No Closed Video Drivers For Next Ubuntu Release 448
lisah writes "Ubuntu's next release, Feisty Fawn, is due out in April and, according to company CTO Matt Zimmerman, proprietary video drivers failed to make the cut for the default install. Zimmerman told Linux.com that although the software required for Composite support is not ready for prime-time and therefore will not be included in Feisty, Ubuntu hasn't given up entirely on including video drivers in future releases. '[T]he winds aren't right yet. We will continue to track development and will revisit the decision if things change significantly.' Ambiguous or not, the decision to exclude proprietary drivers for now should satisfy at least some members of the Ubuntu Community. In other Feisty Fawn news, the Board also decided to downgrade support for Power PC due to a lack of funding." Linux.com and Slashdot are both part of OSTG.
Before the flamewars start (Score:5, Interesting)
The propietary 3d drivers would have been included because the original plan was to support a 3d desktop (like compiz and beryl) out of the box.
As it has now become obvious that these desktops are not yet stable enough to be the default, there isn't any need to include the propietary drivers.
more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
Or, it could be because installing ATI drivers (for those of you out there who've done it know this) is an absolute pain in the ass on Ubuntu. When I installed NVidia drivers on my friends laptop, I groaned because it was so convenient.
People would complain if OpenOffice, Firefox, and some kind of movie/music didn't come packaged with Feisty Fawn, and for good reason! They are essentials to the system! I think it's really too bad they probably won't be included.
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Funny)
What's so difficult about:
% sh
% dpkg -i *deb
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Funny)
% sh
% dpkg -i *deb"
How about:
# sh
# dpkg -i *deb
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:4, Interesting)
# sh
# dpkg -i *deb"
On my laptop a compaq r4000 with a bcm43xx pcmcia network controller and ubuntu
6.10, xorg 7.1, beryl, and a ati 200M XPRESS controller it was a nightmare to get
it all working together. Either my nic would fail, graphics would fail, x would fail
, all would fail at the same time. I tried ndiswrapper, my system hangs on that one.
(three different versions of ndiswrapper). All on amd64.
After a week or so trying different versions of all programs involved i came up with
the right settings. A custom kernel 2.6.18.1, ati driver 8.29.6, x windows 7.1.1,
If i try a newer kernel, the ati drivers won't compile, if i try an older kernelversion
my wlan isn't properly supported, so i'm stuck at 2.6.18.1, and i want xen to run on
my laptop, which uses 2.6.17.x i think so i'm out ofluck...
I think they did a good job postponing the option of a beryl/compiz/xgl/aixgl setup
in ubuntu. If you get it working it's quite cool and worth the trouble. IMHO this kind
of thing is always worth the trouble (i have a relatively high geek factor).
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
End users should be told to go to one place. For now, that's synaptic. Maybe in the future it will be some click'n'run thing. Don't instruct them to
1. download a driver from a particular website.
2. open up a shell.
3. enter a cryptic line.
4. pray.
Plus, is the CLI way going to survive when a kernel upgrade is released? Presumably when the proprietary drivers are in synaptic they will be updated to work with the kernel updates.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
>
>Why? Why is it so unreasonable to expect people to know how to use their computer?
"Using a CLI" != "Using a computer". "Using" a computer should be about identifying what you want to create, edit, contribute, read, etc., then being able to do so in the easiest way possible. Maybe that's a CLI for you, but for most people double-clicking on an icon, or even having something already done so you don't have to worry about it at all, is a lot easier.
I thought you people lost these arguments in the late 80's. 20 years later and you STILL think CLI's should be necessary to perform basic functions on your computer?
Between putting dogma over usability and insisting everyone else should use a computer like a developer prefers to, combined with the big split in the licensing models coming up with GPLv3, I foresee some dark days ahead for open source on the desktop.
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
Mac OS.
And you think THAT was more powerful than CLI? You're an idiot.
Ask someone interested in desktop publishing. Hell, Apple's Macintosh along with the LaserWriter printer *invented* desktop publishing. Decades of the CLI didn't create it, but only a couple of years with a GUI did.
And for what it's worth, yeah, Mac OS was pretty damned powerful. It wouldn't still be around if it didn't meet people's needs.
