Ubuntu Linux 10.04 Review (Lucid Lynx) 567
JimLynch writes "The open source world has been eagerly anticipating the final release of Ubuntu Linux 10.04, and now it's finally here. Canonical has been working extremely hard and it shows in the quality of this release."
Except... (Score:5, Informative)
Except it isn't released yet. On hold due to a bug in install process that doesn't detect dual boot set ups properly...
Release party on IRC server: irc.freenode.net #ubuntu-release-party
Re:Except... (Score:5, Insightful)
And this is why I'm waiting a few weeks, until they get the initial bugs out.
Re:Except... (Score:5, Insightful)
I have a pet regression in lucid: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/545443 [launchpad.net]
"Lucid on Asus EEE PC 901 and 1000H fails to connect to any wireless network". Those (pretty common, I think) netbooks have the RaLink RT2860 wireless chipset.
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yeah, I sulk on this one too. Hit me in 9.04, worked 9.10, bad on 10.04 again. I think it's something to do with April
Re:Except... (Score:4, Informative)
There are lots of "little regressions" in 10.04, for example this one that affects ATI-powered notebooks:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/537640 [launchpad.net]
This is shaping up to be one buggy release!
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Use Debian?
Sadly, last I remember, they were looking to quicken the pace too due to people flocking to Ubuntu and generally complaining about Debian being "too old". I loved it the way it was. I switched to Ubuntu just to see what the hullabaloo was all about. I'm slowly switching back my workstations to Debian again. I've always been on Debian for servers just for that reason. I develop software. I need a stable target. Debian is it. And it's solid.
Re:Except... (Score:4, Interesting)
Interesting. Then maybe it is some more specific device ID that is affected?
Maybe you could comment on the bug report.
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EE/CS is a popular degree plan at Texas Tech University. Computer Engineering is a condensed version of EE/CS here, so EE/CE would be repetitive.
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You must have some kind of influence here. Any comment I've ever made about a bug in Linux has been modded down.
That depends on if it is worded as "Linux sux because of bug foobar" or as "Ubuntu sux because of bug barfoo". Real Linux fanbois hate Ubuntu, so word carefully!
Re:Except... (Score:5, Insightful)
"real linux"? Like Ubuntu is made from cheap copy components from some nameless factory in China?
Why would I get more respect editing fstab in Debian, running a driver install script from the terminal in fedora, or compiling source code in mandrake?
What qualifies me for "real linux" user? Do I need to pick up Slackware or gentoo and compile my own kernal for a 1% improvement in speed?
Why do fanboys feel the need to splinter themselves internally, even to the point of absurdity?
*note, this is not directed specifically at you Dotancohen
Re:Except... (Score:4, Insightful)
i learned that too about ubuntu releases. I am pretty much the same in terms of "WANT IT NOW" when it comes to new releases, but ubuntu fucks something major up every release for at the very least one of my systems, this got so bad that now i just install the most up to date version when i install a machine, and never upgrade to a new version, the downside obviously is having all my systems run a different version (9.10 on my main, 9.04 on the laptop, 8.10 on the server etc...)
Re:Except... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Except... (Score:5, Funny)
Why is that a bug? MS hasn't ever detected dual boot properly.
You are mistaken. My 98SE disk detected _both_ boots just fine, I still have the pieces to prove it!
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"Left Boot" and "Right Boot" qualifies as two distinct boot detection?
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Specifically this bug: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubiquity/+bug/570765 [launchpad.net]
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Re:Except... (Score:4, Insightful)
Caused by heavily packporting features from xserver 1.8 back to 1.7 and KMS from Linux 2.6.34 back to 2.6.32.
Seriously... what where they thinking? Getting such a huge memmory leak was just being ASKED FOR!
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They've already rolled back the patches (they did so five days ago), and, inasmuch as that prevents the problem from occurring and doesn't appear to have introduced any regressions, it's not unreasonable to call this a "fix." It's not clear to me whether the bug was introduced by the backport (in which case there's nothing more to fix), or whether the bug also exists in the x.org trunk, and needs to be fixed there.
Re:Except... (Score:5, Interesting)
Has it?? i've been running beta2 for a few weeks and it dual boots Win7 just fine. Did they break something?
