Andrex said:You eliminated the best part of it. How could you kill such a fragile, young creature...
It was worse than chrome running inside another os dude, I had to.
(I should reload it again, but it seems like a hassle)
Andrex said:You eliminated the best part of it. How could you kill such a fragile, young creature...
One thing that I just realised is the step forward 3.2 takes in the integrated messaging. With the Contacts app installed you can use the Overview Search to look people up, see if they're online and email/message them without ever opening an IM client (though it needs to run in the background). It's not quite at the stage when you can do this through the Shell only (the Contacts app is opened when you select the contact so you'll have to do it from there) but it feels like the aim is to make it so.Andrex said:Looks great. Gnome 3 is shaping up. Just looked at Unity and it's still not appealing at all to me. :/
Pctx said:Starting to migrate over to Fedora and CentOS...... why the F did I not do this earlier? YUM is GODLY!
I dunno about fedora but centos is <3. and yum is of course also <3.Pctx said:Starting to migrate over to Fedora and CentOS...... why the F did I not do this earlier? YUM is GODLY!
I was getting sick of Ubuntu trying to be everything to everyone. Fedora cuts to the chase and I get what I want. YUM is amazing compared to APT or even Aptitude. I feel like Aptitude is trying to be YUM for APT people and it still fails.Brettison said:What were you actually using before? I can see the Fedora migration, but I'm sort of wondering about CentOS.
CentOS seems to usually be a business starting point rather than a point you migrate too.
Kevitivity said:If you stay up to date with patches, very. Use Ubuntu server, not desktop! And of course follow all the normal hardening procedures... For starters, stay away from cgi programming unless you're an expert. Keep strict permissions on EVERYTHING. Be extra anal when an SQL server is installed. Lock down your network: TcpWrappers, apache allow/deny rules, iptables. Disable services that are not needed.
Automate backups (I like rsnapshot). Clonezilla for bare metal images.
And most importantly, Keep your setuo Simple.
As a professional admin, I would use RedHat or CentOS, but Ubuntu is perfectly capable if you really know what you're doing.
Andrex said:My only complaint is the titles. Make sure it's something like
Ubuntu 11.10 |OT| Subtitle
And make sure the subtitle has correct grammar.
Andrex said:Indeed. Good jorb.
What do you mean by this?Polari said:I've got to say GNOME 3.2 is fantastic. Contacts and Zeitgeist integration (only available as an extension at the moment) makes the whole shell paradigm a lot more compelling. I also love the way Empathy has been implemented in the notification area, it makes IMs so much less intrusive. Online Accounts is a great idea and I can't wait until there's some services beyond Google integrated.
The only real beef I have is the way there's no distribution at the moment that integrates GNOME 3.2 as effectively as Ubuntu used to integrate the 2.x series. They need to get cracking on that GNOME OS, because what they have is fantastic, it just needs be integrated well from top to bottom.
zoku88 said:What do you mean by this?
I used to use Ubuntu and now I'm using GNOME with Gentoo and I don't think the experience is really that different (besides the skin, I guess.)
YUM is amazing compared to APT or even Aptitude. I feel like Aptitude is trying to be YUM for APT people and it still fails.
Polari said:That integrates it seamlessly in a product directed at the end users. Even installing gnome-shell in Ubuntu 11.10 there's a litany of little bugs which wouldn't exist if the distro was built around gnome-shell rather than (ugh) Unity.
Brettison said:Isn't that exactly what Fedora is now?
Polari said:Nah Fedora is and will always be a testing ground for new technologies prior to integration into RHEL despite what anyone says. Red Hat aren't in the business of making a desktop for home users. I don't mind Fedora, but shit like a couple of releases ago when you got countless SELinux alerts and on the last release Totem used to crash constantly demonstrate the lack of true desktop focus.
For me, Ubuntu is the only distro that's come close to being a genuine mainstream alternative to Windows and OS X and now they've gone and fucked it all up with Unity. It's disheartening, because the tools to be on par with Windows and OS X have been there for years, it's just no-one's ever put in the level of care required to fit them all together perfectly. Ubuntu 10.10 was the pinnacle of desktop Linux to date IMHO. I actually think part of the problem is six-month cycles. They seemed like a good idea at first but it's just not enough time to make big changes and deliver the level of polish expected.
pretty muchAndrex said:I completely agree with you. Ubuntu 10.10 was easily the best version of any Linux distro to date.
the way of open sourceAndrex said:Then they had to muss it up.
Andrex said:On the plus side, GNOME 3 is getting pretty awesome and I love a lot of the design cues for that. GNOME OS needs to happen sooner than later, with an equivalent of the Software Center.
Brettison said:PS: I don't have a title yet if you have suggestions. I want the name/words Oneiric and Ocelot in the title somehow though.
