Ubuntu 14.10 Released With Ambitious Name, But Small Changes 110
Ubuntu 14.10, dubbed Utopic Unicorn, has been released today (here are screenshots). PC World says that at first glance "isn't the most exciting update," with not so much as a new default wallpaper — but happily so: it's a stable update in a stable series, and most users will have no pressing need to update to the newest version. In the Ubuntu Next unstable series, though, there are big changes afoot:
Along with Mir comes the next version of Ubuntu’s Unity desktop, Unity 8. Mir and the latest version of Unity are already used on Ubuntu Phone, so this is key for Ubuntu's goal of convergent computing — Ubuntu Phone and Ubuntu desktop will use the same display server and desktop shell. Ubuntu Phone is now stable and Ubuntu phones are arriving this year, so a lot of work has gone into this stuff recently.
The road ahead looks bumpy however. Ubuntu needs to get graphics drivers supporting Mir properly. The task becomes more complicated when you consider that other Linux distributions — like Fedora — are switching to the Wayland display server instead of Mir.
When Ubuntu Desktop Next becomes the standard desktop environment, the changes will be massive indeed. But for today, Utopic Unicorn is all about subtle improvements and slow, steady iteration.
Re: only 'small changes'? (Score:2)
Yes, they used to push everything new into LTS, figure ing they wanted it to be not ancient for most of its life . it was a mistake though , because they were always terrible , I think this is learning from said mistakes .
Because wallpaper is what matters most (Score:3)
To busy reviewing the Apple/Microsoft bling to realize that computer OSes really shouldn't be about what color the drapes are.
Re:Because wallpaper is what matters most (Score:5, Insightful)
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I thought this was "carpet matches the drapes".
All those folks going on about their wife's curtains and drapes has me confused. And possibly disturbed.
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OSs should be about refinement, not about throwing everything out to get ready for the new release. Things should be fairly familiar, even if the last update was a year or so ago. So why bother changing the wallpaper, if it was 'good enough' last time. Spend the time adjusting the icons to make them look good at different screen sizes or something else that needs to be tweaked in the UI.
That being said, I'm skipping updating OSs for a bit. I'm on an LTE of a downstream OS and things are good enough that
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Spyware status? (Score:3)
Does it still ship with the spyware-inspired keylogger which sends everything you search for to Canonical and others?
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It's Linux, if it didn't come with spyware pre-installed, how would Grandma get it installed?
Re:Spyware status? (Score:4, Informative)
The Ubuntu Dash still sends searches to Canonical by default. As before, you can disable on-line searches in the System Settings panel.
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Oh really, last I checked Linux Mint was kicking Ubuntu's butt, Mint being Ubuntu minus the suck.
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So it meets a Slashdot anonymous coward's self-alleged needs, who is lying about using Ubuntu 14.10. 'nuff said about Ubuntu
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That's An Ambitious name? (Score:2)
Re:That's An Ambitious name? (Score:4, Funny)
Vexing Vabbit.
And for Elmer Fudd, certainly ambitious.
How about... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That's An Ambitious name? (Score:4, Funny)
Vaginal Vulture
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Vulture do not have vaginas nor penises
Re:That's An Ambitious name? (Score:5, Funny)
Vivacious Velociraptor.
If they dont use V* Velociraptor I will personally wrrite a strongly worded letter deploring them for their utter lack of humour and sense of awesome.
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Re: That's An Ambitious name? (Score:2)
Voluptuous Vampire would be much more successful.
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Volumetric Vagina
Re:That's An Ambitious name? (Score:4, Insightful)
If "Utopic Unicorn" is an ambitious name, I'm afraid to see what comes next.
utopia = ideal, perfect state
unicorn = magical, legendary creature
I think you'd roll your eyes too if Apple or Microsoft came out with OS X 10.10 "Magic Perfection" or Windows 10 "Magic Perfection", respectively. It's the kind of name that makes you go "Okaaaaaaaaay, are you overcompensating for something?"
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"not so much as a default wallpaper" (Score:5, Funny)
WHAT?
I'm not installing such a crap update. Why would they leave out the most important thing?
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As most users have already defected to other distros, it was not worth the effort!
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"Nobody goes there anymore. It's too crowded." - Yogi Berra
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You're misunderstanding. There's no default wallpaper because the wallpaper now consists of Unity's equivalent to Metro tiles. It's not so much one wallpaper as it is multiple animated posters.
Re:"not so much as a default wallpaper" (Score:4, Interesting)
Pft, Microsoft, such a crappy UI (quick, lets make our own as much like it as we can).
It almost makes me weep when I think of some of the great UI features that have fallen by the way-side from *nix desktops in favor of chasing Microsoft's (and to a lesser extent Apple's) missteps.
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Microsoft, Canonical and Gnome all got together and took the same bad drugs.
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I don't know if this is a joke, because when I install Ubuntu these days I kill Unity and replace it with Gnome before doing anything else. But I sure hope so.
Re:"not so much as a default wallpaper" (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"not so much as a default wallpaper" (Score:4, Interesting)
On a touchscreen laptop, one may want to try either:
Fedora 21 (when it's out)
OpenSuse 13.2 (RC1 or when it's out)
Why?
Wayland, though stiil buggy in opensuse (but functional in Fedora alpha), is a gamechanger for Linux desktops. It is very fast/effficient.
Gnome 3.14 finally looks/is stable, polished and works very well with touchscreens for gestures and such. Gnome maybe has redeemed some trust in this release.
