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First Look at Ubuntu’s New ‘Desktop Security Center’

Ubuntu is working on a new Desktop Security Center tool that will make it easier for users to access many of the distro’s underlying security features. An early version of the Flutter-based app was made available to install from the Canonical Snap Store this week — but before anyone gets too excited I must stress it’s very much a WIP! Read on for a bit more detail on what this app is, the features Canonical plans to add, and how to install a preview version to try it out for yourself. Ubuntu Desktop Security Center Ubuntu offers a variety of :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/first-

Collector is like a Linux Version of DropOver

If you’re looking for a way to more efficiently copy files on Linux, check out Collector. Collector gives you a temporary holding space on which you can drag and drop multiple files, paste clipboard content, and drop web links to images (e.g., Google Images). You can take your time gathering content, and preview and edit your ‘stash’ as you go. When ready you can drag all items out with a single click and drop them elsewhere. You could drop them to a folder on your file system, on to an app (if it supports opening them), or on to a :sys_more_orange:
&ProductivityApps

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/collec

Firefox Devs Working on Tab Hover Previews

Tab previews are in the works for Mozilla Firefox. In current versions of the browser, hovering your mouse over a non-focused browser tab shows a small tooltip that displays the web page title — and that’s it. While this is handy, especially if you have a ton of open tabs (including many from the same site) and are able to read enough of the tab title to distinguish which tab is for which page, you may be more visually-orientated. Enter tab previews. In the latest Firefox 123 beta builds Mozilla devs have added a new flag. When this is enabled :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/firefo

PeaZip 9.7 Archive Tool Now Supports ARM64 Linux

A new version of PeaZip, a popular free, open-source archive manager for Windows, macOS, and Linux, is available to download. PeaZip 9.7 is the first release to offer a native build for AArch64/ARM64 Linux systems, allowing anyone to use PeaZip on the Raspberry Pi 4 & 5, the PineBook Pro, Lenovo X13s Gen 1, and other 64-bit ARM devices. Although an experimental test build and community-based ports of PeaZip for ARM have been around for a while this is the first formal, native, official, etc build — though it’s only provided as a portable build (i.e. not a DEB or :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/peazip

Ubuntu Core Desktop Delayed, Won’t Be Released in April

Ubuntu Core Desktop will not be released alongside Ubuntu 24.04 LTS in April, as originally hoped. For those thinking “wait, what?!” — last year Canonical announced it was building an all-snap, immutable version of Ubuntu for home users called Ubuntu Core Desktop. Further, it was aiming to make the first version available to download in April of this year, alongside the regular Ubuntu 24.04 LTS release. It wasn’t going to be default, more of a formal, public preview release. But those plans have changed: [Ubuntu Core Desktop] won’t be released by 24.04, and unfortunately, I can’t provide a date until :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/ubuntu

Desktop YouTube Music App ‘Musictube’ Gets ‘Major Overhaul’

A new version of Musictube, a Qt-based desktop app that lets you stream music from YouTube, is available for download for Windows, macOS and Linux. Musictube 2 is described as a “major overhaul” offering an improved search algorithm that now supports genres in addition to artists, albums and song titles. The user interface has been refreshed, sporting a “more modern, flatter and generally cleaner” look — a look matching the revamped UI Flavio’s local music player app Minitunes received a few months back. Other changes in Musictube 2 include lighter resource usage by only streaming audio when videos are hidden; :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/musict

Thunderbird Snap Planned for Ubuntu 24.04 LTS

If you’re an Ubuntu user who uses the Thunderbird e-mail client there are a couple of interesting changes on the way you may wish to know about. Canonical’s Thunderbird snap is now built using upstream source code rather than repacking upstream binaries. A subtle-sounding difference that delivers decent-sounding opportunities. For one, the change should allow the Thunderbird snap to be built for architectures other than AMD64, thereby enabling the Thunderbird snap to (theoretically; it’s not currently) be installed in Ubuntu running on, say, the Raspberry Pi — which is neat. Secondly, by building the Thunderbird snap from source code Canonical :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/thunde

