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November 24, 2010

Ubuntu May Move To Rolling Releases

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on November 24, 2010 at 11:42:41 AM
This is a bad move if it comes to pass. It looks like Ubuntu is eying a move to a rolling release instead of the 6 month schedule. Some people may applaud this, but I do not. The release cycle and stable releases give people the ability to stick with something that works.

There are times that something changes in the Kernel that breaks a piece of hardware or even hardware support is removed for older hardware. Having a rolling release is a bad idea for the most part. The only plus side is that most of the user space programs will be kept current, but that is mostly done already.

Quote

Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth told press recently that a move to daily updates would help the popular Linux disto keep pace with an increasingly complex software and platform ecosystem as Ubuntu goes on more devices and syncs up Android and iPhones.

Software Center - barely a year old - is leading these changes, and Shuttleworth has promised this would "go further and faster than people might have envisioned in the past."

"Today we have a six-month release cycle," Shuttleworth said. "In an internet-oriented world, we need to be able to release something every day.

"That's an area we will put a lot of work into in the next five years. The small steps we are putting in to the Software Center today, they will go further and caster than people might have envisioned in the past."


http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/11/23/darily_ubuntu_updates/

A tip: You don't need to reinstall every 6 months on a new release. You can just upgrade or keep the same /home directory and everything will be the same as it was. This is what I do.
Tags Linux Software OS Ubuntu
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1 Comment
November 5, 2010

Ubuntu Dumping X (Finally)

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on November 5, 2010 at 10:36:02 AM
Eventually, Ubuntu will be running on Wayland. Wayland is a new compositing engine built from the ground up AND is a display server. It takes over the X server and compositing engine into one package. Still, an X server can run in tandem with Wayland so older X applications will still run. This is one of the best pieces of news for Linux on the desktop. Wayland's entry into Ubuntu will probably take years, but it is coming.

http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/551

Quote

The next major transition for Unity will be to deliver it on Wayland, the OpenGL-based display management system. We’d like to embrace Wayland early, as much of the work we’re doing on uTouch and other input systems will be relevant for Wayland and it’s an area we can make a useful contribution to the project.

We’re confident we’ll be able to retain the ability to run X applications in a compatibility mode, so this is not a transition that needs to reset the world of desktop free software. Nor is it a transition everyone needs to make at the same time: for the same reason we’ll keep investing in the 2D experience on Ubuntu despite also believing that Unity, with all it’s GL dependencies, is the best interface for the desktop. We’ll help GNOME and KDE with the transition, there’s no reason for them not to be there on day one either.
Tags Linux OS Ubuntu X Wayland
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2 Comments
October 25, 2010

Ubuntu Says Goodbye to GNOME

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on October 25, 2010 at 9:55:30 PM
And finally the default Ubuntu installation will come with Unity. I expected this for some time since Canonical introduced their Unity shell for netbooks. GNOME is also ugly (I'm a KDE user as well).

Quote

Shuttleworth described desktop adoption of Unity as the "most significant change ever" for Ubuntu. He also acknowledged that it is a "risky step" and that much work remains to be done to prepare for the transition. The move reflects Ubuntu's growing divergence from the standard upstream GNOME configuration and effort to differentiate itself with a distinctive user experience. During the keynote, Shuttleworth emphasized that Ubuntu is still committed to GNOME despite the fact that it will ship with Unity instead of GNOME Shell. He contends that diversity and competition between different kinds of GNOME environments will encourage innovation and benefit the GNOME ecosystem.

The decision to ship a custom interface in Ubuntu is going to be controversial. Critics in the upstream community are already expressing disappointment with what they view as a move to fork the desktop. It's worth noting, however, that Canonical isn't the first company to build a unique user experience for GNOME that deviates from the standard upstream user interface stack. Intel also similarly produced a custom shell with the Clutter that is used on the MeeGo platform. Canonical's deviations from the upstream configuration receive closer scrutiny because Ubuntu's popularity among Linux users makes the distribution a king-maker on the Linux desktop. Canonical's decision to ship Unity could deeply marginalize GNOME Shell.


http://arstechnica.com/open-source/news/2010/10/shuttleworth-unity-shell-will-be-default-desktop-in-ubuntu-1104.ars
Tags Linux GNOME OS Ubuntu Unity
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5 Comments
October 10, 2010

Ubuntu 10.10 Released (Maverick)

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on October 10, 2010 at 11:44:54 AM
The new stable version of Ubuntu has been released. This is the 10.10 release. If you can't figure out the versioning, it is for the year.month. This is why it is wrong to say it is 10.1 even though you can reduce it to that. Nearly all pieces of software have been updated and with new versions come new hardware support.

