A backlog of links

I think I finally have enough time to do a links post. Some of these will be a tad old-ish, but they’re things I’ve seen while I was dealing with getting Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope properly installed (and getting Evolution set back up since I forgot to do a proper backup and was pretty much back at square one of importing data from Thunderbird).

  • Edward A. Robinson: Limited Edition Jaunty Jackalope T-shirts. While not as cute as the Intrepid tees, Ubuntu has come out with a limited edition tee that I may have to see if I can coax Nanci (or another family member) might get me for my (upcoming) birthday.
  • Andrew Zajac: Version 9.04. Andrew has info on the latest version of Ubuntu Rescue Remix, which includes the “best free-libre, open source data recovery and forensic tools available”. I may have to throw it on either a CD-RW or a flash drive, and keep it updated, just in case I end up needing it. I could have really used it back when I kicked Windows off my comp and accidentally blew away a few thousand audio files that I hadn’t backed up yet. (Yeah, you’d think I’d have learned to back up my data by now. Me too.)
  • Emma Jane Hogbin: Presenting online. Emma has some really nice tips for you if you ever find yourself having to create a presentation to give online.
  • Lior Kaplan: OpenOffice.org 3.1 New Features. The latest update to the very popular open source productivity suite came out the other day and Lior has links to a nice listing of what the new features are.
  • Paolo Sammicheli: Jaunty under Android. This Planet Ubuntu member got the latest version of Ubuntu working on his G1 phone. And as far as I know he’s still able to make calls with it. ;)
  • DesktopLinux.com: Anti-malware software upgraded for Linux. AVG Technologies has an update for GNU/Linux users who want to scan their systems for malicious code.
  • Mighel de Icaza: Smooth Streaming with Moonlight. Miguel has good news for those who want to be able to enjoy Microsoft’s Silverlight technology on their Linux boxes.
  • Jaldhar Vyas: Shaka, When the Firewall Fell. Some of you will recognize that title as a modified version of a line from a very well done episode of a sci-fi television show. If you liked the original, and you like GNU/Linux, you’ll love Jaldhar’s version.

For those who haven’t gotten their free Ubuntu 9.04 disks yet, I have links to posts from Søren Bredlund Caspersen, Hollman Enciso, and David Thomas showing the new circle-of-friends-free (and IMO nice looking) packaging for the LiveCDs for Jaunty.

I’m going to call it a lid, and I hope everyone who is able will contact their mom and wish them a happy day for tomorrow. Just remember, not all gifts will bring the intended result.

Yes, Virginia, Ubuntu 9.04 is now available!

Yesterday the Ubuntu devs officially released Ubuntu 9.04 “Jaunty Jackalope”, bringing the newest and best versions of Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Xubuntu to a waiting world, as well as the newest versions of Ubuntu Studio, Mythbuntu and the Ubuntu Netbook Remix and the Ubuntu server edition. Plus this morning I got word that the

You can take a tour of all the great new features in Ubuntu 9.04 Desktop Edition and you can read the release notes. When you’re ready to get Ubuntu 9.04 you can download a disk image or request a free LiveCD, and if you’re currently running Ubuntu 8.10 there are instructions on how to upgrade to Ubuntu 9.04.

For more info, as well as links to the other versions of Ubuntu that I listed above, you can read the official release announcement. You can also attend one of a number of release parties where you can meet others and just plain have a good time.


My bad.

I meant to post this yesterday, but I ended up taking the advice of James Malanowski and Tacone in their comments to my post of the 16th and blew away my old Ubuntu install and do a fresh install of 9.04, making a new profile so I could get rid of some problems that had cropped up. I thought I could simply bring in my Epiphany and Evolution data (especially the email, etc. for Evolution) and use it with no special efforts. D’oh! I should have done a proper backup from Evo and done a restore from that backup. Instead I’m having to go through the hassle of importing my messages from my old Thunderbird data all lover again. Luckily in the info on my PDA was snagged with no problem, but I’m having to manually import a veritable ton of messages into Evolution one folder at a time, then I have to recreate my message folders. I’m still not finished with that.

