nsane.forums Posted October 25, 2010 Share Posted October 25, 2010 At the Ubuntu Developer Summit (UDS) today in Florida, Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth announced that the Unity shell will become Ubuntu's default user interface across both the desktop and netbook editions. Unity, which was introduced as the new netbook interface in the recent Ubuntu 10.10 release, will arrive on the desktop in Ubuntu 11.04 next year. Shuttleworth described desktop adoption of Unity as the "most significant change ever" for Ubuntu. He also acknowledged that it is a "risky step" and that much work remains to be done to prepare for the transition. The move reflects Ubuntu's growing divergence from the standard upstream GNOME configuration and effort to differentiate itself with a distinctive user experience. During the keynote, Shuttleworth emphasized that Ubuntu is still committed to GNOME despite the fact that it will ship with Unity instead of GNOME Shell. He contends that diversity and competition between different kinds of GNOME environments will encourage innovation and benefit the GNOME ecosystem. The decision to ship a custom interface in Ubuntu is going to be controversial. Critics in the upstream community are already expressing disappointment with what they view as a move to fork the desktop. It's worth noting, however, that Canonical isn't the first company to build a unique user experience for GNOME that deviates from the standard upstream user interface stack. Intel also similarly produced a custom shell with the Clutter that is used on the MeeGo platform. Canonical's deviations from the upstream configuration receive closer scrutiny because Ubuntu's popularity among Linux users makes the distribution a king-maker on the Linux desktop. Canonical's decision to ship Unity could deeply marginalize GNOME Shell. The diverging desktops could pose some challenges for GNOME application developers who will have to support two different sets of desktop integration features. I discussed that issue with Shuttleworth after the keynote to get his perspective. He pointed out that developers are already supporting Ubuntu's indicator system and other custom integration points without much difficulty. He is confident that fragmentation challenges for application developers can be avoided by working through FreeDesktop.org to ensure that desktop integration mechanisms are standardized and interoperable between environments. As an example, he highlighted the collaboration that occurred around the Media Player Remote Interfacing Specification, the protocol that Ubuntu uses to facilitate communication between music players and the desktop's new audio indicator menu in Ubuntu 10.10. I also asked Shuttleworth why Canonical is building its own shell rather than customizing the GNOME Shell. He says that Canonical made an effort to participate in the GNOME Shell design process and found that Ubuntu's vision for the future of desktop interfaces was fundamentally different from that of the upstream GNOME Shell developers. He says that GNOME's rejection of global menus, for example, is one of the key philosophical differences that would be difficult to reconcile. Canonical has accumulated a team of professional designers with considerable expertise over the past few years. They want to set their own direction and create a user experience that meets the needs of their audience. The other major Linux vendors, who are setting the direction of GNOME Shell's design, have different priorities and are arguably less focused than Ubuntu on serving basic desktop users. There are also technical issues that drove the decision. Ubuntu's developers are deeply dissatisfied with GNOME's new Mutter window manager, for example, and have decided to use Compiz instead in their Unity environment. Shuttleworth says that Mutter simply couldn't deliver acceptable performance. Shuttleworth also says that Zeitgeist will play an increasingly significant role in Ubuntu even though it is not going to be part of GNOME 3. Zeitgeist is a sophisticated framework that tracks and correlates relationships between the user's activities so that it can supply applications with contextually relevant information to present to users. Zeitgeist was once considered to be a key part of the roadmap for GNOME 3, but was rejected by the upstream community due to cultural differences in its development model. Shuttleworth says that GNOME would benefit from greater receptiveness to outside innovation and is disappointed that the Zeitgeist project isn't being embraced by the upstream community. Shuttleworth identified multitouch support as a very high priority for Unity. During his keynote, he expressed the belief that multitouch hardware will eventually become ubiquitous in portable computers. The earliest hardware-enablement aspects of Ubuntu's multitouch strategy have already landed in Ubuntu 10.10. Canonical aims to work with application, toolkit, and Xorg developers to bring richer touch interaction to the desktop. He also emphasized the importance of moving beyond the traditional approach to file management. He argued that the "files and folders way of thinking is completely broken" and should be displaced by a more search-centric model and Zeitgeist-enabled tools that rely on context. Despite his enthusiasm for driving innovation in file management, he acknowledged that the file interface in Unity is not sufficiently mature yet. In Ubuntu 11.04, GNOME's traditional Nautilus file manager will be made easily accessible through Unity. Unity will be at the heart of the ambitious Ubuntu 11.04 roadmap. Due to the enormous magnitude of the changes that it will bring to the Ubuntu desktop, it will likely be a major focus of discussion this week at the Ubuntu Developer Summit. As we concluded in our recent review of Unity, it has considerable potential but still needs a lot of work. During the next six months of Ubuntu development leading up to the 11.04 release, the Ubuntu team will endeavor to make Unity shine. View: Original Article Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrator DKT27 Posted October 25, 2010 Administrator Share Posted October 25, 2010 It'll be great in my view. I haven't used Ubuntu on netbook but I'm already hearing a few good things about it. It will help GNOME in the end for sure.After trying both Kubuntu and Ubuntu, I know why most prefer Ubuntu. Kubuntu may have Windows looks and customization. But Ubuntu beats it in most of the other cases. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrator DKT27 Posted October 26, 2010 Administrator Share Posted October 26, 2010 yeah this is great news i can put this program on my Playstation 3 :w00t:It's not a program. It's a linux distro (an linux OS) and the topic we are talking about is it's interface.I thought ability to install linux into PS3 was removed long time ago. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtmulc Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 yeah this is great news i can put this program on my Playstation 3 :w00t:It's not a program. It's a linux distro (an linux OS) and the topic we are talking about is it's interface.I thought ability to install linux into PS3 was removed long time ago.Only if you install the firmware updates Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sl@pSh0ck™ Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 This would be a great move on Ubuntu's part ... Unity UI just rock the linux community with it's introduction in Ubuntu 10.10 netbook edition ... this will give Ubuntu a character of it's own among the other linux distros Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Brrownie Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Here what I am going to do on my days off ( VBox with Ubuntu 10.10 )....;) Wish me luck... :fear: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrator DKT27 Posted October 26, 2010 Administrator Share Posted October 26, 2010 @nivrid05: Agreed. What it also does is to shut the mouth of some critics who are paid to spread false rumors about Linux is dying on desktops. Inspite of the linux usage being on rise.@Brrownie: All the best. But you wont need it. From a Ubuntu n00b to another. :D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
irefay Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 I would consider moving to linux but it seems like I would constaintly have to be tweeking windows software to make it run correctly. I know, I know - linux has many programs that work as replacements or I could use wine (to make a few more work correctly) But what about my specialty windows apps - ballistics programs, Noclone, ect? I wish they could sneak in some way to allow windows apps to run well out of the box without any extra work. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrator DKT27 Posted October 26, 2010 Administrator Share Posted October 26, 2010 I once heard Google developing or something a compatibility to run standard windows softwares on it's Chrome OS. So never know what happens in future. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wenwind Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Waiting for Ubuntu 11.04. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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