ohloh.net]
            • by xenocide2 (231786) on Friday September 14 2007, @04:01AM (#20600659) Homepage
              If you want examples, look at the bug list for compiz. 175 bugs. You can't even configure compiz by default, beyond "none, some, and more". The fire module tends to choke up starting apps that start maximized. The optional preferences manager in universe hates gconf. And it doesn't even call the burn module by the same name, sometimes calling it fire. And of course, it breaks GL apps that don't do some fullscreen magic. It resets your number of workspaces to 1, and doesn't replace them with viewports. But most of all, it won't really work out of the box in most cases. They try to detect when it won't work and prevent it from activating in those situations. Only the Intel integrated stuff will likely be able to handle it out of the box. Compiz won't be enabled by default if you upgrade, I hear.

              These are nitpicks and serious bugs I've found while testing for a few hours. Most are already in launchpad. Bugs don't go away because you don't like me. If you want people like me to go away, report and fix bugs. There's nothing wrong with the software existing -- it's a great tool to experiment with, and impress people. And it's certainly better than what Vista provides. I just think it's important to provide people with a flawless experience out of the box, and let them explore the more adventurous packages Ubuntu provides at leisure.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          It's unstable and it hangs X.org. I disabled it within half an hour of trying it.

  • Bloat++ (Score:5, Insightful)

    by zblach (977591) on Thursday September 13 2007, @01:54PM (#20592455)
    guh. Why not make a package w/ auto-configurable scripts available for install? Put a box in adept, or something "Click here for flashy graphics!!11". I run Kubuntu because I like having a *nix compatible desktop, not because I want another toy. I understand that some people are turned to linux for stability, and some for flashy graphics, but why include by default? Aero competition? Hope it's easily (and completely) removable. -z
    • by DreadSpoon (653424) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:57PM (#20593703) Homepage Journal
      You realize that Kwin is including all of the 3D graphical foofah in new versions, right? Compiz is a WM that you can swap out with Metacity (or anything else) whenever you want, but your desktop is coming with the special effects built-in to the default window manager.

      Thankfully, you're using KDE, so you'll have at least 8 checkboxes to disable it. ;)
    • by Nosklo (815041) <WPARHFOBFDOT@[ ] ... m ['spa' in gap]> on Thursday September 13 2007, @03:37PM (#20594459)
      OOOOOHHH!!! My Eyes! They have Diabetis now! Too much candy!!
      • Re:Bloat++ (Score:4, Informative)

        by notthe9 (800486) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:10PM (#20592715)
        No one is hiding a root password from anyone. Ubuntu by default install with no root account. The idea is that you will do all your administrative stuff using sudo. You can easily enable the root account with the password of your choice.

        As to removability, I would assume a single apt-get call or a couple clicks in a graphical window manager will remove Compiz completely. (You'd sudo the tasks if you are not root.)
          • Re:Bloat++ (Score:4, Informative)

            by MMC Monster (602931) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:59PM (#20593751)
            It's not that there is no root account. There is a root account that cannot be logged into without first setting a password (using sudo from a user account that is allowed to run sudo).

            The idea is that no one needs to be root except to run particular commands (using sudo or gksudo). If you do need to run root you will create the root password and log in as root and be able to shoot yourself in the foot if you point the run in the wrong direction (ie: rm -R /. instead of rm -R ./).
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        I imagine it would be easy to remove if they just gave us the root password.... (or am i getting my distros mixed up?)

        sudo passwd

        Now you have a root password.

        Still, to disable Compiz all you'd have to do is click on "System"->"Preferences"->"Desktop Effects" and press the "Enable Desktop Effects" toggle button. No password required (it's a per user setting).

        If you want to completely remove Compiz from the system, just click on "System"->"Administration"->"Synaptic Package Manager". Type in your password, and then do a search for "desktop-effects" and "compiz-core" (all over compiz packages depend on this, s

  • by downix (84795) on Thursday September 13 2007, @01:55PM (#20592487) Homepage
    or to crash and burn, that is the question. Ubuntu might be making a brave move, or a bad move, but only time will tell. If their gamble pays off, they might be on the cutting edge, and with a marketable, noticeable advantage. If not, well... there's always Knoppix.
  • well... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 13 2007, @01:57PM (#20592505)
    as long as that "fallback configuration tool" that was linked here a few weeks ago works properly, i guess it shouldnt cause too many problems. lets hope that the installer will intelligently choose the correct manager.
  • by fishthegeek (943099) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:25PM (#20593011) Journal
    I teach at a technical high school, and I use Ubuntu, Vista, XP, and OS X in the course for integration lessons. The kids Ooooh at Vista and OS X but when they discover that Ubuntu can do compositing in a flashier way (with Compiz Fusion) than either of the other two platforms and that it is free they immediately ask for one of the Ship it CDs that I happen to keep around.