I was able to get MPD working again (thank the Great Penguin in the Sky), and while I am having a problem with pympd I’m back to being able to use Sonata. I also haven’t tried to use SecondLife yet (Actually I’ll connect to SL with the Open Metaverse Viewer) to see if the resolution issue got fixed but I want to get all my email, etc., working properly first. All in all I’m pretty happy with the Jackalope.

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Ubuntu 9.04 reaches RC status, and orders for the next LiveCD release is now open

I  see in my inbox this morning that the Ubuntu devs have officially released the Release candidate for Ubuntu 9.04 “Jaunty Jackalope”. The official release of Ubuntu 9.04 is due in a mere six days, so now would be the time to help make sure there are no critical blocking bugs in the ISO or the release.

As always, you should check out the release notes for special instructions and caveats before downloading and installing the upgrade, as well as the short list of known bugs in the RC.

You can check out the official announcement on the ubuntu-announce mail list, as well as the announcement of the Ubuntu Netbook Remix 9.04 Beta, which was also announced today.

I’m also happy to be able to say that Ubuntu’s ShipIt is now accepting pre-orders for the official 9.04 LiveCD. You will need to have an account with Canonical’s Launchpad site (Canonical is the parent company of Ubuntu), but it’s totally free. Even if you never report a bug or want to subscribe to a bug to keep up-to-date with it’s status, a Launchpad account is handy for those twice-yearly requests for a free LiveCD.

I had hoped to have an Ubuntu 9.04 Countdown iGoogle gadget available but for some dumb reason the bugger has never been published, despite making sure it was set to be published on multiple times. Luckily frbastida has gotten a gadget published, so you do have a chance to use the countdown in the days before the release.

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A follow-up on my upgrade to Ubuntu 9.04

As I said back on the 6th of this month I made the upgrade to Ubuntu 9.04 “Jaunty Jackalope”. While most of it’s been pretty good (other than the three plus hour upgrade time and no visible improvement in the boot time on my system) there is one thing that’s bugged the living daylights out of me. Something happened while I was installing the upgrade that essentially killed my MPD/Sonata install. I’ve spent a number of hours trying to get it resolved, including completely uninstalling it and blowing away my existing configuration files to start from scratch, and what I ended up with yesterday is a complete inability to even update my MPD database. Since I use MPD/Sonata on a daily basis when I’m at my Ubuntu box the inability to use it is a deal breaker. Plus it seems that the .deb package for Google Gadgets has been edited to remove the Gmail Notifier applet, which is something I rely on several times a day to use my multiple Gmail accounts. The fact that I don’t use Firefox as my default browser anymore has added even more insult to the “injury”, and I haven’t seen a reliable way to have an applet or gadget check my multiple accounts outside of the Gmail Notifier addon for Firefox.

All of these issues may come from something I discovered over a year ago, and that’s the fact that something in my user profile has been borked. It first showed up when I was unable to do something no matter what I tried (I don’t even recall what it is at this point) but I suspect it’s gotten worse in the last year with my installing apps to try them out and getting rid of them when I decided I didn’t like them enough. I’ve decided that I’m simply going to clear out some of the config files on my primary profile, get rid of things that I don’t have in other forms (like .tar.gz’s), and back up some of my most critical data (such as bookmarks for Epiphany and my Evolution email/rss settings). Once that’s done I’m going to dig out my old Ubuntu 7.04 “Feisty Fawn” Live CD and do a fairly clean install, blowing away my current root partition and creating a new user profile. My /home directory resides on it’s own partition so once I make room for a new partition I’ll be able to create a new user account and simply move my documents, etc., into the new user space (and updating permissions as needed). I don’t think it will be a completely easy task, and I’m preparing myself for the very real probability that it’s going to end up being a ton of work. I know just starting that far back and upgrading the system one version at a time is going to take many hours, and I’m hoping 7.04 is the proper version to go back to. I remember starting with Ubuntu in November of 2007, and 7.04 came out in April of that year so I’m not sure why I started with that rather than Ubuntu 7.10 “Gutsy Gibbon”, but I distinctly remember using Feisty so that’s where I’ll start. Nanci and I were able to set up our LCD monitors back in December 2007 so that SecondLife would let us use the 1280×1024 resolution, and I haven’t been able to do that properly in recent reinstalls so I know I need to go that far back.

