It is a fairly smooth experience yes but you start to see the downfalls with LTS in particular after 2 or 3 years when drivers and software start to not work anymore because the required compilers and libraries are out of date, and stuff like that will break your system real quick if you start swapping out packages that other things rely on. I still use it and enjoy it, but yeah the criticisms do make sense after you've used it as a daily driver.
@@BBHexKeythe point of the LTS release is that you don’t tinker with it and swap out packages. It’s meant to be a stable contained system for years. If you want the latest and greatest don’t install an LTS distro.
The only thing I dislike is snap. It is a very badly implemented format with a very irritating approach to working with a file system. And the non-hidden snap folder in the Home folder is that last drop that makes me turn away of that in every other aspect brilliant distro.
Excellent work covering Ubuntu releases. I hope that the Ubuntu project returns to being a relevant Linux project for the community, especially for the recent gaming community. I test whenever possible on my Linux partition, even casually. I can't wait to marathon new tests.
Your video editing skills are really getting to be top notch. I think this video has some the slickest and best looking shots of a Linux laptop on the platform.
When did RUclips commenters become so polite?! Really makes the platform just like any other. Guess I'll try out Dailymotion or some other crap platform until I find the derogatory put downs that made this place what it was. Plus oh yeah fuck that new UI what the hell is up with this it looks childish as hell.
Ubuntu is really gorgeous, Microsoft is Lucky that so much software is till Windows only because if it wasn't for software availability they wouldn't stand a chance to Ubuntu and other linux distros. Showing how little effort they are putting in their OS
I really admire Ubuntu for sticking to its colour scheme and overall design language over the years while Mac and Windows have gotten glassier and I'd say colder in a way. Ubuntu looks so inviting in comparison.
I totally agree, I'm never home anywhere else but Ubuntu. It's so welcoming and beautiful. It's just an amazing lift after using windows Mac os or Chrome os which is like you said "colder" and more sterile. I also hate windows and Microsoft like hell now, constantly nagging me to purchase this and that and use this and that (game pass, edge, bing search etc etc). I'm just like "can you just let me use chrome and shut the f up please?" 😂
It's had some major changes. Gnome 2 was a vastly different interface to now. The colour scheme used to be orangy-brown, but they adopted the purple somewhere around 2010. Then when they developed Unity, the design language changed immensely. They tried to preserve some of that design when switching to gnome 3, such as the sidebar, but most of the design now is fairly straight forward Gnome with the Ubuntu colour scheme. Don't get me wrong, I like many aspects of Ubuntu's design. i have the ubuntu font as the default even on my android phone, and I try to replicate the Unity layout on any DE that I use, but in 2009, Windows 7 was out, and Ubuntu used Gnome 2, and I'd say that current windows and Ubuntu are wide departures from then, Ubuntu has changed much more in that time.
I understand, but its a matter of taste. I find it even annoying how hard it is to get rid of the purple. Thats me, i respect every other opinion. Ubuntu is still a great basis for linux!
Man, Ubuntu is looking awesome. I'm from Windows, and I'm thinking about switching. Love that Task Manager clone and the Activities top-left change. Both of those make me feel more confident in Linux, and I will try this as one of my first distros. Hopefully, those features will ripple throughout the Distro world or be available as add-ons.
The activity button change to a workspace indicator was an improvement that happened due to the launch of GNOME 45, so all distros implementing this version or newer of GNOME will get that improvement for free.
I know you've been thinking about doing more videos than just these release overviews and I think they would be great! You are a great presenter on screen
I really need/want/will kick the tyres on Ubuntu on ZFS - though I'm not brave enough to use the TPM-based disk encryption yet... It currently requires the whole disk, and I'm too fond of my multi-boot setup!
Great video! I've been using Ubuntu for 13 years and this kind of videos give me hope in a wider adoption. Regarding the features that I miss most, when searching for files, I wish I could sort the results using the same criteria for sorting files (size, date, etc.). Wouldn't it be a nice addition?
It's a feature I wasn't aware of until GNOME devs revamped the UI for GNOME 45 (which is included in this release) but glad they did - it looks great. The old one (in Ubuntu 23.04 and below) is archaic looking by comparison!
