I have had good luck with Kdenlive for many years on several systems
(hardware wise) and a very long-lived rolling OS install.
On 5/10/2020 at 3:24 PM, "Erich Eickmeyer" wrote:Hi all,
So, first with the news: I'm done with the move and configuration of
the
seed to KDE Plasma. If there's
Try blocking all blockable ads first: you will save your sanity and your
bandwidth. If you still get a crash ads probably are not the culprit. If the
site then loads normally, that's another matter.
Online ads are infamous for issues including serving malware. Still, nothing
beyond the
That may be practical in the US and Europe, but far less practical for
say, an activist media maker in a Rio favela opposing Bolsonaro's
efforts to "cleanse" the city of the poor. S/he might be limited to
the hardware on hand, and an upgrade requirement will be translated
into a change distro or
That may be practical in the US and Europe, but far less practical for
say, an activist media maker in a Rio favela opposing Bolsonaro's
efforts to "cleanse" the city of the poor. S/he might be limited to
the hardware on hand, and an upgrade requirement will be translated
into a change distro or
It may take a while for New York City's used electronics to percolate
down to thefavelas in Rio or back streets in San Salvador, and longer
yet to rural Africaand other places will a smaller population of
migrants to the US who can sendstuff home.
As a practical matter this may mean using older
A worry in any distro including WINE in thr default install would be that the
distro would no longer be immune to Windows malware, at least not to those
varients that run in WINE. A single report of a user's audio files getting
encrypted with ransomware would be very bad for the whole distro.
A recent round of fixes for another Spectre varient that got backported into
linux 1.19 and reverted in 1.20, then revised, and finally a new version written
caused major CPU slowdowns but was not reported to balloon memory use.
The revised code fixed most of the performance issues by limiting the
All I've ever noticed is the issue with multiple filemanagers starting at once,
but
I've only ever extensively used one at a time (normally MATE) so might not spot
other issues
On 10/11/2018 at 12:31 AM, "Jonathan Aquilina" wrote:
>
>Hi,
>
>If the below is accurate what issues could be
The "main DE's" now are at least GNOME, Cinnamon, MATE,KDE, XFCE,and LXDE
and probably more.
On 10/10/2018 at 2:11 AM, "Jonathan Aquilina" wrote:
>
>Hi Len,
>
>Aren’t there just 3 Main DE’s. Correct me if I am wrong but aren’t
>you talking about corner cases here? Or are you also taking into
The external green drive issue is really a firmware bug, with that 4 second
spindown interval that gradually kills the drive unless it is run under very
limited circumstances. I would not support removing GVFS from MATE,
Cinnamon, or GNOME simply to crutch this situation. The correct fix would
be
I have never heard of a metapackage for a DE that removes another
DE, they just install the selected DE in addition. Most DE's are designed
not to conflict with any other DE, which is why forks of GNOME such as
Cinnamon and MATE rename every forked package.
Metapackages in Debian install packages
I don't see any references in your logfile to mounting or unmounting
filesystems,
but since it got as far as shutting down or trying to shut down systemd, they
should
be getting unmounted before the hang.
Most linse in your logs were truncated but this line implies you have
sucessfully
Might be a kernel hang with your hardware, I've seen such problems come and go
with Linux over the years, usually hanging just before poweroff and after all
filesystems
have been unmounted. I would just power cycle when this happens and treat the
machine
as usable. If logs show you are NOT
I am not on that list and will not be pursuing this matter any farther.
>
>Luke,
>
>I understand your frustrations on this, but I'm afraid it will
>fall on
>deaf ears in this mailing list since the issues don't seem to be
>specific to Ubuntu Studio.
>
>Peter can correct me if I'm wrong, but I
One place you may need more detail (or to tell people to look online for it
is the mess created by UEFI and secure boot for new installs on
computers from the Windows 8 and later eras. The advice given about trying
from a USB stick and how easy it is applies only to machines with a real BIOS
Turning everything into snaps is a good way to balloon install size out to
Windows proportions. I still remember Windows specifying 30+GB system
install space as recommeded in the late 2000s when I could get all of
UbuntuStudio into well under 5GB.
Whichever package is smaller as a snap is
You mentioned getting a dark theme to work well and keep working well.
My modded and ported version of the old UbuntuStudio theme works very
well for what I use it for (because I myself ensure it does), but last time
I tried the "refactoring" branch of Kdenlive a whole section did not work
even
Moving to MATE would be a great idea., would in my judgement go a long way
to restore the UbuntuStudio of old. Rather close in fact to what ended up doing
with Debian, with my video and audio programs running over MATE (which I am
a developer at these days) and my updated forks of the old GTK and
I've always used qjackctl if I needed to set up something non-default in jack,
had little trouble with it. Even used it on a netbook for a while to set up
sound
to deal with mono files (not supported in harware on that machine) by running
jack, which was much lighter on that machine running
What is probably going on is that linux users are installing the base
system, then using online search tools to find what programs they
need for their workflow and installing those programs..
