Ubuntu 8.04 Beta Released
markybob writes "Ubuntu Hardy 8.04 beta has been released. It features GNOME 2.22 and uses Linux kernel 2.6.24. Furthermore, it uses Firefox 3 beta 4, and PulseAudio is enabled by default. To ease the transition of Windows users, it includes Wubi, which allows users to install and uninstall Ubuntu like any other Windows application. It does not require a dedicated partition, nor does it affect the existing bootloader, yet users can experience a dual-boot setup almost identical to a full installation."
Anyone have any information about this? I prefer having a linux environment but my work laptop *must* run windows thanks to company software. This seems like it may be a much better solution for me compared to, say, cygwin.
Wubi? Whoopee! How does that work? Anybody has had any experience? It sounds quite incongruous with the whole idea of "dual-boot" or having two OSes for that matter.
I am waiting for the Hungry Hippo version of Ubuntu...
this one time... at computer camp... I shoved a linux cd in my windows computer
I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good either. - Scott Adams
Just installed the amd64 version on my quad core box. I am really liking the goodies -
/virtio - KVM is something that never worked well for me.
Startup is quicker than previous version on the same hardware. Filesystems are now mounted with 'realtime' flag out-of-box - yay for even more speed!
I was able to install it inside of Windows (Vista x64) without any performance loss using the Wubi installer - Ubuntu entry appeared in Windows boot loader and I did not had to partition my NTFS formatted disks - you can try and see how it works without losing data or even disk space when you am done trying it. Cool.
Firefox 3 - my favorite browser is bundled and integrated - can't ask for more!
Got to try KVM
Still free, but one version is not supported. Because of the current transition to KDE 4, the KDE 3.5 Kubuntu is the officially supported distro, while the KDE 4 distro is community maintained.
During the time that RH and Mandrake didn't do this, weren't THEY suckers too for thinking you could run a business without charging for ... well anything?
Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.
'with limited functionality'
Where did you read that? If you look at the official page https://wiki.kubuntu.org/HardyHeron/Beta/Kubuntu you'll see that the difference is the commercial support available. Since KDE 4 is not intended to be used by the general public just yet, there will be one version of Kubuntu 8.04 with KDE 3.5 that is supported, and one with 4.0 that isn't.
Slagborr
Perhaps you're referring to the fact that although Ubuntu 8.04 will be considered "Long-Term Support" (LTS), the corresponding Kubuntu 8.04 will not be LTS (it will still be supported, just not for as long). The reason for this decision being that KDE 4.0 is still "too fresh" for Canonical to guarantee that it will be stable-enough (and unchanging-enough) to warrant the LTS label. However Kubuntu will still be available, will still receive consistent patches and updates, and will still be Free and free.
Or perhaps you're referring to the effort to get Linspire's "Click 'n' Run" to work on Ubuntu, which would allow users to install commercial/proprietary software from repositories?
In any case, I think you're mis-remembering what you've read. As far as I know, Kubuntu and Ubuntu will remain Free and free.
Can somebody change the typo "relatime" to "realtime" in this page: http://www.ubuntu.com/testing/hardy/beta Thanks, Sundar
Rock solid KDE 3
Commercial support provided by [WWW] Canonical for a term of 18 months
Release available through ShipIt for everybody as well as downloading
Kubuntu KDE 4 Remix
Cutting edge KDE 4.0
Support provided by the Kubuntu community via [WWW] Ubuntu Forums, [WWW] Kubuntu Forums, IRC, and the [WWW] Kubuntu Users Mailing List.
Release available through CDs for groups who need it (ie. LoCo teams, conference teams, etc.) as well as downloading
As I understand it, there will be 2 versions Kubuntu 8.04 and Kubuntu KDE 4 Remix 8.04. The vanilla version has the standard support lifetime with updates and you can purchase support from Canonical, basically the way it has always been. The Remix version includes KDE 4 and is a bit less stable. Therefore, the Remix version does not offer official support and you need to go to the forums. I am not sure what the security or bug update procedure is, that is, whether or not packages found only in Remix will receive security and bug updates. So the "commercially" supported version is the same Kubuntu as usual, but Remix is for all of those people screaming about KDE 4.
Any link for that?
I did here that there would be two versions of KDE shipping, but I don't see how they can charge for Kubuntu while keeping Ubuntu free, since they basically run the same software and can use the same repositories.
Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
I remember hearing about this in past updates, but no info in the summary. I've tried to install Ubuntu a number of times on my PC and laptop but I always ending up having graphics card errors and the fixes I've tried either failed, were too convoluted and time consuming or just way above my depth of knowledge. I've heard that that 8.04 will solve a lot of these issues as well as making Ubuntu even more painless to install.