Good question! It is a custom extension not a native GNOME feature. It wasn't created by Canonical but they now help with development. It's available to install from GNOME Extensions on any distro with GNOME 40+ - it's the 'Tiling Assistant' by Leleat one.
The video edit is so smooth and slick. Totally in tune with what to expect from omgubuntu similar presentation standard. What video editor did you use?
@got-any-updogsnap store backend is still closed source, unfortunately. Snapd may be open source, but not the whole of snap. That's why most people prefer flatpaks to snaps.
It is a very elegant, purposeful design, isn't it? Quite Apple-esque. The speed compared to the old Ubuntu Software app is also night and day too. Great improvement.
Canonical did remove a new installer of ubuntu 23.10 due to translation problem. Luckly, there is a legacy installer that we can use it instead so we can use ubuntu 23.10 what ever we want. Yes, they did announce that importantly. Good job Canonical keeping us safe😃 4 days later, they restored it with a first point release to remove hate speech malicious, now we can use it finally and not just a legacy version.
I've used Ubuntu in the old days, it was a nice distro. It's sudo apt-get clean still needed from time to time, to clean /var/cache/apt (from what i remember), or packages clean themselves?
It’s a Chuwi Aerobook Pro. It’s a few years old at this point but is a great everyday laptop. The majority of the screen content showing Ubuntu etc in this video is from that laptop, so it runs things well.
It's a Chuwi Aerobook Pro. I picked it up a few years back in a Black Friday deal for about £150. It's not super duper fast, but considering the price I paid, the specs (which you can see in the system info dialog section of the video) are decent enough for everyday usage - Ubuntu runs fantastically well on it too.
That happened to me, and a number of other people too. Easily solved (sounds like you managed it too) but not ideal! And cheers for the sub, it’s appreciated!
Also, ever since that release (23.10) now the Installer mostly supports NVIDIA GPU. Some users with NVIDIA RTX 4090, may still have some issues until they enable integrated GPU just for installation, once their done with installer and making sure GPU drivers are installed, then they can turn off integrated GPU again.
Amazing. But I have got a question, after updated ubuntu 23.04 gestures did not work any more. Until installation of previous version (23.04) I could use them. Unfortunately, in this version (23.10) i cannot use them. I have no idea, what should I do? is there any solutions please. in your video I saw that you are using your touchpad for switch to several windows. please help me to fix it
Really enjoying all your videos, the content is top quality. I made a decision to buy CoreBook x 14" Intel i5-8259U running Ubuntu 22.04.3 but the battery indication is not displaying, under devices the battery is not recognized. I noticed you have the AeroBook Pro and the battery indicator is displaying. How did you get this working, any information would be helpful.
Thanks for the kind words about the videos, I appreciate it :) As for my Chuwi, I didn't need to do anything special to get the battery indicator showing: it just worked out of the box. From looking into it (as I'm sure you have) it seems missing battery info is a "known issue" with the 8th-gen intel CoreBook on Linux, specifically due to battery controller firmware not being readable by the Linux kernel - and if the Linux kernel can't see the battery every distro is going to be affected, and easy workarounds won't be possible. Pretty devastating issue for a laptop to have! Apparently there's a BIOS update that indirectly fixes it but no-one who wants it seems to have it or be able to get it - which is typical Chuwi tbh. They make affordable, well spec'd laptops but their "support" on the software side is patchy. I knew before I bought my AeroBook Pro that keeping Windows on it was /important/ for getting things like BIOS updates as they only officially support Windows, and if you mention Linux they often stop replying (I had issues with my laptop's speakers so had to seek help from them). Sorry I can't be much help or offer a solid-gold fix - I hope it's sorted, either by Chuwi and their mythical BIOS update, or a future Linux kernel gaining a driver/workaround that skips the need to rely on them.
Quick question: Is it possibl eto add Flatpak suppport to the Software Centre or I have to live with redundant app stores using Gnome Software with flatpak support?
