Archive for the ‘Ubuntu’ Category

Hardy Heron??

Friday, August 31st, 2007

Ubuntu have named their 8.04 release. This one will have Long Term Support, so you can expect to hear a lot about it, as it will be Ubuntu’s next big push and will be around for a long time. With that in mind, you might think they would put a bit of thought into the code name.

They could have chosen:

  • Hearty Hamster
  • Humble Horse
  • Hefty Hippo (battling the temptation to opt for ‘Hungry’)
  • Hostile Hyena
  • Homnivorous Hummingbird

How great would it be tell people that you’re trying out a new home theater platform on Hefty? Everyone loves hippos and they tie nicely into the African theme. Hippos have great personality. Herons? They just stand there all day doing nothing! Who ever heard of a hardy heron? And as for HARDY??? What kind of signal are you sending to potential users who are contemplating a switch to Linux but worried about the steep learning curve. Next we’ll be seeing Impossible Iguana, Justforgetaboutit Jack-rabbit. Myself, I would have skipped the H entry altogether, given that we’ve already had a Hoary Hedgehog.

From Dapper to Edgy

Sunday, October 29th, 2006

I just installed Ubuntu 6.10 - “Edgy Eft” today. First impressions are good - it looks nice, and it’s very fast, particularly the boot-up process. I haven’t had a chance to check out any of the new features yet, like IceWeasel 2.0. There were a few issues with the installation - most critically the wireless card support. I’ve been using a Belkin USB wireless adapter via ndiswrapper with no problems since Breezy. Edgy detected it, for the first time, and loaded the rt73usb driver… which didn’t work properly. I blacklisted the module and opted for my trusty ndiswrapper instead - but Edgy packaged a very outdated version 1.1, which didn’t work either. This was nearly a show-stopper, since I depend on a wireless network as my only internet gateway, but luckily I had my ndiswrapper 1.8 source backed up on my /home partition and was able to get online with that.

Edgy Eft

The beardiest of Linux snobs sometimes sneer at Ubuntu, because it is not hardcore enough. It is pretty and graphical and far too easy to use, with tutorials on how to spell your name. As a Ubuntu user since Warty, I have always hated this kind of attitude… but for the first time I am starting to see where it comes from. The greatest strength of Linux in general is the ability to see exactly whats going on - and if you dont like it you can change it. Tragically, this refreshing verbosity is what keeps the average computer user at barge-pole distance. In an admirable effort to make Linux more accessible, Ubuntu made a compromise. Thanks to Dapper (with Long Term Support, an easy Live CD install, and programs like Automatix and EasyLinux which magically do all the work for you), for the first time, Linux was a genuine option as a desktop OS - I’m surprised that there wasn’t a bigger take-up among art students and the like, or enterprising refurbished-computer dealers who wanted to save on the cost of an operating system. But there’s a thin line between making the system more user-friendly, and unnecessarily dumbing-down the distro. The first thing I noticed upon booting up my Edgy system was the fact that there is no feedback, no step-by-step progress that we’re so used to seeing. I’m sure its easy to enable this again, but thats beside the point. I really don’t see any advantage to removing the diagnostics, but there are a number of obvious disadvantages, and this does not bode well.

When Dapper came out four months ago, I spent days (literally) on dial-up downloading the standard installation CD. What a sickener it was when it woudln’t work on my system. I was gutted to see that there was no means to fail over to a text-based intallation without downloading another 700mb alternate install. I got stung again this time around, but lucky I’m no longer a narrowbander. I had to download Edgy Eft three times - the first one failed its checksum, and the second time I accidentally got the standard live CD again. In my opinion, the Live CD should be the alternative version. I fear for Fiddly Ferret, or Gawky Gazelle or whatever is coming next.

A minor annoyance - the bog version of vi is back again, but “apt-get install vim-full” puts it back in its cage quickly enough.

Dodgy Update for X on Dapper

Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006

For any Ubuntu Dapper users who didn’t see this… there was a dodgy version of xserver-xorg-core released yesterday which breaks your X server. The thread on Ubuntu forums is here. There will be a fixed version on synaptic soon, so you’ll save yourself some hassle by not apt-get-upgrading today.

The Naked Ubuntu Woman

Tuesday, August 1st, 2006

What a fright I got when I came back from lunch to find a naked woman floating across my screen at work. This is part of a default Ubuntu screensaver (Flipscreen3d) which I suppose ties in with the whole Ubuntu “human” theme. I know there is nothing wrong with the image, but my boss might not feel the same way. If its borderline NSFW, then leave it out of the default setup, please!

Naked Ubuntu Woman

Dapper Drake Released

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

Ubuntu has launched version 6.06 today. Evaluating the test releases was not really an option for me, since it takes about three weeks for me to download an ISO, so I am looking forward to getting Dapper this weekend. I haven’t been so excited about an OS since I got Windows 95 for my 486. Hope there’ll be nothing like this this time around.

Breezy Critical Security Threat

Monday, March 13th, 2006

With Breezy running on three of my systems here, I was a bit surprised to find this post on the Ubuntu security forum; root password in plain text in a file that is readable by all users, on a standard installation. I am amazed that nobody has spotted this before - surely there has been some paranoid user who has searched for his password in case he accidentally left it in plaintext somewhere. Now is a good time to update your system, and change your password while you’re at it.

I am from Cork, Ireland. A fan of the Big Lebowski, Mac OS X, Linux, Cork hurling, Munster rugby, Irish football. Interests include QuakeWorld, Python (lately Django), network security, web applications and technology in general.

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