GNOME 46 Plans OneDrive File Access in Nautilus

Support for accessing Microsoft OneDrive files through Nautilus is planned for GNOME 46, which is due for release next month. GVfs (GNOME virtual filesystem) provides a number of backends that allow SFTP, SMB, HTTP, MTP, WebDAV and other mounts/shares to be accessed through the Nautilus file manager (i.e. as folders and files you can open, move, edit, etc). That tech already offers a Google Drive backend (which is setup via the Settings > Online Accounts panel). On the way is OneDrive support, thanks to a revived effort utilising the MS Graph API library (and a related task to add the :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/onedri

Bluesky is now open to all, invite codes no longer required

Bluesky, the much-hyped open-source alternative to X/Twitter, is now open for all — invites code no longer needed! Launched in the spring of last year, Bluesky is a decentralised social network modelled after early Twitter. You sign up, post, follow people, repost, and generally enjoy seeing content from people you choose in a reverse-chronological feed. And for fans of algorithms, Bluesky has an open marketplace where developers can share custom feeds that users can add, access, and even make their default experience. This focus on giving users choice will, Bluesky CEO Jay Graber says, shortly extend to moderation. Despite being :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/bluesk

Kubuntu 24.04 LTS Won’t Include KDE Plasma 6.0

Kubuntu 24.04 LTS will not use KDE Plasma 6.0 by default. Kubuntu Council member Rick Timmis has shared an overview of a recent meeting at which it was “unanimously agreed” to, among other things, prepare an alpha of KDE Plasma 6 targeting the Kubuntu 24.10 release. Ubuntu Studio lead Erich Eickmeyer refers to the agreement on Discourse, confirming: “The Kubuntu Council voted unanimously to stay on Plasma 5 for the time being.” Noting: “I’m the leader of Ubuntu Studio, which also uses Plasma, and would’ve had something to say about any last-minute (at this point) transitions with a lot of :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/kubunt

Microsoft’s VS Code Drama Gets a (Temporary) Happy Ending

Microsoft has announced a temporary reprieve for developers using VS Code to connect to servers, clouds, container, and other devices running Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. As I covered last week, Microsoft pushed out an update to VS Code that bumps its glibc requirement, dropping support for Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (which uses an older version of glibc) in the process. Innocuous though it sounds, that move had a major impact, leaving thousands of developers who use VS Code unable to connect to/work with devices running Ubuntu 18.04 LTS and other Linux distros equipped with glibc 2.27 or lower, including RHEL 7, CentOS :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/vscode

Ubuntu 24.04 Will Use Linux 6.8 Kernel (If All Goes to Plan)

Ubuntu developers recently shared word on the Linux kernel version Ubuntu 24.04 LTS will use — and I’ll admit: it’s not the one I guessed! Ubuntu 24.04 is a long-term support release (LTS) and last year’s Linux kernel 6.6 is also a LTS release — ergo, there’s a clear synergy there that should mean the latter ships in the former. But Ubuntu developers are feeling much bolder! Their plan is to ship the Linux 6.8 kernel in Ubuntu 24.04. Now, Linux 6.8 is in active development right now (February 4) but it should see a stable release in March, giving :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/ubuntu

Papirus Icon Pack Update Adds 50+ New Icons

If you use the Papirus icon theme in Ubuntu you’ll be pleased to hear a new version is available to download. Papirus’s first update in 2024 adds more than 50 new and updated apps icons, and makes a handful of other changes to existing icons, including updating icon names and symlinks. This updates removing a handful of couple of icons for apps no longer widely used/EOL. Among new apps to gain coverage in Papirus is multi-protocol backup tool Celeste, nifty Logitech wireless utility Solaar, stat-packed system monitor app Mission Center, and Thunderbird beta builds. Icons for Iotas, Halftone, Upscayl, and :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/papiru

How to Enable Bluez Experimental Features in Ubuntu

Bugged by a Bluetooth device not showing its battery level in Ubuntu? There is a something you can try that may get it to appear. Ubuntu, like most desktop Linux distributions Ubuntu, use Bluez as its Bluetooth stack. This powerful, open-source tech works with a wide range of bluetooth devices including mice, keyboards, gamepads, bluetooth headphones, sound bars, speakers, and so on. In most cases, Bluetooth devices “just work” in Ubuntu once you’ve paired them. For Bluetooth devices with a battery (like wireless mice, keyboards, and headphones) you can usually check battery level in Settings > Power panel (if the :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/how-to

