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GNOME Ubuntu Linux

What Does Ubuntu's Post-Unity Future Look Like? (techrepublic.com) 121

intensivevocoder quotes TechRepublic: Following Canonical's pivot away from its internally-developed Unity user interface and Mir display server, Ubuntu has enjoyed two relatively low-drama years, as the Linux Desktop market homogenized during its transition back to a customized GNOME desktop. In a review of the most recent release, TechRepublic's Jack Wallen declared that "Ubuntu 19.04 should seriously impress anyone looking for a fast and reliable Linux desktop platform."

Largely, it's been a slow-and-steady pace for Ubuntu since the pivot from Unity to GNOME, though the distribution made headlines for plans to end support for 32-bit support. This prompted Valve, operators of games marketplace Steam, to re-think its approach toward Ubuntu, which it previously characterized as "as the best-supported path for desktop users."

TechRepublic's James Sanders interviewed Will Cooke, director of engineering for Ubuntu Desktop at Canonical, about the distribution's long-term plans for legacy 32-bit support, shipping a desktop in a post-Unity-era Ubuntu, and why Linux should be the first choice for users migrating from Windows 7 prior to the end of support.

From the interview:
When we did the switch to GNOME Shell from Unity, we did a survey [asking] people straightforward questions like, "What sort of features do you want to see continue in Ubuntu Desktop?" The answer came through very, very clearly that people liked having the launcher on the left, and they wanted to keep that feature there. They liked having desktop icons and they wanted to keep that feature there.

We've made decisions based on data from our user base, from our community. They have provided that feedback and we've done what the majority of people want.

Sometimes that doesn't go with the ideals of GNOME design, but we're comfortable with delivering what we see as value on top of GNOME. That's delivering a product which gives people consistency between the old days of Unity 7, and the new days of GNOME Shell. That transition was as easy as possible, everybody had a chance to have a say in it, and the answers were pretty clear.

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What Does Ubuntu's Post-Unity Future Look Like?

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  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Saturday July 13, 2019 @12:36PM (#58919628)

    Doesn't the success of Linux MInt show people would rather be using Ubuntu with MATE and Cinnamon?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I wonder how many of them would prefer Xfce but have never been introduced to it.

    • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Saturday July 13, 2019 @03:04PM (#58920320)

      >"Doesn't the success of Linux MInt show people would rather be using Ubuntu with MATE and Cinnamon?"

      Yes. But speaking for myself (and a number of friends and family), I am quite happy with Mageia and KDE (Plasma), and have been for many years. KDE lets you put anything wherever you want, customize most anything, and always has. GNOME went 100% user-hostile with GNOME 3. Not just because the defaults were horrible, but trying to FORCE people to use their strange idea of how a "desktop" works is a sure way to piss off a huge number of their users. Ubuntu showed just as much arrogance with Unity and Mir, and look at those results.

      For desktop use I recommend Mageia and Mint and nothing else at this point.

      • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

        That was pretty much my reaction to both Unity and Gnome3: WTF have they done with my desktop? Where'd everything go? what is this, Android 1.0 on a big screen?? why does it take so much flapping around to get to anything? It went from tolerable to -- I think I prefer Windows 10, and yes that's horrible.

        I like PCLinuxOS myself, with either KDE or Trinity, but Mageia would be my next choice (main drawback being it needs a lot more hardware to run well, and I've come to appreciate rolling updates). Stuff wor

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The kicker is that Debian (Gnome home) and Ubuntu (Unity ex-home) are now available with the MATE and Cinnamon desktops. In fact those two (Mate & Cinnamon) are on every major distro! Gnome devs don't listen to the user base, or are being paid to be deaf.
      Xfce is light (eg MX Linux who bake it the best), but I find too many things don't work as I have become accustomed to work.
      My biggest ongoing complaint against Debian and downstream Ubuntu and Mint is: too many "international" fonts. My work centers

      • I find the thing I like best about xfce is the incredibly customizable panels (aka task bar(s)) And the fact that those run beautifully on most other desktops lets me get the best of two worlds.

    • I tried Mint. Totally don't like it. There are a lot of people using Ubuntu (and Kubuntu) for a reason: they like it. You sound pretty much like a Mint fanboy.
    • Doesn't the success of Linux MInt show people would rather be using Ubuntu with MATE

      Not possible. There are only two kinds of people in the world. Windows users and Ubuntu users. Having a userbase that "prefers" anything other than two choices is simply unfathomable.

    • i certainly havent gone back after using mint cinnamon once and i use mint xfce for my minimal celeron machine, but i sincerely hope it's not about "winning" on the best flavour here, its about getting the best OS to as many people as possible. Thing is, for people who are at least a little tek-savvy, it literally comes with ALL the goodies but the software ... well , sometimes, euhm ... i dont have to explain that, right ? support and stuff, broken stuff, incomplete, obsolete, deprecated and not enough alt
  • by freakingme ( 1244996 ) on Saturday July 13, 2019 @12:44PM (#58919660)
    Ubuntu also keeps pushing the Snap-packaging. I understand its use for proprietary software that's distributed by third parties, but Canonical seems insistent on shipping also regular packages as a snap. This results in broken functionality and hard to debug problems. I've been an Ubuntu user for 14 years now, but will soon switch to Debian because of this nonsense.
    • Fair point really. I'm still not sold on snaps/flatpaks entirely but it is offputting having it forced AND not even consolidating on one kind of container app- snap or flatpak.
    • >"Ubuntu also keeps pushing the Snap-packaging."

