What's Coming Next For Ubuntu Linux?
#2
Posted 02 May 2012 - 12:28 PM
#3
Posted 02 May 2012 - 01:33 PM
I find myself having to do (at least) twice the work to get what I want with Unity.
How about this? An option to "merge" the Unity icon bar with the top task bar. Having both there simultaneous is a bit superfluous.
#4
Posted 02 May 2012 - 02:00 PM
CannibalCat, on 02 May 2012 - 01:33 PM, said:
I find myself having to do (at least) twice the work to get what I want with Unity.
How about this? An option to "merge" the Unity icon bar with the top task bar. Having both there simultaneous is a bit superfluous.
Open up terminal copy and paste the following
sudo apt-get install gnome-shell
Thats it you are done, you now have gnome
Reboot the system, switch to gnome
You can also try out LxdE
sudo apt-get install lxde-core
This post has been edited by RickDobbelmannqbtt: 02 May 2012 - 02:03 PM
#5
Posted 02 May 2012 - 02:44 PM
Food for thought!
- Katherine.
#7
Posted 02 May 2012 - 07:39 PM
RandyFrancis, on 02 May 2012 - 06:10 PM, said:
Your hope was fulfilled around 1991.
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#8
Posted 02 May 2012 - 11:26 PM
1. Good. Menus belong in any self-respecting interface. Otherwise the "tucked away" features less used will clutter up interfaces to all hell or will require people to memorize keyboard shortcuts. However, it still sounds like Shuttleworth still intends to move forward eventually with this terrible idea.
2. A friend of mine astutely pointed out that Unity is "moderately better than GNOME 3" Considering how godawful and unusable GNOME 3 is in most circumstances, this should give a good idea of why Unity has found absolutely zero adoption outside of Ubuntu. Mint itself is opting instead to create and mold Cinnamon as the possible definitive GNOME 3 alternative aside from serious contender Plasma Workspace (Part of the KDE Software Compilation.) and lightweight hitters such as Xfce and Lxde. Unity only being "two-thirds done" isn't exactly very encouraging considering it's already being forced on mainstream Ubuntu users despite this fact.
3. This is still maybe the top of the top reasons why Ubuntu is going to lose its user base within the next few years. Wayland. Say it with me: "Wayland." Every Xorg alternative to date has failed abysmally at replacing Xorg. Wayland will not be an exception to this. This is due in no small part to the fact that Mark Shuttleworth is vastly overestimating upcoming application support for it. Few window managers will be ported to it, only the most mainstream desktop environments and most, but not all, of their software compilations will see Wayland ports. This is only one of many reasons why Wayland will fail to even make a dent in Xorg. Another reason being that official support for Wayland by hardware manufacturers will be completely absent, unlike with Xorg. nVidia has very publicly announced many times they will not provide any Wayland support at all in their drivers. Considering the immaturity of Nouveau and the unwillingness of its developers to provide any official support or development for OpenGL means that the majority of Linux nVidia users will be left in the lurch when Ubuntu makes this switch. I also take pains to point out that generally, in Linux graphics right now, either you have excellent KMS support, which Wayland requires, or excellent OpenGL support, which is what will make Wayland "good," but rarely will you find a driver/GPU combination that'll get you both. Prognosis? Wayland is doomeed unless it can drop KMS requirements. This will not happen. I wouldn't hold my breath for Wayland to have excellent Xorg compatibility, either.
4. Big deal. So far Canonical's attempts at making their horribly ugly color schemes better have failed. Face it: Orange and brown are ugly colors. Introducing purple didn't help.
5. Even Mark Shuttleworth isn't falling into the "Secure Boot" bandwagon a lot of alarmists are falling into these days because they misunderstand how UEFI works and what Microsoft was actually calling for. Still, early reviews for windows 8 by pubdits wouldn't have called 8 "gutsy" but just downright "shitty."
6. More evidence Mark Shuttleworth thinks he's Steve Jobs. Ubuntu TV will last for exactly two releases before Canonical realizes they can't really sustain it. As for "Ubuntu for Android?" The point of that being...? Junking up smartphones with software that is ill-suited for smartphones?
#9
Posted 04 May 2012 - 01:17 AM
I've recently upgraded my UBUNTU 11.10 to UBUNTU 12.04 LTS.
Main problem is while connecting to Internet using connection/network settings Ubuntu can not detect my USB modem. I've searched a lot in web. But no perfect result is shown. Is there any solution ??? If yes, please provide me immediately.
#10
Posted 04 May 2012 - 01:19 AM
I've recently upgraded my UBUNTU 11.10 to UBUNTU 12.04 LTS.
Main problem is while connecting to Internet using connection/network settings Ubuntu can not detect my USB modem. I've searched a lot in web. But no perfect result is shown. Is there any solution ??? If yes, please provide me immediately.
#11
Posted 04 May 2012 - 08:33 AM
ashimsarkar, on 04 May 2012 - 01:19 AM, said:
I've recently upgraded my UBUNTU 11.10 to UBUNTU 12.04 LTS.
Main problem is while connecting to Internet using connection/network settings Ubuntu can not detect my USB modem. I've searched a lot in web. But no perfect result is shown. Is there any solution ??? If yes, please provide me immediately.
Possibly, but we'd need more details on the modem. I'd suggest posting a question regarding it over in the Linux forums (on this board). As much information as you an provide on the modem itself and any other relevant hardware you're using would be a huge help.
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"42.7 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot."
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"Dawn: When men of reason go to bed."
— Ambrose Bierce
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#12
Posted 04 May 2012 - 01:15 PM
linuxrants7xpg, on 04 May 2012 - 08:33 AM, said:
ashimsarkar, on 04 May 2012 - 01:19 AM, said:
I've recently upgraded my UBUNTU 11.10 to UBUNTU 12.04 LTS.
Main problem is while connecting to Internet using connection/network settings Ubuntu can not detect my USB modem. I've searched a lot in web. But no perfect result is shown. Is there any solution ??? If yes, please provide me immediately.
Possibly, but we'd need more details on the modem. I'd suggest posting a question regarding it over in the Linux forums (on this board). As much information as you an provide on the modem itself and any other relevant hardware you're using would be a huge help.
Open terminal and type in lsusb
This will tell you what USB device you are using. then Google your device and the word Ubuntu 12.04. I am sure you will find solutions or a reason why your device is not working.
#13
Posted 04 May 2012 - 02:07 PM
This post has been edited by RickDobbelmannqbtt: 04 May 2012 - 02:07 PM
#14
Posted 07 May 2012 - 07:36 AM
RolandTaylor, on 02 May 2012 - 12:28 PM, said:
What's wrong with that? There are quite a few people who prefer the 2D version (like myself) for the speed benefits and non reliance on graphic acceleration. If the functionality of 2D and 3D mirror each other and look great in QT, then I'm all for it.
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