VSCode Drops Ubuntu 18.04 Support, Leaves Devs “Screwed”

Microsoft Visual Studio Code (VS Code) has dropped support for Ubuntu 18.04 LTS — a decision causing issues for scores of developers. VS Code 1.86 (‘January 2024’ update) sees Microsoft bump the minimum build requirements for the text editor’s popular remote dev tools to ≥glibc 2.28 — but Ubuntu 18.04 LTS uses glibc 2.27, meaning they flat out refuse to work Although Ubuntu 18.04 is supported by Canonical until 2028 via ESM a major glibc upgrade is highly unlikely to happen. Thus, this “breaking change” is impacting workflows: “Yeah this has completely screwed me. I have a number of older :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/02/vscode

Linux Mint 22 Reveals Codename, New Cinnamon Feature

Linux Mint has shared a few tidbits about its next major version, expected in the summer. First up, codename: Linux Mint 22 will be called “Wilma”. All of the Linux Mint 21.x series releases used codenames starting with the letter ‘V’ so a progression to ‘W’ was expected. There are lots of female names beginning with W for Mint to use in point releases, including Wendy, Winona, Wanda, Winnie, and Winifred. Secondly, Linux Mint 22 will be based on Ubuntu 24.04 (expected). Although that foundation is inn’t dialled in (not due for release until April) Mint will inherit, leverage, and :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/01/linux-

LibreOffice 24.2 Released, This is What’s New

A brand new version of free, open-source office suite LibreOffice is ready to download. LibreOffice 24.2 is the follow up to last year’s LibreOffice 7.6 release. A leap because the latest edition is the first to use a calendar-based version number (like Ubuntu’s own): 24 denotes 2024, and 2 denotes the month, February. Switching to a date-based version number will allow LibreOffice users to know how up-to-date their version is. After all, LibreOffice 7.6 tells you nothing about when it was released, really. LibreOffice 24.2 ships with 6 months worth of developments from 5098 commits, spanning the full breadth, from :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/01/libreo

Linux Mint 21.3 Edge ISO Offers Newer Hardware Support

Linux Mint developers have announced the release of the Linux Mint 21.3 Edge ISO, which is powered by Linux kernel 6.5. The standard Linux Mint 21.3 release that arrived a few weeks back uses the Linux 5.15 LTS kernel by default. That kernel version is solid, stable, and actively supported. But it might not boot on newer hardware (i.e. released after November 2021, when Linux 5.15 was released). While the Linux 5.15 LTS kernel is still actively supported with critical bug fixes and security patches new hardware support is not back-ported to it. For such situations, the Linux Mint Edge ISO is :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/01/linux-

Firefox 122 Released with Official Deb for Ubuntu, Linux Mint, etc

Mozilla Firefox 122 has been officially released, with an official Deb package debuting alongside it. Yes: there’s now an official Firefox Deb package for Debian-based distros, including Ubuntu. This gives users a safe, reliable way to get the latest version of their browser should they (for whatever reason) not want to use a repo build, Snap, Flatpak, PPA, etc. Last year Mozilla launched their own dedicated apt repo to make it easier for Debian, Ubuntu, Linux Mint, etc users to install Firefox Developer Edition, Nightly, and, most recently. Beta builds. Adding a stable build was the logical end point. Mozilla :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/01/firefo

Ubuntu Pro Packages in ‘Software Updater’ — Annoying, or Necessary?

It seems some users aren’t happy that there’s (currently) no way to disable Ubuntu Pro package updates from showing in the Software Updater tool in Ubuntu LTS releases. Last year, Canonical updated update-manager (aka Software Updater) to show a list of Ubuntu Pro package updates available for user systems regardless of whether Ubuntu Pro is enabled or not. Prior, only users who explicitly opted-in to Ubuntu Pro would see corresponding package updates available for their systems. Now, everyone sees them. And the inability to opt-out of being asked to opt-in is providing an irritant… Ubuntu Pro Branded ‘Misguided Marketing Trick’ :sys_more_orange:

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/01/ubuntu

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小森林

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