Ubuntu 24.04 Arrives on Mars – the Milk-V Mars (RISC-V Computer)
Ubuntu 24.04 is now available for the Milk-V Mars RISC-V single board computer (SBC). RISC-V is an open-source processor spec. Anyone can access its design to create their own chips freely, without having to pay licensing fees or royalties. Much like a Linux distro, people are able to collaborate, contribute, and build on RISC-V in effort to improve it. And while ARM (which I’m sure you’ve heard of) and RISC-V fall under the RISC (Reduced Instruction Set Computer) umbrella, RISC-V touts a unique, modular architecture. Its base instruction set can be extended, tailored, or moulded to suit specific needs. Given the
#Hardware #News #Risc-V #Ubuntu24_04
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/ubuntu-24-04-risc-v-computer-milkv
Day Progress GNOME Shell Extension
Day Progress is a new GNOME Shell extension that does something really simple (perhaps too simple to appeal to a mass audience): it shows a progress bar in the panel to relay how much of the day has elapsed. A visual cue to stay motivated —deflated in my case: I realise how much time I waste browsing for ‘schweet gharms’ (as the yoof say) on Vinted— and a way to gain a more abstract perspective on time tracking than that offered by a traditional clock. This extension is directly inspired by a macOS app of the same name created by
#News #GnomeExtensions
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/day-progress-time-tracking-gnome-extension
Microsoft Gives Its Open-Source Developer Font Major Update
Cascadia Code is an open-source monospaced font made by Microsoft first released in 2020 and serves as the default typeface for the official Windows Terminal app. Similar to Intel’s One Mono, JetBrains’ Mono and IBM’s Plex, Cascadia Code is an clear, legible, modern monospaced font tailored for terminal and code editing and offering a wide range of programming ligatures. Earlier this mont the font received its first update in nearly 3 years and, as per release announcement, it’s a huge one. If you’re a fan of this font and have an older version installed, or you’re just a creative into
#News #Fonts #Microsoft
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/cascadia-code-font-update-large-type-pieces
Rufus Update Can Create Persistent Ubuntu 24.04 USBs
Rufus, a popular open-source tool for making bootable USB drives on Windows, just released an update that includes a ‘fix’ for working with Ubuntu 24.04 LTS ISOs. A truly versatile tool, Rufus is able to create bootable Windows installers from ISO files and disk images as well as Linux installers and, more pertinent to this news, persistent Ubuntu, Linux Mint, and Debian USB installers. Rufus 4.5, released this week, includes a fix to support persistence in Ubuntu 24.04 LTS. Support for persistent USBs of Ubuntu isn’t new (debuted in 2019) but Rufus devs often have to play catch when distros
#News
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/rufus-usb-ubuntu-24-04-persistence
Snap Store Website Has Been Redesigned
Stop by the Snap Store website today you’ll see it’s undergone a revamp, and the second design rejig to the online storefront in the past 12 months is more substantive than the first. The search bar is now shorter and incorporated into the header section (which also drops the “Search thousands of snaps used by millions of people across 41 Linux distributions” strap line its shown since 2019). The “Featured snaps” section remains at the top of the content area but is no longer topped by a featured banner graphic. Icon, title, uploader, and description for each of featured snap
#News #Canonical #SnapStore
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/snap-store-website-new-look
Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Upgrades Officially Open
It’s now possible to upgrade to Ubuntu 24.04 LTS from earlier versions officially, using the standard GUI mechanisms — no command-line flags required. Ubuntu 24.04 LTS was released on April 25 but the ability to upgrade to it delayed while bugs, one quite serious, were tackles. Though the effects of those issues weren’t universal (lots of folks upgraded manually via the command-line without issue) the risk was there. But with the necessary bugs squashed the upgrade channel has opened. Canonical has now added Ubuntu 24.04 LTS to the meta-releases file which older versions of the distro probe to see if
#News #Ubuntu24_04Lts
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/ubuntu-24-04-upgrades-officially-open
Mozilla Shares Updated Roadmap for Firefox – Vertical Tabs, AI + More
Wondering what sort of features Mozilla is prioritising for inclusion in future versions of the Firefox web browser? You needn’t wonder too hard as Mozilla has shared a short-term roadmap on its ideas platform outlining a number of things its engineers are already or will soon begin working on over the coming months. And be excited, be-be excited as a few tentpole new features are mentioned, including vertical tabs, container options in the tab bar, greater personalisation options, and forewarning on a glut of impending AI features — “yay”. What’s neat is that the roadmap mentions how we can test
#News #Ai/Ml #Firefox #Mozilla
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/mozilla-shares-firefox-roadmap
