Dapper Drake Hits Ubuntu Servers 259
linuxbeta writes "Ubuntu 6.04 (Dapper Drake) daily builds have hit the Ubuntu servers. Dapper's goals: Substantial polish and integration, software discovery and installation, make network-wide enterprise updates easy to manage, consider LSB and related certification standards and support for deployment of Dapper on mission-critical servers. Screenshots have already surfaced."
VIA C3 Bug (Score:2, Informative)
Ed Almos
Re:VIA C3 Bug (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not an Ubuntu bug. Your hardware is flawed. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's not an Ubuntu bug. Your hardware is flawed (Score:2)
Re:VIA C3 Bug (Score:2)
Re:VIA C3 Bug (Score:4, Informative)
Re:VIA C3 Bug (Score:2)
I sure hope that they've fixed the VIA C3 bug that was present on the last distribution
I did not encounter this problem, but I am also running a newer C3.... I have a 1.2GHz Nehemiah core.
Re:VIA C3 Bug (Score:4, Informative)
No problems here. (Score:3, Interesting)
Screenshots show nothing new (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Screenshots show nothing new (Score:3, Interesting)
One thing though...I love the Tahoma and Times New Roman fonts. Unfortunately, I have to copy them from Windows make my environment look good. The Tahoma font itself is very small 252 kb I wonder why n
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Screenshots show nothing new (Score:2)
Re:Screenshots show nothing new (Score:2)
Re:Screenshots show nothing new (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Screenshots show nothing new (Score:2)
--
Evan
Re:Screenshots show nothing new (Score:2)
Re:Screenshots show nothing new (Score:5, Interesting)
Yet another "review" of yet another Linux distro consisting mostly of screenshots Gnome/KDE along with the installer. They are all so very superficial, and quite frankly, quite booring. I'm pretty sure that the distro maintainers are not that happy themselves with these "reviews".
As an example, this is almost never seen in a review: Upgrading a machine (desktop/server/whatever) from and older version to the newest version and reviewing that. Or reviewing the package lifecycle in a version of a distro (does the upgrades work? breakes anything? Are upgrades properly tested by the distro/package maintainers? etc etc).
Re:Screenshots show nothing new (Score:2)
Ok, it's been released... (Score:2, Insightful)
What's the "killer feature" for this installer?
Re:Ok, it's been released... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ok, it's been released... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Ok, it's been released... (Score:4, Interesting)
Regards,
Steve
Re:Ok, it's been released... (Score:2)
But to say it takes 'days' to fix an apt problem is just pure exaggeration - I've rarely had anything take more than a few minutes. Compared to RPM hell (go to rpmfind.net, download package, shit it needs another package,
Re:Ok, it's been released... (Score:2)
If you add the Universe and Multiverse repositories, the numbers are pretty close. I've got a little over 20000 packages listed on both Ubuntu (Breezy) and Debian (Sid).
The difference is mostly in how you like your packages. If you like your packages to be extremely well tested and don't like changing your configuration too often, Debian stable is the way to go (until the next release, you
Re:Ok, it's been released... (Score:2)
oblig (Score:3, Funny)
Re:oblig (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah, it would've been much better if it was a dragon [ubuntu.com]!
But that wouldn't really fit GNOME, I guess.
Pointless (Score:5, Insightful)
sounds good but.. (Score:2)
Ubuntu means.. (Score:2)
Re:sounds good but.. (Score:2)
Polish (Score:4, Interesting)
Glad to hear it. I love Ubuntu. In my experience, it's the easiest and most reliable Linux distro to setup and maintain. Apt is great, and Synaptic makes it easy. A lot of things are just done the right way.
However, being a new distro, it's lacked a little polish here and there. Nothing big, but just the sort of thing where, if I were to set my parents up on a Linux machine, I'd be more confident in the presentation that SuSE or Fedora provide. I'd be really confident that Ubuntu would work correctly, and it might be my choice of distros for that reason, but I'd be more confident that Fedora would *look* like a professionally-created OS.
So I think polish is a good place to focus right now.
Re:Polish (Score:2)
Heck, Doesn't Ubuntu come with the standard Gnome themes too? Why not take 5 seconds to switch it to Clearlooks or one of the other themes that look great in Gnome?
If the default theme is the basis of deciding on which OS you'd use, XP would be the worse OS in history. Lokks like computers by Fisher Price.
