Re: Screen dims during a video playback

2013-10-22 Thread Joseph Godino
On Tue, 2013-10-22 at 09:25 +0200, Romuald TISSERAND wrote:
 That's the kind of bug you think it cannot re-appear, but yes, it
 can !
 
 
 So with UG 13.10 + Gnome3 Next + Gnome3 Staging : when I play a video,
 the screen dims after a while.
What happens when you change the defaults for your screen saver? If you
are not interacting with the computer via the keyboard or mouse the
screen will co dark. I'm not an expert but I hope this helps.
 
 
 Anyone to confirm?
 
 
 Thanks.
 
 romu
 



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Re: Time for LTS (was: Re: [Discussion/Opinion] Ubuntu 14.04 LTS To Stay On GTK/GNOME 3.8?)

2013-10-03 Thread Joseph Godino
Hello,

I think that Ubuntu integrates GNOME into Unity. Over the summer I was
testing Ubuntu 13.04 with GNOME classic and I noticed some minor
differences between a pure GNOME and GNOME integrated with Unity. For
example, to close an application window in GNOME the x is on the right
side of the window. In GNOME integrated with Unity the x is on the left
side of the screen. There are other minor differenced too. Another thing
I noticed is that Ubuntu ships with Thunderbird instead of Evolution and
Thunderbird was integrated into the GNOME classic application bar. So
for complete GNOME experience use Ubuntu GNOME.

Cheers,

Joe


On Thu, 2013-10-03 at 02:10 -0500, Erick Brunzell wrote:
 On 10/02/2013 10:27 PM, Ali Linx (amjjawad) wrote:
 
  Hi,
  
  
  
  On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 8:51 PM, Ali Linx (amjjawad)
  amjja...@gmail.com wrote:
  Hi,
  
  
  Whether this is a shocking news or not, I guess I have to
  share it here and read your opinion about this :)
  
  
  http://www.webupd8.org/2013/10/ubuntu-1404-lts-to-stay-on-gtkgnome-38.html
  
  
  Read the link carefully before replying :)
  
  Thanks!
  
  -- 
  Remember: All of us are smarter than any one of us.
  Best Regards,
  
  amjjawad
  
  Areas of Involvement
  
  My Projects
  
  
  
  If this decision is true and they will go for it, then I see NO
  valid reason why not have Ubuntu GNOME 14.04 as an LTS release?!
  
  
  I am NOT a developer but the packages that we will maintain
  shouldn't be much. That could be the bright/good side of Canonical
  Plan/Thought.
  
  Now, the downside of it:
  
  A side of the name, what is the differences between Ubuntu 14.04 and
  Ubuntu GNOME 14.04 in this case? do we have to release 14.04 if
  Ubuntu 14.04 will use GNOME 3.8 which is the same what will be
  shipped with Ubuntu GNOME 13.10?
  
  
  What do you think?
  
  
  
  Remember: All of us are smarter than any one of us.
  Best Regards,
  
  amjjawad
  
  Areas of Involvement
  
  My Projects
  
  
  
 
 We'd need to release a 14.04 regardless because 13.10 is only
 supported for 9 months, so we'd have a three month gap with no
 security updates if we were to skip 14.04.
 
 Lance



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Re: [Discussion/Opinion] Ubuntu 14.04 LTS To Stay On GTK/GNOME 3.8?

2013-10-02 Thread Joseph Godino
Hello All,

In terms of a LTS release it would make sense to stick with GNOME 3.8. I
have been running Ubuntu GNOME 13.10 for about a week on my main
computer and I feel that this release has all the stability requirements
to be considered LTS. As for GNOME 3.10 couldn't it be backported to a
ppa so the adventurous could give it a try.

Cheers,

Joe

On Wed, 2013-10-02 at 12:32 -0500, Erick Brunzell wrote:
 On 10/02/2013 11:51 AM, Ali Linx (amjjawad) wrote:
  Hi,
 
  Whether this is a shocking news or not, I guess I have to share it
  here and read your opinion about this :)
 
  http://www.webupd8.org/2013/10/ubuntu-1404-lts-to-stay-on-gtkgnome-38.html
 
  Read the link carefully before replying :)
 
  Thanks!
 
 
 As an official flavor of Ubuntu I'm not sure our opinion matters much,
 but Ubuntu 14.04 will be an LTS (probably with 5 years of support like
 12.04) so stability is a key aspect.
 