Slack Linux App Fixes Screen Sharing Under Wayland
If you use Slack on Ubuntu but are frustrated that screen sharing under Wayland (the default session for most) only show a black screen or causes the entire app to crash you may be interested to know it’s fixed. I’m not a Slack user —who’d I talk to, myself?! ahem— and while I hear this popular chat platform works best in a Chromium-based web browser (some features aren’t supported in Mozilla Firefox) the native desktop Linux app has its conveniences. In the past 12 months or so I’ve seen a fair few folks who rely on Slack (for it is
#News #Slack #Wayland
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/slack-linux-app-fixes-screen-sharing-under-wayland
Keep Losing OneDrive File Access in Ubuntu 24.04? Here’s a Fix
Of the (many) handy new features in Ubuntu 24.04 LTS is the ability to access OneDrive files through the Nautilus file manager as a remote mount. This is made possible by the msgraph package, a new gvfs backend that Nautilus can use, account integration through GNOME Online Accounts (GOA), and Microsoft giving GNOME the relevant permission and approvals. And while the file-access feature isn’t obvious to set up, it’s easy once you know how. It works with both regular Microsoft OneDrive accounts and OneDrive accounts provided for and/or managed by an organisation such as your work. As a ‘turn key’
#HowTo #News #Gnome46 #Onedrive #Ubuntu24_04Lts
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/fix-ubuntu-onedrive-account-error
Ubuntu 24.04 Comes to the Nintendo Switch (Unofficially, Obvs)
There are plenty of fun things you can do on a Nintendo Switch: you can throw your hat at sentient creatures in Super Mario Odyssey; plaster people in colourful ink in Splatoon 2; and lose all grip on reality thanks to an ill-timed blue shell in Mario Kart 8 Deluxe. Oh, and you can also run Ubuntu. Switchroot is an open-source project that allows Android and Linux-based distros like Ubuntu to run on the Nintendo Switch —absolutely not something Nintendo approves of let alone supports, endorses, or encourages. I covered the loophole that permitted this back in 2018. Back then
#News #Nintendo #Ubuntu24_04Lts
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/ubuntu-24-04-nintendo-switch
Ubuntu 24.10 Plans to Enable Wayland for NVIDIA Users
Ubuntu first switched to using Wayland as its default display server in 2017 before reverting the following year. It tried again in 2021 and has stuck with it since. But while Wayland is what most of login to after installing Ubuntu anyone doing so on a PC or laptop with a NVIDIA graphics card present are instead logged in to an Xorg/X11 session. This is because the NVIDIA’s proprietary graphics drivers (which provide the best performance, access to all hardware capabilities, etc) haven’t supported Wayland as well as they could’ve. Thankfully, things have changed. NVIDIA is now warming to Wayland
#News #Nvidia #Ubuntu24_10 #Wayland
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/ubuntu-24-10-wayland-nvidia
VMware Workstation Pro Now Free to Use on Linux & Windows
VMware has made its professional virtualisation software free to use on Windows, macOS, and Linux — for personal use only, though. For Windows and Linux users that means VMware Workstation Pro 17 is now readily available without cost, while macOS users get VMware Fusion Pro 13. Broadcom, who bought VMware in 2023, say in a blog post that it’s making these previously pricey tools free for personal use in an effort “to provide ongoing, lasting value to our customers and to the VMware community at large”. Everyday users who want a virtual lab on their Mac, Windows or Linux computer can
#News #Broadcom #Virtualmachines #Vmware
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/vmware-workstation-pro-is-now-free-to-use
Mozilla Firefox 126 is Now Available to Download
Mozilla Firefox 126 is now available download, and in-app updates beginning to roll out to existing users on Windows, macOS, Linux, and Android. As Firefox updates go the 126 release is rather light on user-facing goodies, especially versus last month’s release which intro’d clipboard paste suggestions in the address bar, colourful highlighting tools to the PDF editor, and activity indicators in Firefox View. The only real user-facing change in Firefox 126 is a toggle to turn-off the vertical split pane feature in the the web inspector. While a tap of the esc key can show/hide split-pane at will some folks
#News #AppUpdates #Firefox
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/mozilla-firefox-126-is-now-available-to-download
Linux Kernel 6.9 Released, This is What’s New
Linux kernel 6.9 has been released after several months of development. Linux founder Linus Torvalds says that while kernel contributors report “a few regression fixes that haven’t made it to me yet none of them look big or worrisome enough to delay the release for another week. We’ll have to backport them when they get resolved and hit upstream.” “So 6.9 is now out.” Nice, but what’s new? Linux 6.9: New Features Linux kernel 6.9 includes the usual glut of enablement work for upcoming hardware and hardware-related features that most of us aren’t currently able to take advantage of.