Re:Polish (Score:2)
It seems to me, also, that the new bootup splash screen could use a little work. It'd be nice to tighten up the grub>boot spl
Re:Polish (Score:2)
This is actually a Firefox bug, not an issue with Gnome (or Ubuntu). Firefox has all it's own text rendering code and doesn't use pango.
It seems to me, also, that the new bootup splash screen could use a little work. It'd be nice to tighten up the grub>boot splash>Xorg loading so that it appears to be a single, nice looking loadup.
Agreed, although I prefer to not have the framebu
Re:Polish (Score:2)
Whatever it is, I don't experience this problem with either Fedora or SuSE.
Agreed, although I prefer to not have the framebuffer at all.
Well, I'm sure it's a matter of preference and priorities. Of course, if you're setting up a server, for example, who cares about splash screens, right? But if I'm setting up a desktop for normal users (or even myself), my ideal would
Lack of Polish? (Score:2)
Re:Polka! (Score:2)
Theme (Score:5, Insightful)
How hard is it to change? Two levels down, IIRC, and you don't have to click apply, unlike on my XP machine. The brown theme is minimalist, it's earthy, and it's a *really* welcome change from the stupid industrial blue/grey offend no-one look of a corporate release.
To reply to another post, the XP Blue theme sucks big time, but the Energy Blue one, which comes as default (I believe) with Media Center, is rather easy on the eyes. However, I really, would NOT mind a Gnome themed desktop, and if I could use it without the need for a stupid hack like WindowsBlinds/ThemeXP/whateverthefuck, I would.
I really don't know why there is such a big fuss. Change it if you like. Use Kubuntu.
Sheesh.
Re:Theme (Score:2)
Re:Theme (Score:2)
Personally I think the deafult win2k background was the best, it's so ugly I just have to change it, which I assumed was the point. You just don't get more incentive than that. Then I looked at other people and realized they didn't. So a good default theme is actually important, as trivial as it might seen to the people here.
Re:Theme (Score:2)
You should be happy about that! After all, if that's all they find to complain about, it's got to be a damn good release...
I like Ubuntu theme, but not the GNOME f dialogs. (Score:2, Informative)
It has a 'let us stick together and respect the nature' feel.
However (unrelated to Ubuntu) I agree with a comment above about the gnome file selection dialog.
It is terribly unintuitive and ugly. I have initiated a lot of people to GNU/Linux, and I've shown both KDE and GNOME. Some like one, some the other.
However I noticed that novices which chose GNOME spend a lot more time in GNOME file selection dialogs.
Priority one for the usability of a file selection dialog is shortening the
My take on ubuntu. (Score:4, Interesting)
Multimedia support is close to non existant. I have source installed mplayer, dvd::rip and avidemux (And a few libraries they depend on). That brought multimedia up to par with my gentoo install altough much more hassle than gentoo.
Default kernel is non preemptible which just sucks if you like me do some heavy multitasking. It's not unusual for me to have 5 mencoders or a couple of compiles going and without preemptible kernel the system is close to non responsive, the problems show up even if you only encode one movie. A kernel compile fixes the problems but some people probably don't want to recompile the kernel (Or have the skill to do so).
Default firefox is slow. For some reason the default firefox is amazingly slugish. I downloaded a new from mozilla.org and problem is fixed. Still annoying.
Gentoo has amazinlgy good documentation. Not something against ubuntu but coming from Gentoo it's a big loss.
Main reason for switching was getting a reasonably new gnome desktop with good package stability. With gentoo you have a too much of a moving system with new releases of packages way too often and too inconsistently. So far ubuntu has been great in that regard.
All in all it's one of the best desktop distros right now.
Re:My take on ubuntu. (Score:5, Informative)
At first it seemed this was the case to me as well, but I have found that many (all?) of the items in "multiverse" - including Mplayer, dvd libraries, etc - don't show up in the basic/default package installer. If I search there, either nothing appears or it shows up grayed out. If I switch to the "advanced" mode and search, everything shows up (with multiple versions even) and I can get it all installed. The only thing not available in the repository was libdvdcss (think that's the name) due to legal issues but libdvdread spit out some instructions when I ran mplayer on how to install that with a supplied shell script.
I was quite pleased - I have a 1GHz desktop leftover from work that I installed 5.10 on, and once I found the above got Mplayer working easily. In far less time (not to mention frustration) than I've ever spent before I was watching and ripping DVDs. Very nice. This machine is now probably destined to replace my "TV computer" out in the living room.