3 seconds, no starting a program or using the mouse.
Plus the months of learning curve so that you know what the hell that "cut -f2,3 -d',' file1 | sort > newfile" gibberish even means, not to mention the time taken learning how to create your own gibberish that does what you want. Given a choice between doing an extremely rarely-needed task in 3 seconds with years of learning curve, or doing it in one minute in Excel, I'll pick Excel every time.
These are trivial examples, yes, but you would be shocked to learn how much processing is trivial once you start doing it in an environment that doesn't hold your and and change your diaper for you.
If you're the type of person whose job consists mainly of combining and/or sorting strange random data files over and over again, you might have an argument. Maybe. (Except still not, since it's trivial to run CLI commands in a GUI-- try running GUI tasks like photo editing or desktop publishing in a CLI!)
But that type of person is a very small minority. Face the facts, bud, you're only deluding yourself. I may be an idiot for agreeing with the grandparent poster, but at least I'm not a delusional idiot.
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
Most people aren't smart enough to master this with out hours of formal training. So don't complain that most people don't use a CLI, most people don't use calculus either.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:4, Insightful)
I know how to fix my own car just like I know how to operate Linux using a CLI, but do I expect others to? Nope. While it may be fairly simple, at least to us, it's very intimidating to the average user who would rather stick the keys in the ignition and "make it go" so they can get their work or play going.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
but in my experiance it is more ready than Windows 95.
That's a safe assumption. In fact, I'd be more generous and say Linux is probably closer to Windows 98/Mac OS 8.x standards. The problem, of course, is that it's not competing with Windows 95 or Mac OS 6.0.8. It's competing with vastly
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
For me, Linux is very successful on my desktop (notebook, really) and on the server I depend. It beats Windows XP and 2003 hands down on many tasks I do on a daily basis and, when compared to it, Vista and its brain-dead UAC mechanisms are a bad joke. When considering my job, Windows - every single version - fails miserably.
On the other hand, most users seem to be happy with its shortcomings and Windows commands a huge market share.
But, really, I couldn't care less ab
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I did just that. Well, almost. I downloaded the Ubuntu 6.06LTS DVD, and installed from that.
Everything worked. My PC is an Abit NF7-M with 512MB RAM, Athlon XP 2000+, and the only card I installed is a Belkin 802.11 wireless card I got at Wal-Mart. Everything worked "right out of the box
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:4, Interesting)
Let's tell consumers to stop buying their low-quality buggy hardware that require special installation procedures, and maybe they'll stop dragging down the consumers idea of the Linux Desktop.
I have an intel-based graphics setup that works just fine with beryl- no special install voodoo necessary. It might not get quite as many FPS as my coworkers' firegl board, but it never crashes, and never freezes up on me.
He's convinced all he needs to do is tweak some underclocking or somethingrather I don't really understand, but at this point I'm pretty sure a big part of his efforts are there to justify his purchase and vindicate his decision, and that the ATI board really wasn't worth it even to him- an otherwise very technical person.
Maybe after we get ATI/NVidia to stop hurting Linux with their inferior hardware and software, we can get some OEMs- besides TiVO- to actually ship with Linux desktops...
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
Figuring out what to type in is. Rebooting, then coming up with a text screen because "startx" failed and there's nothing but an instruction telling you to restore your backed-up config (with, of course, no instructions on HOW to do that or, even better, an option to automatically do it)... that's very difficult.
Of course typing in those commands *is* difficult for somebody who's visually (or otherwise) impaired. You can install a driver on Windows or OS X using a screen-reader... try typing in 6-x86.x86_64.run with a screen-reader.
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
"Okay, so go to nvidia.com and find the driver for your card."
"How do I do that?"
"Click Downloads, select your operating system..."
"Is that Windows?"
"Yes. So select that and--"
"It says.. Windows XP slash 2000... Windows 98 slash 95..."
"You're on Windows XP. So select that."
"Okay."
"Now which video card do you have?"
"I don't know."
"Right click on the desktop. Go to properties. Go to Advanced. Do you see it?"
"No."
"Right above the colorful thing."
"Oh. Okay.. uh.."
"..it'll say Nvidia something, or maybe GeForce something."
"Ohhhh. GeForce 5200?"
