Desktop

All you need to know about the fast, free, and user friendly
Ubuntu desktop operating system.


Will Cooke
23 February 2018

Ubuntu Desktop weekly update – February 23, 2018

News Desktop

GNOME We’ve been working on a GNOME Online Accounts plugin for Ubuntu One. This will allow you to manage your U1 credentials and share them with services which need them, for example Canonical LivePatch. A MR is being proposed upstream. A bug has been fixed which caused some high contrast icons to be missing in

Will Cooke
23 February 2018


Sarah Dickinson
16 February 2018

Snapcraft through the eyes of its biggest community contributor

Article Desktop

If you’ve spent any time in the Snapcraft forum, it’s quite likely you’ve come across Dani Llewellyn – a keen community advocate or self-proclaimed Snapcrafter. Dani has always had a passion for computing and is completely self-taught. Outside of the community, Dani is a freelance WordPress developer. After getting into...

Sarah Dickinson
16 February 2018


Sarah Dickinson
13 February 2018

Skype discuss easing Linux maintenance with snaps

Article Desktop

Skype is used by hundreds of millions of users globally to make free video and voice calls, send files, video and instant messages. It has been two years since Skype first launched to Linux users on the Electron framework. This brings us to the present day, where the team recently launched their first snap and

Sarah Dickinson
13 February 2018


Kyle Fazzari
11 February 2018

Your first robot: The controller [3/5]

Article Desktop

This is the third blog post in this series about creating your first robot with ROS and Ubuntu Core. In the previous post you were introduced to the Robot Operating System (ROS), and got your robot moving by ROSifying one of the CamJam worksheets. Today we’re going to move beyond the CamJam worksheets, and work

Kyle Fazzari
11 February 2018


Will Cooke
9 February 2018

Ubuntu Desktop weekly update – February 9, 2018

News Desktop

Here’s the round up from this week: GNOME The default session has now been switched back to use Xorg by default.  Wayland is still installed and can be selected from the login screen. GNOME 3.27 has entered Freeze in preparation for the 3.28 release scheduled for March. We’ve landed some changes to udisks2 and GNOME

Will Cooke
9 February 2018


Sarah Dickinson
6 February 2018

Building Slack for the Linux community and adopting snaps

Article Desktop

Used by millions around the world, Slack is an enterprise software platform that allows teams and businesses of all sizes to communicate effectively. Slack works seamlessly with other software tools within a single integrated environment, providing an accessible archive of an organisation’s communications, information...

Sarah Dickinson
6 February 2018


elopio
3 February 2018

Snapcraft Summit summary – day 5

Article Desktop

This Snapcraft Summit is coming to an end. We had five days full of hard and fun work, together with many friends from many other projects that are part of our ecosystem. It was amazing to see the kind of collaboration that snapcraft brings to the Linux world. The engineering, advocacy, desktop and design teams

elopio
3 February 2018


Will Cooke
2 February 2018

Ubuntu Desktop weekly update – February 2, 2018

News Desktop

GNOME As you might have already read, we’ve taken the decision to ship Xorg by default in Bionic 18.04 LTS. The Wayland session will still be available as an option at login. You can read more about that here. The Ubuntu Dock extension has been rebased on the latest upstream master and we’ve added some

Will Cooke
2 February 2018


Kyle Fazzari
2 February 2018

Snapcraft Summit summary – day 3

Article Desktop

The third day of the Snapcraft Summit here in Seattle saw all the developers reconvene and really get down to work, and ROSHub came by in the afternoon with their snap-powered robots! Strictly-confined snaps can only access specific areas on disk that are defined by the interfaces they utilize. This works well, but can...

Kyle Fazzari
2 February 2018


Canonical
1 February 2018

Skype now available as a snap for Linux users

News Canonical announcements

Skype snap widens availability in the Linux community with easy install and automatic updates London, UK – 1st February 2018 – Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, announces today that Skype is now available as a snap, the universal Linux app packaging format.  Available as of today, the release means that Skype can...

Canonical
1 February 2018


Kyle Fazzari
1 February 2018

Snapcraft Summit summary – day 2

Article Desktop

The second day of Snapcraft Summits tend to be particularly productive as all the participants get more familiar with each other, and this one is no exception. In addition to developers from CircleCI, Electron, Microsoft, Plex, and Slack, today saw the addition of our friends from ROSHub joining us to hack on their...

Kyle Fazzari
1 February 2018


Alan Pope
1 February 2018

Snapcraft Summit summary – day 1

Article Desktop

The first day of the Snapcraft Summit in Seattle kicked off with a simple round of introductions and each participant voicing their plans for the week. People from Microsoft, Skype, Slack, Electron and CircleCI joined the snap advocacy and Snapcraft teams to crank through their tasks. Snapcraft community superstar Dan...

Alan Pope
1 February 2018


Sarah Dickinson
31 January 2018

Plex joins Snapcraft Summit to advance snap learnings

Article Desktop

Plex is the leading streaming platform for personal media collections, also offering over-the-air Live TV and DVR capabilities, and curated news from over 200 global media partners. It’s the only solution that seamlessly combines your personal collection of TV shows, movies, music, photos, and videos alongside live and...

Sarah Dickinson
31 January 2018


David Callé
30 January 2018

Tutorial: Install Ubuntu on a Chromebook

Tutorials Desktop

Chromebooks have gained popularity as relatively inexpensive web-centric laptops. They give access to web-based and native applications through the Chrome store, but what if you want to do more with them? Installing Ubuntu on a Chromebook gives you more choice and lets you turn a web-centric machine into any other...

David Callé
30 January 2018