ThatObviousUser
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I wish GNOME 3.2 would come out already! I want to see how much better it is. You know if there's an ETA on it, Brettison?
peakish said:Gnome's on a six month release schedule, so early October sounds probable to me.
It really should be great, the Shell aside I'm really looking forward to their Documents software (no idea if it'll make it to 3.2 though) and to see how they'll create their integrated experience.Andrex said:Sweet thanks guys, should be great.
I think Ubuntu still ships with Tomboy, a note program that's quite good.Haziqonfire said:I recently started using Ubuntu a few months ago. I'm currently in an IT program at school, so I duel booted my laptop with Ubuntu 11.04 (other partition has Windows 7).
I haven't really done much in Ubuntu, but I'm liking that it's faster and generally has less problems than Windows does.
I was wondering if anyone has any good recommendations for a desktop-note/sticky program to use in Ubuntu? So far I've found Xpad, but I'm not really liking it much -- looking for something a bit neater. Suggestions?
Also, any good places to look out for general tips/tutorials about things in Ubuntu? Thanks!
peakish said:I think Ubuntu still ships with Tomboy, a note program that's quite good.
Brettison said:Tomboy would be my recommendation as well.
I'd also highly suggest following the website OmgUbuntu to follow Ubuntu news! It updates daily, and they generally have some decent articles on just what's happening in the world of Canonical, Ubuntu, and Linux in general.
Haziqonfire said:Thanks for the recommendation, I'll tinker around with it.
I've been viewing OMGUbuntu for a while now as well, though I was looking for more tutorial type things. I found this, but I'm not sure if it's any good -- Full Circle Magazine. I've been trying to look up a place that has good tutorials for learning to code in Python, their tutorials are decent but I was wondering if anyone knew of another source perhaps?
PS - Sorry if I'm asking a lot of questions . I want to eventually add more to the Open Source community.
Brettison said:No your good. Sounds like you want more how to code tutorials which there are alot on linux based sites. You seem to need more programming tutorials rather than linux tutorials though.
Brettison said:Not sure if you've seen this already (probably have), BUT Python in the Ubuntu Documentation!
Haziqonfire said:I haven't seen that. Thanks! .
Andrex said:I got Chromium OS to boot on my netbook and another person's laptop! Unfortunately Wi-Fi didn't work so I couldn't get past the network select screen. It's the Vanilla build by Hexxeh, and I still don't know if I'm on board with booting someone else's Chromium OS but it's good for giving it a shot, I think. I'm about to boot it on my desktop, which uses a USB dongle for Wi-Fi, so I'm crossing my fingers for it to work. Third time's the charm eh? Funny thing is that I know Ubuntu has the right drivers by default for the dongle, but Windows 7 doesn't, and from what I understand Chromium is more related to Ubuntu than other Linux distros, so it may just work. Will report back soon!
Brettison said:Why did I think you already had a CR-48?
Andrex said:Because Google sent thousands of them out and I'm their #1 fan.
But they didn't see fit to send me one. They didn't even finish the darn program, didn't they only send out like half of what they said they would?
Oh well. I got a free Google TV (Logitech Revue) around the same time the Cr-48's were being sent out. So it's not all bad.
Anyways, I wasn't able to get it to boot on my desktop, but that may be because I wrote the CrOS image to an SD card, and have to use a SD-to-USB adapter. Ah well. One day! One day I will enjoy the fruits of Chrome OS.
Melhisedek said:Do you guys use Unity or something else with Ubuntu?
I can't seem to decide
Look at my pics I posted above. 11.10 is gonna fix some of that in Unity with the categories and tabs and such. Also easiest way is to open anything is to just type in search. Honestly it's the same for every OS these days, but we are use to browsing the drop down/ pop up lists verses up just typing in the box. It's faster that way in say Win 7 as well.Melhisedek said:I like how Unity looks but I have no idea where everything is I'll need to tweak it a bit I guess. Started with minimize, close and maximize buttons
$ du -hs /usr/*
297M /usr/bin
274M /usr/include
1,8G /usr/lib
207M /usr/lib32
3,3G /usr/local
11M /usr/sbin
2,3G /usr/share
16M /usr/src
df -h does it for me. With Arch, there's a package called pacgraph which shows the disk space that every installed packages takes. There should be a similar utility available with your distro.peakish said:What do you guys use for monitoring disc space usage? I was just trying to find out if I had some huge unnecessary software lying around on my partitions and doing that in a file manager seemed painful.
I googled myself to the du command which seems like a good way to do it, but are there perhaps any easier ways?
Code:$ du -hs /usr/* 297M /usr/bin 274M /usr/include 1,8G /usr/lib 207M /usr/lib32 3,3G /usr/local 11M /usr/sbin 2,3G /usr/share 16M /usr/src
Autodetected deb.