On 3/28/2018 at 12:22 PM, pc...@laposte.net wrote:
>
>"That is something I hope to rectify. Since I have
There have been long-standing complaints about Linux systems in general becoming
unresponsive when waiting on the hard drive for something. Pretty sure this
can't be
fixed at the distro level.
On 2/14/2018 at 10:34 PM, "Helios Martinez Dominguez"
wrote:
>
There have been long-standing complaints about Linux systems in general becoming
unresponsive when waiting on the hard drive for something. Pretty sure this
can't be
fixed at the distro level.
On 2/14/2018 at 10:34 PM, "Helios Martinez Dominguez"
wrote:
>
First reason is to defeat Verizon's "UIDH" online tracking header
https://www.verizonwireless.com/support/unique-identifier-header-faqs/
and no doubt to defeat similar tracking that other ISPs will roll out. They
are used as unblockable trackers for ad serving partners but do not work
with https
I have never, ever left auto updating turned on because i often can't
spare the bandwidth, may be using an IP address I don't want to make
non-Tor connections from, or cannot spare the CPU load on the netbook.
I have yet to have a use case where I could get away with it on something
other than a
GTK3 itself brings hidpi support to its widgets. That means GTK3 desktops
should support it. I only have 1920x1080 as my largest monitor, but GtkInspector
allows testing hidpi scaling, with 1.0 and 2.0 times default size options. I can
verify that this works in MATE for mate-panel and Caja
For anything to pull in wine by default is a theoretical security risk,
due to the great many cross-platform exploits that then install
Windows-only payloads. While most of these would fail on a Linux/wine
setup due to not being invoked within wine, a malware author could
probably fix that.
A
The CPU governor is easily controlled in any DE. Ubuntu offers
indicator-cpufreq, which will also work as a tray applet when not
in Unity. I've used it in MATE, IceWM, Cinnamon, even gnome-shell
so it should have no trouble in XFCE either. Many DE's offer their
own CPU governor controls
I noticed Kdenlive is at 16.04.3. This is smart, as Kdenlive 16.08 or GIT master
is another bugfest when using Movit (GPU effects). Seems to work fine without
GPU effects but 16.04 works well both with and without them.
On 10/15/2016 at 5:37 PM, "Set Hallstrom" wrote:
>
I was thinking there is one way to slow down but not stop this attack at the
server
level, and it works only if the package is both downloaded over https and
signed:
that is to have the packages and their signing keys on one server and the ssh
keys
on a physically different box, so any attack
This is REALLY ugly, and suggests keyservers be dedicated machines that
are not co-hosted with anything and don't co-host anything. Until then it
means GCHQ can probably crack Ubuntu's keys if they are hosted in the UK.
This sort of thing makes substituting binaries built from alternate source
One issue in audio is that huge numbers of older 32 bit machines considered
"slower than smartphones" for huge, JS heavy websites and Internet video are
still as good for audio work as they ever were. The very first Pentium 4's were
able to run things like Audacity with no video rendering glitches
One other thing you should check before committing to any kind of
video conferencing is that all intended participants have the bandwidth
for it, as those without landlines might not.
On 7/10/2016 at 4:57 PM, "Len Ovens" wrote:
>
>On Sun, 10 Jul 2016, lukefro...@hushmail.com
There is one limitation to "If the community prefers to use Google Hangouts, it
would be highly
counterproductive if you did not, particularly if you are a involved in the
work being discussed."
That is that some people do not have Google accounts and in fact some people
cannot make
them due
Maybe they should be reminded that they are using Linux every
time they connect to a webserver, fire up an Android phone, or
even use some embedded systems. In some markets MS has
little more market share than Apple had in 1999-and even OSx
is just a proprietary Unix with a custom DE and window
Why on Earth are they first going out of their way to buy Ubuntu machines,
then installing Windows? Is it an attempt to avoid preinstalled crapware or
vendor-provided malicious extras perhaps? Maybe the Lenovo crapware
with UEFI driven reinstallation got their attention and they simply don't
want
When something is actually released into the public domain it is not under
the GPL, CC or any other license and everyone is in fact free to use it for
anything and in any way. From what I've heard the reason Linux et all are
NOT simply released into the public domain is to prevent an "embrace,
That's true-someone could just check the wrong boxes in Synaptic and
have issues.
