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Raspberry Pi’s New $70 AI Camera Works With All Pi Models

Par : Joey Sneddon

If you’re looking to kick the tyres on some AI image processing/recognition tasks and you own an older Raspberry Pi, the new AI Camera add-on may be of interest. While the $70 Raspberry Pi AI Kit only works with a Raspberry Pi 5, the $70 AI camera works with all of the Raspberry Pi boards which boast the relevant camera connector port (spoiler: most, including the Raspberry Pi Zero and Raspberry Pi 400). This product is the fruits of Raspberry Pi’s ongoing partnership with Sony Semiconductor Solutions, using the latter’s IMX500 image sensor and boasting a 12.3 MP resolution that […]

You're reading Raspberry Pi’s New $70 AI Camera Works With All Pi Models, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Linux Mint Gives First Look at New Cinnamon Theme

Par : Joey Sneddon

Linux Mint logo on a green backgroundAs revealed last month, Linux Mint is working on an improved default theme for the Cinnamon desktop – and today we got our first look at what’s coming. The way Cinnamon looks in Linux Mint (the distribution) is not the way it looks if you install the Cinnamon desktop yourself on a different distro. There, assuming a theme pack is isn’t pulled in as a dependency, you’ll see the default built-in Cinnamon theme. And it’s that built-in theme that Linux Mint is currently improving. Mint says “the new default theme [is] much darker and contrasted than before. Objects are rounded […]

You're reading Linux Mint Gives First Look at New Cinnamon Theme, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Mission Center (Linux System Monitor) Now Reports Fan Info

Par : Joey Sneddon

Mission Center Linux system monitor app screenshotA major new release of Mission Center, a modern system monitor app for Linux desktops, has been released. Fans of this Rust-based GTK4/libadwaita system monitoring tool (which to address the recurring elephant in the room does indeed have a user interface inspired by—now I’d argue superior to—the Windows system monitor app) will find a lot to like in the latest update. I’m not going to recap all of this tool’s existing features in this post as I’ve covered this app a few times in the past. The Mission Center homepage has more details for the uninitiated. Instead, I’m going focus […]

You're reading Mission Center (Linux System Monitor) Now Reports Fan Info, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

VirtualBox 7.1.2 Adds Support for 3D Acceleration in ARM VMs

Par : Joey Sneddon

Oracle has release a new maintenance update for VirtualBox, its open-source virtualisation software. VirtualBox 7.1.2 is the first such point release since the VirtualBox 7.1 series debuted earlier this month. Naturally, it builds on that major release with a flurry of big fixes, performance finesse, and UI refinements, and adds a few new features. Among them, the latest version adds support for a multi-window layout, gives users the option to choose remote display security method, and fixes for a 3D acceleration-related quirks, including black screens in Windows VMs and minor rendering issues. A bug fixes ensures virtual machines created using […]

You're reading VirtualBox 7.1.2 Adds Support for 3D Acceleration in ARM VMs, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Ubuntu Patches ‘Severe’ Security Flaw in CUPS

Par : Joey Sneddon

If you’ve cast a half-glazed eye over Linux social media feeds at some point in the past few days you may have caught wind that a huge Linux security flaw was about to be disclosed. And today it was: a remote code execution flaw affecting the CUPS printing stack used in most major desktop Linux distributions (including Ubuntu, and also Chrome OS). With a severity score of 9.9 it’s right at the edge of the most severe vulnerabilities possible. The CUPS Security Vulnerability Canonical explains in its security blog: “At its core, the vulnerability is exploited by tricking CUPS into […]

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COSMIC DE Alpha 2 Released, This is What’s New

Par : Joey Sneddon

Chocks away —British saying, don’t stare at me weirdly— as the second alpha of System76’s homegrown COSMIC desktop environment has been released. To make it easy for us all to try out the latest improvements a second alpha build of Pop!_OS 24.04 is also available to download. Those who installed the first Pop!_OS 24.04 alpha don’t need to re-install. All of the improvements in this post are available as software updates via the COSMIC App Store. Not that anyone needs to use Pop!_OS to try the COSMIC. This Rust-based DE is also available to test on a wide range of […]

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Ubuntu 24.10 ARM ISO Supports the ThinkPad X13s

Par : Joey Sneddon

Ubuntu 24.10 supports the Snapdragon-powered Lenovo ThinkPad X13s laptop in the official ‘generic’ ARM64 ISO — a notable change. Although it is possible to use Ubuntu 23.10 on the Thinkpad X13s it requires using of a custom ISO spun-up specifically for this device. Ubuntu 24.04 LTS had no official installer image for this device (it is possible to upgrade to 24.04 from 23.10, albeit with caveats). But with the arrival of Ubuntu 24.10 in October, the standard Ubuntu ARM64 ISO (which works much like a regular Intel/AMD ISO, with a live session and guided installer) will happily boot on this […]

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How to Disable the ‘Recent’ Files Section in Nautilus