I'm new to Linux. Is it hard to make windows remember where I placed them? I move them to the center of the screen, and every time I reopen them, they open at the top left. Why would that not be an important detail to implement out of the box? Also, the one thing that comes to mind is for new users, why is it that apps do not come with self installation? Not everyone wants to use commands. Is it the software developers who don't want to spend the extra time making it install or is it something to do with the OS? I am aware of flat packs repositories and snaps, but I get the feeling that I am not likely to find the apps I'm interested in are not going to be there, or they are old buggy versions, and coming from Windows, I am used to finding the app online, downloading it and installing it. Why can't this be done on Linux? It would make transitioning way easier. I know some apps do work like this, but there also seems to be an acceptance of just having to learn a bunch of commands and complex steps that is really standing in the way of just using the OS. Not everyone wants to learn all of this. Not everyone who uses Windows has to take a course on DOS in order to use Windows. Just looking for some helpful insight about Linux.
I have a hp computer with i5 11th Gen 8Gb ddr4 and 500 SSD but when i install Ubuntu i get lags all over the place unlike windows, like when login it gets stuck there and sometimes it just stucks on screen idk what to do i was thinking to have Ububtu as my main OS n move from windows. Any suggestation would be appreciated
Simple expectations. (All gnome based) 1. Battery % and number 2. Drag and drop to Desktop. 3. Inbuilt native gnome extension (but that gnome not Ubuntu) 4. Lockscreen wallpaper. (Hopefully someone knows an app to have Windows Spotlight and Bing wallpapers in rotation)
I really disagree with the "Minimal install" option being renamed as Default Install and being selected by default. Most of the new to Linux people installing Ubuntu will now have a inferior experience. And let's be honest, the naming of open source apps literally suck, so it's harder to find apps just by looking at their name or category for a new to Linux user.
I agree. I wrote an editorial about why minimal-as-default is a bit of a regressive move from the POV of attracting new users, and raised some of the same points you make in your comment. Initially, Ubuntu was NOT planning to offer an 'expanded install' option at all but, after publishing my post, a number of other community members raised concerns and the 'expanded install' option was (thankfully) added.
Loupe, the new GNOME image viewer app. Ubuntu still uses the old one, so you'll need to install it from Flathub, or get it from the Snap Store (but a number of features are broken/missing in the snap build)
Did Ubuntu 23.10 solve the sleep problem for never hardware like AMD Ryzen 7 6800U / 7840U - not being able to returning from sleep or not going to sleep at all? My latest try was with Ubuntu 22.10 which didn't manage to solve this with AMD Ryzen 7 6800U - probably because of a lower power state for the CPU not being supported.
Ubuntu is so unfairly criticised yet it is no doubt a professionally developed stable desktop system, with an amazing out of the box experience.
It is a fairly smooth experience yes but you start to see the downfalls with LTS in particular after 2 or 3 years when drivers and software start to not work anymore because the required compilers and libraries are out of date, and stuff like that will break your system real quick if you start swapping out packages that other things rely on.
I still use it and enjoy it, but yeah the criticisms do make sense after you've used it as a daily driver.
@@BBHexKeythe point of the LTS release is that you don’t tinker with it and swap out packages. It’s meant to be a stable contained system for years. If you want the latest and greatest don’t install an LTS distro.
People should stop criticizing without knowing full context
The only thing I dislike is snap. It is a very badly implemented format with a very irritating approach to working with a file system. And the non-hidden snap folder in the Home folder is that last drop that makes me turn away of that in every other aspect brilliant distro.
U must be kidding , the system not progressing at all crap as fuc..k
I am from brazil and I can say I`ve been following you since Ubuntu 12. Your work is Amazing!
Appreciate that!
Excellent work covering Ubuntu releases.
I hope that the Ubuntu project returns to being a relevant Linux project for the community, especially for the recent gaming community.
I test whenever possible on my Linux partition, even casually.
I can't wait to marathon new tests.
One issue remains is that of vulnerability of systems having Wine
Your video editing skills are really getting to be top notch. I think this video has some the slickest and best looking shots of a Linux laptop on the platform.
Appreciate the encouragement 🙌🏻
@@omgubuntuNew to your channel, but I do agree with @PA above. Your editing is incredible. Very enjoyable to watch.