Anyone have any more info on this?
The "relatime" mount option tells the filesystem to update atime only when it is older than mtime or ctime. This is better than turning off atime entirely, but doesn't have the performance issues of the older atime functionality.
Looks like the update servers are being hit pretty hard. Does anyone have a link to the torrent?
'Every story, if continued long enough, ends in death.' --Ernest Hemingway
I think you're confused. Canonical splitting any of their official distros into a limited free version and a fully-functional paid version would violate their own promise that Ubuntu will always be free of charge. Even if they wiggled out of that on a technicality, Ubuntu lives purely on the strength of its community. Canonical know that and would be insane to risk losing them through such a move.
The actual situation is that Kubuntu will be splitting into two versions, both of them free in all senses of the word, for the 8.04 release. One (using KDE 3.5.9) will be officially supported for 18 months (it won't be a Long Term Support release, since KDE 3 likely won't be supported in three years, though it will still support upgrading directly from 6.06) while the other (using KDE 4.0.2) will be community supported. This is probably because (like me) they think that KDE 4 really isn't ready yet as it hasn't had much time to mature and many of the Extragear application (some of which come with Kubuntu) haven't been updated yet, the most notable for me being Amarok.
My understanding is that Kubuntu will only do this split release system for the 8.04 release, with the 8.10 release likely to use KDE 4.0.x officially.
I am using the Ubuntu beta since the early Alpha versions and I should admit that everything is going into place very well. Actually using it, you'd never say it's a beta given how polished and smooth the user experience is. A little bloating on the other hand is pervading the desktop setup and maybe too many services are active by default. With 512mb RAM you will need to disable something to have a better experience but compared to some competing OS the situation is really good.
Comparing the Ubuntu 8.04 beta to my other Debian Lenny box with comparable hardware (laptops with 1gb ram and centrino 1.8GHz) Ubuntu feels much faster doing everything. I don't know if it's the kernel 2.6.24 with CFS or some optimization of the libc or something else but the difference is night and day. Debian should care a bit more about performance if it wants to stay the UNIVERSAL OS...
So, up to now: really good and two thumbs up for this "beta" (just a bit different from the stability of KDE 4 beta!....)
Happy dowloading!
marco
So, basically, the "fully supported" version of Kubuntu 8.04 will use KDE 3.5. You will be able to purchase commercial support from Canonical if you like, but in any case can always download and use it for free. Or, you can use the more experimental Kubuntu 8.04 Remix, which uses KDE 4.0. In this case you will receive the usual community updates and community support.
Both versions are free, but if you use the more stable version that includes KDE 3.5, you have the option of paying Canonical for commercial support, just like every other official Ubuntu and Kubuntu version. You don't have to pay Canonical to get updates or unlock features or anything... but for businesses who want support contracts the option is there.
And, as I said before, Canonical is opting not to consider Kubuntu 8.04 as an "LTS" release... which means that they will officially provide updates to it for "only" 18 months.
Charging for support/consulting is something that money can be made on. You don't have to cripple your product in the process.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
For some reason, the traditional dual-boot WinXP and Ubuntu does not work for her. 7.10 works great as a LiveCD, installs just fine on her second HDD, but REFUSES to boot from GRUB, no matter what we've tried. MAYBE Wubi would fix that...
Anyone managed to upgrade? My last attempt to upgrade (alpha 5) was disaster and broke my machine completely.
You can't get there from here.
- There's Fedora (which Redhat supports) which has the bleeding edge stuff that other distributions get the benefit of. PulseAudio is enabled in Hardy Heron which Fedora 8 currently has it. BTW Fedora 9 is being released around the same time as Hardy Heron
- There's CentOS which quoting them "... is an Enterprise-class Linux Distribution derived from sources freely provided to the public by a prominent North American Enterprise Linux vendor. ". That Linux vendor is redhat.
What you're paying for Redhat is the support which makes sense for business to have a safety net. There's nothing different software-wise (as far as I know) except that you have someone to call when some UH-OH happens.Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on mine.
Did you try installing it to your master drive instead of a slave drive?
How's the PulseAudio decision working out so far? I've run into lots of PulseAudio problems in Fedora (which enabled it by default in Fedora 8), so its a little bit surprising that Ubuntu has decided to enable PulseAudio by default. Personally, I don't think PulseAudio is yet ready for mainstream use, so I'm wondering what the justification for this decision was.
We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
In addition to what other /.ers said about WUBI, there's also the possibility to use Live USB distribution.
/on the windows drive/ and adds a new entry to the Windows boot loader to make the system. So you boot you hard drive normally and then use Windows XP's boot menu to select Linux instead of WinXP).