The process will begin this weekend, so if I don’t get much posting done between now and when it’s done you will know why. I do have my RSS feeds available to me in the Google Reader, which will allow me to find things I want to post about, but I still have limited access to my Ubuntu box so I’ll have to watch how much I mark for  posting for a bit.

TTFN!

I dood it

As promised I managed to snag the update to Ubuntu 9.04 “Jaunty Jackalope” Beta yesterday. The first thing I noticed, even as I was taking the update, is that the estimated time for the update was 3 and a quarter hours. Holy crap! I’ve never seen an Ubuntu update take that bloody long. EVAH. Of course one of the possible causes could be that I have so many damned apps installed, but somehow I’m not sure that’s the issue. (Although yes, I did go through and clean out some of the crap.)

Once I finally got to the reboot stage I noticed an error message about something crashing during the update. I didn’t notice what it was, but I get the feeling it’s in relation to Bug #356157 in hotkey-setup (Ubuntu): “package hotkey-setup 0.1-23ubuntu10 failed to install/upgrade: subprocess post-installation script returned error exit status 2”. It seems everyone is getting bitten by this bug, and even though an update came down the pipeline to fix it, I couldn’t apply the update yet. Sergios was kind enough to post very specific instructions that fixed the issue for me. In short, get to a terminal window and run this command

sudo gedit /etc/init.d/hotkey-setup

When the file opens go down to around line 46. You should see

# This entire block does nothing on desktops right now
if laptop-detect; then
do_video
;;
restart|force-reload)
$0 stop || true
$0 start
;;
esac

exit 0

What you want to do is to add a line below where it says do_video so it will now read like this:

# This entire block does nothing on desktops right now
if laptop-detect; then

do_video
fi

;;
restart|force-reload)
$0 stop || true
$0 start
;;
esac

Save the file, and then apply the update with sudo apt-get upgrade. Your problem will be solved.

My Ubuntu 9.04 beta desktop (not the official wallpaper)

I ended up with problems trying to get Avant Window Navigator (AWN) reinstalled, but that’s because I’m running the trunk packages and one of the first thing the update process does is to disable any and all third-party repositories like the Launchpad PPA’s. I went through and verified which of my PPA’s have Jaunty packages available (I have about 40 PPA’s that I’ve used from time to time and had to see if they could be enabled for 9.04 Beta) and was finally able to get my AWN back working (for the most part).

I’ve seen some really short boot times, but I just did fired up my comp (from being completely off) and from selecting the specific GRUB entry to being able to do anything on my system (with autologon) took me about two minutes. That may not be the start/end events that others are using but I’m not seeing a noticeable change in the startup time on my system. I’m also seeing that I’m still getting issues of Compiz not getting started properly so I get a nice message from AWN that it can’t see any compositing. I’m definitely going to have to try to sit down one day and spend some time in an exhaustive search for what could be causing the problem because it really bugs the living daylights out of me. What I end up having to do for now is to go to my Compiz Fusion Icon and make either reloading the window manager or manually selecting Compiz as the Window Manager, which seems to “hang” my system while Compiz does it’s thing. In the process of doing all that I have to kill my Google Gadgets Sidebar and restart it once I get Compiz running properly, which is just one more pain in the rear that I have to get resolved. I know I probably have a faulty profile and I need to create a new profile to try to get things cleaned up but I really don’t feel like going through that hassle, plus I seem to have filled up most of my partitions so I’ll need to see what I can do to clear out some space to make a new profile.

There’s a new icon on my panel for the Indicator Applet, and I’m honestly not sure if it’s useful or not. At the moment it’s showing an envelope to let me know that Evolution has a new message, and I have a feeling it’s going to stay there until I mark all of my email read, which I don’t do that often since I tend to use the unread flag to help me see the messages and articles I want to blog about or use in some other way at a later date.

