Slashdot Mirror


Interviews: Ask 'Ubuntu Unleashed' Author Matthew Helmke

Matthew Helmke (personal blog) is the author of the newly published 11th edition of Ubuntu Unleashed (published by Pearson); this updated edition of the book will cover the OS through Ubuntu's 15.10 and (forthcoming) 16.04 releases. Helmke is also a former Ubuntu Forum administrator, a musician, an entrepreneur, and a long-time Slashdot reader who now leads a "nice quiet life in Iowa." Ask Matthew about what it's like to be a Linux book author and community leader, and his thoughts on Canonical, the goods and bads of modern Linux distributions, and the future of Ubuntu -- especially relevant with the upcoming release of the first Ubuntu-based tablet. (Remember, Matthew isn't responsible for gripes you may have with either Ubuntu or Canonical, but he might have some good solutions to particular problems.) Ask as many questions as you'd like; we just ask that you keep them on-topic, and please stick to one question per post.

Who would you like to see interviewed on Slashdot? Drop us a line at feedback@slashdot.org.

9 of 59 comments (clear)

  1. frosty by edittard · · Score: 2

    The Unleashed books are still going?

    Correction: Books are still going?

    --
    At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
    1. Re:frosty by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 5, Funny

      The Unleashed books are still going?

      Correction: Books are still going?

      When the Apocalypse comes and you're frantically looking for something to charge your Kindle so you can read your digital copy of "Surviving the Apocalypse" I'll be sitting by the campfire, thumbing through my hard copy - which can *also* be used to start the campfire.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    2. Re:frosty by sinij · · Score: 2

      Yes, because reading about Ubuntu is exactly kind of information one would need to survive when the apocalypse comes.

  2. Re:Slashdot != Iowa? by gstoddart · · Score: 2

    Where everybody surfs corn. ;-)

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  3. segmentation by blackomegax · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ubuntu as is, is basically forking itself into the mobile version (and IMO making it all kinds of 'crap' in the process). This process has caused Ubuntu Desktop to stagnate like a mofo since 2013. 16.04 isn't looking much better in this regard. Is anything going on to ~innovate~ the user-facing side of Desktop Ubuntu? Mir feels like vaporware, Unity hasn't changed at all. 8 might be good but is also vaporware. Canonical has a wonderful opportunity to steal vast shares of the windows market with MS spying going on, but is letting the OS stagnate to chase some pipe dream of mobile they'll never gain a real foot-hold in....

  4. What support channels are recommended for noobs? by rgbe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have been using Linux since the good old days of the late 90's. I was using Debian until Ubuntu came around in 2004 and switched. Ubuntu was amazing in terms of how it made Linux more usable. However, as time went along Ubuntu was no longer so cutting edge and no longer resonated with me, so I have switched back to Debian. Anyway, all this time as a Linux user it's been a rough ride, every laptop I have purchased (I haven't had a desktop for 15 years) has had issues with Linux. Most common issues for me are that wi-fi drivers don't work and graphics card drivers are unstable. I choose Laptops that are going to give me the least problems by researching them thoroughly beforehand. The most recent laptop (HP ProBook) came with the option of having SUSE Linux installed by default, I thought this would be perfect, but the wi-fi did not work unless you had the correct version of SUSE installed. I am experienced at debugging and resolving issues, a new user would require a lot of patience, technical no-how just to get Linux functioning before they can use their PC. Although you can use Linux without the console, it is difficult to never have to go to the console. The console requires a paradigm shift for many users. In a nutshell the first hurdle for Linux is a massive jump, and only few are brave/curious enough to take it.

    So my question is: What support channels would you recommend for new Linux users?

  5. Why Ubuntu by frovingslosh · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm a life long computer user and have been considered very knowledgeable in some operating systems, but so far I can't claim to be knowledgeable or even comfortable with Linux, although I would like to gain that knowledge. I'm leaning towards Debian. Is there any reason that I should try to learn and use Ubuntu over Debian? If something has been dumbed down at the loss of flexibility or usefulness I would not consider that a "feature".

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  6. Re:3D graphics fanciness for the new now? by KGIII · · Score: 2

    This is not quite what you asked for but I had stumbled across it, emailed it, and was able to pull it out of my archives.

    http://eaglemode.sourceforge.n...

    Give the video a peak - it's an interesting method to navigate your computer. I've never tried it and I'm not actually sure what I was doing when I bumped into it back in September but there it is.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  7. Amen to that: Car Analogy Alert by bdwoolman · · Score: 2

    Why do OS designers (or, more accurately, the suits who manage them) feel moved to swap around the main controls for known tasks with each new release? It is so silly to have such a steep learning curve for new versions. Windows 8 was too stupidly different (not hard, but different) from its predecessors. And it was obvious to anyone with the common sense that God gave a parakeet that people would hate doing familiar tasks in novel ways. People want to do stuff they are used to doing, Don't they? But boy do people despair of gratuitous novelty.

    If auto designers did what OS designers routinely do, then we would be steering with a stick one year and with our feet the next. Accelerating with our thumbs one year... (Oh, wait! We DO do that.) But it's okay... We can still use our foot pedals. Why not design something more stable, faster and more bullet proof? It is no accident that schools are gravitating to Chrome OS, which is essentially a browser, which everybody already knows how to use. Chromebooks are admittedly cheaper. And there is no doubt that functionality and choices are sort of basic and limited in Chrome. But ask the fast food industry how restricting choice and reducing ambiguity actually improves the user experience. I use Mint because I hated Unity. Again... Why ax the steering wheel in favor of a cyclic? Why, I ask... Why? Why? Why?

    --
    "No fear. No envy. No meanness." Liam Clancy