PenDrive Linux has a lot of resources about this kind of distributions.
I've been using their Quick and easy Pendrivelinux for quite some time.
You can buy commercial preinstalled ones from companies like Mandriva Flash.
It works to a very similar way to WUBI, but on a flash drive.
Essentially it puts 2* big files that contain the file system on the USB drive, and make the USB stick bootable using "syslinux". You start it by hitting F12 when the BIOS starts and choose to boot on the USB drive instead of your hard drive.
(whereas WUBI puts a big file with the partition
So in that solution, your hard drive is virtually untouched (not that creating a file and adding an entry are *that* much big change) so it may please more the paranoid admins at your company.
Last-but-not-least there's also the running-Linux-inside-Virtualbox (or some other virtual machines that have native-speed performance) solution. It's a bit complicated, but has the benefit of letting you run your Linux apps along side the Windows desktop (with possibilities for native integration, either using a X-Window server for Win32, or using the virtual machine's client tools).
* - most Live USB solutions tend to use 2 files : one is a big read-only file containing the live system, the other is read-writeable and used to store and remember modification (newly installed software, upgrades, user settings, user's home, etc.) between session.
This is because most Live USB distribution are descendant of Live CD distribution (where the CD-Rom is read only and holds the live distro and a RAM-disk holds the modification, using a UNIONFS to bridge the 2 together).
The big advantage of this system is that in case of a big fuckup, you can still reboot using only the original live system (just like a LiveCD) and fix/rebuild/create a new read-write big file.
Of course there are also other solutions for partitioning and installing linux on a USB stick the same way you install it on a harddrive.
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
Seconded, I've always had trouble with multi-drive multi-boot setups and Windows. Win just doesn't play nicely with GRUB. As far as WUBI goes, I'm surprised to read so many comments like it's a new thing. It's essentially a dual-boot setup which doesn't require its own partition, it worked plenty well on 7.04 and I would expect the same thing for 8.04 (which I have installed now, and it looks nice but there are some polishings that need to occur.) Just don't forget folks, this is an Alpha release which is usually intended for developers only. Don't start selling Grandma on 8.04 just yet!
That promise was my point exactly, so i do hope i just misunderstood the wording in their news blurb and nothing really has changed. On the risk of losing their base due to dumb stunts: RH went thru the same thing, so it IS possible.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I use (the free) VMWare Server (not ESX) on Windows boxes for various Linux installs...including Ubuntu. I do not understand an earlier comment stating that VMWare Server is complex. You install it as a Windows application, fire it up, select "new VM", choose a linux distro (Ubuntu 32 and 64 are options) for the VM architecture, and away you go...you now have a VM ready for a Linux install. The Live Ubuntu CD works with no issues...as does the default Ubuntu install.
You can also tweak the number of processors, hard disk size, and memory that you assign to the VM, but VMWare suggests low-end (working) default values. I have run VMWare on numerous machines (laptops, desktops, servers) and it just plain works. It is a fantastic way to test out various distros without putting the Windows partition at risk. If you take the time to mount and install VMWare Tools in the VM's hosted OS, switching back and forth between the host and guest OSes (including copying and pasting) is a breeze. You can also have as many VMs (and OSes) installed as you please. Want to play with 8.04 without losing 7.10? No problem. Create a new VM.
Downsides include:
- It is virtualized. Thus, it is going to run significantly slower than a native install.
- You are limited by the types of hardware architectures that VMWare simulates. That said, I have not had issues getting any sound or graphics card to work...and the networking options are fantastic. I cannot get access to all four cores however. The free VMWare server only allows me to create a VM that simulates either 1 or 2 CPUs...and I am not sure how many cores the VMWare container is using.
- Memory...since Windows is still running, it needs its share. Thus, you need a lot.
Of course, on the positive side, Windows is still running...so you have access to whatever you need there (e.g., Outlook, games, whatever). You can also run in reverse, and run VMWare on Linux and install Windows in a VM, but I dare say that most of us are in a situation that requires (or prefers) the VMWare on Windows approach.
I assume that Windows is not running in the WUBI option and that Ubuntu is running right on the metal (not virtualized), with full access to the real hardware architecture and all of the memory. Putting the HD in a Windows file must have some performance impact, but most likely far less than the entire OS in a VM (which also uses the Windows file approach for the HD). Does anyone have anecdotal performance impressions for WUBI? It sounds very cool and a great option for someone who is not yet committed...but I will say that I am not much of a fan of modifying the boot loader, but perhaps I am just being overly skittish.
Steve
Here's what's I think is important (and new) Ubuntu 8.04 Beta, with my comments. There are more new things, but I don't care about them.