Speaking of which, my impressions of 10.04 aren't as thrilled as the summary (can't read TFA yet). I ran 9.04 for nearly a year, skipped completely over 9.10, and now that I'm on 10.04, I honestly can't tell what's different from 9.04 aside from the new purple/grey/orange colored interface bars, moved min/max/close buttons, different IM tool (which I was already using in 9.04 anyway), and the login tool already knowing my name. Oh, and some icons for cloud computing (which I'm not sold on at all) and integration with facebook and twitter.
Maybe I'm wrong here, but with the short 6-month release schedule, it doesn't seem like -any- release of Ubuntu is worth "eagerly anticipating". It's not like we're talking the 6 year feature/design gap between XP and Vista, or even the 3 year gap between Vista and 7.
It seems like it basically comes down to "install whatever release is current, get it configured to your liking, and run it until support ends." I saw no reason to upgrade from 9.04 to 9.10, and I wouldn't have upgraded from 9.04 to 10.04 except I needed to wipe the HD anyway.
Re:Except... (Score:5, Insightful)
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The other reason is when your current version is no longer supported. That's why I'm eagerly waiting for this release, since it's a "long term release", so I'll not be upgrading for a long time.
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Re:Except... (Score:5, Interesting)
While I'm criticising... the recent patch to turn off SMART monitoring, because it apparently damages some SSD's, could have been handled better. On my system it seemed to have a side effect which manifested as all the file systems suddenly going RO - while I was running and editing something important. Even inserting a thumb drive to try and save the work resulted in it coming up RO. And it wouldn't "shutdown".
Long story short, after cycling the power it took the better part of half a day to get things straightened out. Yes there was notice of the change but honestly who reads every single little description of every single patch? Something this major should have had lots of bells and whistles to attract attention - not because of the headache I suffered, although it would have been nice to avoid the frustration and wasted time - but because turning off SMART monitoring without making damn sure the user knows the health of his disks aren't being monitored anymore is assinine.
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Release party on IRC server: irc.freenode.net #ubuntu-release-party
Will there be any chicks there?
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The alternate install also fails to do Software RAID correctly.
While in installer, pre first boot: /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 /dev/md0, as /boot) /dev/sda2 /dev/sdb2 /dev/md1 as LVM)
(combined to
(combined to
After first boot (well, not even, because /boot doesn't mount) /dev/md0 is not started /dev/md1 is comprised of /dev/sda and /dev/sdb
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/debian-installer/+bug/563343 [launchpad.net]
I heard the same about 8.10 and 9.04 and 9.10 (Score:5, Interesting)
... and I've given up. Between the backport madness, button relocation debate, purplification, and a complete disassociation with the community I did something which I didn't think I'd ever do. After 10 years of .deb distros, I'm running Fedora.
And you know what? It's nice. F12 is stable; yum seems to address all of those rpm complaints of old. I don't have strange oddities, there's actually SELINUX support. F12 works so well that in 10 years of running Linux I find myself (for the first time) in the situation where there is a beta out of the new Fedora and I haven't installed it as my system works flawlessly (I did boot the live CD and F13 beta is looking good too - I just don't want to upgrade until its baked).
Re:I heard the same about 8.10 and 9.04 and 9.10 (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I heard the same about 8.10 and 9.04 and 9.10 (Score:4, Informative)
I used Gentoo for almost 3 years, but personally, I dumped it for Ubuntu when 9.04 was released. Gentoo often got confused over time. portage would work great until EVENTUALLY it got into some conflict where you couldn't emerge a new package because it conflicted with an older one. And if you tried to update your profile things could get hairy. And merging your changes to an old config file with the incoming one via etc-update? That was always a crapshoot. 90% of the time it would work fine. The other 10% something would break and require a few hours of digging around to fix it.
Don't get me wrong I liked the speed of Gentoo, and it was nice that I typically had new releases of software much faster than I do on Ubuntu, but Gentoo just got to be too big of a headache for me.
Besides. On theming issues it's not hard to pull Ubuntu back to defaults (or customized to what you want - which for me isn't upstream nor Ubuntu's defaults).
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etc-update? I moved on to dispatch-conf a number of years ago, and thought everyone else did too. etc-update is a pain in the ass, and always has been.
Exotic video card? (Score:3, Funny)
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Yeah, it does when you first install it.
Then eventually you hit a circular dependency, or a package yum mysteriously won't upgrade, or RPM craps out its database, or you notice how incredibly goddamn slow yum is...
Re:I heard the same about 8.10 and 9.04 and 9.10 (Score:5, Funny)
F12 works so well that...