I haven't used it enough yet to comment on anything else, it seemed quite speedy enough to me considering the computer. I'm just about willing to install it on the laptop - that'll be the real test for me.
Re:My take on ubuntu. (Score:2)
That's n
Re:My take on ubuntu. (Score:2)
Ubuntu Guide has a lot of great tutorials for practical tasks (e.g. -- getting DVD functionality to work, setting up DHCP client, installin
Seems to be a long lasting release of Ubuntu (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyway, Ubuntu is a really great distro. I've moved from Debian to Mandrake (now Mandriva) becouse of outdated packages needed for a workstation
Re:Seems to be a long lasting release of Ubuntu (Score:2)
I've found that it works, it's just ungodly slow, taking almost as much time to load as a full boot, which sort of defeats the point of hybernating.
Hibernating (Score:2, Interesting)
OK, so I haven't googled enough, and I suspect it's just a matter of executing the correct commands when the ACPI event is tr
Re:Seems to be a long lasting release of Ubuntu (Score:2)
Whats really needed on this account is better mime type support. Something to associate various types against each other. I propose we start an online web 2.0 folksonomy service for tagging our mime types.
Re:Seems to be a long lasting release of Ubuntu (Score:2)
But it is really not very useful when we are speaking of desktop environment. You're right that MIME system is mess. There is large number of MIME types which are essentially identical or at least always handled by the same application. And unfortunately not all core programs use it -- for instance firefox has it's own completely different mechanism. So not only you have to change a large portion of MIME associations (and the tr
Re:Seems to be a long lasting release of Ubuntu (Score:2)
Some notes after ten minutes of trying it (version 0.60):
I expect the filemanager to be rock stable (for writing/changin at least). I managed krusader crash in 5 minutes trying only some simple things. Ok, that may be a bad luck but I don't like the idea let the filemanager messing any of my files.
The whole thing is a bit flickering and unr
Re:Seems to be a long lasting release of Ubuntu (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Seems to be a long lasting release of Ubuntu (Score:2)
-Firewalling: There is a planned implementation of some firewall for the Dapper (6.04) release. I assume this is a basic iptables mod, with some configurable frontend. They mentioned the name of a specific package, but I don't recall what.
-Backup: There is also a planned implementation of backup software, very simple in implementation, but designed to be largely effective for most "aver
bug in breezy and about Drake... (Score:2)
On Drake (sorta):
read thru the few comments here so far... If you don't like Gnome then use Kubuntu or even just add KDE and have a choice. This is not an isse of the distro, but of you personal choice. Same applies to the theme. If you don't like it then stop being lazy and change it.... Jeez. maybe we need a tutorial added to it to teach people that they can do this and how...(rolls eyes)
Readin
Re:bug in breezy and about Drake... (Score:2)
Developer bandwidth? (Score:2)
With Google, which Slashdot hails as the chief innovator, when someone has an idea about a new feature or product, they have two options: pursue it on their own, given their ~20% personal project time, or make a proposal and get a small group (usually around five people, from what I've heard) to at least make a mockup.
With an operating system, inflexibility
But I just got Breezy in the mail (Score:2)
kudos (Score:2)
these are words that i think a whole damn lot of us have been waiting a long time to be able to use when describing a linux distribution. the ubuntu team really is making some progress, so kudos to them!
You're JOKING me! (Score:2)
And when I click on the screenshot... (Score:2)
RH 5.0 install screens! (Score:2)
Ubuntu's console install looks exactly like RH 5.0's install console screens. They were klutzy then and they are klutzy now. They detract from Ubuntu's overall image, but once you realize how limited the GNOME desktop is you can understand the match.
Re:RH 5.0 install screens! (Score:2)
My note on the installer (ubuntu 5.04 or Ubuntu/Edubuntu 5.10, sorry, I can't remember but it shouldn't matter cause the installer is identical or almost identical): sometimes it lacks descriptions. I r
Yet still we live with those depressing icons. (Score:2)
Disappointing to see Dapper will still include those awful, tired (6 yrs?) old icons.
Who really thinks of an old life-rescue ring when seeking help? When one wants to engage with an office productivity suite, do we think of an old typewriter? Scissors and Right Angle rule for 'Accessories'?? Nostalgia aside, it's time Ubuntu revisited 'polish' within a contemporary and aesthetic context.
Placement of icons are also still ugly: look at the 'help' and WWW icons in the menubar of this screenshot [osdir.com]: they are
Re:Yet still we live with those depressing icons. (Score:2)
No, just once every six years.