One of the nice things I’m seeing is that there’s now a fade transition when Wallpaper Tray changes my desktop wallpaper. I’m not sure what’s generating the transition effect but it’s pretty nice.

During my first reboot after the update (while I was still making sure I had all my apps updated properly) I didn’t have any sound, not even the Test sound from the Sound Preferences window, but once I got all of my Gstreamer  codecs updated properly and logged out I was able to hear sounds from my comp again.

Sessions is now called Startup ApplicationsIf you’re like me you use the Sessions window pretty often. It’s been renamed so typing “Sess” into Gnome Do won’t do any good anymore. It’s now called System > Preferences > Startup Applications.

Speaking of Gnome Do, I’m finding that when I use the hotkeys to call up GNOME Do 0.8.1.3 it wants to come up behind whatever window I have active unless I make the desktop the active “application”. Of course now when I try to use the hotkeys it doesn’t do that, even with calling up Do when I’ve got the cursor in Epiphany, so I’m not sure if I just needed to to do a reboot or what. I’m also noticing that I’m not seeing the Nouveau theme, even though it’s my selected theme in the Do Preferences dialog.

Synaptic thumbs in Ubuntu 9.04 betaThere’s also a very nice new feature in Synaptic. Now when you select a package you’ll see a button labeled “Get Screenshot”. When you click the button it will grab a screenshot for the application (if one’s available). They’re rather on the small side, and I haven’t seen a way to enlarge them, but it’s nice to be able to see a screenie of an app.

I seem to be having an issue with Sonata and the Music Player Daemon itself. For some reason MPD isn’t seeing any music it can play. It’s probably a change in the configuration but I didn’t keep my old config settings when the update came in. I’ll play around with it some more later on but I already miss my Sonata. :(

I honestly haven’t had much chance to play with the update yet, mostly because the update itself took so bloody long plus I wasted a lot of time trying to chase down the sound issue before I relogged. I strongly recommend that you snag the Ubuntu 9.04 beta iso and either burn yourself a LiveCD or put it on a flash drive and check it with that before you take it, especially while it’s still in beta. Plus make sure you backup your important files before doing any major upgrades like this. The Ubuntu 9.04 beta is for testing purposes only and shouldn’t be used on a production system (the computer you use on a daily basis). There are still some things being fixed and the members of the Ubuntu community can not be held responsible for any data loss that arises from upgrading your daily system to this beta.

Otherwise, what I’ve seen so far looks pretty good. I can’t wait to play with it more and see all of the changes and improvements the dev teams have made. :p Now if we could only get a useful spell checker in Epiphany I’d be even happier.

Peng’s links for Wednesday, 1 April

I was going to save my links for one more day, but there’s one that I want to post today for everyone. And no, it’s not about the malware that Windows users are having to deal with.

  • Tom Dryer: Upgrading to Ubuntu 9.04 Beta. Yet another report on how the upgrade to Ubuntu 9.04 went. I won’t post all the ones I find (I hope not at least) but Tom’s a great source of tutorials so I definitely wanted to make sure people saw his. It’s not all beer & skittles, and it’s nice to see someone give a balanced report with both positives and negatives. (As I’ll post this weekend the beta LiveCD saw my wireless USB with absolutely no problems, something 8.10 didn’t do.)
  • Steven Harms: New NVidia driver out. Nvidia released a new stable 180 driver for those who use them. I’ll have to check it out when I’m back at my Ubuntu box.
  • Bryan Quigley: Ctrl-Alt-Backspace (Restarts X, don’t do it). It turns out not everyone’s tyhrilled with the decision to remove the hotkey combination to force a new X video session. Brian has some nice info on the matter.
  • Ubuntu Packaging: Packaging Training kicking off this week! If you ever wanted to learn how to package apps for Debian/Ubuntu now’s your chance to find out how. 
  • Craig A. Eddy: To PulseAudio or Not To PulseAudio . . . Craig looks at the issue that is PulseAudio, along with info on how to get rid of it if you don’t want to use it. Thanks, Craig!
  • Stefano Forenza: TomTom settles, is Microsoft shooting its own foot ? I was hoping to see a nice article from the Ubuntu community about the recent settlement between Microsoft and TomTom since TomTom uses some Linux kernel code, and once again Stefano rides to the rescue.
  • Matt Zimmerman: Please don’t report Ubuntu bugs directly to Launchpad. Matt brings us a reminder about something I posted a link to last week, making sure we know the best way to get bugs fixed for the next update cycle.
  • Isabelle Duchatelle: Medibuntu: non-free-codecs for Jaunty. It’s getting to be that time again, time to update the repo info for the next version of Ubuntu Linux. Isabelle has the info you need if you want to use packages from Medibuntu with Ubuntu 9.04.
  • Jeffrey Detras: Hardy-ier than before. Believe it or not some people prefer Ubuntu 8.04 “Hardy Heron” to Ubuntu 9.04. Jeffrey has some very good reasons for going back to 8.04 after testing the beta for Ubuntu 9.04 “Jaunty Jackalope.”

