Ask HN: Thoughts on Ubuntu 10.10?
Out of curiosity, I upgraded both my laptop (which uses the desktop version) and netbook (netbook edition) to Maverick this week.
Desktop: Not much is noticeably different. I do like the new Ubuntu font, though. Pretty nice looking.
Netbook: I absolutely hate the new interface. Unity is slow, buggy, and limits horizontal screen space, which is a deal breaker - I need every one of my 1024 pixels. No auto-hide and no customization either. After trying it out for about an hour I gave up and reinstalled 10.04. I really wanted to like this one, too.
What do you think?
8 comments
[ 8.6 ms ] story [ 44.2 ms ] threadI use a single, skinny, left-aligned panel. I replace the default icon+text 3 section menu with the single icon GNOME menu.
I replace the window list with Talika. It makes it similar to windows7. The only other thing in my panel is wireless, recycling, time.
I use no shortcuts or pinned items. Instead I access everything using Gnome-DO.
edit: on topic of actual changes I noticed\like I think the show desktop key might have been changed from CTRL+ALT+D to CMD+D
I'm currently back to using Arch. I was hoping that 10.10 might offer a more "ready out of the box" experience, but I didn't find it.
I tried to install Ubuntu10.10 yesterday. Burned the image on a CD, and tried to put it on my unix test box. At the end the install quits on me with some cryptic cannot mount foobar drive. Browsing the web for help it turns out either I should have burned a DvD instead of a CD, or I have not enough RAM for the installation. This machine was running XP for Christ's sake. :)
My point is, I'm still waiting for a Linux distro that "just works/installs". Ubuntu has some momentum at the moment, so I thought maybe this is it. But again I ended up in a 15-open-tabs browser-session on a "PC" to crawl through message boards to see what is going wrong.
I'll give it another try someday, but not anytime soon. For now, I'll stick to my freeBSD box.
I like the small changes to the UI and the improvements to wireless support. I'd always have problems with wifi connections in 10.04, which was mostly fixed by installing wicd. This is the first release for me that's just "worked". For reference, this is on a Dell Studio 14z.