This German web site to be each to navigate to find various versions and flavours of Ubuntu (and you can also see the sizes)
http://de.releases.ubuntu.com/
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This German web site to be each to navigate to find various versions and flavours of Ubuntu (and you can also see the sizes)
http://de.releases.ubuntu.com/
So far, I'm running it and I like it a lot!
Really sucks to hear about Ubuntu One integration being removed (and I did read the stories and posted there... or so I think I did) but I really liked it. So far the speed difference is
the same, and each LTS release, it gets a bit more polished! :)
It's not all of Ubuntu One, is it? Just the file syncing? The "single log-on" service is still a part of the system. It surprises me that they're canning the music store, though. = / I've switched entirely over to Google Play music, but it's still really too bad the system doesn't have a built-in music store like every other operating system ever.
The syncing was always terrible, much slower and much more poorly integrated into the OS and file manager than Dropbox is with a tendency to create duplicate files all willy-nilly, so I'm glad to see it go; it was bringing down the overall quality of the product to include it in Ubuntu. And that's not mentioning the hideously skinned client app (made to look like the Windows app, I understand?) while Dropbox just follows native toolkits on every system....
Is there any posted schedule for the point releases for 14.04 as of yet? I was just curious ;)
Did a clean install the other day, and it's running superbly...
Yeah the SSO part was retained and I think a little bit of the back-end for future projects. I also recall something about once Ubuntu One is completely gone they will release their coding for it?Quote:
It's not all of Ubuntu One, is it? Just the file syncing? The "single log-on" service is still a part of the system. It surprises me that they're canning the music store, though. = / I've switched entirely over to Google Play music, but it's still really too bad the system doesn't have a built-in music store like every other operating system ever.
The syncing was always terrible, much slower and much more poorly integrated into the OS and file manager than Dropbox is with a tendency to create duplicate files all willy-nilly, so I'm glad to see it go; it was bringing down the overall quality of the product to include it in Ubuntu. And that's not mentioning the hideously skinned client app (made to look like the Windows app, I understand?) while Dropbox just follows native toolkits on every system....
I had pretty good experiences with it and I hope that they bring it back. I really liked it because it worked on everything that I have and I honestly do not trust Microsoft or Google with my data. Drop-box I used when it was a beta and see that it has now really grown but I still prefer the synergy that Ubuntu One offered. Also I did use their music store and liked it as well.
As of now, they have the schedule for 14.04.1 as July 24.
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/TrustyTahr/ReleaseSchedule
But based upon the last LTS, the next point release should be sometime during the smack dab middle of the next release after 14.10 comes out.
So 14.04.2 will probably come out sometime between December and February.
and the rest following that same pattern.
Everything is subject to change, of course.
The succeeding point releases beyond 14.04.1, need extra testing, above simple bug-fixings.
Since they get the upgraded kernel and X stacks.
If I remember 12.04.2 was delayed a little because of one of those (kernel or X) having issues.
Thanks deadflowr and congratulations on becoming a forum moderator :D
Must be a blue moon tonight (i think you get my reference) LOL
Out of curiosity, what synergy did it provide that Dropbox didn't? Dropbox runs on everything, too. The ability to sync between Ubuntu and Android (or rather, sync to the cloud and access and edit from Android as if it's local) is the whole gimmick for me. Plus, Dropbox monitors changes as they happen - finding out that Ubuntu One doesn't, but just periodically pushes updates, really killed U1 for me. If I can't be sure that I'm looking at the most recent version of the file, I can't really make any use of it.
I'd put up with even the random duplicate files over that - although seeing it recopy my Tomboy notes exponentially with each update was just about depressing.
That's just trying to shoehorn it into use cases that I'd already established in habits formed around using Dropbox, though. What was awesome about U1 when used properly?