    I'm not saying that I evangelize Linux but since it is free, and I do teach it I find it very convenient to be able to just furnish them a copy on the spot. Flashy sells. It sells cars, bombers and hookers why not use it to sell an OS? Before anyone posts a response about bloat please remember that these are primarily 15 year old kids and the concepts of bloat are just academic to them. They won't care about bloat until they are running their own network.
  • Stability Now (Score:3, Insightful)

    by keithjr (1091829) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:41PM (#20593363)
    Depending on how stable all related drivers and devices are by the time Gutsy rolls out, this may very well be the worst thing that could happen to Ubuntu since that bad Xorg update last year.

    Ubuntu is cherished by new-to-linux users as being zero-configuration and extremely hardware-compatible. Now they are introducing features which may fail to work with certain hardware. Why on earth would they do this?!
  • by LWATCDR (28044) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:50PM (#20593543) Homepage Journal
    They have released the docs for their GPU. I have been told time and time again on Slashdot that all that has to happen is to document your hardware and a legion of FOSS programmers will write a better driver than you could.
    So why does Intel need to address anything?

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        So without the company that created the hardware dedicating resources to a driver project the driver may or not be done in a timely manner.
        So if a company wants their driver in the Kernel they will have to not just release the documentation but dedicate programming staff to the project. So they pretty much have to make the same effort as they would with a closed source driver but also prepare the documentation, manage the open source contributions if they get any, and make sure that their software is legal
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          I hope you're not trolling here. X.org has very few contributors as a whole. Maybe 20 or so, with about half who do real work on the graphics drivers. That's really not very many for such a large amount of code. So no, I'm sorry to break it to you, but there's no armies of experienced graphics driver coders just itching to write those drivers. If you believe that then you're living in a fantasy land.

          On the flip side, it's becoming easier and easier to get involved, for those who are interested. XFree86's pr
  • by Vspirit (200600) on Thursday September 13 2007, @03:26PM (#20594269) Homepage
    Since the 3D engine and direct rendering features accelerate rendering windows, toolbar, systray etc.. it ought to be of value to all, even the X users that only use X to open terminal windows and|or use multiple monitors. (most of you guys use web browser also anyways).

    I have not yet used compiz-fusion, although I have made sure the graphics card and the freebsd+xorg installation are prepared, when I do I sure hope that it is fairly simple to install a configuration that can be stripped down, so only the the cpu+mem eating code that are needed to render window, toolbar, systray and alike are active, making it efficient. Then I hope it is also easy to enable/disable simple features that suits my liking, with and option to save and switch between different profiles.

    But I still wonder if what I dream of is simply a fairytale, or whether this can be expected?
  • Yikes (Score:5, Interesting)

    by massysett (910130) on Thursday September 13 2007, @03:43PM (#20594573) Homepage
    If there has to be "vigorous debate" about something like this, then it is not ready to be turned on by default, plain and simple. The article says the developers don't know how stable Compiz-Fusion is, because they don't have data, etc. But they have doubts, which is all that matters. It would be fine to go forward with turning it on by default if all the devs ran it and none experienced any problems. Instead, there are known problems (such as this Intel problem) and some of the devs acknowledge that the thing can crash once a DAY, which is consistent with other experiences I have read as well.

    New users (Ubuntu's target, I believe) will try Ubuntu, see this thing crashing all the time, and think "why did my geek friend tell me this Linux is more stable than Windows? My XP doesn't crash once a day."

    One dev said "if we don't get it out there at some point it'll never get good enough." I don't see how foisting it on new users will help get it into shape. Are the Compiz-Fusion devs not busy enough already? There are apparently already KNOWN ISSUES that aren't being fixed, so how is turning it on by default going to improve anything? It surely will not generate better bug reports--new users will not know Compiz-Fusion is the problem; how are they going to bugreport it?