"Okay, select that then."
"Where?"
"On the WEBSITE."
"Exit out of this?"
"YES, EXIT OUT OF THE PROPERTIES THING AND GO BACK TO THE WEBSITE."
"Okay."
"..."
"..."
"..."
"Did you select the 5200 yet?"
"No, am I supposed to?"
"YES. Click that. Click next."
"Do-I-want-to-download-the-following-file: installer dot exe."
"Yes. Download that."
"Where should I save it?"
"ANYWHERE. The desktop, okay?"
"Okay... it's downloading."
"..."
"Do-I-want-to-run-the-following-application: installer dot exe."
"Yesssss."
"It says.. warning-some-software-can-damage-your-computer-ar
"Yes."
"Accept terms and conditions?"
"...yes..."
"This-will-install-nvidia-drivers-blah-blah-blah, continue?"
"...yes..."
"Setup is preparing the... uh, install..shield.. wizard?"
"That's fine, just let it go."
"Do I click Next?"
"YES. YES. JUST KEEP HAMMERING NEXT UNTIL IT SAYS FINISHED."
"Okay.
"YES FOR GOD'S SAKE ALREADY!"
"Okay, now it says I must reboot. Should I do that?"
"@#%"
Yeah. That's much, much easier for most people. The CLI looks intimidating but, to most people, both Windows and Linux CLI are incomprehensible gibberish anyway, so what's the difference?
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:more than just desktops, (Score:5, Informative)
Do yourself a favour and stick with the official packages: http://packages.debian.org/src:fglrx-driver [debian.org]
Re: (Score:2)
I've been using the ATI packages for over two years now (first on Debian, now on Ubuntu) without any major problems (at least due to the installation procedure).
Of course if you overwrite a file installed from the package you'll have to reinstall the generated ATI files (using that oh-so-complex 'dpkg -i' command). This is no different than installing the nVidia drivers from the nVidia package.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Yes, that is what I said, pretty much.
Any bugs you found have nothing to do with the distro-provided packages of the proprietary drivers.
Okay, the distro-provided package cripples my display capabilities for (to the best of my knowledge) no immediately apparent reason. The proprietary driver doesn't.
Whether you want to call it a bug, a "feature", a bad design decision, etc., it still boils down to the sam
Re: (Score:2)
Or rather :
sudo apt-get install xorg-driver-fglrxYou could even do that from Synaptic or gnome-app-install, if you need a GUI for the tasks.
Is there a particular reason not to use the packaged binary drivers in the first place ?
Buy hardware (Score:4, Insightful)
My Tuxracer, bzflag, + AIGLX/compiz bling-bling work out of the box because I only purchase hardware that is supported out of the box: ATI 9200 or less, or Intel graphics.
If you don't support the companies releasing open source drivers, those companies will disappear. And please don't give me the boo-hoo about Intel graphics not being as fast as the latest-latest-latest ATI/NVIDIA card. They really are fast enough for 99% of gamers.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
some kind of movie/music (Score:2)
I thought Ubuntu was supposed to be easy to use, It's about time someone put up an illegal distribution of Linux with everything included (firmware etc...)
Re:Before the flamewars start (Score:5, Interesting)
The situation is even more interesting considering that the proprietary ATI drivers (that are required for the X1000-series to have even 2D support) don't support Composite with AIGLX, the default in Ubuntu and X.org, while the reverse-engineered open source driver does. I think it is one aspect that has been affecting this decision - why include proprietary drivers if they don't even work.
It is to be admitted though that NVIDIA has such a large market share (probably 20-30% of all desktop and laptop PCs, compared to ca. 50% with Intel integrated graphics), that it partly makes the issue "3D needs proprietary drivers"-like, until Nouveau gets usable.
a question (Score:2)
Is there any project similar to Nouveau underway for ATI? What's the ETA for Nouveau? I'm going to make another serious run at using Linux as a production system when UbuntuStudio comes out, and I'd like to plan for the platform starting next month.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: "ati" == "radeon" (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I have a notebook with an i915G video chipset, and making beryl work on my system was a straight forward process. Now I'm using it all the time, with very few (if any) stability issues, and even when anything goes wrong it falls back to the default window manager.