I'm on Ubuntu. I pressed F12. nothing happened. For all of us ignorant and backward Ubuntu users, what does F12 do on Fedora?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Shouldn't you be in the Apple thread? Seriously, the dude is expressing his opinion. After putting time/effort into $THING it no longer is the thing for him and he listed reasons why.
For some reason expressing an opinion results in ad hominem attacks anywhere I go anymore. "Oh well, that's user fixable, so you're retarded. Thus your are wrong."
Why you are modded insightful and not flamebait is beyond me.
Lucid Lynx (Score:2, Funny)
No, it's not (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, not currently as the home page issues a warning about a "in development" version for lucid ...
btw, the review seems to provide little more than the press release : what about bugs ? speed ? HW compatibility and performance besides boot times - it's an OS ! - , system configuration apps, boot splash with nvidia proprietary drivers ..., what about other sister as mint, Kubuntu, or Lubuntu)
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What will they do for release 24? (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope someone sees that the naming scheme is going to run into trouble when they reach the letter 'X'.
What is the best they can do? Ubuntu 24.0 (Xanthic Xerus) ?
Re:What will they do for release 24? (Score:5, Funny)
Xenophobic Xenomorph?
Re:What will they do for release 24? (Score:4, Funny)
Sure, and after Z, they can use AA (Aardvaark), but where do they go from there?
Re:What will they do for release 24? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm waiting on Ubuntu 13.04... Rapist Racoon.
Still, the real danger is in 12.04 LTS: Paedophile Penguin.
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Quick Quail?
You can do one for just about any letter.
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Re:What will they do for release 24? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What will they do for release 24? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What will they do for release 24? (Score:5, Funny)
Xenophobic Xenu.
In other news, Ubuntu will be taken over by the Scientologists. There will be no major changes; just some web filtering. And the psychiatrist module will be dropped from Emacs, but who uses Emacs anyway?
It's 10.04 LTS (not "10.04") (Score:5, Informative)
This Ubuntu release is 10.04 LTS (for "Long Term Support").
Getting the RC version or the latest daily ISO and upgrading from that is functionally equivalent to waiting for the final ISO to be released and installing it.
Anyone updating their packages from a recent enough beta or RC of Ubuntu will end up having the equivalent of the release.
In case it's not clear, it makes sense NOT to wait for the final release.
Re:It's 10.04 LTS (not "10.04") (Score:5, Informative)
While it's unlikely this late in the game, you have to account for the fact that the Beta or RC versions could put your system into a bit of disarray (for example, the alternatives system for Nvidia drivers has given me nothing but trouble) which might not be reversed on final update. To be safest, it's best to wait for the final release.
Specifically, though I had no trouble upgrading from 9.04 final to 9.10 final, I jumped the gun and tried 10.04 while it was beta. Lets just say that while the system is working ok(-ish), I won't be doing that again, and after the release today I'm wiping the system and reinstalling a clean copy (/home is on separate drive so it's pretty easy to just start over).
Perhaps... (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps this will be the Ubuntu install were I have no problems like everyone else claims. Every freaking version I try installing I always seem to run into issues, and not of them are easy fixes. Oh you want native resolution fine but you will need to give up GNOME, Unless you want to install it via TAR Balls. Oh you want sound sure... But this only worked in some apps. Oh what is the fix for that. Go into you etc file and add some cryptic commands that are not in any man page.
But if say there are problems with Ubuntu and there are things that OS X or Windows handles a lot better. Be prepared for a fight and everyone calling you an idiot.
Re:Perhaps... (Score:5, Insightful)
To be fair, being called an idiot instead of a reasonable reply is pretty much inherent to the entire IT community. We're an entire culture of people that have long since forgotten that our job is ultimately to provide a customer service. There is a prevaling attitude of 'works for me, you must suck' or 'program it yourself' instead of taking the moderate and service-oriented approach of actually listening, interpreting, and working collaboratively towards a solution in a manner that everyone can follow.
It's little wonder we are held in disdain by most.
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To be fair, being called an idiot instead of a reasonable reply is pretty much inherent to the entire IT community. We're an entire culture of people that have long since forgotten that our job is ultimately to provide a customer service.