    I hope Compiz-Fusion shapes up soon or that Ubuntu reverses itself; if not, this release will be a slide backward for many users--it will resemble Vista: a release with lots of paint, but with no improvements under the surface.
    • Re:Yikes (Score:4, Insightful)

      by xenocide2 (231786) on Thursday September 13 2007, @05:11PM (#20595871) Homepage
      If we don't get it out it'll never be good enough
      The basic idea here is that by shipping it with bugs, you'll motivate a few people who wouldn't have otherwise used it to investigate. In some cases, this is true. But realistically, we're not sitting on a pile of unused openGL / video driver development talent. Any such slack was picked up by Intel and put to work on what they felt pressing, and as such is not available to meet Canonical's unpaid requests.

      We don't even know how bad it is
      There are 150 open bugs against compiz, and only 3 labelled critical. But we really don't know how perception of compiz affects bug reporting. We know not all bugs found are reported by it's finder. It's possible that compiz is known to be unstable and rather than report, people just disable and get on with life, assuming compiz stability will continue to be a back burner issue. Dropping compiz into gutsy by default would likely expose more users to bugs.
      This exposure is theoretically what testing is for, but for various reasons, hasn't come to fruition. One is that upgrades don't enable compiz. Another is that people come to testing not for Ubuntu's sake but for theirs. They're interested in significant new software, or preserving some hardware compatibility.

      Or it's simply possible that that's all the bugs there are. But I doubt that.

      However
      Ubuntu does have a significant support structure in place capable of dealing with all but the most egreious failures (think broken X server pushed out). Launchpad does a good job of searching for duplicate bug reports to bring people together, and test workarounds / patches. It's also got a way to attach to upstream bugs to follow on with. This is good because compiz's bugzilla is a nightmare.
    • by everphilski (877346) on Thursday September 13 2007, @01:55PM (#20592467) Journal
      What name will they use for the release that comes after the "zesty zebra" release?!?

      anonymous anorexic anacondas
      • I'm just happy this release wasn't 'glistening goatse'. *shudder*
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          'Nah, they'll use "Hungry Hungry Hippo", once it becomes bloated with other stuff like this that new users won't likely use.'

          You don't think users will use a 3D accelerated desktop? Forget the breathtaking effects this brings, the performance makes 2D X look slow and crappy.

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              I said new users. More experienced users would likely use this technology.
              I have to agree with GP. In my experience, although the 3d effects aren't implicitly useful, they tended to make my computer FEEL more interactive, and I tended to feel less tired after using the computer.

              Which I guess sounds weird. Maybe I can get a government grant to study wobbly windows.
    • What name will they use for the release that comes after the "zesty zebra" release?!?
      "[rusty [urmudgeon", followed by "/ntelligent /rma", and then "]azzy ]ason".
    • by mrchaotica (681592) * on Thursday September 13 2007, @01:59PM (#20592539)

      It's like Beryl. Hope that helps! ; )

    • Re:Compiz is...? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Adult film producer (866485) <van@i2pmail.org> on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:16PM (#20592825)
      here, watch it.. better than any wordy description.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4Fbk52Mk1w [youtube.com]
    • Re:Compiz is...? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by El Lobo (994537) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:23PM (#20592943)
      Compiz is the thing that MS gets criticized to death when they dare to use it in their OS (called sometimes bloat, or stupid effects, shit, etc), and that is critically aclaimed when Apple, some Linuzzz distro or use it in their distributions.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        One thing you forgot, in M$Win it would be enabled by default, and wired in without any chance to remove it.
        With Linux, you at least get a chance to find a distro without it, or be able to remove it completely .
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        MS gets criticized because when they implement it, it hogs system resources and requires bleeding edge hardware to run. My 6 yr old computer will run Beryl with no effect on system performance, but i can't turn on the effects in Vista without my computer slowing to a crawl. (i tried to run it for 30 days so when i said how horrible it was, i could give examples from personal experience. i only made it 10 days, but i got plenty to bitch about.)
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        yeah, i've been trying to post an appology outlining that my original post was being written as the original reply was being posted, i didnt see it.

        sorry.
        • by eln (21727) * on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:02PM (#20592575) Homepage
          This is simply unacceptable behavior for a Slashdot reader. You never admit that you were wrong, and you certainly never apologize. Next time, reply with something like "The article was Slashdotted, you insensitive clod!"

          I'll forgive you this time, though.
            • by QuantumRiff (120817) on Thursday September 13 2007, @03:19PM (#20594117)
              Guide to Slashdot Etiquette

              Never Ever Read the Articles.. That is for people with time to spare, and we are busy geeks..