Par : Joey Sneddon

Remove Recent folder from NautilusThere’s one feature in the Nautilus file manager I use daily: the Recent files shortcut. One-click brings up a pseudo-folder showing all of my recently downloaded, modified, and newly created files, regardless of which folders they’re in. I find this grouping dead handy – but I accept it’s also dead revealing too. Which is why not everyone likes this feature. Individual files can be hidden from view manually, but that’s effort. Since ‘Recent’ is pinned at the top of the sidebar, it’s easy to accidentally click it. Not an issue for most of us at home, but for those in […]

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See Real-Time Power Usage (in Watts) in Ubuntu’s Top Panel

Par : Joey Sneddon

If you’re looking for a no-fuss way to see real-time energy consumption on your Ubuntu laptop as you use it, a new GNOME Shell extension makes this deliciously easy. “Why would I want to see energy usage?” – anyone asking that question probably doesn’t. This is more for the curious folk; those keen to reveal the relative power demands of the software they run, the tasks they perform, they hardware settings they use, and the devices they connect – more of an educational tool than an essential one. Of course, you can monitor power consumption on Linux without any extension. […]

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Ubuntu 24.10 Beta Released, Available to Download

Par : Joey Sneddon

A beta of Ubuntu 24.10 ‘Oracular Oriole’ is now available to download – a day later than planned! Developers and non-developers alike can download the beta to try the new features in Ubuntu 24.10, check compatibility, and flag any issue for fixing before the stable release takes flight next month. “The Beta images are known to be reasonably free of showstopper image build or installer bugs, while representing a very recent snapshot of 24.10 that should be representative [the final release]”, says Canonical’s Utkarsh Gupta. This is the only beta release planned, though a release candidate will follow in few […]

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Vivaldi Web Browser is Now Available as a Snap

Par : Joey Sneddon

Vivaldi browser logoVivaldi web browser has arrived on the Canonical Snap Store – officially. This closed-source, Chromium-based web browser has been available on Linux since its debut in 2015, providing an official DEB package for Ubuntu users (which adds an APT repo for ongoing updates). And last year it became possible to get Vivaldi on Flathub – though that Flatpak build is only semi-official: maintained and packaged by a Vivaldi engineer, but not a recommended or supported package by Vivaldi itself – not yet, anyway! So to hear Vivaldi is embracing the Snap format is an interesting, albeit not surprising, move. It’s […]

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Zorin OS 17.2 Released, Powered by Linux Kernel 6.8

Par : Joey Sneddon

Zorin OS 16.2 on a laptopZorin OS 17.2 is available to download, bringing users a welcome set of enhancements. The latest release in the Zorin OS 17 series, still based on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS, is described by the team as the “most capable, customisable, and compatible version yet”. Exciting – what’s changed? Well, Zorin OS 17.2 adds new options to its bespoke Zorin Appearance application. Users can now change cursor theme in this one-stop personalisation tool, and now install third-party themes they download from elsewhere. Additionally, the theme section links to a guide that details how to restyle apps which uses libadwaita thanks to “an […]

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Ubuntu 24.10: The Best New Features

Par : Joey Sneddon

Ubuntu 24.10 graphicUbuntu 24.10 ‘Oracular Oriole’ will be released on October 13th, and as you’d expect from a new version of Ubuntu, it’s packed with new features. As a short-term release, Ubuntu 24.10 gets nine months of ongoing updates, security patches, and critical fixes. It’s not a long support window. However, Ubuntu 25.04 will be released in April of next year (six months later) and users of 24.10 can upgrade to 25.04 directly. Enough about releases next year; let’s focus on this one. In this post I run through the best Ubuntu 24.10 features, changes, and enhancements. Keep in mind that everything you […]

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Void Text Editor: Open-Source Alternative to Cursor

Par : Joey Sneddon

VS Code is to modern text editors what Chromium is to browsers: a fork magnet. A slew of niche spins have emerged, each putting their own spin on Microsoft’s massively popular original. The latest to join the fray is Void. The GitHub page for Void describes it as an open-source alternative to Cursor. Cursor is a subscription-based, cross-platform AI-powered text editor (and VS Code fork) that has gained considerable attention. It offers AI-powered code completion, predictive coding, code generation, edit suggestions, and predictive cursor positioning. Developers working on AI at companies like OpenAI and MidJourney are reportedly fans of Cursor. […]

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Ubuntu 24.10 Fixes PWA Issue in Chromium Snap

Par : Joey Sneddon

Using the Chromium snap app? If you are, and you use Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) or install websites as ‘apps’ there’s a bug fix coming that should improve their behaviour on Ubuntu. When you install a PWA1 in the Chromium snap you might expect it to open it in a separate, streamlined window when you open it using its shortcut in the applications grid. Presently, PWAs in the Chromim Snap don’t get detected as separate instances by GNOME Shell. This means no separate dock icon (it is grouped into Chromium’s) and it is not treated as a separate app by […]

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Linux Kernel 6.11 Released, This is What’s New

Par : Joey Sneddon

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

Par : Joey Sneddon

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

Ubuntu 24.10 Oracular Oriole hero imageThere’s a clutch of new features in Ubuntu 24.10, but plenty of smaller, less obvious fixes for “paper cuts” – a decades-long issue with thumbnails in the GTK file picker among them. 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 […]

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Ubuntu 22.04.5 LTS Released with Linux Kernel 6.8

Par : Joey Sneddon

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

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

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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