I think the problem is that most of the people calling you an idiot, are not AT WORK. They're more like an after hours meeting of professionals, and many of the people asking are like going up to a bunch of doctors discussing medical procedures (their version of tools) and asking them to take a look at the rash on their leg. Yes, they probably could examine him but they don't want to, don't care and just want you to go away. And if you keep bugging them they'll tell you that you're an idiot. Come back for a
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So why do you continue with Ubuntu? Not to knock Ubuntu, but have you ever tried some of the others? Fedora comes to mind, as well as Suse.
There are over 2000 different Linux distributions, so obviously someone will fault me for not mentioning their favorite. But my point still stands, if you have troubles all the time, try another.
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especially if the manufacturer is a small one with no resources to dev for linux
Like Dell.
However I don't like building my own System just to run Linux. Not because I can't but because you assume that I have the time to check every freaken spec to see if Linux works with it, then you need to see if your chosen Distribution works with it. Or the fact that your computer say for work is purchased by reasons unknown sure they will allow you to install Linux on it but they are not going to spend extra money for
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Really... Define "almost anything".
If it's one of the repository provided applications (thousands thereof), it's as simple as:
Clicking on "system", mousing down to "Administration", mousing over and down to "Synaptic Package Manager" and clicking to bring up Synaptic. From there, you can search for the application you're looking for by using search criteria- things like "game", "3D", or "draw". At that point you have a p
Is there a How-To on moving the window icons back (Score:3, Insightful)
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.... to the right side of the window title bar where they belong? If it's not possible, I will not budge from 9.10 thank you very much.
http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/13535/move-window-buttons-back-to-the-right-in-ubuntu-10.04/
Or just enter one command: (Score:5, Informative)
gconftool-2 --set /apps/metacity/general/button_layout --type string menu:minimize,maximize,close
Thanks to:
http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1592998&cid=31593244 [slashdot.org]
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.... where they belong?
And the Lord said, "Window decorations must always reside on the right hand side of the window!" And so it was done.
Re:Is there a How-To on moving the window icons ba (Score:5, Funny)
You aren't being biblical enough.
[Charlton Heston voice]
And thus the Lord, who is our God, the God of Israel, spake, saying " Woe unto him and unto his seventh generation, he who puts his window decorations on the left side, for they are an abomination unto Me. Thou shalt offer burnt sacrifices as guilt offering to atone for your sin and then henceforth always have your window decorations on the right" and thus it was written
Now that's biblical
Re:Is there a How-To on moving the window icons ba (Score:2)
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.... to the right side of the window title bar where they belong? If it's not possible, I will not budge from 9.10 thank you very much.
just use the "Human" theme (that's the default in 9.10)... the buttons moved are only part of the NEW THEMES.
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Not true. I was running my own custom theme (loosely based on Clearlooks) from 9.10 and on upgrade it forced my buttons to the left, requiring me to change it back.
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.... to the right side of the window title bar where they belong? If it's not possible, I will not budge from 9.10 thank you very much.
Simply copy and paste this line into your terminal: /apps/metacity/general/button_layout --type string “menu:minimize,maximize,close,spacer”
gconftool-2 --set
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Go into gconf-editor, look into the metacity preferences, and there is an option to adjust button order.
IIRC (sorry, I'm at work on a Win7 machine), the new default is
close,maximize,minimize:
change it to
menu:minimize,maximize,close
and you get the old button order back. Works fine.
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.... to the right side of the window title bar where they belong? If it's not possible, I will not budge from 9.10 thank you very much.
http://www.google.com/search?q=ubuntu+move+buttons+back [google.com]
More than a few...
This one is the original. http://lifehacker.com/5500577/move-ubuntus-window-buttons-back-to-the-right [lifehacker.com]
And this one looks quite easy. http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/13535/move-window-buttons-back-to-the-right-in-ubuntu-10.04/ [howtogeek.com]
Now you can upgrade.
but left is good for you (Score:5, Funny)
Do you really want to end up throwing chairs at people?
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Do you really want to end up throwing chairs at people?
To be honest, that sounds like a lot more fun than wearing turtlenecks and starting a cult....
Been using Kubuntu 10.04... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Been using Kubuntu 10.04... (Score:5, Funny)
Without tabbed windows, you lived like some sort of animal. Probably sitting in a pile of your own sick and excrement, as likely to use your computer as to try to eat it or hump it.
We all did. Thank god we upgraded.
Re:Been using Kubuntu 10.04... (Score:4, Interesting)
Tabbed windows? Isn’t that called a two-level task bar?