Xorg 7.3 - the main advantage should be easier configuration, especially in multi-monitor setups. I haven't tried it yet, so I can't say. But it can only be better than what we have now.
Linux kernel 2.6.24 - The new & neat things here are dynticks for amd64 (power savings), the new CFS scheduler (you should experience less lags when your system is loaded). I'm mostly interested in the dynticks part.
PulseAudio - this is supposed to clean up the linux audio mess. I say wait and see.
Firefox 3 Beta 4 - I tried Beta 3 and it's *really* an advance over Firefox 2. I can't say that I personally witnessed any real speedups, but the new location bar is really cool. It takes a day or two to get used to it, but it really changes the way you surf.
Transmission - a new Bittorrent client. I'm using it regularly since months, and it *rules*. It's exactly the way a bittorrent client should be.
Brasero - a new CD/DVD burning program. I have never used it, but I can only hope that it is the way Nero 5 was.
World clock for the clock applet - that's really handy. Never type "what's the time in california" into google again!
Virtualization - it's supposed to be some super-easy and clicky integration of virtualization. I'm looking forward to it.
RHEL is just a more conservative package set than Fedora, there's not much difference in functionality, and you can always just use CentOS anyway.
Personally I use Ubuntu but I'm sick of all the regressions so I'm off to Debian.
I have only been able to get windows to run when Grub is physically on the same drive as Windows. This makes me put Windows on the first drive, and Linux on any other drive (including the first). As long as Windows and Grub are on the first drive (and the /boot/menu.lst is visible), Windows boots fine from Grub.
/dev/hdc) and still successfully boot Windows from Bios. This same thing DOES NOT work in Linux. When installed, Linux knows which drive it was installed on and ALWAYS needs to be on that drive. Look at /etc/fstab and think about it.
Another note, when booting from Bios (not using Grub), Windows can be on any drive, even if it was installed differently. In other words, if I install Windows to the first drive (/dev/hda) I can later move it to another position in the computer (via cables and/or jumpers) to (/dev/hdb or
Years ago, I had a Tekram HD controller that would let me change the logical locations of the drives in my computer WITHOUT moving wires or jumpers. I could even tell the system that a connected drive was not connected. SWEET. I could boot from ANY drive and set the drive location all through the Tekram Bios. I have not seen a product like this since.
- I live the greatest adventure anyone could possibly desire. - Tosk the Hunted
I installed Kubuntu beta with KDE4. Almost everything just worked.
/etc/network/interfaces to fix it. That's the only old-style hackery I had to do. Did everything else via the GUI.
Had a tiny issue with KNetworkManager. It only wanted to recognize one network card at a time. I had to manually edit
Now it's functioning as a gateway, interfaces with Windows machines on my home network via samba, set up apache and all that stuff. KDE4 is a bit tough to customize. The features are pretty sparse. I can't tell my clock to display seconds, it's really inconvenient to move icons around on the taskbar--gotta go through many menues, etc., but I suppose this will get better with time.
Summary: KDE4 isn't done, but it looks like it will be nice. Almost everything just works.
Where does it say this on their site? I only see two different versions: the KDE 3.5 version (which is commercially supported just like all previous releases) and the KDE 4.0 version (which is a community-supported version; like a spin-off version). You may have confused this with them charging for Ubuntu/Kubuntu; however, this is how it has always been.
'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
I partially agree, however, pulseaudio is a full-featured, low-latency audio server. What's missing is app support. While I don't entirely agree with it, this seems to be a move to force applications to support pulseaudio. The Ubuntu developers will probably be writing patches for a number of libraries and applications and sending them upstream. For legacy ALSA and OSS applications, there is pasuspender (pause pulseaudio and give a single app direct ALSA access) and padsp (emulate an OSS device for an application, send its audio to a pulseaudio output). Hopefully we will soon see pulseaudio support in the major audio libraries (PortAudio etc.) ALSA already includes a compatibility drive where you can create a virtual "pulse" device to send output to pulseaudio.
BTW about latency, I tested JACK running on top of PulseAudio on my system with a generic integrated soundcard, and got <2ms without hardware monitoring. <flamebait>Try that under any Windows soundserver.</flamebait>
Do away with our corrupt tax code. Support the Fair Tax
It must be... you posted a comment that it's a slow news day on the article that you believe proves it's a slow news day. If there was something else interesting/important going on, you would have commented on that article and not this one.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
Another thing: as a Linuzz contributor (which, believe it or not, I am), i couldn't care less about how many users I will get...
If you are truly a contributor why do you insist on trolling by using "Linuzz"? It detracts from anything you may say, positive or negative, with regard to Linux.