Autodetected Arch.
Loading package info
Total size: 4312MB
214MB tucan
189MB neverball
141MB hplip
104MB boost
90MB inkscape
84MB linux
80MB xbmc
80MB chromium
79MB xulrunner
70MB gimp
66MB llvm
62MB samba
58MB sdlmame
41MB linux-headers
40MB bzr
37MB opera
37MB subtitleeditor
34MB kde-l10n-fr
32744kB nspluginwrapper
31469kB subversion
29748kB firefox-i18n-fr
28372kB vim-colorsamplerpack
26460kB cmake
24100kB gstreamer0.10-bad-plugins
23008kB yaourt
22510kB brasero
22012kB xorg-docs
21232kB xscreensaver
20048kB pathological
19384kB flashplugin-prerelease
18828kB ruby
17260kB xorg-fonts-100dpi
15968kB xorg-fonts-75dpi
15904kB gvfs
15772kB handbrake
15623kB xbindkeys
15244kB cups
15224kB audacity
15154kB man-pages
14832kB live-media
13516kB git
12604kB mkvmerge-gui
12560kB elinks
12176kB xorg-server
11460kB kde-meta-kdeutils
10976kB lib32-db
10860kB mc
10676kB mercurial
10280kB filebot
9032kB p7zip
8312kB bsnes
7544kB dnsutils
7396kB i3-wm
7380kB kdebase-konqueror
7248kB smplayer
7156kB desmume-svn
7068kB kdebase-kwrite
7004kB fbreader
6908kB doxygen
6476kB muttng
6132kB libgpod
6036kB gstreamer0.10-ffmpeg
5872kB mpd
5684kB mednafen
5680kB ssnes-git
5600kB ttf-ms-fonts
5236kB calc
5052kB projectm
5016kB tpu
4804kB initscripts
4276kB ledger
4236kB lib32-nss
4024kB alsa-utils
3928kB xcursor-themes
3840kB linuxdcpp
3692kB yasm
3596kB clucene
3530kB gftp
3448kB xfsprogs
3316kB elfutils
3272kB transmission-cli
3132kB terminus-font
3116kB rrdtool
3028kB gnomad2
2972kB easytag
2860kB gqview
2844kB rxvt-unicode
2700kB gecko-mediaplayer
2652kB obexfs
2588kB irssi
2548kB sonata
2300kB kde-meta-kdeadmin
2200kB autoconf
2116kB ttf-liberation
2028kB grub
1932kB privoxy
1900kB python2-distribute
1896kB bison
1848kB ranger-git
1824kB automake
1816kB sudo
1784kB comix
1772kB libgsf
1712kB gstreamer0.10-ugly-plugins
1692kB bmpanel2
1636kB python-mako
1628kB xorg-server-utils
1624kB ntp
1596kB imake
1568kB namcap
1560kB youtube-viewer
1540kB wmii-hg
1521kB nano
1460kB oxygen-gtk
1452kB xorg-server-devel
1424kB ntfsprogs
1400kB customizable-weather-plasmoid
1368kB syslog-ng
1348kB nasm
1329kB xarchiver
1320kB make
1316kB kdemultimedia-kmix
1316kB kdebase-konsole
1304kB lib32-curl
1300kB lib32-mpg123
1264kB rp-pppoe
1256kB xf86-video-ati-git
1252kB archlinux-artwork
1240kB libvncserver
1176kB abcde
1144kB linux-atm
1096kB asciidoc
1044kB xterm
1040kB reiserfsprogs
1036kB jfsutils
1008kB mupen64plus-video-rice-hg
1008kB mdadm
920kB offlineimap
920kB flex
840kB gweled
804kB wpa_actiond
800kB mlocate
772kB utimer
732kB smooth-tasks
720kB dictd
684kB xvba-sdk
668kB mirage
632kB luakit
628kB ncmpcpp
600kB portaudio
584kB moc
556kB driconf
552kB raptor1
540kB xorg-apps
540kB rsync
528kB zip
508kB cryptsetup
504kB gopreload
504kB cloog-ppl
492kB kdebase-plasma
468kB uswsusp-git
460kB heirloom-mailx
456kB pmount
456kB nfoview
452kB netcfg
452kB lib32-lcms
440kB qtfm
412kB qtcurve-gtk2
408kB feh
404kB tmux
376kB pmus-git
372kB jdownloader
328kB netkit-bsd-finger
316kB esound
312kB kdebase-kdepasswd
304kB wireless_tools
304kB gifsicle
300kB iputils
284kB typespeed
284kB tcp_wrappers
284kB logrotate
268kB alsa-plugins
264kB kdebase-kfind
240kB cpufrequtils
236kB opencl-headers
228kB less
228kB bc
220kB mupen64plus-video-arachnoid-hg
220kB gperf
212kB fakeroot
208kB hdparm
208kB ethtool
196kB xorg-twm
192kB dwb-hg
180kB xorg-xkb-utils
172kB pycp-git
168kB snespurify
168kB htop
164kB xdotool
156kB mpc
148kB preload
144kB patch
144kB id3
136kB youtube-dl
136kB bin86
132kB dash
128kB mpdscribble
124kB kdemultimedia-mplayerthumbs
120kB vimprobable2-git
120kB gtkperf
120kB at
116kB transmission-remote-cli-git
116kB libdvdcss