#News #LinuxKernel
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/linux-kernel-6-9-features
Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Runs Brilliantly on the Raspberry Pi 5
The recent Ubuntu 24.04 LTS release has garnered plenty of praise for its great performance on Intel/AMD hardware, both does the latest version runs as well on the ARM-based Raspberry Pi? I’m pleased to say it does. Ubuntu 24.04 LTS for Raspberry Pi is available in both server and desktop builds. Both offer the majority of what’s found in the equivalent 64-bit Intel/AMD version. For desktop users that means GNOME 46, the latest Linux kernel 6.8, and Mesa 24.0.5 graphics. But because Ubuntu’s Raspberry Pi builds are ‘preinstalled images’ they don’t include the Flutter-based installer. Instead, user account set-up and configuration
#News
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/ubuntu-24-04-raspberry-pi-5
First Ubuntu 24.10 Daily Build Available to Download
Let’s go, folks — Ubuntu 24.10 daily builds are available for download. Ubuntu 24.10 ‘Oracular Oriole’ officially opened for development earlier this week following the announcement of the release codename (more than window dressing; it’s a critical part in infrastructure setup) and a draft release schedule. As development has only just started there’s no need to download an Ubuntu 24.10 daily build just yet. The beginning of each Ubuntu development cycle is primarily package churn, thus there’s little “new” to see or use. While there’s sure to be plenty of new Ubuntu 24.10 features to enjoy they’ll only start to
#News #Ubuntu24_10
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/ubuntu-24-10-daily-build-downloads-live
Disqus Comments Not Loading? It’s Not Me Bro, It’s Firefox
Over the last 12 months I’ve received a trickle of messages from readers (through the tip form) asking why the Disqus comments section doesn’t load, or comes and goes. Comments are auto-enabled all articles I publish. And if comments are intentionally disabled for an article (which does happen, albeit rarely) you won’t see a comment count (functions as an anchor link to the comments section) in the ‘meta’ area beneath the headline on the article page. So what’s the cause of comments not loading? Mozilla Firefox with Enhanced Tracking Protection (ETP) mode set to ‘Strict’. The feature —I won’t be
#News #Disqus #SiteStuff
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/disqus-comments-not-loading-its-not-me-bro-its-firefox
Gemini AI GNOME Shell Extension
If you use Ubuntu 22.04 LTS or later and want to access the Google Gemini AI chatbot straight from your desktop outside of a web browser, you’re in luck! The Gemini AI ChatBot GNOME Shell extension (unaffiliated with Google; it’s not an official thing) gives you immediate access to Gemini at any time from the applet it adds to the top panel — no need to open a web browser tab or fire up a standalone app. Gemini, formerly known as Bard, is an AI language model developed by Google. Like ChatGPT, CoPilot et al it will generate human-like replies
#News #Ai/Ml #Gemini #GnomeExtensions #Google
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/gemini-ai-gnome-shell-extension
Google’s Flutter Team Layoffs Leave Ubuntu Devs in a Flap
Google’s recent ‘structural simplification’ led to 200 people across many of its core development teams, including Python, Dart, and Flutter, losing their roles. With Canonical committed to using Flutter for its own desktop apps that news has left some in the Ubuntu community worried. The new Ubuntu Installer, Firmware Updater, App Center, and the (currently MIA) Desktop Security Center are all built in Flutter, which is Google’s cross-platform Web-based UI framework underpinned by the Dart programming language. And within the wider Ubuntu Flutter community a handful of devs are creating third-party apps using it, with music/radio/podcast/video player MusicPod the best
#News #Flutter #Google
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/googles-flutter-team-layoffs-leave-ubuntu-devs-in-a-flap
Ubuntu 24.10 Release Date Set for October 10
Canonical has published a draft release schedule for Ubuntu 24.10 ‘Oracular Oriole’. According to the timetable we should expect the final stable release of Ubuntu 24.10 to arrive on Thursday October 10, 2024. Six months of development lay ahead, with a beta release of the ‘Oracular Oriole’ set to take flight on September 19, and a release candidate on October 3. As a short-term ‘interim’ release Ubuntu 24.10 is supported for just 9 months from release, dovetailing into the release of Ubuntu 25.04 in April of next year. Key milestones in the Ubuntu 24.10 release schedule (subject to change): With :sys_more_orange:
#News #Ubuntu24_10
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/ubuntu-24-10-release-date