Will the non-KDE packages in Kubuntu 8.04 receive long-term support, i.e., the rest of the distro will have long term support, but the KDE packages will only have 18 month support? Or will the whole thing only have 18 month support (no updated kernel packages, etc, after 18 months)?
By your comment about performance being "slightly" slower, and that you "won't notice if you're running on modern hardware", I take it that this is the pseudo read/write mode provided by the kernel NTFS drivers -- that is, you can only read/write to a file, but you can't change any of its attributes, including size, and you can't create or destroy files.
In other words, it's a mode that's really only useful for creating disk images, for things like a Linux filesystem, or swap. Not really like umsdos at all.
I don't actually know this to be true, but I do know that ntfs-3g (which provides full read/write access) is slow enough that I think I would notice the difference if my root filesystem was mounted loopback off of it.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
What, specifically, makes you think that they are not trying to make a better Linux for Linux users?
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
Compiz/Beryl takes away OpenGL resources, and pulseaudio doesn't work right with ALSA, let alone the ALSA Wine driver.
I'll be spending so much more time telling people to turn that stuff off.
Oh thank you so much, Ubuntu team!
Hello, even if not recommended for, a main machine (at home), I've installed 8.04 beta. I cleaned the system partition (/home is safe elsewhere) and made a fresh reinstall. My current installation has several upgrades on it and I want a good LTS, free of old stuff.
/home for users, so you will have to add them manually... The problem is that the GUI to add/change groups don't let you assign a new user to an existing /home/stuff dir. Also, nautilus (running as root) is broken when you try to change the ownership of something.
My first impressions... The theme is almost the same, the menus are the same, but there are some theme inconsistency between windows...some processes lunched by root get a different theme. Emerald not working.
the new applications rock, lots of changed applications, upgrades and beta software... As an LTS I think the developers chose soft that may be maintained longer, even if it is still in beta.
By the way, Firefox 3B4 integration with gnome is fantastic.
Only a thing that is not so good. If you have multiple accounts in the computer, the installer won't scan
All hardware running well, no strange things happening. Yet. Congratulations and many thanks to the ubuntu dev team.
Math is beautiful... e^(pi*i)+1=0
I have an earlier version ubuntu. Can I just upgrade in place?
This is my sig.
I assume the limited functionality = KDE4 and the one for sane people who want to do stuff other than sit around looking at their desktops is 3.5.9.
Everything except KDE packages will have long-term support.
After all, you can install Ubuntu 8.04 LTS, and then install the package "kubuntu-desktop" to add all the required KDE packages. Most of the system (kernel, servers, most apps, GNOME, etc.) will be covered by LTS and receive patches for years. The KDE components will only receive patches for 18 months (of course after that you can just upgrade to the next supported version of Ubuntu or Kubuntu anyway).
but I will say that I am not much of a fan of modifying the boot loader, but perhaps I am just being overly skittish.
Well, the summary says that it does not modify the existing bootloader. Not that I've RTFA yet or anything.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
If you're a Linux contributor (and also then presumably a user too), then the benefit of more Linux users should be obvious: Better driver support from hardware manufacturers, more software being targeted to the platform, and of course more people willing and able to contribute to Linux and Linux-oriented software.
While it's a fair point that blindly copying Windows is not a good idea, I don't see many Linux distributions doing that. There is plenty going on in the arena of Windows inter-operation sure, but that's something entirely different.
Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
This actually boots directly into the image file that has the kernel installed to it and runs linux natively.
Grub already does this automagically - booting into Windows natively. But there is no option to install Windows as a separate partition within the filesystem (ie as an iso file) or to remove both the file and the boot option via package removal.
If Wubi get's out into the world as "the way to install Ubuntu" noob users will assume they need Windows to install a Linux distro..
Huh? This makes no sense. It's an option, not a requirement. Nowhere in the Ubuntu system recommendations does it say you need Windows... Why in God's name would anybody think that? Use of Wubi is a tool, not a requisite. Frankly if anyone is dumb enough to think that you NEED Windows to run Linux, they're probably Windows users anyways.
Karma: Non-Heinous
Actually, is states that it does not "affect the existing bootloader", but you are right...I definitely missed the boat there. I read that description, but I think my past experience unconsciously dismissed that line because I do not see how that is possible. That said, I have googled a bit since posting my original message and it appears that it does not replace your boatloader, but does require upadtes to the existing loader...as well as adding another one. Specifically, it does this:
1. On installation, WUBI adds an entry in the settings of the ntldr boot loader of Windows 2000/XP/2003.
2. That entry points toward a special version of the grub bootloader (grub4dos) that does not overwrite to the Master Boot Record on your hard drive.