On 6/21/2016 at 2:29 PM, "Ralf Mardorf" wrote:
>
>On Tue, 21 Jun 2016 14:13:18 -0400, lukefro...@hushmail.com wrote:
>>One more point about the various debates here: While Ubuntu with
One more point about the various debates here: While Ubuntu with Unity
has shared personal information, UbuntuStudio has never used Unity and
never had the shopping lens or its descendants.
On 6/21/2016 at 2:08 PM, "Ralf Mardorf" wrote:
>
>On Tue, 21 Jun 2016
The USB stick line of attack has happened, but usually involves ordinary
files attacking Windows machines via autorun. USB firmware attacks to
exist but are rarely used. There is no way to reduce any risk in life to
zero. Snowden was attacking the NSA itself, so yes he needed new
USB sticks
Here is a short, simple overview that could be used as a starting point by
nearly anyone able to boot US live:
Due to the growth even in open source of applications that "phone home," when
it is necessary for privacy or security reasons to be able to deny having
produced a media item, it
Those are pretty and a bit reminescent of one of the early UbuntuStudio
backgrounds, though at far higher true resolution.
On 6/16/2016 at 9:30 AM, "Ralf Mardorf" wrote:
>
>On Thu, 2016-06-16 at 13:27 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>> The links:
>>
>>
A "Monsanto sound font" could simply create the sound of someone dying and
falling off the toilet from terminal diarrhea with their last words being a
reference
to corn chips.
On 5/29/2016 at 9:18 AM, "Ralf Mardorf" wrote:
>
>On Sun, 29 May 2016 15:15:47 +0300,
In the case of Kdenlive, versions 15.08 and later use a different file format.
They can read an old project but cannot save back to the old format, saving
to the new and renaming the old one as a backup. If the user deletes the
backup, then reverts Kdenlive versions 15.04 and earlier cannot open
With a too-high Q in an audio amp but short of oscillation you would get
"ringing" of the frequency in question and greatly increased amplification of
that frequency from the input signal. The level just short of that ringing would
be used by a CW (morse code) user in amateur radio to single out
BTW, Kdenlive is actually not as tied into KDE as it used to be,
probably due to how the KDE Framework 5 system is set up. I
have enough of KF5 and QT5 installed to build Kdenlive but it
I tell Synaptic to pull in kde-plasma-desktop it would use nearly
another 139MB on disk, so that's a lot of
Kdenlive just keeps getting better and better. Version 16.04 just came out
with all the features of 15.12 and a whole lot more. The last round of updates
apparently was guided by some professional video makers in terms of features
added. By the time Yakkety comes out 16.08 will be out,
This is the first I have heard of it, so no opinion yet. Will have to test it.
On 4/25/2016 at 1:59 PM, "Kaj Ailomaa" wrote:
>
>On Mon, Apr 25, 2016, at 07:53 PM, lukefro...@hushmail.com wrote:
>> If Recordmydesktop is dropped it should be replaced. I have
>issues with
>>
If Recordmydesktop is dropped it should be replaced. I have issues with it but
still use it, as the alternative is to take the time to set up a video camera
aligned
with the screen.
On 4/25/2016 at 11:30 AM, "Set Hallstrom" wrote:
>
>On 2016-04-25 15:56, Len Ovens wrote:
As for themes, I've kept my modded (blue-green) UbuntuStudio_Legacy port
current, supports GTK2, GTK 3.14 through GTk 3.20 and even development GTK
3.21.
(GTK 3.14 now deprecated for my other packages due to breakage). You can see
for yourself in this package how to support multiple GTK 3
Have you considered Caja? I believe version 1.12 will be in repo, built
with GTK2.
On 4/22/2016 at 3:35 PM, "Len Ovens" wrote:
>
>On Fri, 22 Apr 2016, Thomas Pfundt wrote:
>
>> @ Len: Just a quick remark on the "gear wheel" that you
>suggested using:
>> I do not see a "gear
Video quality can be changed, I normally switch framerate out to 30fps rather
than
15 due to my use case. Wonder though if that is a factor in the loss of the
last
part of the video recorded due to some variable expecting a set number of
frames.
On 4/16/2016 at 5:29 AM, "Grant Frank Burton"
Recordmydesktop has always had problems for me with not saving all of the
video stream, I can lose as much as the second half of it in some cases, so
I always record longer than I need to as a workaround.
On 4/16/2016 at 11:50 AM, "Kaj Ailomaa" wrote:
>
>On Sat, Apr 16,
Audacity can set up its own audio device using in Preferences>Devices and will
default to using Pulseaudio. On some setups Pulseaudio still has issues for
Audacity. To actually be using ALSA directly you have to set it up in
Preferences.
