I'm trying not to be noob, but neither wikipedia or google told me what beagle or dashboard is. Care to explain? (please)Quote:
Originally Posted by demon666_nl
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I'm trying not to be noob, but neither wikipedia or google told me what beagle or dashboard is. Care to explain? (please)Quote:
Originally Posted by demon666_nl
http://www.beaglewiki.org/index.php/BeagleQuote:
Originally Posted by poofyhairguy
http://www.beaglewiki.org/index.php/...is%20Dashboard
Quote:
Originally Posted by ralph_ubuntu
Thx.
Wow, that looks cool! If Ubuntu is going to throw all its weight behind Gnome, it needs this kind of stuff.
Warty hardly is ready, I think Hoary will be a good indicator of how much work is ahead of us.
The main problem is still that we can't legally ship a lot of functionality that end users expect, like the ability to play DVDs, mp3s, wma/wmvs and so on. That problem sadly has no easy solution.
Another thing is translations, they are far from perfect in Warty, hopefully Ubuntu will work hard to reach out to the translation teams to get their own stuff translated properly, and please reconsider the idea of only shipping 10-15 languages, I would feel violated as a translator if I worked my ass off and I didn't get my work shipped by Ubuntu, looking at how the translation efforts are doing right now:
2 languages at 95% or better (Danish being one of them thank you very much, MWH has worked his butt off getting us there)
11 at 85% or better
25 at 80% or better
And this is for the development branch of GNOME (2.10), this early in the game that's impressive, since the string freeze isn't even in place yet. I'm willing to bet that we can get 25 at 90% or better with proper support (for the GNOME 2.8 branch that's now 33 languages). So it's a matter of someone (Ubuntu maybe) sponsoring the right interstructure for translators, and you will see impressive results.
coolQuote:
about the linux certified hardware website:
http://hardware.linuxfaqs.de/
There are many more like this site.
I didn't know such a thing existed. But it would be more handy if there was just 1 or 2 sites that have a comprehensive overview. It sucks if you have to browse a lot of sites and still have to use google. But it's better than nothing :)
I also think Ubuntu needs to have the media support. But I'll create a custom ubuntu cd when hoary releases.Quote:
Warty hardly is ready, I think Hoary will be a good indicator of how much work is ahead of us.
The main problem is still that we can't legally ship a lot of functionality that end users expect, like the ability to play DVDs, mp3s, wma/wmvs and so on. That problem sadly has no easy solution.
Ubuntu needs to mature a bit. I think hoary will be ready. But we need a killer app that's going to attract people. Like games for windows XP.
If only we could have dashboard and beagle in hoary long before longhorn :). That would truly rock.
All the things average-desktop-users do often have to be in ubuntu. Are there any more features/high level user tasks you guys can think of that we didn't discuss ?
I would be really grateful if Ubuntu would throw some cash and labor at GNOME storage and SystemServices - but that's probably not happening any time soon.
can you be a bit more specific ?Quote:
Originally Posted by Lovechild
Theres no law that says you can't have a DVD player. No one owns the right to DVD movies andQuote:
Originally Posted by Lovechild
Cool CD Linux allready has a fullyworking one...
Here's what I think users will want, and have been thinking so for a while.
A package management system revamp. Preferably, you could download a .deb or whatever, double click on it, and a graphical install manager would come up that would connect to the apt databases to download the dependencies available there, and then, this is the tricky part, when creating these packages, the developer or packager should always have the URLs to debs of dependencies that AREN'T provided through apt. Dependencies are still very much an issue for software not in the apt repositories, and the lack of a graphical installer for standalone .deb files not downloaded through apt will be a slight thorn in the side. One of the strengths (and at the same time, one of the crippling weaknesses) Windows has is that it almost always comes with all the dll files it needs, which leads to a lot of bloat and unnecessary duplicates. But to the user, everything just works.
I don't know how much effort this would take beyond the obvious muck of getting maintainers to update their packages to provide the new information, and I also don't know how far away from Debian this would make Ubuntu, but I've been wanting something like that in a distro for a long time.