http://releases.ubuntu.com/maverick/

If GNOME isn't your fancy, you can opt for the KDE based Kubuntu. It also has been updated to 10.10. Here's hoping the polish is much better than previous releases.

http://www.kubuntu.org/getkubuntu/download
Tags Linux OS Ubuntu
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8 Comments
September 15, 2010

Imagine People Complaining About Ubuntu's Contributions

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on September 15, 2010 at 2:46:35 PM
Mark Shuttleworth has a posting defending how Canonical adds to the Linux community. It is really sad that anyone would say that Ubuntu isn't do enough to contribute back to the Linux community when it has the most popular distribution for daily use on the desktop.

Ubuntu is the reason that Linux on the desktop is where it is today. They might not provide much code, but they provide QA, localization, bug fixing, reports, ideas... Just because Red Hat contributes more code doesn't mean they are better or worse.

Quote

Nevertheless, the Ubuntu Project does bring something unique, special and important to free software: a total commitment to everyday users and use cases, the idea that free software should be “for everyone” both economically and in ease of use, and a willingness to chase down the problems that stand between here and there. I feel that commitment is a gift back to the people who built every one of those packages. If we can bring free software to ten times the audience, we have amplified the value of your generosity by a factor of ten, we have made every hour spent fixing an issue or making something amazing, ten times as valuable. I’m very proud to be spending the time and energy on Ubuntu that I do. Yes, I could do many other things, but I can’t think of another course which would have the same impact on the world.

I recognize that not everybody will feel the same way. Bringing their work to ten times the audience without contributing features might just feel like leeching, or increasing the flow of bug reports 10x. I suppose you could say that no matter how generous we are to downstream users, if upstream is only measuring code, then any generosity other than code won’t be registered. I don’t really know what to do about that – I didn’t found Ubuntu as a vehicle for getting lots of code written, that didn’t seem to me to be what the world needed. It needed a vehicle for getting it out there, that cares about delivering the code we already have in a state of high quality and reliability. Most of the pieces of the desktop were in place – and code was flowing in – it just wasn’t being delivered in a way that would take it beyond the server, or to the general public.


Who is actually complaining? Is it upstream? The Linux community should do its part to make Ubuntu (and Debian) the best it can be for the desktop. Red Hat can handle the server market for right now.

Quote

What do we do for free software? And what do I do myself?

For a start, we deliver it. We reduce the friction and inertia that prevent people trying free software and deciding for themselves if they like it enough to immerse themselves in it. Hundreds of today’s free software developers, translators, designers, advocates got the opportunity to be part of our movement because it was easy for them to dip their toe in the water. And that’s not easy work. Consider the effort over many years to produce a simple installer for Linux like http://www.techdrivein.com/2010/08/massive-changes-coming-to-ubuntu-1010.html which is the culmination of huge amounts of work from many groups, but which simply would not have happened without Canonical and Ubuntu.

There are thousands of people who are content to build free software for themselves, and that’s no crime. But the willingness to shape it into something that others will find, explore and delight in needs to be celebrated too. And that’s a value which is celebrated very highly in the Ubuntu community: if you read planet.ubuntu.com you’ll see a celebration of *people using free software*. As a community we are deeply satisfied to see people *using* it to solve problems in their lives. That’s more satisfying to us than stories about how we made it faster or added a feature. Of course we do bits of both, but this is a community that measures impact in the world rather than impact on the code. They are very generous with their time and expertise, with that as the reward. I’m proud of the fact that Ubuntu attracts people who are generous in their contributions: they feel their contributions are worth more if they are remixed by others, not less. So we celebrate Kubuntu and Xubuntu and Puppy and Linux Mint. They don’t ride on our coattails, they stand on our shoulders, just as we stand on the shoulders of giants. And that’s a good thing. Our work is more meaningful and more valuable because their work reaches users that ours alone could not.


http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/517
Tags Linux OS Ubuntu
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4 Comments
April 23, 2009

Ubuntu 9.04 Released

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on April 23, 2009 at 5:47:26 PM
The 9.04 edition of Ubuntu and Kubuntu have been released today.

http://www.ubuntu.com/products/whatisubuntu/904features/

This release of Ubuntu focuses on faster boot times and a unified notification system. I've been using 9.04 of Kubuntu for a few days and it seems very solid compared to 8.10.