What I'd like to see is a more serious effort to show what hardware is fully supported under Linux. Of course you have some listings at the Ubuntu wiki, and other distros provide similar info... but I don't
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
misleading title (Score:5, Informative)
...and can be easily enabled when... (Score:5, Informative)
--snip--
* However, new infrastructure will be implemented which allows the user to
trivially enable both enhanced desktop effects and the necessary driver
support.
--snip--
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:misleading title AND misleading summary (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
ie. it will kernel panic on my dual core machine?
nope, you can't read this (Score:5, Funny)
Re:nope, you can't read this (Score:4, Informative)
The binary says [nickciske.com]:
So it is. (Score:5, Funny)
Justin.
Re: (Score:2)
I didn't "work it out", I just had a link handy to the binary - text translator. Same as that, I have the awesoma powa of Rot13 [rot13.com] to help me when I read ASR.
And no, I never take anything I read here for granted either.
Re:nope, you can't read this (Score:5, Funny)
Re:nope, you can't read this (Score:4, Funny)
Only on Slashdot... (Score:5, Funny)
Re: I can. (Score:4, Funny)
0110011101110101011101100110011000100000011110100
Community needs to get over this issue. (Score:2, Interesting)
Sorry, but ATI binary drivers just suck too much. (Score:5, Interesting)
- Hang the whole machine every time I logout (apparently because I'm using DVI output... gosh!), so I exit that installation of Ubuntu (which is not my primary, just testing the fglrx drivers etc. there) with alt-sysrq-e/i/s/u/b because it's safer.
- Give only green stripes and a complete hang if using _both_ DVI and VGA outputs at the same time (oh my god, we never though that could happen!).
- Do not give any 3D support if I happen not to disable Composite/AIGLX in Xorg.conf.
I do symphatize with the people who just want "stuff to work", and know that NVIDIA proprietary drivers happen to be better quality at this time, but all my experiences with binary blobs has been so bad that I will take reverse-engineered drivers anytime, even for NVIDIA.
For those who haven't read it yet, David Airlied's LCA 2007 talk is a really good and entertaining piece: http://www.skynet.ie/~airlied/talks/lca07/nouveau
Re: (Score:2)
Many years ago, I worked for a manufacturer and wrote a graphics driver. This was a long time ago and on ancient hardware, so I won't name names. If I write a disk driver, the thing is fairly basic and the hardware exposes basic functionality, which most people can get right. A graphics processor, particularly with 3D shading support is *exceptionally* complex. To get it running properly, you not only have to know how it works but what doesn' and usually for several different variation of a chip mask. We d
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
One interpretation of what you've just said is that graphics chips have a goodly share of bugs, the workarounds are in the drivers, and they're sufficiently embarrassed about it that they keep it all secret.
Imagine if CPU makers worked the same way.
CPU's do have bugs (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sure you know this, but for others reading your post: CPU's do have bugs, the manufacturers publish errata as they find them, the kernel does CPU detection and either works around the bug or uploads a microcode patch for the bug, and everybody gets along swimmingly.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
For other architectures ? (Score:3, Insightful)
And what should the users do when the want to use other platforms ?
- If the constructor only release drivers for 1 platform and not other, like back when ATI released drivers for Intel-compatible processors, and Mac PowerBooks came with PowerPC CPUs and R300-based GPU ? You couldn't get 3D acceleration for them until R300 project reverse engeneered them.
- Same for new sub-architectures : when 64bits started to appear, m
How "up to date" do they need to be for a desktop? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Obligatory:
You must be new here...
This is the Aqua and Aero "equivalent" ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Apparently what is probably the premier desktop-oriented Linux distro doesn't think it's stable enough to include, but it's just as good - nay, better - than Aqua and Aero ?
Sounds like just another day in Linux-land to me :).
(Aside: I've used Beryl, etc on Ubuntu and it definitely does some cool stuff. To try and suggest it's anything close to the equivalent of OS X's and Vista's offerings, however, ignores some pretty hefty usability issues with regards to getting - and keeping - it working.)
Re:This is the Aqua and Aero "equivalent" ? (Score:4, Insightful)
You are comparing them on one aspect, in which admittably the Linux offerings fall short - stability. But the people who say that Compiz/Beryl are better aren't talking about that, they are referring to other aspects - say, that they require less in the way of hardware (especially vs. Vista), or that they allow a lot more user customization.