When did RUclips commenters become so polite?! Really makes the platform just like any other. Guess I'll try out Dailymotion or some other crap platform until I find the derogatory put downs that made this place what it was. Plus oh yeah fuck that new UI what the hell is up with this it looks childish as hell.
Ubuntu is really gorgeous, Microsoft is Lucky that so much software is till Windows only because if it wasn't for software availability they wouldn't stand a chance to Ubuntu and other linux distros. Showing how little effort they are putting in their OS
And also, sadly, also showing how little they need to put more effort in.
I bet they wanna lock down their system more but know if they do that they will lose more than half of their users to linux
I really admire Ubuntu for sticking to its colour scheme and overall design language over the years while Mac and Windows have gotten glassier and I'd say colder in a way. Ubuntu looks so inviting in comparison.
I totally agree, I'm never home anywhere else but Ubuntu. It's so welcoming and beautiful. It's just an amazing lift after using windows Mac os or Chrome os which is like you said "colder" and more sterile. I also hate windows and Microsoft like hell now, constantly nagging me to purchase this and that and use this and that (game pass, edge, bing search etc etc). I'm just like "can you just let me use chrome and shut the f up please?" 😂
It's had some major changes. Gnome 2 was a vastly different interface to now. The colour scheme used to be orangy-brown, but they adopted the purple somewhere around 2010. Then when they developed Unity, the design language changed immensely. They tried to preserve some of that design when switching to gnome 3, such as the sidebar, but most of the design now is fairly straight forward Gnome with the Ubuntu colour scheme.
Don't get me wrong, I like many aspects of Ubuntu's design. i have the ubuntu font as the default even on my android phone, and I try to replicate the Unity layout on any DE that I use, but in 2009, Windows 7 was out, and Ubuntu used Gnome 2, and I'd say that current windows and Ubuntu are wide departures from then, Ubuntu has changed much more in that time.
I understand, but its a matter of taste. I find it even annoying how hard it is to get rid of the purple. Thats me, i respect every other opinion. Ubuntu is still a great basis for linux!
@2001DavidBowman Yeah. The orange theme just seems weird to me. It's practically ugly and has to be replace after you get Ubuntu installed.
Man, Ubuntu is looking awesome. I'm from Windows, and I'm thinking about switching. Love that Task Manager clone and the Activities top-left change. Both of those make me feel more confident in Linux, and I will try this as one of my first distros. Hopefully, those features will ripple throughout the Distro world or be available as add-ons.
The activity button change to a workspace indicator was an improvement that happened due to the launch of GNOME 45, so all distros implementing this version or newer of GNOME will get that improvement for free.
Excellent video, as always, thanks Joey! 🙏👏
Ahh, thank you so much Adam!
Love To See Linux Developers Are Working Hard Keep It Up 🔥🔥🔥
I know you've been thinking about doing more videos than just these release overviews and I think they would be great! You are a great presenter on screen
Bart my man, don't tempt me! ;)
Workspace switcher, zfs and tpm are top things imho
I really need/want/will kick the tyres on Ubuntu on ZFS - though I'm not brave enough to use the TPM-based disk encryption yet... It currently requires the whole disk, and I'm too fond of my multi-boot setup!
Looking forward to the LTS, thanks for the preview.
Great video! I've been using Ubuntu for 13 years and this kind of videos give me hope in a wider adoption.
Regarding the features that I miss most, when searching for files, I wish I could sort the results using the same criteria for sorting files (size, date, etc.). Wouldn't it be a nice addition?
Honestly I really like the overall UI. Good work!
Wow this release looks great 😍
Am not a fan of ubuntu but i must give credit where they deserve their icon and theming is always beautiful
I’m so excited for the new stuff.
Ubuntu is getting really beautiful
Love these videos !
I love your comment!
Great, thanks for your informative content. I'll wait for Kubuntu ❤
It is really a beautiful implementation!
Nice to see you Joey and the famous desk!!! And the editing is super and looks very professional. What editor did you use?
Davinci Resolve for the majority of it. It's what all the cool RUclips kids use these days, and runs on Linux.