KDE 4.2 is a huge improvement as well.
Tags OS Ubuntu
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3 Comments
October 30, 2008

Ubuntu 8.10 Released

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on October 30, 2008 at 8:44:02 PM
Ubuntu, and all its derivatives, has reached the 8.10 stable release. http://www.ubuntu.com/

http://www.kubuntu.com/

http://www.xubuntu.com/

I've got a CD burned and will do a fresh install tonight. I've carried over my /home partition far too long and it is loaded with settings and crap that I don't need anymore. It is easy enough to copy /home back over after.
Tags OS Ubuntu
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0 Comments
July 12, 2008

CNET + Microsoft In Bed

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on July 12, 2008 at 1:44:12 PM
I'm sorry, but news sources such as CNET have really lost credibility when they post crap like this. The article compares service update system's uptime on the internet from Apple, Canonical (Ubuntu's maintainer), and Microsoft. Basically it is taking pings from a site like Windows Update and comparing which update service has better uptime.

Fine, it's a stupid metric, but whatever. Where the crap starts to spread is the title of the article: "Microsoft ahead of Apple, Ubuntu in OS update reliability." Right of the bat, it looks like Microsoft's updates are more reliable than the other two providers. So if you glance the title and not the meat (as most IT managers do since they are lazy), you take that Microsoft provides better support... That's the first point.

Here's the entire article:

Quote

A company that measures Internet service reliability has given Microsoft the top score in a test of operating system update services.

Microsoft's Windows Update was available 100 percent of the second quarter of 2008, Pingdom said in a blog posting Friday. Apple's service was down 2 hours and 34 minutes, with 99.9 percent uptime, and Canonical's Ubuntu version of Linux was down 1 day, 5 hours, and 45 minutes, for 98.64 percent uptime.

"Microsoft wins this one hands down," Pingdom said. It noted that Ubuntu's service also is available through mirror sites, however.

The company tested the three services every five minutes.


Microsoft Windows Update was available 100 percent of the time, but at the end of the article, Pingdom noted that Ubuntu's service is available from mirror sites. So, I guess that Pingdom doesn't really care how the OS handles updates through the internet (Ubuntu's update service was never down due to the amount of mirror). They picked Canonical's mirror to judge this really useless statistic.

If you just glance over the article, you will see that Microsoft wins, hands down! CNET has really gone downhill recently. These "news stores" look more like paid posts. Even the comments on that story are saying the same thing. Sorry CNET, you keep losing credibility.
Tags News Microsoft Apple Ubuntu CNET
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0 Comments
April 24, 2008

Ubuntu 8.04 LTS Released

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on April 24, 2008 at 2:38:33 PM
The download is ready. Ubuntu 8.04 comes with Long Term Support for 5 years. I found a torrent here: Torrent. I use Kubuntu and will be using the KDE4 Remix. KDE4 rocks and I can't wait to try it out.
Tags OS Ubuntu
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1 Comment
March 7, 2008

OpenLDAP Installation On Ubuntu

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on March 7, 2008 at 4:01:12 AM
OpenLDAP Installation On Ubuntu
Directory services run nearly every enterprise network today. Each place you see Active Directory, LDAP is working its magic. Find out how to easily install a LDAP server of your own on Ubuntu.Next Page »
Tags Linux Guides Ubuntu OpenLDAP LDAP
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1 Comment
December 18, 2007

Ubuntu Verizon EVDO Tethering

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on December 18, 2007 at 4:55:15 PM
Ubuntu Verizon EVDO Tethering
Want to use Verizon's EVDO network with your Linux laptop? This guide shows the step-by-step on how to tether your phone with your laptop running Ubuntu.Next Page »
Tags Linux Mobile Ubuntu Verizon EVDO
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0 Comments
August 26, 2007

Gutsy On The Way

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on August 26, 2007 at 5:43:03 PM
Remember that the new Ubuntu release is almost a month away. Gutsy will bring loads of enhancements and such. I'm preparing to redo my main computer and will likely install the Kubuntu version of Gutsy. That's how I roll!

Quote

Printing also has had an overhaul, with a virtual "PDF printer" set up by default to allow any application to output into PDF format. The old printer management system has been replaced and a new configuration tool should mean that printers are set up just by plugging them in and turning them on, developers said. The Tribe 5 release also includes the latest version of the Gnome desktop, the public test version of what will become Gnome 2.20. Other additions scheduled for the final release include faster desktop search, fast user switching, a new deskbar applet and the AppArmor security framework, released as open-source software by Novell. The final release is scheduled for October 18.
Tags OS Ubuntu
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0 Comments
August 8, 2007

Dell And Ubuntu Released To More

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on August 8, 2007 at 3:22:20 PM
More countries can now buy Ubuntu on Dell machines preloaded. This is really good for the Linux community.