If you are like me, you start thinking outside of the box. I completely removed any task bar from my system. There’s no point in it. ...and finally... .xsession-errors log, calculator, clock, calendar, weather, system information, system tray, minimized windows (as big icons), and whatever else I need in there.
I use corner clicks for everything. Which corner does not matter.
Right click: Compiz zoom overview of all windows.
Thumb click: Overview over all desktops (expo).
Left click: Toggle the KDE4 dashboard, which includes the K menu, the
The rest is all different keyboard and mouse shortcuts. Like Win+LMB = drag, Win+RMB = resize, or Win+End = end program / close window, etc. So I don’t even need window title bar buttons.
Works very nicely. Unfortunately the dashboard is pretty slow, and gets slower when you add more stuff. But it’s bearable. And I filed a bug, since I think it’s caused by one.
Nautilus still broken (Score:2, Informative)
Such as pain in that ass as this did once work in 9.10.
Teething troubles (Score:2)
BUT:
Nowadays everything is late.
It is going, I think, to be a worthwhile upgrade with its 3 year timeframe.
As for the menu widgets - I actually like it that way and I find myself annoyed that Chrome doesn't follow the rules. Sorry.
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As for the menu widgets - I actually like it that way and I find myself annoyed that Chrome doesn't follow the rules. Sorry.
If you search around in the menu's there's an option to use the WM's title bar instead of Google's. Not as slick, but it works. There's also a GTK theme option which is what I use. I like the traditional button placement, but the default blue color scheme on Chrome clashes with the GTK theme I'm running, so I just want it to match a little better.
Obvious comment: (Score:2)
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For some people it was the year of the linux desktop back in '98 :).
Either way, desktop relevance is waning ('course the first time I heard THAT was back around 1998 too), and Linux came out of the gate swinging in that area. Linux very well may become the dominant OS via a method none of us ever expected.
Features (Score:3, Informative)
Well since the link is slashdotted, maybe a list of the new features will be useful:
So it looks like solid improvement for the most part, nothing really revolutionary, but solid.
Not even close to ready for prime time (Score:5, Funny)
When my Gateway LT3201u with its Athlon 64 and positively antiquated ATI graphics can actually come up in X11, it's ready.
When my Acer Aspire One D250-1165, an incredibly common machine with bog-standard intel chipset, graphics, &c can stay up for more than eight hours without hanging with only the background image displayed, or kernel panicking because some system component (the only stuff running is "official" Ubuntu packages) has consumed all available memory and the system can't spawn new processes, it's ready.
But so far, Lucid is in even worse shape than Karmic was when it was released. I'd be ashamed to have my name associated with Lucid.
Re:Not even close to ready for prime time (Score:4, Interesting)
9.10 is rock solid on my Acer Aspire R1600. It's got similar specs, except the gpu is a Nvidia ION instead of Intel 950. The only reason I reboot is for new kernels or moving the pc. I go weeks with zero problems and I play a lot of quake on it.
don't forget to run... (Score:3, Informative)
sudo apt-get purge libmono* libgdiplus cli-common
Why is this flamebait? (Score:3, Insightful)
No one should be running Mono. It's a well-proven, extensively documented part of Microsoft's PR, FUD, and patent attack on Linux.
The real problem is that it was included to begin with. It needs to be removed at the source.
pulse, flash, java (Score:5, Insightful)
Have they fixed the pulse audio clusterfuck yet? How about flash and java working properly out of the box? (being able to watch youtube and hulu without ridiculous installs and configurations should be a serious focus for serving the general user)
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apt-get install ubuntu-restricted-extras is ridiculous? How easy do you need it to be?
If it requires the command line, it's too hard. It needs to show up in Ubuntu Software Center (or whatever they call it in 10.04; I'm waiting a month to upgrade from 9.10), not be buried in Synaptic.
Upgrade to debian (Score:3, Funny)
Canonical has been working extremely hard and it shows in the quality of this release.
Yeah--after upgrading my server which has a standalone boot drive along with 8 other disks that are in a RAID6 array--it completely fails to boot. Plymouth is a joke--why install graphical boot crap on a server? I can't even see the output of fsck which is apparently complaining that my array is corrupted--because the output is hooked into the fscked-up plymouth system. Lame regressions. Funny how the 8.04 recovery CD says the array is just fine. Meh, loaded Debian last weekend, haven't looked back.