108kB mupen64plus-rsp-hle-hg
104kB zathura
100kB xorg-xinit
100kB linux-wbfs-manager
100kB lib32-libsasl
96kB ttf-inconsolata
96kB pacman-color
92kB xorg-xfontsel
92kB kdebase-kdialog
92kB jumanji-git
84kB uptimed
84kB ed
84kB automoc4
80kB ncdu
80kB iftop
80kB gcolor2
76kB pkg-config
76kB pacgraph
76kB iperf
76kB id3v2
72kB xcompmgr
68kB xf86driproto
68kB wol
68kB vbetool
64kB xf86-input-mouse
64kB pcmciautils
64kB kdemultimedia-ffmpegthumbs
56kB mupen64plus-input-sdl-hg
52kB scrot
52kB mupen64plus-ui-console-hg
48kB weather
48kB gtk-chtheme
44kB transset
44kB time
44kB dmenu
40kB xsel
40kB xf86-input-keyboard
40kB xclip
40kB numlockx
36kB xf86-video-vesa
36kB sxiv-git
32kB urlview
32kB lsdvd
28672B vdpauinfo
28672B statnot
28672B slurm
28672B packer
28672B mtpfs
28672B id3ed
28672B devmon
28672B bashmount
24576B lxsplit
24576B libtxc_dxtn
24576B id3tool
24576B gen-init-cpio
20480B ttyload
20480B tty-clock
20480B mupen64plus-audio-sdl-hg
16384B unclutter
12288B pbget
8192B aurvote
4096B radeon-initrd
4096B imgurbash
Oh, I never heard of that program before, it should come in handy. Thanks!Vic said:df -h does it for me. With Arch, there's a package called pacgraph which shows the disk space that every installed package takes. There should be a similar utility available with your distro.
Here an example of the console output of the pacgraph -c command:
doesn't even boot in my vmware player. good job whoever is at fault.Brettison said:Fedora Alpha Announcement!
Fedora 16's 1st Alpha is out for those that want an early look into the next wave of stuff. Comes with GRUB 2 now as well as the development release of Gnome 3.1! So go get your Fedora on peeps!
Try using unetbootin.Andrex said:Hrm is it possible to write that Fedora live CD image to a USB stick? Usually there's a dedicated USB version...
Works fine in VirtualBoxTworak said:doesn't even boot in my vmware player. good job whoever is at fault.
angelfly said:Try using unetbootin.
looks like it's EasyInstall (or whatever it's called) being silly. DVD fails but netinst seems to work fine. well, kind of fine.Tworak said:doesn't even boot in my vmware player. good job whoever is at fault.
MS fonts are non-free so Fedora doesn't ship with them at all in their repositories. I thought RPMFusion would carry them but apparently not. Here's a guide here for getting them (and improving rendering in general). I haven't tried it myself so I can't vouch for it.Andrex said:Running the Fedora 16 alpha right now. Smooth as heck! I love it. GNOME 3 > Unity for sure. Only problem, and this is a problem for all Linux, is fonts. I need my Windows fonts. Ubuntu has an easy way to grab them from the Software Center, trying to locate the equivalent for Fedora is a bit harder...
peakish said:MS fonts are non-free so Fedora doesn't ship with them at all in their repositories. I thought RPMFusion would carry them but apparently not. Here's a guide here for getting them (and improving rendering in general). I haven't tried it myself so I can't vouch for it.
http://fedoraunity.org/Members/khaytsus/improve-fonts
Andrex said:Sweet, thanks!
Any word on if Fedora is gonna have their own Software Center? Seems to be all the rage nowadays (was Ubuntu the first of all the desktop OS's?)
I heard something about the 11.9 drivers but can't remember where I read that or if it was more than speculation, sorry... I hope it'll be fixed quickly since my next desktop probably will be AMD powered.Chinese Electric Batman said:Does anyone know anything about when/if fglrx will be supported in GNOME3?
Andrex said:Is there an easy way to axe Unity in the new Ubuntu? I heard the architecture is GNOME 3.