              Never Admit Being wrong, Just post that your being misunderstood, and what you were trying to say was....

              If there have been more than 4 articles about google or apple this week, we hate them!

              If the day ends in "Y" you hate microsoft

              Corollary to above, If you post a genuinely well thought out, insightful comment about maybe MS is not all that bad This time you will be marked as Troll or Flamebait.

              If a post is made by a "4 digit" user, even if they claim the Iraq war was started by Ceasar in 42BC, for control of the moon and the entrances to the caverns beneath the earth were the Hobbits live, you may never comment against them, or mod them down..

              Funny Beats Intelligent comments any day.. (see this comment for reference, which is also a reference to the next rule!)

              Last and most important, always try to Karma Whore!
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        but not with the detailed configurability of Beryl

        or the stability of all of those window managers that don't do the worthless fancy stuff.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:03PM (#20592601)
      > welcome our gusty gisbo overlords.

      We set AC up with the perfect opportunity for a Goatse Gibbon, or a Gutsy Goatse, or a Goatse's Guts, and he swings and misses.

      *sigh*

    • Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Interesting)

      by SlashdotOgre (739181) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:09PM (#20592695) Journal
      I've been running Compiz in its various forms (compiz-quinnstorm, beryl, now compiz-fusion) on Gentoo since around March of 2006, and while I can see where you're coming from I have found some of its features actually useful. The ones I particularly like are: the expose clone (google 'expose mac to see what I'm referring to), the live alt-tabs (you see what's running in the alt-tab windows), it allows for extensive key bindings (I know you can use other programs like xbindkeys, but it at least beats Metacity's binding capability), and transparency (compiz isn't required to do this, but it makes it a lot easier than other WM's -- basically it's designed with that in mind).

      Most of the eye candy doesn't eat too much CPU, and it all easily be enabled and disabled from it's control panel (compiz-fusion uses ccsm which works great, beryl-settings-manager was also pretty good). I was also impressed by beryl-manager (now fusion-icon) which made switching windows and decoration managers easier than ever.
    • Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Insightful)

      by kerohazel (913211) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:10PM (#20592725) Homepage
      For me it's a convenient way to answer someone who asks me "Linux? Why do you use _Linux_?"

      Not much of a meaningful answer, but then again when posed like this it's not really a meaningful question.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Maybe this'll help, with a decent 3d graphics chipset, it makes the desktop more responsive by offloading the desktop rendering to the GPU completely.
    • Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Nutty_Irishman (729030) on Thursday September 13 2007, @02:21PM (#20592907)
      I originally thought the same thing with Beryl (the breakoff from Compiz, which is now remerging into compiz-fusion), and thought, "hey it looks nice, but that's about it". I left it installed on my machine as it was pretty stable and didn't see a need to remove it. After a while I started rearranging and managing my desktop-- all development work in one window, terminal windows in another, email/web browser in another, and the last for visualization apps (imageJ, matlab, etc.). It wasn't until I had all four desktops being active used that I realized how much easier it was to multitask with a more sophisticated windows manager. I could actively switch between desktops fast, drag and drop items from one desktop to the other, separate global and local task switchers-- all much faster and with less downtime than before. Now I find it rather limiting to use a linux box that doesn't have it installed.

      The only thing really holding it back is the stability issues (my desktop has no problems, but my laptop crashes at least once a day with it enabled). It doesn't hurt to install it and give it a try-- if you don't find it useful at first but it runs stable, then leave it installed-- you might come back and find it useful someday.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Did you run top while using Compiz? I'd think letting the video-card handle all the effects (vid cards these days handle games with requirements far more brutal than a wussy little desktop) would be way more efficient than rectally violating the CPU. I've seen X bolt to the top of my CPU lists frequently, and I just roll my eyes every time.

      I've actually been waiting for it to stabilize and for Compiz and Beryl to quit arguing amongst themselves for just this reason. The eye candy is nice, but I just want
    • Re:Ubuntu (Score:4, Informative)

      by HermMunster (972336) on Thursday September 13 2007, @06:20PM (#20596723)
      He's clueless. Ubuntu is awesome.
    • Sorry, I don't have time to read your whole post. Could you summarize your thoughts for me please?
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Could you summarize your thoughts for me please?

        Microsoft gave me $$$

      • So does your mom... troll.
        I find it strange that this comment was modded "informative".

        Mainly because I doubt there's anyone out there that *doesn't* know that his mom sucks :-)