A quick look at Ubuntu Hardy Heron
,----[ Quote ]
| I installed Ubuntu Hardy Heron via Parallels today and I am once again amazed
| at how sophisticated Ubuntu has become in terms of usability and offering
| the "just works" Linux experience.
|
| There are many new features including some new interface customizations which
| allow you to customize your experience. The release seems more stable that
| Gutsy Gibbon but that could just be my hardware.
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http://www.cnet.com/8301-13846_1-9929213-62.html
Linux Distros Updated
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| Finally I switched to PCLinuxOS on the advice of one of my readers. This
| Mandriva based distro is slick, and promised ATI video support from the
| install. I’ve been using it ever since, and love it. I’ve since installed
| nearly every KDE option, and everything works well and the way I want it.
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http://www.byzantineroads.info/?p=144
Recent:
An Apple User Tries Ubuntu
,----[ Quote ]
| I sat down with a Toshiba laptop, a hot little box with 2GB of RAM, running
| Ubuntu, the Gutsy Gibbon release. I used the machine courtesy of Free Culture
| at Virginia Tech, which provided assistance as a clicked around.
|
| First off, immediately, before anything: the rotating desktop. Damn, that is
| totally cool. You click an icon in the screen’s lower right, and the desktop
| rotates to a fresh view. Remarkably, you can have up to 16 different
| desktops.
|
| It’s not just cool, it’s great for workflow. You can have files and documents
| open on one desktop – maybe you’ve got four browser windows open, researching
| something – and a single click takes you to a fresh desktop, with documents
| and apps open as you like.
|
| Ubuntu rotating cube
|
| The rotating desktop in mid-rotation
|
| I thought to myself: this could increase productivity so much. Even with my
| huge Apple monitor, I'm always needing to move things around when I’m deep in
| a project.
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http://itmanagement.earthweb.com/osrc/article.php/3742066
Related:
,----[ Quote ]
| Early this month, Mark Pilgrim made waves when he went shopping for a
| new Mac, but decided not to buy one, and, in When the bough breaks, wrote
| at length about switching to Ubuntu. I've been thinking about this a
| lot recently, and now John Gruber's written And Oranges, a fine excursus
| on Mark?s piece. I'm pondering the switch away myself, too, and maybe
| sharing my thoughts will be helpful. [Update: Lots of feedback on the
| state of the Ubuntu art.] [Update: More from Mark. I feel sick,
| physically nauseated, that Apple has hidden my email--the record of
| my life--away in a proprietary undocumented format. I've had this happen
| once before (the culprit was Eudora); fool me twice, shame on me. Hear
| a funny sound? That's a camel's back, breaking.]
|
| [...]
|
| Will I Switch? · Yes. For Mark?s reasons, and because I'm pretty darn
| sure that either Ubuntu or some other distro will eventually get the
| key things right.
|
| Alternatively, Apple could open-source a few of their apps so we could
| all fix the pain points, and they could start having an actual
| conversation with the world. Nothing less is acceptable.
|
| As John Gruber points out, neither Mark nor I are exactly typical.
| But you know what? I think that if the GNU/Linux/Solaris community
| can sustain its current level of energy and progress, and if Apple
| maintains its dysfunctional communications culture, there are going to
| be better choices just not for me, but for a lot of other people too.
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http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2006/06/15/Switch-From-Mac
|
|