So, you are all right.
apples and oranges (Score:2)
Beryl and and Compiz go far beyond the released versions of either OS X or Vista, both in functionality and in architecture. Current OS X and Vista-like functionality have been in X11 desktops since before they were included in Apple's and Microsoft's commercial releases.
There are no installation issues with Beryl a
Re: (Score:2)
Beryl and and Compiz go far beyond the released versions of either OS X or Vista, both in functionality and in architecture.
Really ? How ?
Current OS X and Vista-like functionality have been in X11 desktops since before they were included in Apple's and Microsoft's commercial releases.
Right. Which is why the OSS community is making such a big deal of them *now* - because the functionality has been around for ages ? Maybe that would also explain why, until quite recently, those fancy features were now
Re:This is the Aqua and Aero "equivalent" ? (Score:5, Informative)
Look who's talking: OS X 10.4 has most OpenGL acceleration disabled by default because Apple doesn't consider it release-ready; to enable them, you have to dig around with low-level settings. The only hardware-accelerated desktop operations in 10.4 appear to be texture operations. And Vista apparently has serious problems with 3D graphics drivers not quite doing what they are supposed to (see FPS story earlier).
Don't kid yourself: none of this stuff is new and neither Apple nor Microsoft pioneered it. The reason they are all coming to market with this functionality in mainstream systems at around the same time now is because hardware is finally cheap enough and fast enough to do so. If Linux were a little later to market (I don't think it actually is), it has to do with getting drivers out of recalcitrant vendors, not with Linux "following" Apple or Microsoft.
Re:This is the Aqua and Aero "equivalent" ? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think it's accurate to say that 3D acceleration on Linux is necessarily better than Aqua and Aero, as it's currently more immature. However, the X based systems seem to me to be more flexible, with a more clearly defined architecture. When this reaches stability, it seems that Linux will enjoy a not insignificant advantage over its competitors. Until then, I'd have to consider it as not better, but perhaps "more promising".
Re:This is the Aqua and Aero "equivalent" ? (Score:4, Funny)
That's correct; unlike proprietary systems, Linux has no mechanism to protect you from your own bad taste.
Incorrect interpretation of the decision (Score:3, Interesting)
Everyone seems to make a big deal about the display drivers, but Ubuntu has shipped proprietary wifi drivers since warty, and they are used by default on vastly more hardware than the display drivers.
No more PPC support? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
These names kill me..... (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
"Fighting Phallus" won't work... (Score:2)
On the other hand, if you are that enamored with the letter "F", you could have "Fluffy Fur-burg{CENSORED}"
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Ubuntu adoption will go through the roof
J.
Confused ... (Score:5, Interesting)
referenced here: http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/02/08
What will a potential user make out of this while asking himself whether things will work for him?
CC.
Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why make it harder for these users?
What is so bad about giving me the proprietary but working NVidia driver for my NVidia hardware right from the start instead of forcing me to read countless HOWTOs and jump through holes first?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I am really sick and tired to see a couple of fundamentalist nuts hinder the success of Linux through nonsense like this. Until you can actually use hardware the way you do with other OS, Linux on the desktop for everyone will remain fiction.
It is already sad enough to see how much hardware there is were no driver at all (proprietary or not) is available -- to limit Linux even more by not suppo
Re: (Score:2)
I agree a lack of drivers is not a good thing, but we should not give up. Buy hardware from manufacturers that support free drivers and
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I happen to value my freedom a lot more than that, especially when it comes to computers. As for the topic at hand, the proprietary drivers are usually pretty bad (I have an Ati card, so I'm partly to blame for that) as you can see in another post above this one.
Linux is a free operating system, in all senses of the word free. If that is not to your liking, there are loads of other OSes out
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Who's fault is it? Who do you go to get help? I have had the NVidia driver die on me but it killed off the system. when you have a closed blob you can't figure out which part is broken. is it the kernel, or is it a driver?