3. On boot, it searches for wubi/boot/initrd and wubi/boot/linux.
(paraphrased from https://wiki.ubuntu.com/WubiGuide)
Modifying boot.ini is no big deal...as long as they stay away from my MBR. Thanks for keeping me honest.
cheers,
Steve
I disagree with this statement. VMWare doesn't introduce a lot of overhead in their virtual machines. A few percentages difference from running it "on metal".
My empirical evidence shows otherwise. That may be due to a range of factors...not the least of which is the fact that the VM creates a hardware architecture that is more generic and thus, you may not have access to optimized drivers for your specific hardware (e.g., graphics card). The fact that an entire windows stack is running underneath the VMWare server application also cannot be understated, however, regardless of how efficient the VMWare Server application is. Keep in mind, I am talking about (the free) VMWare server...and not VMWare ESX.
BTW, this isn't just theoretical for me. I have numerous VMWare Server installs.
One example, I have Ubuntu 7.10 installed on two devices at home:
1) Installed as the actual OS on a 5 year-old Compaq laptop with 512 MB of RAM (and it was a budget laptop the day that I bought it new)
2) Installed in VMWare on a intel-based quad core Q6600 with 4GB of RAM, an 8800GT GPU, and a 10k Raptor Hard Drive...running XP SP2 as the base OS.
The compaq laptop Ubuntu performance absolutely SMOKES Ubuntu running in VMWare in the Q6600...even when the Q6600-based PC is running nothing beyond anti-virus, anti-spyware, and other lighter weight services. I don't have CPU mark tests, so I apologize for throwing out an assessment without objective measures to base it...but I stand by it. I will try to run some tests to isolate the GPU factor however, since I really believe that is a large part of the issue. Native graphic drivers are just plain better.
Looked pretty good at first; it shows the two monitors side by side, showing the one I hadn't been using with a screen resolution set to 'off'. I set that to 1152x864, and pressed 'apply': Lo and behold, it turned on and showed my desktop at that resolution -- except that the monitor I had been using before was now set to 'off'. I used the applet to turn that monitor on, it did so -- and turned my secondary monitor back off.
The old 'Screens and Graphics' manager is still installed, only it's been moved over to the 'applications' menu for some reason. It still works identically to how it worked in Gutsy. By which I mean: not at all.
Not impressed.
What's purple and commutes? An Abelian grape.
Rather annoyed at Ubuntu. It worked great on my Dell Precision M90 laptop in 6.? (whatever the one before this was). I upgraded to 7.10 and the sound, wireless, and suspend all broke.
I managed to fix them by doing a lot of Google and package installation (here is what worked: the sound required the installation of something like "ubuntu_backports". The wireless (an Intel chip) required the installation of the i386 drivers (as opposed to the "generic" drivers used by the non-default version of the kernel). The suspend required installation of something called "ps_suspend" though I tried a lot of scary-looking other suggestions before this worked, with the annoying fact that I had to reboot every time a test failed. I'm quite certain that most people would not have figured out or tried any of these. (hint for googling: use the animal name, ie "gutsy")
Normally you can blame lack of hardware manufacturer support and/or lack of resources to test things, but not when it worked in the previous version AND the system can be fixed to work in the new version.
From my Google searching it sounds like a lot of people complained about the lack of such quality compared to the previous Ubuntu.
Any word on whether I can expect the same, better, or worse from this new version?
KDE 4.0 has some fundamental problems. They tried to somewhat mimic the Vista start menu and essentially failed. They were trying to shoot the prairie dog and killed the horse by mistake. IMHO they created an ugly weak and problematic menu.
Other things are that KDE 4.0 was released early so that developers could work on it to help resolve issues and create new features. In the end, as far as end users are concerned tho, if they chose to use it as an early adopter they will have to put up with some extremely messy looking features.
I've looked at it and after some time dropped it. It was messy as hell and had some real organizational issues. Even the icons on the desktop are kludgy. They can easily get disorganized and spread around thus creating a messy desktop. They are extremely buggy and the desktop itself can be inadvertently moved off center of the screen with no hopes of moving it back, unless you restart KDM.
Conceptually, it is a good first start, but I'd say it is about a year out before it becomes anything really useful to the average person. This makes it an obvious choice for limited support.
KDE needs serious work, but it is the future of their desktop. It is a good first try, though buggy as all hell.
You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
I never took the time to do a dual boot. Maybe to me it is too much hassle restarting to get into another machine. If you have your working computer (Ubuntu for me..) and your coding computer or gaming (Windows).. Go with the multiple computer set up I think. Synergy is the way to go. I can have my yahoo widgets in Windows, code in VB, and do everything else in Linux and it is just like have running a computer with dual monitors. XP and Ubuntu Gusty make a good combo. I wonder what improvements Hardy will add to the mix? - AHA! Proof that we can truly have our cake and eat it! Excellent!
