Ubuntu Ibex 8.10 Beta - updated

Posted by John
on Sunday, 12 October 2008

Ubuntu Ibex 8.10

Last night I upgraded my laptop's o/s to the new Ibex 8.10 release, not yet official still in beta but so far very stable.

This can be done via,

sudo update-manager -d

...then choosing the new distribution 8.10 from the top of the update manager dialog, you'll need about 1 hour for it to download & install. Be around for some of the dialogs; one of which will ask you if you want to merge or replace your network script (i clicked merge) after which you should be ok.

It comes with a lot of new updates and a major interface overhaul.

There's now a fallback linux kernel if the main one should fail (like ArchLinux), more windows-like logout panel, better hibernation and a new theme called NewHuman (see screenshot above).

Along with this there's available from the repository,

  • VLC 0.94 (with a more graphical control panel)
  • GIMP 2.6 (much more professional)
  • Gnome 2.24 (with tabbed browsing)
  • GEdit 2.24

...and a ton of other newer packages, Mercurial is also updated along with the Kernel so any new hardware should be properly recognised.

After the install I had to reboot obviously, on rebooting my wifi no longer worked, so after another reboot that came back. Did an update & upgrade for any newer packages and so far other than the battery indicator applet crashing a couple of times nothing majorly serious.

Eclipse is still at 3.2 in the repository, along with NetBeans at 6.1 so that's a little bit of a bummer. However NetBeans does come with an easier installer so just grab the latest nightly build for that, Eclipse Ganymede and 3.2 are proving a little flakey at the moment.

Interface-wise it is a heck of a lot better than the previous release and although unofficially available I would recommend grabbing a copy, definitely worth the effort.

Update

Just done an update,

  • In the repositories is Flash Player 10.
  • On bootup instead of saying 'kernel alive.. etc..', they've replaced it with 'Starting up...'; nice.
  • The Installer is now graphical with a very osx partition manager and new logout screens and graphics.
  • On that end when you login the screen doesn't go blank then show the desktop but stay Ubuntu Brown then show the desktop.
  • Stick a dvd in first-time and like Windows it'll ask you what you want to open it with, vlc, totem, etc.
  • Plus you've got some nice new default wallpapers available.

Did have a problem with the NewHuman theme, after doing a safe-upgrade I lost the theme, although I did find a replacement;

Dust

..you need to download the Murrine debian package for the distro you're using, install it, then download + install the Dust Theme.

Other than that this release is shaping up pretty nicely!

OpenOffice 3

Found this good guide to replacing OpenOffice 2.4.1 with the latest 3.0 release, pretty simple.

Basically add this to your repository then update and upgrade & you should have the new build.

deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/openoffice-pkgs/ubuntu intrepid main
Firefox 3.1 alpha

Add this to your repository to grab Firefox 3.1

deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/fta/ubuntu intrepid main

Reuters Insight

Posted by John
on Tuesday, 20 November 2007

Reuters Insight

Not too long ago back in '99 I did some work for this amazing company; based in their London Docklands office building up their tech-team.

Today a friend dropped me a line about a new service Reuters is offering which looks pretty nice.

It's based around something like SharePoint providing a portal for all your business news, reports, post questions, blogs, etc. within the news network.

I'm saying Sharepoint, but now looking into the source I have to say I'm quite surprised!

The actual system is powered by Prototype with the FCKEditor providing textual input into the the system. Prototype obviously provides the AJAX functionality as (like mootools) it's one of the major JavaScript-AJAX libraries around, (and being plugged into Rails from the start is just a bit popular).

Will wait and see how it goes, but so far the service is pretty promising.

Take a look for yourself...