Before I close this post, I have to share one more thing. It’s April Fools Day and while Nanci and I aren’t doing anything with the blog to “celebrate” the day, there are some really nice gags out there. Stefano Forenza is compiling a list of the Linux-based gags he finds so if you want to find a single place to see most of them Stefano’s blog is the place you want to be.

I’m not posting anything about the Conficker worm (other than a link to Panji Nushantara’s article) that has info that Windows users reallyshould have known about by now) for two major reasons. This blog deals with GNU/Linux, specifically Ubuntu Linux. It’s not that I don’t really give a rat’s bum about Windows (I really don’t), it’s that this isn’t the place Windows users should be looking for info like that. Besides, if you run Windows you have a responsibility to make sure you have all the security patches. Uuser with unpatched Windows systems have reasons to worry. If you’ve kept your patches up-to-date (or don’t run Windows) you have little (if anything) to worry about.

That’s a lid, folks. See you tomorrow, and don’t take any wooden nickels, ok?

[UPDATED] Peng’s links for Friday, 27 March

Updated to include note about the PHP version of the Ubuntu 9.04 [countdown. -Peng]

I tried to post some links yesterday but as soon as I hit the save button to lock in some tage and my text I was rewarded with a 100% blank post. Hopefully this post will last long enough to publish it.

  • Pavel Rojtberg: Giving Google Earth a native look & feel. One of the biggest complaints about Google apps on Linux (other than some apps actually not being native Linux apps because they shove an extra installation of WINE down our throats) is how butt ugly they are. Pavel walks us through what we need to do to get them looking like the theme we have selected.
  • Jonathan Carter: The correct way to file bugs in Ubuntu. Filing bugs is important when you help test new releases, but I found out yesterday I was doing it wrong because I went straight to Launchpad to file my bug. Jonathan lets us know not only how do to it properly but also why the way I was doing it is a bad idea.
  • Steven Harms: Thank You. Steven writes a wonderful post to the people who help make Ubuntu Linux such a wonderful distribution. As for me, I’m just going to say, “What Steven wrote.” :)
  • Tiago Vaz: Some cool audio stuff for Debian. Usually when people write about cool audio tools for GNU/Linux they’re referring to media player apps like Amarok, MPD and Totem. But Tiago has good news for musicians, especiallt guitar players, as he tells us about some virtual processing gear.
  • Steve Langasek: Ubuntu 9.04 Beta released. I know this should probably get a post of it’s own, but I’m tight on time since I needed to reclaim yesterday’s links from Google Reader. The first beta release of Ubuntu 9.04 “Jaunty Jackelope” is now available for downloading. I’ll snag it this weekend and post my thoughts about it.
  • Nick Ali: Ubuntu 9.04 Countdown Banner. If you have your own blog or website you may want to snag the countdown banner to help countdown the says until Ubuntu 9.04 is released. Stefano Forenza also has the code on his site, as well as tips for people like Nanci and I who aren’t allowed to use any JavaScript on their blog. That was a pain in the rear the last two releases (Thanks, WP.com) and we’re glad the devs thought of us this time around. Updated 29 March: If you can’t use JavaScript grab the PHP code from Stefano’s post. It’s working fine on our blog!
  • Daniel T. Chen: Lessons Learned at Jaunty Beta. Not everything went 100%smoothly with the alpha versions of Ubuntu 9.04, and Daniel clues us in on some of the things the dev team had to deal with.