Quack quack (Score:2)
Quack quack
Who's there?
Dapper
Dapper who?
Da person you are calling knows you are waiting
Re:Ugly Theme (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ugly Theme (Score:2, Informative)
Of course, you can still install and use GNOME software, although I don't know why you'd want to do that when you've got the power of KDE available to you.
Re:Ugly Theme (Score:2)
Re:Must every thread be used by you for proselytiz (Score:2)
(Typing this in firefox 1.0.7 on ubuntu breezy)
Re:Must every thread be used by you for proselytiz (Score:4, Insightful)
To me, the best path for Gnome to take is to work with Firefox, leaveraging mutual official endorcement to work towards consistancy (mainly in regards to things like the file selector) rather than simply re-inventing what I see to be a wooden spoked wheel without enough tread. But the Gnome crew demands to see consistancy now and they see making their own browser to be far easier.
Re:You're right, the GNOME file selector has to go (Score:2)
Re:You're right, the GNOME file selector has to go (Score:2)
Under Linux, however, Firefox 1.0.7 does use the GNOME file selection dialogs. Trying to save a file using Galeon brings up the exact same dialog as when trying to save a file using Firefox. This is with GNOME 2.12, mind you, the most recent stable release. I repeat, Firefox does not use its own file selection dialogs.
I'll show you a picture:
http://www.gnome.org/~seth/designs/filechooser-spe c/ [gnome.org]
Re:You're right, the GNOME file selector has to go (Score:2)
Re:You're right, the GNOME file selector has to go (Score:2)
Firefox, in Linux, by default, does *not* use gnome dialogs. Period.
Firefox save-as dialog [utdallas.edu]
Cramped, hard to use, file names are trunkated way too soon, and I'm not sure the size field really has a point being there.
Save-as dialog from gedit [utdallas.edu]
Bigger, allows me to select media which I'm pretty likely to want to save to in a hurry, and navigating the file-system tree i
Re:You're right, the GNOME file selector has to go (Score:3, Interesting)
Funny how my 1.5 prerelease does use gnome dialogs. I'd love to find a way to force it to use the old ones, especially when it comes to choosing helper applications. The old dialogs, unlike the shitty gnome ones, let me type in an absolute path (e.g.
Re:You're right, the GNOME file selector has to go (Score:4, Interesting)
You are a KDE zealot. You don't care about the facts regarding the dialog, you don't care about the design decisions behind the save as dialog and I'd wager that you wouldn't care if it copied the dialog from KDE, windows or OSX. You just want Gnome to look bad because you plain don't like it. Look around you, is anyone else trying to reignite the desktop wars on this thread? No, everyone's mature enough to realise that both desktops are doing a lot of good things.
I'm a Gnome user, but I'm not telling everyone that KDE sucks and to use Gnome. I was being so objective on this subject that you thought I was a windows user. This cannot be denied because it is there in your own writing. I switched to Gnome from being a very loyal KDE user three years ago because I found the attitudes behind KDE were in need of a bit of maturity. What you are displaying exemplifies this. Gnome and KDE are very different environments. They appeal to very different people, when I was a loyal KDE guy I loved it because of the amount of fun stuff they manage to pack in, the options, the huge number of fun included games, the sticky button right on the left hand side of the window bar for quick tying down of windows, the big pretty applets, the power and integration of KFM and later Konqueror. But these days I like Gnome because of its sleek, uncluttered appearance, it's focus on making the most common tasks faster to do, the widgets being small but very readable. As a developer, I also prefer GTK+ to QT because of its community focused development methods and its focus on having excelent high level language bindings (pygtk (python), gtkmm (c++), gtk# (c#)) rather than encoraging everyone to use its native API.
If you want to help KDE you should maybe spend some time developing it, or maybe praise their developers every time there is a positive story on KDE on slashdot. Trying to convert everyone to KDE whenever there is a gnome story on slashdot doesn't help anyone and doesn't really make you or KDE look good. Try not to do it in the future, thanks.
Re:Must every thread be used by you for proselytiz (Score:2)
Re:Must every thread be used by you for proselytiz (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, it's discussed on his page [ubuntu.com] in the Ubuntu Wiki:
Re:Ugly Theme (Score:2)
Re:Maybe it's just me (Score:4, Insightful)
I enjoy getting info on Linux distros on Slashdot, their updates etc. It sure as hell beats having 2000 Google stories and 5 "infomercials" for some dude looking for money to fund some science project. If you're tired of these submissions, just choose to ignore Linux threads in your preferences page.
