Tag Archive for: Ubuntu

Ubuntu 15.10 review: Wily Werewolf leaves scary experimentation for next year

For many users, Unity 8 is a scarier proposition than some mythical human-wolf hybrid. (credit: Flickr user: Boogeyman13)

Canonical recently released Ubuntu 15.10, nicknamed Wily Werewolf. In the past, an autumn release of Ubuntu Linux like this would have been more experimental, warranting some caution when updating. Such releases weren’t quite update-at-your-own-risk rough, but they were often packed full of new features that were not fully baked. (For example, the now-shuttered Ubuntu One first debuted in 9.10. The Unity desktop became a default in 11.10, and the controversial Amazon search results in the Unity Dash made their debut in 12.10.) Especially compared to the spring .04 releases that tended to be stable (and every two years packaged as Long Term Support releases), autumn was Canonical’s time to experiment.

Unfortunately—or fortunately, depending on how you feel about desktop experiments—that’s not the case with Wily Werewolf.

There are new features worth updating for in this release, but, on the whole, this is Canonical refining what it has already created. The organization is essentially getting ready for the next LTS release (Ubuntu 16.04, due toward the end of April 2016), which will also likely be the last LTS release based on Unity 7.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Ten years of Ubuntu: How Linux’s beloved newcomer became its criticized king

It may not be Superman, but Ubuntu has done wonders for Linux.
Nicolás Demarchi

In October of 2004, a new Linux distro appeared on the scene with a curious name—Ubuntu. Even then there were hundreds, today if not thousands, of different Linux distros available. A new one wasn’t particularly unusual, and for some time after its quiet preview announcement, Ubuntu went largely unnoticed. It was yet another Debian derivative.

Today, Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, estimates that there are 25 million Ubuntu users worldwide. That makes Ubuntu the world’s third most popular PC operating system. By Canonical’s estimates, Ubuntu has roughly 90 percent of the Linux market. And Ubuntu is poised to launch a mobile version that may well send those numbers skyrocketing again.

This month marks the tenth anniversary of Ubuntu. As you’ll soon see in this look at the desktop distro through the years, Linux observers sensed there was something special about Ubuntu nearly from the start. However, while a Linux OS that genuinely had users in mind was quickly embraced, Ubuntu’s ten-year journey since is a microcosm of the major Linux events of the last decade—encompassing everything from privacy concerns and Windows resentment to server expansion and hopes of convergence.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Ubuntu Privacy Remix 12.04 Verschlüsselung auf kompromittierten Systemen ist … – Golem.de

Ubuntu Privacy Remix 12.04 Verschlüsselung auf kompromittierten Systemen ist
Golem.de
in Computersysteme einbricht, von Microsoft Exklusiv-Zugriff auf noch nicht veröffentlichte Schwachstellen in Windows-Systemen bekommt und die eng mit der NSA kooperierenden deutschen Behörden sich die Trojaner-Software Finfisher/Finspy beschafft 

finspy – read more

“Record-breaking” Ubuntu Edge fundraiser $20M short with 2 days to go

The Ubuntu Edge.
Canonical

Canonical has been trumpeting the exciting news that it has broken a crowdfund record by raising more than $ 11 million for the Ubuntu Edge phone.

“This morning the Ubuntu Edge passed the $ 10,266,845 raised by the Pebble smartwatch to become the world’s biggest ever fixed crowdfunding campaign,” Canonical wrote Friday on its Indiegogo campaign page. “Over 14,500 Ubuntu Edges have been pledged for—and there’s still just under a week left to add to that total.”

The total is up to $ 11.5 million now, but with just two and a half days to go the project is more than $ 20 million short of its $ 32 million goal. Unless Canonical hits the goal, contributors will get their pledges back.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab