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Hier — 15 septembre 2024OMG! Ubuntu!

Linux Kernel 6.11 Released, This is What’s New

Par : Joey Sneddon
15 septembre 2024 à 18:32

Linux Kernel 6.11 newspaper headline graphicLinus Torvalds has announced the release of Linux kernel 6.11, which is the kernel version Ubuntu 24.10 and Ubuntu 24.04.2 LTS will offer. Fittingly, this update arrives a few days before the Linux Kernel Maintainer Summit takes place in Vienna, Austria. In his message to the Linux Kernel Mailing List to sign-off on the release Torvalds’ writes: “I’m once again on the road and not in my normal timezone, but it’s Sunday afternoon here in Vienna, and 6.11 is out”, and asks kernel devs to “give the latest release a try” before getting stuck in with the 6.12 merge window, […]

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À partir d’avant-hierOMG! Ubuntu!

Raspberry Pi Imager Gets Qt 6 Port, Now Offers AppImages on Linux

Par : Joey Sneddon
13 septembre 2024 à 15:59

You don’t need to own a Raspberry Pi to make use of the Raspberry Pi Imager. This nifty image writer makes flashing ISO, IMG, and similar files to USB drives and SD cards mighty easy. A new update, Raspberry Pi Imager 1.9, was released this week with some big changes. For one, this open-source and cross-platform image writing tool now uses Qt 6. This framework uplift offers a stack of underlying improvements in terms of stability, plus visual changes too. Raspberry Pi say the Qt 6 port provides “a lightly refreshed UI throughout on all platforms.” Comparing the Qt 6 […]

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Ubuntu 24.10 Fixes a Pesky File Picker Paper-Cut

Par : Joey Sneddon
13 septembre 2024 à 14:47

Ubuntu 24.10 Oracular Oriole hero imageUbuntu 24.10 features a clutch of headline-worth changes, but also plenty of less obvious fixes for “paper cuts” – including a decades-long issue with thumbnails in the GTK file picker. Feeling deja-vu? GNOME 44 (shipped in Ubuntu 23.04) included a thumbnail grid in the GTK file picker to make it quicker and easier to select the right files to upload, or open in an app, and so on. A feature long overdue, resolving a “bug” which had been open for 20 years! Only, there is a bit of a problem with how it works — some of you may have […]

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Ubuntu 22.04.5 LTS Released with Linux Kernel 6.8

Par : Joey Sneddon
12 septembre 2024 à 21:41

The fifth and final point release to Ubuntu 22.04 LTS is now available to download. This update was due to be released a couple of weeks ago but was delayed by a delay in getting Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS out the door – something had to give, so the release date of this update slipped. But it’s here now, ready to download. Ubuntu 22.04.5 LTS brings a freshly-spun installer image (ISO) that includes all of the software, security, and stability updates released since the last ISO was made. This cuts down on the number of updates that have to downloaded after […]

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Linux Mint Tease ‘Improved’ Default Cinnamon Theme

Par : Joey Sneddon
12 septembre 2024 à 14:35

The Cinnamon desktop environment looks pretty nice on Linux Mint, but if you install it on other distributions it doesn’t look as good — but that’s about to change. In his latest monthly mail-shot, distro lead Clement Lefebvre says the “ugly” default Cinnamon theme, which is maintained for trouble-shooting and testing purpose and is not the theme Linux Mint itself sets as default, will be “much improved” in Cinnamon 5.4. “In our distribution the focus is on Mint-Y. The default Cinnamon theme […] rarely gets attention from theme artists,” he says. “Ideally, it is the responsibility of the distributions to […]

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Parallels 20 for Mac Released with Ubuntu 24.04 VM Support

Par : Joey Sneddon
11 septembre 2024 à 21:44

Parallels Desktop 20 has been released for macOS. The virtualisation software introduces a number of buffs for Linux VMs running on macOS. The headline change in Parallels Desktop 20 is support for macOS Sequoia, both as host OS and as a guest — important given that Sequoia is due to be released in the next few weeks. But Parallels Desktop 20 has a lot of improvements for Linux guests too. First up, it now officially supports Ubuntu 24.04 LTS VMs, Fedora 39/40, and a handful of other recent Linux distributions releases. The icons for Ubuntu VMs now use the new […]

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VirtualBox 7.1: Qt 6 UI, Wayland Clipboard, New Icon + More

Par : Joey Sneddon
11 septembre 2024 à 21:06

VirtualBox 7.1 is now available to download for Windows, macOS, and Linux. Those upgrading from VirtualBox 7.0 or earlier will find a sizeable set of changes on offer, among them what Oracle describe as a “modernized look and feel”. Set your expectations accordingly for while this update to VirtualBox does feature an improved UI, as well as a port to Qt 6, the extent of those changes are more ‘modest refinement’ than ‘major revamp’. Basically, VirtualBox 7.1 now offers two UI modes: Basic (educes the number of options, settings, info, etc shown) and Expert (doesn’t hide anything). Switching between them is easy, […]