 This might be a good time for our devs to start thinking about whether
 Ubuntu GNOME 14.04 will be an LTS or not.
 
 Lance
 



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Re: [Discussion/Opinion] Ubuntu 14.04 LTS To Stay On GTK/GNOME 3.8?

2013-10-02 Thread Joseph Godino
On Wed, 2013-10-02 at 14:20 -0400, Manuel Cuadra wrote:
  In terms of a LTS release it would make sense to stick with GNOME 3.8. I
  have been running Ubuntu GNOME 13.10 for about a week on my main
  computer and I feel that this release has all the stability requirements
  to be considered LTS. As for GNOME 3.10 couldn't it be backported to a
  ppa so the adventurous could give it a try.
 
 
 I've been using Gnome 3.10 and it's not that much unstable, I can
 actually do my work with no problems, it's just the main programs that
 need some refinement.
 In the article, the main thing that worries them is that the latest
 GTK wants to get rid of the icons in menus and icons in buttons, so a
 lot of people report that as a bug and think that it's not a good
 change...
 
 I do think like @Joe that this could be a PPA to upgrade the version
 of Gnome but I think also that Gnome itself is changing anyways and
 people that wants to stick with it should be more focused on making it
 better, not trying to stop its growth by freezing the version, they
 should debate this things on the official gnome project if they want
 the icons back to the buttons and menus.

REASONS to consider a LTS release.

1. The kernel is frozen. Therefore kernel updates shouldn't break API's
which would lead to the stability of the proprietary drives provided by
the Ubuntu software center. In other words, a kernel update won't break
a system and render it unusable until a driver patch becomes available.
I believe this is what happened with the release of the 3.10 kernel.

2. Lagging development can catch up. For example, I would like to work
with CUDA applications. Unfortunately, this requires the Nvidia CUDA
tookkit. At the present time Nvidia only provides support for Ubuntu
12.04 and 12.10. One on the problems I ran into when trying to install
the CUDA toolkit on a newer version of linux was that the installer
complained about the version of the gcc compiler. It detected a new
version and aborted the installation. In as LTS release the compiler
version is frozen.

3. Software in the software center is frozen, enabling users to get a
system up and running that they can rely on without it becoming
unstable. I think this is a requirement for business and/or university
students who may be working on a research project that would last longer
than a six month development cycle.

REASONS why I chose Ubuntu and specifically Ubuntu GNOME.

1. A great collection of software both free and non-free.

2. Excellent fonts - especially useful when spending a long time with
the computer.

3. All my other proprietary software, for example, Maple, Mathematica
and CrashPlan, run flawlessly.

4. Easy installation of software not included in the distribution via
ppa, e.g Oracle Java, GNOME 3.10.

5. I prefer GNOME over Unity especially GNOME classic session. I don't
use the newer GNOME interface because I am mainly running a workstation
and/or desktop. The newer interface may be better for mobile devices.

CONCLUSION

In no way should a LTS release affect the continued development of
software. It is just a reference point in which to continue building
However, it provides users with a branch in which to run in a production
environment.




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Testing

2013-10-02 Thread Joseph Godino
Hello,

I just set up a machine so that I could continue testing the daily
builds of Ubuntu GNOME without disturbing my production machine which
is running Ubuntu GNOME 13.10. I only do upgrades to this machine
without doing fresh installs -that is what my test machine is for.

My experience with the test machine is as follows.

The computer has two hard disks which had nothing but free space before
installing 13.10. During the initial installation I installed 13.10
to /sda using lmv. Unfortunately, upon rebooting the machine 13.10 would
not load. I could not determine if this was a hardware or software
problem. 

Next I tried a dual boot with Windows. Again after installing 13.10 only
Windows would load - not at all what I wanted.

Finally I tried a dual boot with Fedora 19. I installed Fedora to /sda
using lvm and upon rebooting the machine I was able to get into the
GNOME desktop. After that I installed 13.10 to /sdb. Upon rebooting I
obtained a grub menu allowing me to choose which OS to boot. Final
result - I can boot into 13.10 and Fedora 19.

Cheers,

Joe 


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TESTING

2013-09-25 Thread Joseph Godino
Hello All,

I just installed the Sept 26 daily build of Ubuntu-GNOME. I found that
TexStudio crashes on startup. A bug report was submitted to Ubuntu.

Cheers,

Joe


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