Been watching your videos for years and excellent review ;)
I appreciate that, Andy!
I like the minimal installation!
Thanks for taking your "Day off" to make this awesome video!
Very nice video. And I didn't know you could search how to write special characters from settings! Very handy! Thank you!
It's a feature I wasn't aware of until GNOME devs revamped the UI for GNOME 45 (which is included in this release) but glad they did - it looks great. The old one (in Ubuntu 23.04 and below) is archaic looking by comparison!
Great work, Joey! Is the quarter tiling available upstream in GNOME or is it a Canonical made custom extension?
Same thought.. that looks really neat and I also want it - tried so many extensions for tiling before, all very frustrating usability.
I think it's a custom extension.
Good question! It is a custom extension not a native GNOME feature. It wasn't created by Canonical but they now help with development. It's available to install from GNOME Extensions on any distro with GNOME 40+ - it's the 'Tiling Assistant' by Leleat one.
It's a re-pack of the 'Tiling Assistant' by Leleat extension available on GNOME Extensions, if you fancy trying it out.
Anyone saying he/she wants a "clean" Gnome Shell is missing things like this. It is not a very practical shell without extensions.
0:30 what is your laptop name?
The video edit is so smooth and slick. Totally in tune with what to expect from omgubuntu similar presentation standard. What video editor did you use?
Nicely done!😊
Short and to the point, well done sneak peek, thx👍
Snaps have been integrated more into the core experience of the system!
@got-any-updogsnap store backend is still closed source, unfortunately. Snapd may be open source, but not the whole of snap. That's why most people prefer flatpaks to snaps.
Solid looking release
And what system monitor do you have installed 4:16?
App center almost look like App store from apple! Really nice
It is a very elegant, purposeful design, isn't it? Quite Apple-esque. The speed compared to the old Ubuntu Software app is also night and day too. Great improvement.
@@omgubuntuI disagree. The new Ubuntu Appcenter is beautiful! It looks nothing like the ugly macOS store
Love the cat! One of the stars of the show haha
🐈⬛
Firefox wayland is gonna be exiting
Canonical did remove a new installer of ubuntu 23.10 due to translation problem. Luckly, there is a legacy installer that we can use it instead so we can use ubuntu 23.10 what ever we want.
Yes, they did announce that importantly.
Good job Canonical keeping us safe😃
4 days later, they restored it with a first point release to remove hate speech malicious, now we can use it finally and not just a legacy version.
What is the terminal GUI you have for system resources at 4:25? Looks like a sexier version of htop
That was easy. Did a reverse image search and found it is called "btop"
The awesome 'btop'
I've used Ubuntu in the old days, it was a nice distro. It's sudo apt-get clean still needed from time to time, to clean /var/cache/apt (from what i remember), or packages clean themselves?
Greate video and more detailed Thanks mate
great video Joey, thanks for sharing. may i ask, what is your laptop on 0:30 ?
It’s a Chuwi Aerobook Pro. It’s a few years old at this point but is a great everyday laptop. The majority of the screen content showing Ubuntu etc in this video is from that laptop, so it runs things well.
Is there a definitive list/comparison of the apps in the default installation versus the expanded installation?
What's the comp at 0:27? Looks neat but it''s not air
It's a Chuwi Aerobook Pro. I picked it up a few years back in a Black Friday deal for about £150. It's not super duper fast, but considering the price I paid, the specs (which you can see in the system info dialog section of the video) are decent enough for everyday usage - Ubuntu runs fantastically well on it too.
hey what is the laptop you're using, i love its design!
Very helpful. Subbed😊. It hasn"t installed the new softwarecenter and the firmewaretool. Had to do it manually. Strange.
That happened to me, and a number of other people too. Easily solved (sounds like you managed it too) but not ideal! And cheers for the sub, it’s appreciated!
thumbs up for the new snap store🎉
👍👍👍
Yeah so you can get all your malware and bloatware
@@derteateronly if you use crypto tho hehehe /s
where did you get that tux from. I wanted it but couldn't find anywhere.