Latest kernel with laptop power management is much improved in these versions(though the same could be said for ubuntu)
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The Windows 10 preview doesn't come with Minesweeper... Ubuntu had to compete SOMEHOW!
Thank god for small changes (Score:2)
I have had quite enough reimagining thank you. Just make it smoother, more reliable, more options, fix bugs please.
The bigger the lie (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:The bigger the lie (Score:5, Informative)
Statistically, assuming even distribution of bugs across all packages in the system, I should expect to be affected by about 1100 bugs. There are some real questions that need to be asked, though. For instance: How many of those bug reports are actually valid? How many were fixed upstream and simply never closed? How many are stupid shit like "this text should be in that font" versus the number that actually impact performance or productivity? And, most importantly, how does Ubuntu compare with other distros, offering fewer packages overall, in bugs-per-package?
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As someone who recently had to do hand-to-hand combat with Xubuntu 14.04 to get certain features working at all (like detecting a second monitor on the HDMI port), I can state that certain packages are going to be way more jam-packed with bugs than others.
HDMI support seems to pretty much suck, with Pulseaudio being a close second.
A few words for the developers of things like Pulseaudio and the maintainers of various distributions, most (but not all) of which end with "buntu":
I'm really not sure why a commo
Re:The bigger the lie (Score:4, Insightful)
Pulseaudio bugs should be reported to a certain Lennart Poettering (you may have heard about him before) and became standard thanks to Red Hat. ALSA was fine, and OSS wasn't bad either (it was the licensing they didn't like IIRC).
Re:The bigger the lie (Score:5, Interesting)
It's ridiculous to think that after 2 decades that something as fundamental as "sound" is still a clusterfuck on Linux. The fragmentation and infighting in the community is what holds Linux back so much, you need a dictatorship on the distribution just so it isn't an incoherent mess, just look that the sound subsystems ALSA, OSS, PulseAudio, ESD, aRts and JACK (I'm probably missing more), then you have all the various packages that allow those systems to feed into eachother in various ways that is so messed up you can't even have a reliable software master volume on Linux. None of this shit works together properly! The biggest problem with the Linux community is not technical competence, there is loads of that, it is built of incredibly smart people but these people lack the social skills to work together in a unified way so the result is peppered with brilliance but is an outright mess of incompatibility.
That is why you need dictatorships sometimes, with Android Google takes the position that while there is no one perfect solution that is best for all they do have to make a decision on one system and go that route for their platform so that you dont have everybody going off doing whatever they want which results in a terrible user experience.
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Oh NOES right on the Debian wiki it says that Unstable might have horrible bugs! And if you run it on a server you are insane!
And... it says Debian's security team only covers Stable. Maybe this is why the Ubuntu forums got hacked and every user account, password and email address was stolen?
https://wiki.debian.org/Debian... [debian.org]
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"Most source packages in all Ubuntu components are copied unmodified from Debian."
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Ubuntu... [ubuntu.com]
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1. Shellshock was discovered by Stéphane Chazelas, who reported it to bash maintainer Chet Ramey and a few others, and assigned CVE identifier CVE-2014-6271.
2. "CVE-2014-6271: remote code execution through bash" by Florian Weimer of Red Hat (2014-09-24) was one of the first public disclosures of the p
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A good reason to use Ubuntu (Score:1, Interesting)
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel/2014-October/038520.html
Refusing to fix critical/security updates? Throwing the work on their packages to upstream? Thank God we have OSX and don't need wannabe's.
Re:A good reason to use Ubuntu (Score:5, Insightful)
Just what I want (Score:4, Funny)
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Slackware. Just about.
Anyone else not bother with the interm releases? (Score:3, Insightful)
I only ever install the LTS releases any more. I don't have time to waste upgrading the OS.
Consider how long Windows goes before a major version upgrade. The 6-month cycle of Ubuntu is too short.
As I have been saying for years, Ubuntu should do an LTS "core" released every 2 years or whatever long cycle. That core would not contain things such as Firefox, LibreOffice, etc. It would literally just be the core Linux services. Everything else can be upgraded on the fly with rolling updates.
Re:Anyone else not bother with the interm releases (Score:4, Informative)
The main reason for a six month release cycle is to provide drivers for new hardware.
Since hardware drivers are integrated with the kernel and window system, supporting new drivers requires upgrading the core system.
If aren't upgrading your hardware constantly, there's no reason to update beyond the latest LTS. If you're buying this week's Nvidia card or a laptop with a new wireless card, then you'll want to use the latest Ubuntu release to get support for it.
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However LTS releases periodically update the kernel, I assume for the same driver (as well as security) reasons, or is this different? The main drawback I see with LTS is that many application packages remain old, so you miss out on new features to LibreOffice etc.
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Windows major version upgrades are fast as a tachyon, we have Windows 10 before 9 even came out.
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The LTS releases do update the Firefox, Chrome and Thunderbird major versions. So far as I know, those are the only three packages which update major version numbers in an LTS, as the major version numbers of those software are as point releases of other software.
Unity is Crap (Score:1)
Oh, great. They can inflict Unity on miserable people on two platforms.
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I finally switched to Mint (Score:4, Interesting)
Has the audio theme changed? (Score:1)
Has the audio theme changed yet or is it still the jungle/bongo sounds?
Let's allkeep in mind the penultimate release name (Score:3)
To which Ubuntu forum users massively agreed that this would make a great release name [ubuntuforums.org] !
Unity (Score:1)