      +1. It is a pretty stupid way to package your own stuff. Large, complicated, irritating, mess of a config. I couldn't agree more with you that it only makes sense for "foreign" stuff, like proprietary software or things like Steam. Thankfully I am not an Ubuntu user (and if I was, I certainly would have left after the whole Unity/Mir crap; I will take Mageia + KDE /Plasma + X11, thank you).

    • but Canonical seems insistent on shipping also regular packages as a snap.

      Yes, and for good reason. If you want something to be up to date then it's best not to have to rely on the blessing of a packaging manager from your distribution to do so. Sure you can start adding custom repositories and hope the result doesn't horribly screw up your system, but Snap is ultimately a solution to a big problem the repo / distro system has, and those problems include standard software as much as it does proprietary.

      You want to run vlc 3.0.7-1 on Ubuntu? Snap or GTFO, the mainline repo is stil

      • Yes, and for good reason. If you want something to be up to date then it's best not to have to rely on the blessing of a packaging manager from your distribution to do so.

        Why? If anything the Debian package manager is proven technology that has proven itself over the past 20+ years.

        Sure you can start adding custom repositories and hope the result doesn't horribly screw up your system, but Snap is ultimately a solution to a big problem the repo / distro system has, and those problems include standard software as much as it does proprietary.

        That's not a matter of 'hope'. It's a matter of engineering. Incompetent (or less experienced) engineers will always be able to screw up - no matter the package manager.

        You want to run vlc 3.0.7-1 on Ubuntu? Snap or GTFO, the mainline repo is still on 3.0.6-1

        I do want to run a recent version of vlc, and I do so using plain old Debian packages. Works like a charm.

  • by dremon ( 735466 ) on Saturday July 13, 2019 @01:30PM (#58919858)
    Ubuntu has completely lost it's spirit as a desktop OS, thanks to stupid GNOME3 transition. No sane person would use GNOME3 for a daily productive work. I have switched to openSUSE Tumbleweed (rolling release) with KDE Plasma desktop and never looked back. For those willing more maturity they also have openSUSE Leap based on enterprise version. Highly recommended, it's a bit pity openSUSE is not as widely used or recognized as Ubuntu. Very stable and polished system, nothing else matches it.
    • >"It's a bit pity openSUSE is not as widely used or recognized as Ubuntu. Very stable and polished system, nothing else matches it."

      Mageia is close. Doesn't have the mindshare, but every bit as stable, established (Mandrake-> Mandriva-> Mageia), and polished... top-rate KDE/Plasma, great defaults, great artwork, really nice GUI management tools, large selection of packages (both official and third-party), prompt updating, good installer. As long as you don't need enterprise support or rolling-rel

    • I switched to MX linux when Ubuntu announced that they were dropping 32-bit support. They're not going to miss me or anything, no doubt. But I probably won't switch again until MX linux pisses me off, or goes away.

    • MINT is very popular as an alternative to Ubuntu. It is available with MATE, Cinnamon, or Xfce desktops. MATE is pretty much improved Gnome2. Cinnamon is a highly customizable desktop that is gtk3 based and has many of the advancements of Gnome3 without deciding how you should do things. Xfce is a modular, super configurable, very lightweight desktop. It i s not Gnome in anyway but, last I checked, uses gtk2 as it's toolkit.

    • by sad_ ( 7868 )

      The latest KDE is just as bad (different, but bad) unless you config and customize the hell out of it.
      But then you could do the same with Gnome3.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Launcher on the left? WTF?
    Is this like the thrash icon that couldn't be removed because canonical's brainfucked designers decided so?
    For me this has been the final bit that pushed me to finally customize a plasma desktop to look like something usable.
    It's not perfect, but admittedly better than unity was.

  • by imperious_rex ( 845595 ) on Saturday July 13, 2019 @01:39PM (#58919904)
    Like many long time Ubuntu fans, Ubuntu lost me when they switched to Unity. For a couple years I used Xubuntu, but once Linux Mint's Cinnamon desktop matured to be a solid desktop, I switched to Mint and haven't looked back. When it was announced that Ubuntu was going to abandon Unity, I rejoiced. But that thrill was short lived when it was soon announced that Ubuntu would replace the much maligned Unity with GNOME 3. Not much of a change, really. Which is why I am still sticking with Linux Mint (Cinnamon desktop). The only Ubuntu variant I would ever seriously consider would be Ubuntu MATE, as it seems to be very close to Linux Mint in terms of user-friendliness and quality.
  • ... in Ubuntu design? I guess?

  • works for me ...

  • by mschaffer ( 97223 ) on Saturday July 13, 2019 @07:20PM (#58921382)

    Unity was anything but unifying. Great name.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    My Ubuntu's Post-Unity future looked like Kubuntu - 10 years ago!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    From the interview:
    "The answer came through very, very clearly that people liked having the launcher on the left, and they wanted to keep that feature there."

    Well, yeah, everyone that didn't like the launcher on the left ditched Ubuntu long long ago for Mint, or another distribution, and so wouldn't be responding to Ubuntu's survey. Unless they ran the survey on DistroWatch or something, there is going to be a hell of a lot of participation bias in those results.

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