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Ubuntu Prompting Client is Here to Make Snap Apps Safer

Par : Joey Sneddon
11 septembre 2024 à 18:14

Prompting Client is the latest security effort for snap software, and acts as a companion to the new desktop Security Center app. As you may have read in my article last week, Prompting Client is a security buffer — think doorman — that guards your home folder. Whenever a snap app wants to access non-hidden files within, Prompting Client intervenes to ask you to approve. I’d been tracking this tool’s development for a while but there wasn’t really a lot of explanation or rationale behind it on the project’s Github, and some of the links in commits and issues filed […]

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Juno Tab 3 Linux Tablet — Nice, But Overpriced?

Par : Joey Sneddon
10 septembre 2024 à 22:28

Juno Computers have announced their latest Linux tablet, the Juno Tab 3, and it’s available to buy preloaded with Ubuntu 24.04 LTS (or a choice of other Linux distributions). Which is great. The Juno Tab 3 is powered by an Intel N100 processor, 12 GB RAM (soldered), internal 512 GB storage, and fronted by a 300nit 12.1-inch 2K 10-point touch display. Which is all decent. The Juno Tab 3 also has a detachable keyboard so you can turn the tablet into a portable productivity hub for “proper work” on-the-go (or on-the-sofa). Which sounds perfect — so what’s the catch? The […]

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Fastfetch is the Perfect Replacement for Neofetch

Par : Joey Sneddon
9 septembre 2024 à 00:59

When development on system info tool Neofetch was discontinued1 earlier this year a slew of forks, alternatives, and upstart projects sprung up to fill the void. Yet the Neofetch alternative that’s gained the most traction —anecdotally, at least; I’ve not be creeping around Linux conferences to verify first-hand—is Fastfetch. Fastfetch is similar to Neofetch in that it ‘pretty prints’ information about your OS, desktop environment, pertinent underlying technologies, and selected system hardware specs in a terminal window. But Fastfetch is far more capable than Neofetch: it’s faster, more featured2, supports Wayland (Neofetch technically didn’t), and is actively maintained. Indeed, the […]

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KDE Slimbook VI – A Powerful Laptop for KDE Enthusiasts

Par : Joey Sneddon
7 septembre 2024 à 14:22

Looking for a powerful new Linux laptop? The new KDE Slimbook VI may very well appeal. Unveiled at Akademy 2024, KDE’s annual community get-together, the KDE Slimbook VI marks a major refresh from earlier models in the KDE Slimbook line. And this thing ain’t no slouch – a dedicated benchmark page shows how this model compares to the preceding versions (spoiler: better). The 16-inch KDE Slimbook VI is powered by an AMD Ryzen 7 8845HS CPU with integrated NPU for local AI/ML workloads. Graphics are integrated but are well above the usual iGPU fare, with 12-cores, a high clock speed, […]

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Upgrades to Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Paused [Update: Now Resolved]

Par : Joey Sneddon
5 septembre 2024 à 21:48

Last week, the first point release of Ubuntu 24.04 LTS arrived, and upgrades from Ubuntu 22.04 LTS to the newest one officially enabled. However, those upgrades didn’t go smoothly for everyone who tried, be it on Ubuntu server or Ubuntu desktop. To prevent further headaches, Canonical has decided to pause upgrades to Ubuntu 24.04 LTS from Ubuntu 22.04 LTS while its developers work out the kinks. Yesterday, the ‘noble’ release got edited out of the meta-release-lts file (which Ubuntu systems check to detect new versions), preventing users from upgrading to Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS through officially-supported methods. Folks attempting to upgrade, but suddenly […]

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Ubuntu 24.10 Reveals Its New Default Wallpaper

Par : Joey Sneddon
5 septembre 2024 à 17:50

The default wallpaper of Ubuntu 24.10 ‘Oracular Oriole’ (and its official mascot artwork) has been revealed — along with an extra-special 20th anniversary surprise! A visit to the nearest temple mystic wasn’t required to predict that the new mascot motif would take centre-stage in the official Ubuntu 24.10 wallpaper. Animal mascots are a recurring feature of the default background since Ubuntu 17.10 ‘Artful Aardvark’. Default backgrounds follow a set formula purple gradient, some affectation around the edge, and (typically) a line-art illustration of the codename animal in the middle. For the ‘Oracular Oriole’ we get a geometric rendition of an […]

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Audacity 3.6.2 Released with Scores of Bug Fixes

