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Ubuntu 10.04 - Perfect (lunduke.com)
12 points by macco on May 2, 2010 | hide | past | favorite | 22 comments



Calling 10.04 perfect is a real, long stretch. Even the authors own description of 10.04 hardly amounts to "perfect."

Its cosmetic changes are, in my opinion, dubious at best. Window controls are on the left hand side of the Window for no good reason. The color scheme is way too dark, it made me long for the old human theme. UI elements are glitchy in places. The "Me Menu" is useless to me. And why the heck did they ever remove the startup/shutdown options from the system menu? Why are they off on their own?

I like the idea of the Ubuntu Software Center but its execution leaves a lot to be desired. Last time I checked it was just another front end to apt. Many of the packages available are totally useless to the vast majority of people.

Ubuntu One and the Ubuntu Music store, well, we'll see how those go. Personally, I've never, ever used them and I have to wonder if they're the type of things that will actually draw people to Ubuntu

And, well, I hate to come off as a curmudgeon because I really do like Ubuntu, but to say that 10.04 blows OSX and Windows 7 out of the water is just wrong. It doesn't. For instance, why does Ubuntu still have the same old application menu? Both OSX and Windows 7 (and even KDE4) have moved away from this model. The categorized, hierarchical menus that have been around forever are really unhelpful. Why can't I search this menu like in Windows 7 and KDE4? For that matter, why can't I easily search everything like I can in Windows 7 and OSX (spotlight). If they really want to compete with Windows or OSX they need to give me better ways to find, sort and organize everything on my computer.


>The categorized, hierarchical menus that have been around forever are really unhelpful.

Call me old-fashioned but I liked this way better. Search-based interfaces don't help when you know what you want to do but don't know what applications are available to do it. On Ubuntu for people coming from other OS's, this is probably a very common experience (e.g., "I want to listen to music, what media programs are on this OS?"). I like being able to get on an Ubuntu box and riffle through the hierarchical application menu to see what's installed and what I might need to add for my own use. The fact that the hierarchy is well-integrated with the package manager makes it all the more worthwhile.

By moving away from this format in e.g. Mac OS X, I have a hard time keeping track of what applications I have installed without riffling through my entire Applications folder from time to time. Unless you put your Applications folder as a stack on your dock (which is not the default), I have no idea how typical users on Mac OS X remember and launch apps that aren't pinned to their docks.


I didn't necessarily suggest that the menu not be organized at all, just that the strict categorical hierarchical menus are lame. Why do some text editors go under the Utilities menu and others under the Programming menu (like Emacs). It's hard for a new user to know which menu a program is going to be under immediately after installing it, so they have to scrub all of them until they find it.

Why not have a more semantic approach? Why can't I tag my applications and have the application menu be more like a tag cloud and let applications be under multiple menus. At least then I could put Emacs under Editors and Programming.


It's a nice-to-have, for when you don't know exactly what you're looking for; I just wish that there were a way to make more people aware of things like Gnome Do as a complementary solution. http://do.davebsd.com/


I agree; I'd rather look for a task than have to search for an application by name. Of course, there's no reason it couldn't be hierarchical and have a search box.


Shutdown does belong on it's own. It's something most users will use all the time, unlike the rest of the system menu stuff. It's weird that it's on the right though, since they put the window close button on the left. To me, that's fundamentally inconsistent.

Then there's my Chrome browser which stubbornly maintains the window controls on the right.

No I wouldn't say it's perfect, but I do find it very clean and elegant. It certainly holds its own with Windows 7 and Mac OS.


I used it for a bit and I have to say that I like the window controls on the left. For me the mouse pointer usually hovers in the left side of my screen so they are closer to it = require less mouse movement.


Perfect? I wonder if the author tried installing it on a MacBook Pro.

WiFi won't work without the proprietary BroadComm drivers. But jockey (the program which detects which drivers you need and installs them for you) won't work without an internet connection. So if you don't have a usable ethernet connection handy, you're a bit stuck.

It's possible to install the drivers manually, but it's a pretty convoluted process (which still involves downloading things - go figure). I've not yet had any luck with it.

The irony is that it clearly has the drivers somewhere in the .iso, because when you run it in LiveCD mode it's able to install them, no internet connection required.

Overall it felt like a trip back to the bad old days of linux, where you had to spend a week editing config files before you got a usable system

Not what I'd call perfect.


I'd like to have working suspend/resume on my Thinkpad while using Compiz and the FireGL. I'm going to blame this one on ATI, rather than anything under Ubuntu's control, but it's still short of perfect.


I have a Lenovo T61. There is no suspend option in the power management menu, but from the command line, pm-suspend-hibernate seems to do the right thing.


What video card does it have? The problem I'm having is specific to ATI's proprietary driver when used together with Compiz.


Not saying I could do any better, but all things visual just can't seem to shake a decidedly amateur quality level.

Perhaps an empty desktop looks good, apart from the Firefox icon scraping the top pixel of the screen, but open a few applications...

http://img203.imageshack.us/img203/9595/fffb.png


I had huge problems with my proprietary nvidia driver and the new nouveau drivers (which replaced nv).

Because of this, the experience of upgrading was very painful. It's fine now - but, on the surface, there really isn't much difference to karmic.


The release is quite nice but not perfect - still can't rotate the monitors 90 degrees for vertical alignment unless you go in and manually edit the files instead of the gui


It's perfect just like every Ubuntu release in the last 2 years has been.


2011 will be the year of the Linux on the desktop.


Meaning it's not perfect?


Yes. Every time a new Ubuntu release comes out, it's finally the one that has fixed everything wrong with Linux! It's only a matter of time before Linux has a 50% market share of desktops thanks to this release!

And then market share basically stays flat. But don't worry, there'll be another perfect release in 6 months :)


the bar is continually being raised by other OSs all the time, so the definition of perfect changes. Try using windows 2000 or MacOS 8.55 and see if you don't prefer Ubuntu tremendously. Then ask yourself what has changed about Windows and MacOS in the last ten years.


As of this very moment, MacOS X 10.6 and Windows 7. Neither of them ship with a video editor of any kind out of the box. That’s right. Of the three operating systems, Ubuntu is the only one that ships with any video editor at all.

Huh? My iMac shipped with iMovie, and Windows ships with Windows Movie Maker.

update: whaddyaknow, windows 7 doesn't actually ship with the movie software, you have to download it (free) from http://download.live.com/moviemaker. Still.


Technically your iMac came with that iLife software preloaded, it didn't come with the OS. If you had an older iMac and bought an upgrade for the OS then you'd have to buy the upgrades for iLife separately. (You almost always got a game too, again that wouldn't be there if you bought the OS itself).


What you say is true, but it's splitting hairs really. The fact is that unless actively deleted, every mac has video editing software installed from the day it was delivered. Still, I have to concede that although it is present, it was not actually shipped with the OS.

It's a pretty lame boast that has to be laden with so many caveats, though.




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