On 30/06/12 12:29, john lewis wrote: > On Sat, 30 Jun 2012 11:37:06 +0100 > Alan Pope <alan.p...@canonical.com> wrote: > >> On 30/06/12 11:09, Leszek Kobiernicki 1 wrote: >>> On 10.04.x, you can access every single app cumulatively installed, >>> ever so easily >>> >> In 12.04 it's very search-oriented. Press the "Ubuntu button" then >> click the second lens along (Applications Lens) or just tap the >> "Windows (super) key" + A and then start typing what you're after. >> Way more efficient than squirrelling through menus IMO. >> You could try other derivatives like Linux Mint with Cinnamon or >> Mate, but I would question the sustainability of those desktops. >> >>> When you install KDE, LXDE, XFCE desktops, they take on a kind of >>> Unity cut-down format .. >>> >> I hear Debian is quite nice :) > Debian is more than Nice ;-) > > Install it and never have to re-install your OS again and (for now at > least and hopefully always) you can use Gnome Classic, chosen at login > > Wheezy has just been frozen but it will be a few months before it is > released as the next stable version. > > Install Debian Unstable instead if you need more recent packages than > are in current Debian Stable. > > It isn't all that problematic to use but does need regular doses of > "aptitude update, aptitude safe-upgrade" I do it daily. > Thanx John
If I can't warm to Unity, I might well hafta go Debian Is there a HOW TO for installing it on a Mac ? It was mighty fiddly getting Ubuntu to dual-boot with OS-X on the Mac Thanx again, Lesz -- " The power of this life, if men will open their hearts to it, will heal them, will create them anew, physically and spiritually. Here is the gospel of earth, ringing with hope, like May mornings with bird-song, fresh and healthy as fields of young grain. But those who would be healed must absorb it not only into their bodies in daily food and warmth but into their minds, because its spiritual power is more intense. It is not reasonable to suppose that an essence so divine and mysterious as life can be confined to material things; therefore, if our bodies need to be in touch with it so do our minds. The joy of a spring day revives a man's spirit, reacting healthily on the bone and the blood, just as the wholesome juices of plants cleanse the body, reacting on the mind. Let us join in the abundant sacrament--for our bodies the crushed gold of harvest and ripe vine-clusters, for our souls the purple fruit of evening with its innumerable seed of stars ". Vis Medicatrix Naturae, by Mary Webb, in Spring of Joy: Nature Essays, Constable, London, 1917 " -- Please post to: Hampshire@mailman.lug.org.uk Web Interface: https://mailman.lug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/hampshire LUG URL: http://www.hantslug.org.uk --------------------------------------------------------------