Quote

Similar to what we've done in the United States, we will configure and install open source drivers for hardware, when possible for these new products. See John Hull's Technical Details post for a more detailed explanation. Recently, some IdeaStorm readers asked why we discontinued the Inspiron E1505N in the United States. The answer is that we transitioned to the Inspiron 1420N, which is a product that we do not offer in the United Kingdom, France and Germany.
Tags Company OS Dell Ubuntu
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0 Comments
June 20, 2007

Feisty And Like A Fawn: Ubuntu 7.04

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on June 20, 2007 at 1:15:50 AM
Feisty And Like A Fawn: Ubuntu 7.04
Ubuntu 7.04, codenamed Feisty Fawn, is the latest release of the fast and upcoming distribution from Canonical. Who says Linux is not ready for the desktop?Next Page »
Tags Software Ubuntu
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0 Comments
June 9, 2007

Gutsy Alpha 1 Released

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on June 9, 2007 at 4:47:24 PM
The unstable version of Ubuntu has had its first release. Do not install this on any production machine. The builds could be and probably are unstable.

Quote

The Ubuntu developers are moving very quickly to bring you the absolute latest and greatest software the Open Source Community has to offer. The Gutsy Gibbon Tribe 1 is the first alpha release of Ubuntu 7.10, and with this new alpha release comes a whole host of excellent new features. The feature list for 7.10 has been slowly growing more exact since Gutsy opened late last month. While looking forward nothing is completely certain, here are some of the new things that have already arrived, such as GNOME 2.19, a new 2.6.22-rc kernel, as well as a good look at the approved specifications for Gutsy.


I hope Gutsy will bring better support to the Kubuntu branch. I had the opportunity to test Xubuntu and since it uses GTK, all the Ubuntu tools work fine. Kubuntu seems like the bastard child of the group... but I like KDE over Gnome or Xfce.
Tags Software Ubuntu
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0 Comments
May 7, 2007

Ubuntu Mobile Edition Soon

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on May 7, 2007 at 1:55:26 PM
The Ubuntu brand name is coming to all different PCs. Mobile and embedded versions are coming.

Quote

To fulfil the aims of our mission and in response to the technical challenges that these devices pose, we are announcing the Ubuntu Mobile and Embedded project. We will start more detailed planning at the Ubuntu Developer Summit next week in Seville and the first release of this edition will be in October with Ubuntu 7.10. If you are interested in the project, please get involved. We will be working through our normal development processes on Launchpad, the developer mailing lists and IRC.
Tags OS Ubuntu
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0 Comments
May 1, 2007

Dell Picks Ubuntu For Computers

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on May 1, 2007 at 1:54:38 PM
Dell will begin selling PCs with Ubuntu on them soon. The community will benefit from things like this. Expect Linux to become much more mainstream when makers support it fully.

Quote

At the end of May, the No. 2 PC maker will begin selling some consumer-focused laptop and desktop models with Ubuntu's new "Feisty Fawn" version of Linux installed, Dell spokesman Kent Cook said. The company plans to announce the Linux move Tuesday on its IdeaStorm Web site, launched in February to gather feedback directly from customers about what they want. When buying the Dell systems, customers will have the option to purchase support from Ubuntu backer Canonical, said Jane Silber, the start-up's director of operations.
Tags Company Dell Ubuntu Canonical
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0 Comments
April 19, 2007

K/Ubuntu 7.04 Released

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on April 19, 2007 at 1:40:51 PM
Feisty has been released for download. Ubuntu: http://releases.ubuntu.com/7.04/ Kubuntu: http://www.kubuntu.com/download.php

Quote

Ubuntu is the award-winning Linux distribution for the desktop, laptop, thin client and server which brings together the best of open source software every 6 months. Ubuntu 7.04 desktop edition includes a ground-breaking Windows migration assistant, excellent wireless networking support and improved multimedia support. Ubuntu 7.04 server edition adds support for hardware facilities that speed up the use of virtual machines as well as other improved hardware support, making it an excellent choice as a web, database, file and print server, the fastest growing area of Linux server use. Ubuntu's already outstanding support for thin clients is boosted with advanced print and sound support.
Tags Software OS Ubuntu
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2 Comments
July 8, 2006

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on July 8, 2006 at 1:24:39 AM
Linux is one of elusive topics in many discussions relating to computers. Cut through the fog and try a real operating system with Ubuntu. Take the ease of Mac OSX and the stability of Linux and you have Ubuntu. Read on...Next Page »
Tags Linux OS Ubuntu
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8 Comments
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