PYROPHOR
The LTS versions are every two years. (every 4th of the 6 month releases)
I'm using a Gateway 2000 P6301:
http://support.gateway.com/s/Mobile/2007/Godzilla/1014776R/1014776Rsp2.shtml
It has only VGA out (yep, no HDMI or DVI or other connectors). I have a separate LCD at home that I'd like to "span" or expand my desktop to, but I don't want a "single" screen simply duplicated to the LCD. I want to put on the external LCD any virtual desktop or app of my choosing.
A year or 2 ago, I thought I read in LXF about 2 or more Xserver options to edit by hand to achieve this. There were/are commercial implementations, too. But, I misplaced those mags and can't find the archives online.
My laptop currently is running PCLinux OS 2008, KDE 3.5.8.
Video controller information:
Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator X3100
Up to 384 MB of Dynamic Video Memory
The external LCD is recognized only if connected during boot up. After booting, if the LCD had not been connected, it simply is not recognized, doesn't light up, and I have to connect it and then power cycle if I want to use the external LCD
Currently, I'm looking at:
http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/os-mltihed/index.html
http://kerneltrap.org/mailarchive/openbsd-misc/2007/9/2/153902
Can you offer me any xorg or advice?
Thanks!
Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
Will Ubuntu 8.04 support my wireless usb network adapter? It's a LinkSys WUSB300N.
And by 'support' I mean, install Ubuntu and have it work. Not edit this, hack that, download the windows driver, run this emulator, reconfigure this thingamabob and so on and so forth. And by 'support' I mean, be able to use it - you know, not just be able to go online but be able to encrypt data using WEP or any of the other methods available to me in Windows.
Not trying to be a jerk or anything; but to me this is the ultimate test for Linux. When it works with the hardware I already own.
Of course, fanboys will tell me that everything already does work (or so they've been claiming for years now). In Ubuntu 7 my wireless adapter didn't work. Rumors of people getting it to work using ndiswrap (provided you use the right version of ndiswrap and edit/change a million different settings and then, WEP didn't work).
If it DOES work, on a fresh install; I'd actually like to reinstall Ubuntu.
No one wants to support windows.
The move to pulseaudio as the default sound systems is welcomed. It's mastry of emulating OSS, ALSA and ESound are simply awesome and supposedly these are emulated more efficiently than the origtional competing sound systems.
The problem is that there is an alsa compatibility library that needs to be fixed ASAP before this distribution gets released.
To see the breakage just run the VoIP client named Ekiga and get into it's audio wizard. It just hangs there.
I've been studying long and hard to learn Asterisk and I'll be damned if I will run a distribution that can't provide audio to SIP client software on my laptop.
https://answers.launchpad.net/alsa-plugins/+question/27568
I was an early adopter of pulseaudio on my 7.10 laptop and have suffered not being able to run voip clients such as:
X-Lite
iaxcomm
Ekiga
Twinkle
Kphone
I really like Ubuntu, but I'm concerned they may loose significant market share if they don't resolve this matter FAST in the beta stages of 8.04.
-Joe Baker
GPG Key ID DDEC0260
He's just afraid of his OS becoming mainstream, because then he'll have to start using BeOS to be cool. I mean running what everyone else does is so uncool.
B-b-b-but interoperability! Globalization!
Uhh, Iraq war!
DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
If you're going to claim to have empirical evidence, please don't turn around and say you don't have any measurement, but it sure FEELS a lot slower. That said, I agree that running any full Linux or other big OS on a VM is going to be slower. Even Plan 9 isn't too quick when you're running it on VMware under Windows.
Klingon programs don't timeshare, they battle for supremacy.
Wubi states that it uses a "loopmounted" filesystem to boot off a disk image contained within an NTFS filesystem. My question is, how does this work?
Don't you need a NTFS driver to read the disk image off of the loop mounted partition, and to be able to write back to it? How does linux know what blocks on the filesystem belong to it, and what blocks are for other files?
Is there any documentation out there on how this sort of thing works?
Phat Linux did this six years ago, but is now defunct.
Check its remains at ahref=http://phatlinux.com/about.html/rel=url2html-28947http://phatlinux.com/about.html/>
Slashdot: Where the sig outsmarts the comment
the big difference from what I saw on the Wubi website is that to install Ubuntu, there's like one dialog box with about 6 items and then you reboot. Not much to scare any Windows user away there. Now, with VMware, you install VMware server, start it, have to know what creating a new virtual machine means and how to do it. there's alot of options about version of operating systems, CPUs, disks, networking, etc. Sure, if you know what all this is it is a piece of cake and quite a treat compared to dual booting. But man, there's alot for Joe Sixpack to run crying to mama about in there. Wubi looks like it is as easy as installing any simple Windows application and the result is you can boot into it running directly on the raw metal, or continue booting into Windows.