That is what is wrong with them. Even on windows. how do you know which part really breaks? is it the crappy third party drivers, or is it MSFT's interface? Both sides blame each other if you ask them. All you can do is throw out the card or wait for an update. At least with linux if you have the mind to you can do the work yourself.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Or you can get Windbg, find the non Microsoft module in the stacktrace and either upgrade or uninstall it.
Interestingly, on Win XP, the machine uploads a dump to Online Crash An
Re: (Score:2)
However, that would mean that there is an explicit way how closed drivers shou
Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)
It breeds complacency. My home desktop has an old GeForce MX 400 card which still works perfectly well. It renders my 1600x1200 desktop cleanly and quickly, and basically does what I want it to. I don't have a strong need for OpenGL but do like to play games occasionally (eg Quake or Second Life) and although it's not fast, it worked perfectly.
Note I said "worked". Nvidia has officially deprecated my card, so no new drivers will ever support it. New kernel with an incompatible ABI? I can't upgrade to it. Security vulnerability? I can't get the fix. Basically, I can either keep using my system in its current state forever, or buy a new card purely for the driver upgrade.
Yes, I know my card is old and slow by today's standards. But if it works for me and I'm happy with it, why should I have to replace it? Given that my motherboard has an old Via chipset that Nvidia only supports in AGP 2x mode and that new cards are all but impossible to get working (I've tried), I'm looking at a complete system upgrade just to get a new driver.
With a Free driver, in the worst case situation I could at least attempt to fix new problems on my own as they arise. With closed drivers, I have no control whatsoever. I like Free software for philosophical reasons, but it also has huge practical advantages. This is one of them.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Infact I referred a few users to go to www.nvidia.com who had your hardware to update their drivers so graphical distortions would go away in our game we made. The latest drivers always helped
Re: (Score:2)
So, here's a handful of reasons why bundling the drivers is bad.
First, it's copyright infringement two different ways to do so. ATI and Nvidia both forbid commercial and non-commercial redistribution of their drivers -- the only way to get them is from ATI or Nvidia. This is the same on Windows boxes and Linux boxes alike. Also, it's against the terms of the GPL to redistribute (ship) a tainted kernel, if I remember correctly. At any rate, I do know for a fact that the kernel d
Sorry but.. (Score:3, Interesting)
All of the above IMHO of course.
Re: (Score:2)
Because the FSF and the reactionary, brainwashed morons who support them also want control over what everyone else does, is why.
"Free as in do as I say."
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Additionally, for some devices with binary-only drivers, there are other matters that prevent the manufacturers
Is this different from Edgy? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Shoddy reporting and misleading title
Confused (Score:2)
PowerPC (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
To me, it's sad on a few levels. I still use PowerPC and lament another distro stoping support and also because Canonical is taking the perceived easier path and kowtowing to the video card manufacturer's "inability" to release information on their hardware.
Linux means different things to differ
Several things I would like to point out... (Score:2)
* There is a clear need for wider testing of open source software under
development in this area, including both desktop tools and video drivers.
and
* However, some of the relevant software necessary to implement this
proposal is not yet considered mature enough to deploy in the d
Bad idea (Score:2)
Ubuntu needs to find a way to continue development work while not allowing zealots to have influence...because it will only hurt the distribution in the long term.
I've been reading recently about how there are plans to scrap music DRM entirely, which I knew was going to happen all along, once the companies figured out how unpopular it was. The zealots think
Mandriva? (Score:4, Insightful)
Since when did Ubuntu become the only Linux? Does everyone fall for marketing that easily?
ubuntu is going backwards in usability (Score:3, Insightful)
My first experience with ubuntu was 5.10. It installed fine, apt-get install nvidia got my video sorted, and it played MP3s, etc out of the box. Excellent.
6.06, didn't play MP3s out of the box, and i spent some time (half-assed) rooting around to get my favourite MP3 playing app in KDE to work to no avail. 6.10 shipped with a broken installer that required script hacking to even get it to install on my machine.
Yes, I could have fixed it, but that's not the point. The point is, I couldn't be bothered, and I'm a fairly experienced linux admin - the distribution is, after all supposed to be the "so easy, your grandma could do it" distro. If i have to fuck with it to get it to work i may as well go back to something like slackware/freebsd (which is surprisingly easy to set up these days really).
Now they're removing support for closed drivers? Way to go....
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)