Re:Ubuntu Linux... (Score:4, Insightful)
I know many people who have become disenchanted with the Red Hat and SuSE distros. While they were near, if not at, the top of the game once, they may not remain there much longer.
I'm aware of a number of people, myself included, who gave Fedora Core a try. And frankly, we were not impressed. I had the installer crash on me, and the others I talked with ran into a multitude of other problems. They were simple problems that shouldn't exist in a modern distro.
Meanwhile, there's all the nonsense with Novell/SuSE switching SuSE to GNOME. SuSE has been a KDE-based distro for years, and it has worked very well. As a former fan of SuSE, I do not think I'll bother buying their products if they go with GNOME as their default desktop, rather than KDE.
Some of the people I know went back to Slackware, others to Debian, and myself to Kubuntu. Until Red Hat and Novell/SuSE get their acts together, Ubuntu/Kubuntu may very well have a strong future.
Re:Ubuntu Linux... (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, and as a former fan of RedHat and Ubuntu, I think I may be installing SuSE as my primary system. SuSE has been a great distro, except for shipping with KDE as its default desktop.
Ubuntu/Kubuntu/OpenSUSE and KDE/GNOME (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ubuntu Linux... (Score:2)
He said "Ubuntu is great" few hours after I advised him to make the switch. All hardware was properly detected (he had no sound under FC4) and he loves apt/synaptic.
I've used U for over 6 months now and I have almost no problems. It's certainly much smoother than FC3 that I used before (fewer services installed and running by default). I
Re:Ubuntu Linux... (Score:3, Insightful)
It allows serious developers to focus on programming and software design, rather than painstakingly maintaining their computer system(s). After all, productivity is a must these days, and Ubuntu does much to increase it.
Re:Ubuntu Linux... (Score:2)
Bump.
This is very true. I know a lot of very smart people moving to Macs because "everything just works".
I'm not quite ready to pay the Mac tax yet... Kubuntu gets me a heck of a lot closer than RH or any other distro I've used.
Re:Ubuntu Linux... (Score:2)
(I have debian stable for servers, breezy for family desktops, and will soon be bughunting dapper on my own desktop)
Re:Ubuntu Linux... (Score:2)
Are all Debian packages forward compatible with Ubuntu? Including those from unofficial repositories, or homemade?
If not, breaking compatibility with mother Debian seems like far too high a price to pay for a little "polish". If so, I'm really fucking impressed and will install Ubuntu today.
Re:Ubuntu Linux... (Score:2)
What version of KDE are you using? I'm using KDE 3.4.3, as bundled with Kubuntu 5.10. There is no "Systems Settings" submenu. However, the "Systems Settings" utility is by far the cleanest I have seen from them yet. It looks quite similar to the "Systems Preferences" utility of Mac OS X Tiger.
http://www.sonic.net/support/ss/mac/osx/tiger/syst em_prefs.png [sonic.net]
Re:What is new with ubuntu? (Score:3, Insightful)
The main thing to focus on is the fantastic package management system, the up-to-date packages, and the overall integration of the system. It's a distro that just works, and that is exactly what a busy user needs.
Re:5 Months till release (Score:3, Informative)
Re:5 Months till release (Score:2)
Re:5 Months till release (Score:2)
On a related note, I often see people getting bashed by FOSS (free and/or open-source software) zealots for enumerating their gripes with certain FOSS software. People shouldn't get bashed for complaining! Complaining is an essential part of the feedback loop that improves the software. It's valuable to the development process and should alway
Re:The biggest problem for Ubuntu is... (Score:2)
Next version will be...
Farty Ferret
Fix for X.org for older hardware (Score:2)
Add the following two lines in your config file(Section "Monitor"):
HorizSync 31.5 - 48.5 [consult your monitor manual/specs for the
correct frequencies; but those two should do for now]
VertRefresh 50-70
I don't remember who it was that said that on the fourms at the time. Hell it could be a paraphrase and my notes mixed in since it's from my tomboy. This issue is likely your problem. I use both debian and ubuntu on all kinds of hardware. =)
Re:Hmm (Score:2, Funny)
I amzy justyxz learningwxz Polishyzxw myselfxyzw
Re:Ubuntu 6.04 Already for Sale (Score:2)