That’s it for today. I may have some links to share tomorrow, but look for our report on how Jaunty behaves on our hardware this weekend. Until then, enjoy the weekend!

Peng’s links for Wednesday,25 March

Yep, I’m posting again already. I snagged a few things I wanted to post yesterday when the clock started to run out, and I’m going to try not to let my list of things to post get quite so long.

  • Stephen Hermann: Ubuntu Jaunty Netbook Remix. Getting Ubuntu 9.04 ready for release also brings a version for people using netbooks. Stephen didn’t use apt-get to perform the upgrade, going instead with a flash drive, but if you’re wondering how the next release of Ubuntu will play on the smaller platform you’ll want to read his report. He also posted some screenshots for those who want some images with their text.
  • Jono Bacon:Ubuntu 9.04 Free Culture Showcase Winners!. The Ubuntu devs had a competition to see who could come up with great content to be included in the Examples/folder for Ubuntu 9.04, and Jono has the good news on what content will be immortalized in cd/dvd/iso form when the Jaunty Jackelope is released in less than a month.
  • Launchpad News: Launchpad maintenance 27th March and 1st April. Launchpad, the code hosting service from Ubuntu parent Canonical, is going to be doing some maintenance that will mean that Launchpad will have to go offline for a brief period on two days in the coming week. The first downtime will mean that Personal Package Archives (PPA’s) hosted on Launchpad will be unavailable for about half an hour on Friday, and then all of Launchpad will be offline for one hour on April Fool’s Day. yeah, great timing on that latter date, eh? Get all the details from the announcement on their blog.
  • André Gondim: Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope booting in 20s. Holy crap, but that’s pretty quick! I’ll have to check it on my own system, but if I get even a fraction of that speedup I’ll be one happy penguin. I seem to be hitting lags when Compiz starts and AWN loads in, and I’m pretty sure I’ve got a setting messed up someplace, but it’s good to see that the dev team are working on getting you from turning on your comp to be able to actually use it with the GUI down to as short a time period as possible. (I’ll see about getting some timing figures on both my current boot time and the time under 9.04.) André’s even kind enough to give us graphs to back up what he’s telling us.
  • Stefano Forenza: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. How to waste time. Stefano give us some good info on adding repositories via Apt-URL and why it’s good news. Complete with lolcats. ;)
  • Panji Nushantara : How To Read Software Version Number in Ubuntu. Reading version numbrs (and typing them into bug reports) can be a real pain. Panji has a nice tutorial on how to make sense out of the apparant gobbldygoop. She He (sorry about that!) also has a plea to make the damned things easier to understand.

Looking toward 9.04, and bididng adieu to 7.10

Maximum PC has a nice write up on the upcoming release of Ubuntu 9.04 “Jaunty Jackelope”. As I’ve said before, 9.04 is looking really nice with the info I’ve seen so far, and this article makes the case even better that the next release could be one sweet little collection of code. As soon as I can see a notice that Ubuntu 9.04 has reached beta status I’ll make sure it gets posted for all to try, and I’ll snag it and give it a nice little test so I can give you guys an early look through my peepers. Thanks to Nanci, who spotted the article on Google News and made sure I saw it. (You could have blogged it yourself, sis. I wouldn’t have minded. :) )

For those of you who are running Ubuntu 7.10 “Gutsy Gibbon”, the Ubuntu devs have announced that they will stop providing “security and critical fixes” for it on Saturday, 18 April. This date is eighteen months after Gutsy was released, as is the standard practice for non Long Term Support (LTS) releases. The current LTS version is 8.04 “Hardy Heron”, which will be supported for three years (for desktop systems, five years for servers) with security updates and other packages.

For more info on the end of life announcement for Ubuntu 7.10 you can ready the official notice on the ubuntu-announce maillist archive.

