On top of the usual daily isos, there are a lot of individual package testcases that need testing. Enjoy testers! :p
Type: Posts; User: Mathor; Keyword(s):
On top of the usual daily isos, there are a lot of individual package testcases that need testing. Enjoy testers! :p
I am sure it will infuriate much of U+1, as this might be hardware specific, but I have found a lot of apps (as well as the dash) have sped up a lot with a fresh install of the most recent daily iso....
Although it is fitting that U+1 would test something like this, perhaps you should extend the invitation to the wider forum audiences?
It always pains me to say this, but the newest builds booted/installed just fine for me :oops:
My AMD chip has never steered me wrong. However, look out once Unity 8 comes!
Latest builds worked perfectly on the most recent builds with no bugs. The first few images had some ubiquity bugs, but all of them have been ironed out on the most recent daily iso images. I am...
okay. The builds are up finally.
Check it out:
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/
Mistake on my part. I was told today that there was problem building the new saucy builds today and that we can probably expect the daily builds out by tomorrow
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/
Watch out. Daily builds are coming
3.9 works pretty well for my hardware
Ultimately a CD or a USB is going to have a slower running harddrive, therefore performing a full install will give you a huge speed increase because of faster hard drive and less memory used.
cariboo, you might want to edit the sticky to include the correct link. The original link you posted does not exist anymore.
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SaucyReleaseSchedule
Also the monthly milestone concept allows for development efforts to be more constructive, by thinking on a month-to-month basis, instead of setting huge goals over a 6 month period and not achieving...
I'm almost certain that daily builds will also be made. You will have the daily builds, weekly cadence builds, monthly snapshot builds, and 6 month stable release builds. The idea is to make as AS...
As far as I'm aware, if you are running the development release, the proposed plan is to sync the toolchain to point to "T" series when 13.10 is released, so that a dist-upgrade should be all that is...
It works for both.
http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/1252
Mark Shuttleworth announced it on his blog on 13.04's release day.
Also in https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/saucy milestones have been created to...
Just thought I'd pass this information along :p
Make sure you have your sources.list pointed to saucy. Then, whenever you want to check for updates do sudo apt-get update and sudo apt-get dist-upgrade. This will pull in the newest updates from...
Unity Next is what was called Ubuntu Touch and Ubuntu Phone. That shows how to build the operating system on your desktop so that you can emulate it, like you said.
I would say yes to all of the following except removing gtk/gnome apps.
Ubuntu is not as deeply worried in putting all of its efforts into following Gnome completely upstream durring this cycle,...
You are mistaken. Monthly snapshots will be made, and if you are running the development release (like if you are in saucy now), then you will continue to roll over into 14.04 after 13.10 is...
It just has rarely cooperated in past cycles.
I wouldn't recommend using software-updater at all to update during a development release. Sudo apt-get dist-upgrade is a better choice!
This is now my 10th set of updates in the past 12 hours. dist-upgrade is currently pushing me into Kernel 3.9. This should be interesting..
Agreed. Whether you put Ubuntu +1 Saucy or U+1 you will still get an influx of off-topic threads. I think all that needs to be done is expressed guidelines about what sort of things are suitable...