First, make sure that nothing else is using sound, so
My setup diverged so far from stock Ubuntu I converted my main
development machines to Debian Unstable when the Snappy
controversy emerged as a precaution against having rolling alpha
updating blocked in the future.
The panel icon works fine in my setup and I never had issues with
the old
http://packages.ubuntu.com/xenial/kdenlive
now shows kdenlive 15.12.1-0ubuntu1 so the upcoming LTS won't ship with a bad
version of kdenlive.
The 15.12 version worked very well for me when GIT master was at that level so
I would say people
can expect good results with it.
There will be a
Were those files overwritten, or just on a partition that got formatted or
remade?
If the partition was not used the files are still there, and even if it was
data recovery
software like Foremost(in Ubuntu repos) or Photorec can often get back anything
that
did not get physically overwritten.
At the moment emails from Hushmail still reach the Big Corporate webmailers,
don't know how long that will last. Trouble I will have will be dealing with
Gmail
users who'd really rather Tweet or Facebook anyway, I will have to tell them to
check an open email or lose communication with me as I
The whole Internet is in the process of dividing between a strictly controlled,
monetized/verified corporate network and a non-monetized free network, each
of which may eventually be unable to talk to the other. Now is the time to
decide which side of that divide you want to be on. It has already
Hushmail had that problem, had to resort to Cloudflare's DDOS protection
service,
which forced me to use Torbrowser to log in to block Cloudflare from
fingerprinting
my browser until it was resolved. It was organized crime seeking ransom, which
to
their credit Hushmail utterly refused to pay,
Kdenlive is STILL version 15.08, which is a buggy mess as well as being old. if
that gets to release, anyone wanting to do a complex video in Xenial will need
to install from PPA or source. Version 15.08 is OK for simple stuff but gets
things like compositing transitions that move on their own
"Found on the Internet" could be those bastards at Getty Images, who
would get a lot of free publicity for their extortion letters from a well
publicized even though failed demand letter against Canonical.
Don't use unknown source images unless everyone involved is OK with
standing up to
Exactly which version of kdenlive will be in 16.04? I have been building
kdenlive
from git master routinely, and here's what I've found: the 15.08 release was a
buggy mess, 15.12 is very good, both can handle GPU/Movit effects, and the
upcoming 16.04 kdenlive will have many new features which
Too different from the traditional Win95 layout for many power users, and
all desktop environments optimized for one fullscreened app at a time are
poorly suited to running multiple media applications with drag and drop
between them.
On 1/28/2016 at 6:01 PM, "Daniel M Gessel"
Those are damned nice sounds. I did download the whole tarball before cleaning
out my email account, and immediately played them in Audacious one after
another.
On 1/12/2016 at 9:34 AM, "C. F. Howlett" wrote:
>
>> http://spreadubuntu.org/en/material/poster/ubuntu-sounds
You can counter a local block on Archive or any other site by downloading
Torbrowser. Few if any national firewalls can defeat Tor and to my knowledge
region blocks are not used by Archive, which aggressively pushes fair use
doctrine. Even Google's region blocks are defeated by Tor.
Places and
The size of the ubuntu-sounds tarball nearly filled my email account. It is the
bottom 25MB free tier as I would never pay for email nor have an account with
any ad-supported or PRISM-compliant provider. Please try to avoid sending
anything over 10MB to my email or I could lose other emails that
>A Text-marker is the blinking symbol showing where your text will
>be
>input, once you have clicked inside a text input box. :)
>
>All you need to do in hushmail to post in the /right/ order, is the
>click /bellow/ the quoted text ;)
Always knew that only as the cursor.
--
I don't even know what you mean by a text-marker. I've never once
been employed in an environment involving handling office email, nor ever had
wired
internet access and used an ISP-provided email reached by an email client.
On 12/22/2015 at 4:53 AM, "Ralf Mardorf"
In Firefox on the Web with Hushmail there is no "reply to list" function.
Hushmail blocks
unpaid users from access other than by the webpage, so email clients don't
work. The latter
ia probably true of other webmails as well for unpaid/bottom tier accounts.
