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Ubuntu Feisty Fawn - Desktop Linux Matured

Provataki writes "It seems that Linux on the desktop is getting there, with Ubuntu. Eugenia of OSNews fame wrote a glorifying preview about Ubuntu's next version, dubbed Feisty Fawn. The review talks up the new features, like the restricted drivers/codecs management, easier package management, and good laptop support. The review also lists some of the distro's flaws in the current beta. A good read for those who are curious about what's next for Linux on the desktop. The piece concludes: ' Ubuntu is a distro that obviously has paid attention to detail ... and has found a good middle ground between hard core Linux users and new users from the Windows/OSX land.'"

7 of 413 comments (clear)

  1. my experiences on a laptop by squidinkcalligraphy · · Score: 5, Informative

    I got an IBM r52 recently; I tried installing XP on it - initially with the supposed foolproof system restore image, then from scratch, and three or four hours later, still had no usable system. The drivers just wouldn't install or download and I couldn't find a way to transport them from my other machine. Then I put an ubuntu 6.10 disc in, and bout half an hour later, without little to no interaction, had a perfectly working system. Even wifi worked out of the box. (WPA authentication took a little bit more digging, but was surprisingly easy once I found the package to use).

    --
    "I think it would be a good idea" Gandhi, on Western Civilisation
  2. Re:Boot up speed? by iBod · · Score: 5, Informative

    It is and it is a BAD idea to clear the prefetch folder.

    http://www.edbott.com/weblog/archives/000743.html

  3. Just a minor correction, it is not beta yet by vivaoporto · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the Ubuntu forums:

    Ubuntu 7.04 Alpha 5 CD image testing started
    ** FEISTY IS NOT SUITABLE FOR EVERYDAY USE RIGHT NOW IT IS ONLY IN ALPHA. **
    If you are interested in helping to test CD images for the upcoming Ubuntu release you can find more information here:

  4. Re:Don't pat yourselves on the back yet. by LingNoi · · Score: 4, Informative

    Uh? One bug for one particular hardware type in a beta release and it's 'not designed for end users'?

    Correction Alpha Release, Betas haven't started yet. :D

  5. Re:Linux Mint by johnw · · Score: 4, Informative

    GPL doesn't allow you to distribute closed source software with the GPL lisenced software Nonsense. Users of the GPL have no authority to make such a restriction and there is none in the GPL. Remember, the GPL is a licence not a contract, so it can't restrict what people can do with other stuff, only what they can do with the stuff covered by the licence.

    (The reason why other distributions don't have codecs and drivers with them.). The reason is slightly more subtle than that. The GPL does not allow GPL-licensed code to be incorporated into a larger work where other parts of the work are under a more restrictive licence. There is much debate about whether a device driver with a closed source licence is a derivative work of the kernel, but most distributions err on the side of caution and don't distribute them.
  6. Re:Boot up speed? by an.echte.trilingue · · Score: 5, Informative
    I found that Ubuntu booted initially in +/- 50 seconds, but then that as I installed software and services, it slowed to around 4 minutes. The reason for this is that Ubuntu uses readahead to read all of the required files into memory in one sweep as the machine boots, but as you install stuff, files move around and it doesn't know where files are physically located any more. So, the OS needs to ask the disk to read each individual file as the boot scripts ask for them. The solution to this is very easy:

    http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=25426 3&highlight=grub+profile+speed+boot

    That alone took my boot speed back down to 80 seconds. Then you can install the package bootchart to see what is taking so long to load and tweak those services to load faster or not at all, depending on what you need. For example, I saw that fsck was taking around 25 seconds on boot, and I gained back about 15 seconds by modifying /etc/fstab so that fsck would not check the FAT32 partition that I use to share files with XP. Bootchart will help you figure out why your box takes so much longer to boot when plugged in, as well.

    Now I have a laptop that boots into a usable kde desktop in 47 seconds. I am sure you can do this too. If you need more help, go to the Ubuntuforums, they are full of people who want to help.

    Take care

    -mat

    --
    weirdest thing I ever saw: scientology advertising on slashdot.
  7. Re:Xorg by kripkenstein · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is a very serious problem of Ubuntu that is overlooked by the developers. Problems with specific hardware like those in the TFA, can be common especially these days with so many different combinations of monitors and video cards. I'd like to see some sort of "safe mode" that kicks in when there are problems, and a GUI to allow proper reconfiguration.

    You are correct about this problem, however, the developers are not ignoring it. In fact they were considering implementing more or less what you suggested for Feisty. This has been deferred, however, and for good reason - X.Org, in a future release (7.3, IIRC) will offer related functionality. So Ubuntu developing it themselves would be a lot of effort, for just a few months.

    Hopefully with the next X.Org and the next (after Feisty) Ubuntu we will see many of the typical X problems disappear.