Ubuntu ❤
4:15 What is that Windows Task Manager look alike app shown? I want it
Hello, Joey
Where's your video about Ubuntu 24.10 What's new?
Also, ever since that release (23.10) now the Installer mostly supports NVIDIA GPU.
Some users with NVIDIA RTX 4090, may still have some issues until they enable integrated GPU just for installation, once their done with installer and making sure GPU drivers are installed, then they can turn off integrated GPU again.
Amazing!!!!!!!!!!
Amazing. But I have got a question, after updated ubuntu 23.04 gestures did not work any more. Until installation of previous version (23.04) I could use them. Unfortunately, in this version (23.10) i cannot use them. I have no idea, what should I do?
is there any solutions please.
in your video I saw that you are using your touchpad for switch to several windows.
please help me to fix it
Amazing Ubuntu ❤
Hello,
May I ask, what task manager app are you using at 4:16?
Thanks!
Found it. It’s Mission Center.
Ever since Ubuntu 24.04 LTS, the installer no longer provides legacy installer unfortunately.
Naw gonna wait till the next lts on 22.04 and it's been solid 🙂
Really enjoying all your videos, the content is top quality. I made a decision to buy CoreBook x 14" Intel i5-8259U running Ubuntu 22.04.3 but the battery indication is not displaying, under devices the battery is not recognized. I noticed you have the AeroBook Pro and the battery indicator is displaying. How did you get this working, any information would be helpful.
Thanks for the kind words about the videos, I appreciate it :)
As for my Chuwi, I didn't need to do anything special to get the battery indicator showing: it just worked out of the box.
From looking into it (as I'm sure you have) it seems missing battery info is a "known issue" with the 8th-gen intel CoreBook on Linux, specifically due to battery controller firmware not being readable by the Linux kernel - and if the Linux kernel can't see the battery every distro is going to be affected, and easy workarounds won't be possible. Pretty devastating issue for a laptop to have!
Apparently there's a BIOS update that indirectly fixes it but no-one who wants it seems to have it or be able to get it - which is typical Chuwi tbh. They make affordable, well spec'd laptops but their "support" on the software side is patchy. I knew before I bought my AeroBook Pro that keeping Windows on it was /important/ for getting things like BIOS updates as they only officially support Windows, and if you mention Linux they often stop replying (I had issues with my laptop's speakers so had to seek help from them).
Sorry I can't be much help or offer a solid-gold fix - I hope it's sorted, either by Chuwi and their mythical BIOS update, or a future Linux kernel gaining a driver/workaround that skips the need to rely on them.
@@omgubuntu It is crazy that they don't update the Bios. I have a new laptop that I can only use as a paperweight now. What a shame.
I went to download it to check it out. Downloads are temporarily disabled.
Hey, what’s the laptop that you tested it on?
Ubuntu is getting better and better
Straight to the point.
Quick question: Is it possibl eto add Flatpak suppport to the Software Centre or I have to live with redundant app stores using Gnome Software with flatpak support?
@got-any-updog What if I'm giving the ubuntu-based pc to my aunt (who's 80 years old and doesn't use the terminal)?
@got-any-updog There are some apps that are just not avialable on Snaps, like Gnome Podcast. If they were, this wouldn't be a issue.
Is the python version still tied to the desktop? last time i upgrade to python 3.11 gnome stopped working..
I'm new to Linux. Is it hard to make windows remember where I placed them? I move them to the center of the screen, and every time I reopen them, they open at the top left. Why would that not be an important detail to implement out of the box? Also, the one thing that comes to mind is for new users, why is it that apps do not come with self installation? Not everyone wants to use commands. Is it the software developers who don't want to spend the extra time making it install or is it something to do with the OS? I am aware of flat packs repositories and snaps, but I get the feeling that I am not likely to find the apps I'm interested in are not going to be there, or they are old buggy versions, and coming from Windows, I am used to finding the app online, downloading it and installing it. Why can't this be done on Linux? It would make transitioning way easier. I know some apps do work like this, but there also seems to be an acceptance of just having to learn a bunch of commands and complex steps that is really standing in the way of just using the OS. Not everyone wants to learn all of this. Not everyone who uses Windows has to take a course on DOS in order to use Windows. Just looking for some helpful insight about Linux.
what is name of your laptop?