Par : Joey Sneddon
4 septembre 2024 à 23:23

Audacity audio editor logo on a backgroundThe Audacity 3.6 release in July brought some masterful new features with it, plus all-new Compressor and Limiter filters. But not everyone was pleased to lose access to the older version of those, so Audacity’s devs have brought ’em back in a point release update to the currently Audacity 3.6 stable series. Those who prefer (or just more used to) the original Limiter, Compressor and Classic filters can access them in Audacity 3.6.2 from the new “Legacy” effects section. They’re available to use with new and existing Audacity projects. Audacity 3.6.2 also resolves a sizeable set of bugs, with fixes including: Plus plenty more […]

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Ubuntu’s New Security Center Readies Stable Release

Par : Joey Sneddon
4 septembre 2024 à 21:16

Ubuntu’s new desktop Security Center app is gearing up for its first stable release, along with a background tool called Prompting Client. I first reported on the creation of Security Center earlier this year and it hasn’t changed a great deal since then. Underlying code has been improved, and the Flutter UI made to look more like Yaru/GTK, but in terms of what it does, not much! The Snap Store description for the app describes it as “Security Center UI for the desktop”, which doesn’t say a great deal about the purpose or why a user might want to install […]

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New Version of Power Profiles Daemon Improves AMD Support

Par : Joey Sneddon
3 septembre 2024 à 13:04

A new version of the Power Profiles Daemon is out, bringing a number of improvements to improve power efficiency on Linux desktops, particularly on AMD devices. For those unfamiliar with it, power-profiles-daemon is a low-level component to provide power handling over DBus. Ever used the Power Mode options in the Quick Settings menu in GNOME Shell? Those options interface through this. Now that power-profiles-daemon is battery-level aware, power drivers like the Intel and AMD P-State drivers can (where supported) adjust power management based on the current battery level value. “In particular both the AMD panel power action now uses a […]

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Mozilla Firefox 130 Released with Labs, Overscroll & Web Codecs API

Par : Joey Sneddon
3 septembre 2024 à 04:30

Mozilla Firefox 130 is out with a variety of changes that make this phenomenally popular open-source web browser a touch more productive. On Linux, Firefox 130 enables overscroll animations by default, having added them on other platforms a few years back. This is a familiar visual effect from mobile systems: when you try to scroll beyond the edge content an elastic animation indicates “nuh-uh”. Now, lest anyone end up confused, these new (on Linux) Firefox over-scroll animations only play if you’re using a touchpad/trackpad to overscroll. You don’t see the effect when using a mouse. To help you get an […]

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Tauon Music Player Adds Native Support for PipeWire

Par : Joey Sneddon
1 septembre 2024 à 16:03

tauon music thumbnailTauon music player (once known as Tauon Music Box) now offers native PipeWire audio playback on Linux —  albeit experimental for the moment. Fans of this streamlined music player have asked for native PipeWire support for a while, and the app developers have been working on it accordingly. Now, keen to get it out there, the latest Tauon 7.8.1 release ships with native PipeWire support. Now, in case you’re wondering, Tauon already worked with PipeWire through the pipewire-pulse compatibility layer. This update doesn’t require that; Tauon can now interact directly with PipeWire, accessing and benefitting from all of its features. […]

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Use Lilypad to Rearrange or Hide Panel Icons in GNOME Shell

Par : Joey Sneddon
30 août 2024 à 16:16

You know how on Windows you can collapse icons in the task tray to keep them out of sight? Or on macOS, third-party apps like Bartender let you hide menu bar icons until you need them? Well, Lilypad is a new GNOME Shell extension that does the same thing, just for GNOME Shell. It gives you greater control over what top bar items are visible or hidden, and the order they’re arranged in. The top panel can fill up fast, especially if you use a couple of GNOME Shell extensions that are long, like a now-playing track info, a time […]

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Vivaldi 6.9 Released with Tab Renaming, Mail Buffs + More

Par : Joey Sneddon
30 août 2024 à 02:47

A new version of the Vivaldi web browser is out with an assortment of amiable improvements. Vivaldi 6.9 intros support for renaming tabs and tab stacks, supports drag-and-drop downloads, and offers an improved overview of tabs synced across devices. “This update is all about refining what makes Vivaldi special: giving you powerful tools to personalize your browser, stay organized, and navigate the web your way”, Jon von Tetzchner, CEO of Vivaldi Technologies, says of the release. Support for renaming tabs and Tab Stacks will prove handy for anyone with a sprawling set of tabs open. Not all tabs titles are […]

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First Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Point Release Available to Download

Par : Joey Sneddon
29 août 2024 à 20:16

After a two-week delay, the first Ubuntu 24.04 LTS point release is now ready to download. The first point release delivers an updated ISO, and sees direct upgrades from Ubuntu 22.04 LTS enabled Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS rolls together all of the bug fixes, security patches, kernel buffs, and software updates issued to users since the first release back in April as a new ISO. Periodical refreshes to the ISO mean those who install Ubuntu 24.04 LTS don’t need to download and apply months upon months worth of updates after their install completes. In addition, the new Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS installer images […]

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