For the record, the version is 9.04, not 9.0; it’s based on the year it’s released (2009) and the month it’s released (April, which equals 04), which is always a two digit number. The version number does not shorten to zaro (“0″), just as the October releases nevershorten to simply “.1″. It may seem like a nitpicky thing to fuss about, but it’s the difference between being accurate and, well, not.

Peng’s links for Sunday, 22 Mar

As much as I tried to stay on top of my feeds this week I still end up with 25 items in my ToBlog folder. :( Luckily I’m going to cull out some of the older ones as well as a few things that aren’t so post-worthy at this point. But I have a great (OT) vid to share with y’all at the end.

  • ArsTechnica: Get it done with GNOME Do 0.8. A very nice story on how much easier Gnome Do makes using GNOME-based GNU/Linux distros. Thanks to Peter Stuifzand over on the Do Google Group for letting me know about it.
  • Jonathan Ernst: HP refunds 520$ for unused software. There was just now way I wasn’t going to share this story. ;)
  • Jon Beebe: Top 10 Reasons I’ll Never Use Ubuntu. Yes, it’s from a Linux guy, but it’s a great tongue-in-cheek list.
  • Srinivasa Ragavan: Announcing ‘Anjal’- the new mail for netbooks. If you use a netbook you should definitely check out Anjal for your email client.
  • Stefano Forenza: Chinese MID deploying Ubuntu by default. Speaking of netbooks, I may have to find a way to get one of these. Not only do they run my fav OS, but they’re pretty darned inexpensive as well.
  • Stefano Forenze: New wallpapers for Jaunty. Don’t hold your breath. I’m liking how some of them look, although I know they won’t be everyone’s cup of espresso.
  • Wouter Verhelst: Dealing with apt’s GPG signing stuff — the right way. If you use third party sources for installing and updating your GNU/Linux you know about adding GPG signing keys. Wouter has instructions for adding them in a way that doesn’t inject a security flaw, and that defeats the purpose of importing a GPG key in the first place.
  • Jose Carlos Garcia Sogo: Is ext4 unsafe? The next update to Ubuntu will add support for ext4 partitions, and lately people have been talking about security concerns with ext4. Luckily Jose has info to set your mind at ease.
  • Josselin Mouette: Which logo for the main GNOME menu in Debian? I could have skipped this post from Friday, but the “swirl foot” icons are so cute I may have to grab them for my own system.
  • Isabelle Duchatelle: Ubuntuforums nuts and bolts. Isabelle has some very handy Ubuntu Forums links you may want to bookmark, as well as some rather nice numbers for what’s going on at UF)
  • Tom Dryer: How-to Install Google Earth 5 on Ubuntu. The latest update for GE brings some really nice new features. Tom gives us a very quick and easy way to install this new version, as well as some troubleshooting info.
  • Joe Barker: Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty) – My Thoughts So far. Joe’s been playing with late alpha of Ubuntu 9.04 and is kind enough to let us know how it’s behaving on his system. Remember, no matter how well (or unwell) any software runs on a person’s system, Your Milage May Vary, simply because their hardware, software and particular configuration is bound to be different from yours. But so far Joe’s pretty happy with it, although I’m hearing that those of us on the Mac4Lin dev team are unhappy about yet more bloody changes to things that are affecting our software. Yet again. Grrr.
  • Guillaume Desmottes: Good GNOME news. We’re just about to see a beta release of Ubuntu 9.04 and that means there is an update coming down the pike for GNOME. And as a matter of fact it came out on Wednesday. Guillaume has the best post that I’ve seen with info on what’s new in this update, next to the release notes, that is. Hell, just looking at the improvements for users makes me want to snag the beta for Ubuntu 9.04 “Jaunty Jackelope” just so I can play with it sooner!

I had a few other links I was going to share with y’all, but I think that’s enough for a weekend. If you’re in need of a good laugh (and some of your NCAA brackets may be in the toilet by now from what I’m hearing), check out this vid. As much as I try not to laugh at what happens to the poor feline I just can’t help myself.

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