4:22 What is that window in the background?
I wanted to ask the same! It is like an advanced version of "htop", but i don't know what is it.
@got-any-updogyeah, it really looks like btop
Rounded window corners, extension doesn't support gnome 45 😫😫
What is the system manager app at 4:15 (the first one)?
The system monitor? It's called Mission Center and it's available on Flathub. There's no Snap or Deb version at the moment.
Waiting for a 24.04 video ...
Hi,
Where can I get a tux like the one in 1:09?
Thanks :)
Also the linux sticker is amazing.
great presentation.
Thank you kindly!
I have a hp computer with i5 11th Gen 8Gb ddr4 and 500 SSD but when i install Ubuntu i get lags all over the place unlike windows, like when login it gets stuck there and sometimes it just stucks on screen idk what to do i was thinking to have Ububtu as my main OS n move from windows. Any suggestation would be appreciated
What is the model of the laptop he is using? At 0:30 , it looks very sleek.
A Chuwi Aerobook Pro - it’s a couple years old now so there’s probably newer/faster models out.
@@omgubuntu Thanks for the prompt reply!
Simple expectations. (All gnome based)
1. Battery % and number
2. Drag and drop to Desktop.
3. Inbuilt native gnome extension (but that gnome not Ubuntu)
4. Lockscreen wallpaper. (Hopefully someone knows an app to have Windows Spotlight and Bing wallpapers in rotation)
Finally a tiling assistant!!!!
what laptop he is using?
Can you play windows games there?
I have always preferred minimal install glad they make it default
OMG Ubuntu is awesome
Why did you take so long? I have been waiting for this.
AMD ROCm and NVIDIA Cuda dont work well, I cant install Llama like programm locally
I used Ubuntu for years but stopped in recent years. Maybe I should give it another chance. It was my Linux default choice for over a decade.
I remember your channel.
does it support the ufs filesystem
Default apps now snaps! That is too bad. Can't stand the way they mount each app like a drive
I really disagree with the "Minimal install" option being renamed as Default Install and being selected by default.
Most of the new to Linux people installing Ubuntu will now have a inferior experience. And let's be honest, the naming of open source apps literally suck, so it's harder to find apps just by looking at their name or category for a new to Linux user.
I agree. I wrote an editorial about why minimal-as-default is a bit of a regressive move from the POV of attracting new users, and raised some of the same points you make in your comment. Initially, Ubuntu was NOT planning to offer an 'expanded install' option at all but, after publishing my post, a number of other community members raised concerns and the 'expanded install' option was (thankfully) added.
So.. where do I get a sparkly tux sticker?
I had it made especially for the back of my laptop.
@@omgubuntuI love it. Thanks for replying 🙂
what's that image viewer at 4:21?
Loupe, the new GNOME image viewer app. Ubuntu still uses the old one, so you'll need to install it from Flathub, or get it from the Snap Store (but a number of features are broken/missing in the snap build)
will anything happen to my data and settigns and extention settings if i upgrade to ubuntu 23.10 from 23.04 ?@@omgubuntu
Tpm encryption provably the most interesting
The new software centre is awesome
Yeah, it's so fast!
Did Ubuntu 23.10 solve the sleep problem for never hardware like AMD Ryzen 7 6800U / 7840U - not being able to returning from sleep or not going to sleep at all?
My latest try was with Ubuntu 22.10 which didn't manage to solve this with AMD Ryzen 7 6800U - probably because of a lower power state for the CPU not being supported.
My 22.10 is finally back to sleep mode recently after sleepless nights for last some months.
Finally the minimal install is the default!
Which laptop is that??
Watching this video at 23:10, just as god intended
Haha! Dedication to the cause ✊🏻
can anyone tell me the model of laptop at 0:30? please
It's a Chuwi Aerobook Pro - it's a bit out of date at this point as I bought it a couple of years ago (in a Black Friday sale, no less)
How to install it bro?
OMG!
…Ubuntu or Linux? ;)
An excellent precis.