Most Windows users don't know what a partition is and I've had my fill of people talking about the "D" drive when they are talking about their CDROM. Wubi makes getting Ubuntu on newbies or naive Windows users desktops so they can play with it and learn how easy( or hard ) it is.
I'll continue with VMware but Wubi is definitely something I'll have a few who've recently asking me about Linux. Heck, it now looks so easy, I bet the local school board members could even give it a try.
LoB
"Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
Excellent points...and I also assume that performance far exceeds a VM-based install.
;-)
;-)
That said, for many of us who need to maintain Windows, dual booting is somewhat painful. Can you imagine having to reboot each time that you needed to use Outlook and then reboot again to get back to Linux? WUBI, like most dual booting options, seems like a great idea for someone who wants to take the leap, but doesn't want to commit 100%...but also someone who does not need to routinely perform functions in Windows.
Like many, I need to switch back and forth in real-time...and I also would prefer not to be locked into Windows and just one other OS. A VM-based approach addresses both issues for someone like me. In fact, as I type this in windows, I can glance over at two VMs that I have running on my second monitor - Ubuntu 7.10 and OpenSUSE 10.3...and I can be in either one and back out in a flash. I agree that it is certainly more complex than how you represent a WUBI install...but then I think Joe SixPack may stumble again after the install. Say, perhaps when it comes time to get his wireless drivers working.
In fact, the last Ubuntu install that I performed had major issues with monitor detection...and each boot took approximately 5 minutes. I hunted dowwn the fix (editing a file of course) and thought of that very same Joe SixPack after I made the fix. Don't get me wrong...I think Ubuntu can be great for low-tech user...and my 78 year-old mother is using a Ubuntu box, which replaced her spyware infested Windows box...but I think we are still quite some distance away from the ease of a windows install with plug-and-play hardware detection. While they have made amazing progress, they are not there yet...and a quick search for "wireless" in the Ubuntu forums will tend to support that bold claim.
it is good to have choices.
LoB
"Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
I too have a quad core Q6600 with 4GB RAM, running Fedora 8. WinXP and Ubuntu (8.04 beta) are both blazingly fast under VMware (workstation 6.0.3) compared to my older desktops and laptops. Actually compared to most 2+ year old machines that I've used with WinXP or Linux natively.
Installing Ubuntu 8.04 beta using WUBI can leave your system unbootable, and the filesystem not fully recoverable. It just happened to me. I installed through WUBI and got to a the Ubuntu desktop, after rebooting to go back to Windows, it halted halfway in the boot sequence. I'm not the only one, their are several others on the forums with the same problem.
The only way I was able to get dual screens running in Gutsy at all was using the ATI binary drivers and their aticonfig utility, which worked, except that the cursor, which looks fine in the primary screen, looks like a large square of random noise in the secondary screen. This is fixed if you enable the SW_CURSOR flag in xorg.conf, only then you get huge artifacts whenever you try to move or click on anything. I tried enabling Compiz to see if that fixes it, only it doesn't work the the ATi proprietry drivers. Not to mention that, when running the proprietry drivers, X.org crashed about once every third time I tried to drag a window from on monitor to the other. And I mean *really* crashed -- as in froze up the system to the extent that neither ctrl-alt-backspace (restart X) nor ctrl-alt-F1 (drop back to console) did anything at all.
As a result, I'm sticking with the "ati" drivers and one monitor only for now. If I want dual monitors, I can always boot into Windows, which has worked fine with two screens with no configuration at all (besides ticking the "Extend my desktop onto this monitor" box) since Windows 98...
What's purple and commutes? An Abelian grape.
Have you installed the guest video and mouse drivers for ubuntu? that makes quite a difference - optimised drivers for the vmware video "hardware". Also allows the mouse to transparently move from guest to host sessions.
Also, have you tried VirtualBox? the latest versions are pretty good.
I tried it on my plain old Dell machine that successfully ran 7.10, 7.04, 6.10, and 6.04. This one is broken. I hear the startup sound and see the orange background for a second, and then it blanks out and sits at a black screen forever.
I originally had an ATI card in and took a trip to the local PC store to get an NVIDIA card. I am with you on the ATI in Linux thing.... I quit. That NVIDIA Card was a $100 investment into my sanity.
PYROPHOR
Thats what people say, its not what a lot of people can actually do. First movers like Red Hat and Suse have managed to carve out a niche but even they have found it necessary to create artificial tiers in their product lines.
You see this is the trouble a company runs into when their main product is FREE.
Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.