Desktop is surprisingly good
Have been running it on a netbook for a week - it's excellent for small screens.
Annoying as hell for a workstation - but if you are using a big hairy Linux workstation with big screens you are using KDE anyway ;-)
If you are looking for something to do before the Royal Wedding gets under way, Canonical has officially released Ubuntu "Natty Narwhal". The company opened up the mirror floodgates at 11:36 am Greenwich Mean Time for Ubuntu 11.04 for desktops, notebooks, and netbooks and its server companion, Ubuntu Server 11.04. Last week, …
Or XFCE...
Or LXDE...
Or Fluxbox...
Or Openbox...
Or even GNOME 2.3x "classic"
:-)
Personally, I think KDE SC 4.x has made a lot of great strides (especially with regard to stability), but it's still a bit too resource-heavy for my tastes.
For now, I'll stick with my Lucid (10.04 LTS) installation, then make a decision as to whether I'm going Unity or XFCE when the next LTS arrives. I may even take another look at KDE SC.
All I know is that my next desktop will NOT be contaminated by Gnome Shell, unless something radically changes.
Besides, with LaunchPad PPAs, I'm not missing out on the latest-greatest; for example, I have installed the "official" Firefox 4 package provided by the Ubuntu Mozilla team PPA, for example. Works great...!
No, it does not.
It sits on top of the GNOME library framework, which is provided by GTK+ 2.x and 3.x.
Unity, however, avoids using many of the specific components upon which Gnome Shell relies, like Mutter (the GNOME 3 Window Manager) and Clutter (the JavaScript-like graphics library used by Mutter to render its effects).
Unity 3D relies on Compiz for Window Management, and interacts with Compiz through the Compiz plugin framework. I am not sure what Unity 2D (the version for systems where OpenGL acceleration is not supported) is (or will be) using for its Window Management, but old-school Metacity might be an option.
I like Ubuntu, but I'm steering clear of this one, mostly because of these issues:
-- Ubuntu Wiki: Natty Narwhal Release Notes:
-- https://wiki.ubuntu.com/NattyNarwhal/ReleaseNotes#Known%20Issues
-- -- The swap partition appears become unusable during some installations (UUID not set). This issue is under investigation. (709363)
-- -- The return_to_partitioning function executes and returns as normal, but seemingly fails to properly clean up after partman-commit and initialize partman. (740903)
-- -- During boot, on the cryptsetup passphrase prompt, every character typed causes a repeat of the prompt. (566818)
-- -- When installing the amd64+mac version, please do not use LVM. Also avoid using multiple linux instances at this time. (745960)
I need 64-bit address space AND the ability to use encrypted logical volumes, so installing an operating system with a broken partitioner and storage volume management system isn't an option for me.
Not to mention that, IMHO, Unity isn't quite ready for "prime time." Probably be OK after two more releases, though...
Ubuntu 11.04 and VirtualBox (VB) and Windows -XP. Dual-boot.
'Native' XP had problem accessing my 3G modem, which is my only connectivity. Worked on install, but when I put all the XP updates (downloaded with same dongle), and rebooted, couldn't get dongle - either (E220 or E160) working, no matter what I tried. In desperation, I tried VB.
Installed Windows - a breeze! Ran XP under VB - worked a treat! Modem accessed via Ubuntu, but connection accessable with XP.
Goddammit, I swear the windows in 'guest mode' is niftier than native. Apart from having to hit the 'guest key' (Right-shift), it's seamless.
Forget Royal Wedding, I'm hosing my ancient T30 to remove native Win-XP completely and go this way. The installation was as simple as calling Elop a ****.
First time in my life-of-messing-with-computers, nothing, bar Nothing has worked as seamlessly as this.
Gobsmacked!
Well done, folks.
(H/W? IBM T30 lappie, 512Meg ram, 30G HDD.)
WinXP in VirtualBox under Ubuntu 10.04. Definitely snappier than my XP Dual Boot native --- but frankly, if it wasn't for some weird quirks of my bank's internet service, I wouldn't have Windows on the machine at al.
Downsides (noticed so far) of using V'Boxed WinXP for anything else: the disk access is pretty slow, and the sound qualty is poor.
While we're offtopic (well, a bit ;)) --- the latest Wine seems excellent. I now have Cool Edit Pro and FastStone Image viewer working just fine in Ubuntu. The former was considered a lost cause under previous Wine versions.
Had massive problems with Kubuntu. Default screen res. was something I needed a microscope to see. Tried different res., always ended up with scrambled screen. Found a fix, which was to open a terminal, with "sudo reboot" ready (as root) but not hit return, and size to the left-half of the screen. Change screen res. to what I wanted, (screen scrambled) but before timeout move cursor to where I estimated the terminal was, click and hit return. It worked, a hell of a cluge, but....
I dumbped KDE not just for that, but the flakiness of handling my wifi modem. Forums said use nm-applet, but I decided to go back to 'vanilla' 10.10, thence upgrade to 11.04.
I digressed. Suspend seems to work OK, haven't tried 'hibernate'.
I know it generally works with Linux but I've always found it much more reliable to reinstall. Now if anyone knows of a program that will take note of all I have installed in terms of non-base apps and either list package and source or allow for simpler reinstallation that'd be great.
I've had at least one Ubuntu upgrade balls-up (I'm thinking it was a 9 to 10) and similarly for OSX my Snow Leopard upgrade died a death after a while.
Although it's better these days it's still far less effort long run to reinstall unless you have some real bespoke installation that you have a cloned backup of so can justify the upgrade attempt.
HOWTO Reinstall all of your current packages if you do a fresh Ubuntu install
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1057608
Please also ensure the point made by pepemosca in post #13 on Page 2:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=6696192&postcount=13
<Quote>
I might add that you need to check on the bottom: "Save full state, not only changes"
</Quote>
So this time, I'll just say that Unity is rubbish, and Ubuntu must have taken on some designers that failed at Fisher Price. It's a toytown mess, with lots of ideas, all missing the word "good".
Speaking of Toytown, Mr Grouser said it all: "It ought not to be allowed!"
Never fear: First step is to log in to a "Ubuntu Classic" session, and you'll be greeted with the desktop you know and love. Second is to remove that ridiculous global menu app. With a few more tweaks: Voila!
Seen a release candidate and read heaps of reviews. I have converted the family from the darkside BUT this new interface is something else.....like something I stepped in .... |;-O>
Xubuntu; Lubuntu even Kubuntu (if pressed) will chosen before unity ! ! I'm even looking at Fedora if this rot continues.
... and once the semester is over (< 1 week), it'll be time to exercise it. Debian? Fedora? Slack? Maybe even Gentoo, the distro that lured me over from FreeBSD in the first place. Or maybe back to OpenSUSE, which I ditched when Novell had its fling with M$ ... but only if OpenSUSE is sufficiently detached from Novell and Novell's new overlord (can anyone comment?).
I moved over to 11.04 while it was in early alpha but I can't really deal with Unity.
But fortunately you can just put the gnome3 PPA back in and put gnome-shell on (which is what I do).
It's been pretty rock solid for the last couple of months, both the underline kernel, packages and gnome-shell. The Open Source ATI driver finally does 3D out the box without messing about, which is nice (fgrlx always gave the ugly text based boot - Not the end of the world but not impressive when people look over your shoulder).