Oh--and there's my netbook. After upgrading, the wireless and onboard NIC work intermittently. Most hibernates require a reboot because the wireless and NIC fail to come back up. Unplugging from the AC adapter causes a kernel panic about 60% of the time. Lots of lame regressions. But hey--at least plymouth works on my netbook. I can boot graphically into a flaky distro. It's scheduled to be upgraded to Debian this weekend.
I upgraded my wife's computer even though that BOFH part of my brain was screaming that I was 0 for 2 on 10.04 upgrades. Upgraded her from 9.10 and she immediately lost audio in Firefox along with the sound icon in her systray. Mplayer, totem, and the like all output sound just fine. Just no firefox or sound icon. And I can't seem to get it back. There is no audio panel applet. After a bunch of dorking around, uninstalling things, recompiling other things, I got audio working. Very lame regression.
I'm going to skip upgrading any of our customer systems to 10.04 in light of this. Instead, I'll start migrating to Debian. There doesn't seem to be any mention of 'plymouth' in their packaging system. That makes me feel a lot better.
I know everyone's experiences are different, but this upgrade totally kicked my ass.
Why don't they ever delay the long-term releases by a few weeks or months to put together a truly finished product?
Re:Upgrade to debian (Score:4, Insightful)
If you did all of this and loaded Debian last week, you certainly weren't even using an RC copy. It's your own fault for installing a beta OS on your server..
No GIMP?! Seriously? (Score:5, Informative)
This is a definite WTF moment. How could Ubuntu not include the GIMP?!! And worse yet, they have replaced it with F-Spot -- one of the most difficult and annoyingly feature free graphics programs I have ever seen. IIRC, it is based on Mono, too, which is another reason to hate it.
Well, Ubuntu is shaping up to be more and more useless with every release. In 8.04, I could resize an external monitor to whatever resolution the monitor could take. Updates disabled that functionality and constrained me to hardware detection. In 8.10, using an external monitor on an EEE causes a blank screen. CUPS is broken on every release soon after install. Skype and USB audio have not worked since 8.04. Firefox has been getting worse and worse, as well.
Ubuntu used to be easier to use than anything, but now, it is getting like Windows: Many things are broken and cannot be fixed whatever one does. I guess I will just have to keep my fingers crossed for Haiku or switch back to Fedora. For all the money Canonical has spent and all the work that has been done, I would have believed they would have come out with something better. I guess I will never be able to upgrade my EEE :(
Re:No GIMP?! Seriously? (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps because the vast majority of their users don't use it, because it's a comparatively large package so including it excludes other more desired features, and because apt-get install gimp isn't too great a hurdle for anyone who does need it.
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Why is Ubuntu still clinging to an install CD while all the other distros are using DVDs? Again, Ubuntu is not Windows, and it is not made by MS. Why follow MS's weak design choices?
If Ubuntu claimed that a CD version could not include OpenOffice and instead included Abiword, I would not be arguing. But the GIMP is almost as central to Linux as Gnome or KDE. It is a staple, like rice or bread. Without it, the desktop will be "undernourished".
Ubuntu also is not Puppy Linux. It does not take up a m
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Well, yes they do because if Canonical are expecting F-Spot of all things to be an adequate replacement for an image manipulation application then they're nuts. The GIMP was the only one in the Gnome/GTK world. If they're saying that the GIMP isn't good enough and they're dropping then, well, their application pool gets ever more laughable.
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My Dell Mini is happy running 10.5.7.
Re:HUZZAH!!! (Score:4, Informative)
>>>TFA has already been slashdotted...
If you're using Opera turn on "turbo" and it will load.
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Well... They have to get money to pay the developers somehow.
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Ubuntu has become a platform to generate revenue for canonical:
Ubuntu Music Shop Ubuntu Software Store Search Deal with Yahoo/Google
Become? They have always had a business model. If making money is a crime, quite your job. And the search deal with Yahoo fell through.
Re:quality? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:quality? (Score:4, Informative)
I've switched back to Debian from Ubuntu recently, too. "Sidegrading" from 9.10 to Debian squeeze while keeping all your application configs (and your entire homedir) intact is an absolute breeze:
http://www.psy-q.ch/blog/articles/2010/04/20/sidegrading-from-ubuntu-9-10-to-debian-squeeze-its-a-breeze/ [psy-q.ch]
Although there were a few snags during installation:
http://www.psy-q.ch/blog/articles/2010/03/28/new-adventures-in-debian-land/ [psy-q.ch]
Re:quality? (Score:4, Interesting)