I'm having some problems installing Ubuntu, and Linux Mint. Tried installing Ubuntu multiple times yesterday, but it failed each time. I let the installer create a new partition, the installation goes along well and even finishes, I get a reboot prompt but then shit happens. When it's supposed to just reboot I instead get a wall of text displaying what looks like some sort of hex-coded instructions with comments like "sending reboot signal" etc. It freezes up there and when I force a reboot, Windows just boots up as normal and Grub doesn't start as I assume it should.
Today I tried installing Linux Mint instead, which as far as I understand is built upon Ubuntu anyway. The installer didn't even finish this time, I got an error message just as soon it was about to wrap up. What is it that shits up my install? I'm on a x64 intel processor and both versions I tried to install were 64-bit.
itxaka said:Are you using a cd? Have you checked the cd for errors?
Where are you installing grub? Should be /dev/hda
If you are installing from usb, sometimes it gets fucked and tries to install the bootloader in the same usb drive you are booting from.
Only thing I can think of, if the installation is correct grub should be installed. The text at the end when rebooting is normal, it's not polished yet so you get the terminal output.
Government-man said:I used a USB, and I assumed grub would be installed automatically. I did check the usb for errors (found none), but maybe grub does get installed to the usb instead. Problem is, I don't have an optical drive hooked up right now, so a usb memory is my only option. Maybe I have to go and install grub manually when I'm in the "live" testing run, but I'm not that familiar with Linux yet, so I don't know if I'll pull it off. It's also interesting that Ubuntu managed to get through the whole installation and Linux Mint gave me a notification of a problem with the installation, since they both seemed to use the same installer.
Does your Windows installation boot via UEFI, not the traditional MBR method?Government-man said:I'm having some problems installing Ubuntu, and Linux Mint. Tried installing Ubuntu multiple times yesterday, but it failed each time. I let the installer create a new partition, the installation goes along well and even finishes, I get a reboot prompt but then shit happens. When it's supposed to just reboot I instead get a wall of text displaying what looks like some sort of hex-coded instructions with comments like "sending reboot signal" etc. It freezes up there and when I force a reboot, Windows just boots up as normal and Grub doesn't start as I assume it should.
Today I tried installing Linux Mint instead, which as far as I understand is built upon Ubuntu anyway. The installer didn't even finish this time, I got an error message just as soon it was about to wrap up. What is it that shits up my install? I'm on a x64 intel processor and both versions I tried to install were 64-bit.
some people would (most likely) get pissed if you keep spamming threads about stuff they don't care about.Brettison said:Would all of you Gnome people like ta Fedora 16 thread next week? I haven't done an |OT| for Fedora before, but I can do one for 16 if you people would like one.
peakish said:Is anyone else having trouble with Flash 11.0? Sometimes Youtube videos just hang (they go completely white and audio stops) when I'm browsing other sites at the same time. Maybe some other flash stuff is loaded, or it's something with Opera, but it's quite annoying. Present on Arch and Ubuntu 11.10.
99hertz said:Man, I spend like 1 hour setting up Arch Linux and then went I finally got my network and sudo account up, I remembered that I downloaded the 64 bit install and my laptop is 32 bits. It was running well but I didn't know if it would had caused problems in the future so I decided to install Crunchbang instead. It's amazing. It was easier to set up than Ubuntu or Mint and it detected my wireless card right ahead (something that Ubuntu didn't, because of the drivers). I'm really happy with it, and it looks very good. So if don't have much time and want to try something else, I recommend it.
Now, my netbook has Ubuntu, I still haven't updated because all those horror stories I read a few days ago on /r/ubuntu. How have ,you guys that have updated, been perceiving the changes?
Is anyone else having trouble with Flash 11.0? Sometimes Youtube videos just hang (they go completely white and audio stops) when I'm browsing other sites at the same time. Maybe some other flash stuff is loaded, or it's something with Opera, but it's quite annoying. Present on Arch and Ubuntu 11.10.
Tworak said:some people would (most likely) get pissed if you keep spamming threads about stuff they don't care about.
drama.
DO IT!
Brettison said:My Ubuntu thread is always like 4+ pages so people care. I never do any other threads, but I figured the other big distro to do an |OT| around would be Fedora.
The bigger drama would be the Ubuntu and the Fedora nerds going at it!
Pctx said:for kicks I'm running lubuntu VM on my workstation--- very very fast and lightweight. Only running it on 256MB of memory.
Faster than Xfce IMO. The options and layout is a little different than Xfce but not a bad thing.Brettison said:Comparison to Xubuntu? Xubuntu was sort of the new hawtness last go round because XFCE finally got the big update to 4.8 which rocks. How is LXDE? Any reason to use one over the other?