>[snip] When replying to messages,
Artwork and even software can be posted to Archive.org. I have a whole set of
debian packages for MATE built with gtk3 plus my modded "UbuntuStudio Legacy"
GTK 2/3 and icon themes there:
https://archive.org/details/DebianPackagesForMate-desktopWityGtk3AndCustomPanelTheme
I don't see any reason
Speaking of Kdenlive, kdenlive 15.12 just came out, it is free of most
of the bugs that made 15.08 so difficult to deal with. I've had good luck
with it myself and recommend it. Presu
That brings up the backport issue: a backport of 15.12 into Wily would
make Wily a lot more useful for video. I
Videos can be posted to Archive.org, which also will make a .ogv
derivative of it. Unlike Youtube, Archive does not seek record company
licenses, block on a per-country bases, nor scan content for 3ed party
content. No law requires Youtube to do it eithert due to the DCMA
"safe harbor"
One use case for Pulse is recording the audio output of another application that
won't work with Jack. Makers of "consumer" soundcards and onboard audio
stopped including recording the output as a hardware option at about the time
Windows Vista came out, and removed support for existing cards
This sounds like what happens when you remove a kernel with /boot not
mounted.
On 12/10/2015 at 9:28 AM, "Len Ovens" wrote:
>
>On Thu, 10 Dec 2015, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 10 Dec 2015 12:39:13 +0100, Kaj Ailomaa wrote:
>>> I haven't actually used a vanilla Ubuntu
One other point: compiz still has lots of issues with client-side decorated
apps like Gedit, for users of Unity or MATE/compiz. Although a bug report
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1436553
claims it is fixed, only some parts of the problem were fixed, In gtk versions
3.16 or higher, compiz fails
Ubuntu has stayed with gedit 3.10 all the way through using parts of GNOME 3.16
for good reason. Later versions are much harder to use, GNOME has become
known for designing only around one particular workflow concept. Pluma now
builds
quite well with gtk3 or with gtk2 if the newly released 1.12
The 15.08 version is VERY buggy, it is the embryo of something great yet to
come.
The 15.04 version is very stable-but not included in ANY version of Ubuntu.
Probably
can still be fished out of the Sunab PPA from last April or so for 15.04.
I work with kdenlive every couple days and build it
How well does this work for recovering a viable still from an H264 video?
Remember we are talking about software recovery after all deletion
of files followed by overwrite of all available space (newly and otherwise)
with random numbers. This takes 4 dd runs on a 16GB chip.
I've still been
I had no trouble using GIMP for photoediting even on Pentium III class
machines. None of the photos were larger than 6MP however.
On 10/29/2015 at 7:38 AM, "set" wrote:
>
>On 2015-10-29 12:27, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>
>> Gimp (and PhotoShop) are for painting/drawing too.
>>
I agree with this. No way in Hell I would set up a machine for my sister with
Debian Unstable, and not one of the Ubuntu flavors are involved in the whole
Unity controversy. The needs of a hacker preferring a rolling release and those
of a Window refugee are nearly opposite oneanother
On
One limiting factor will be that I do not have the bandwidth to download
the latest .iso's to check installation details so I will have to refer to
external
postings for things like setting up encryption.
None of the realtime audio issues affect making news audio or video, so many
of the
You are so right about mobile phones and tablets-they are incredibly dangerous
and thus
I do not own one. Even a dumb phone is kept batteries out unless making a call,
which
has to be done from places my presence can be admitted to.
When I think of online activism, I am speaking of organizing
Simplest approach: US on a non-networked, encrypted desktop to make
media and strip metadata that can identify cameras, plus a laptop used
with TAILS to handle posting the materal from offsite connections.
On 10/29/2015 at 4:47 PM, "Ralf Mardorf" wrote:
>
>> On
An update of Firefox that diabled NoScript or Canvasblocker would make the
browser
no longer usable for security work. If the lack of updates is unsafe than NO
version
of Firefox would remain useful.
On 10/29/2015 at 5:02 PM, "Ralf Mardorf" wrote:
>
>> On
Yes-a secure, untraceable posting requires that the user do absolutely NOTHING
else
in the entire session. There are multiple security levels in question here,
from a high
school student blowing the whistle on a "gropy" principal to releasing video of
police
brutality in a corrupt town (or
At the creation level, the value is in having software that does not require
activation. That rules out paid software like Windows video editors
(and lightworks) and sound editors. It also rules out Windows.
If someone installs US from a new iso on an offline machine, there is
no network and
The commercial. ad-supported social networks are so dangerous that I
not only do not use them but actually block both Google and facebook
in /etc/hosts. I've even asked people I work with not to post photos
containing me to Facebook due to their facial recognition database.
It would seem to be
Google docs should be avoided simply due to Google's massive tracking
and presumed sale of personal information to ad networks. When someone
I work with sends a link to a Google doc, I can't open it because it won't work
on Tor browser and I keep Google blocked in /etc/hosts to prevent them from
Some "hybrid UEFI" boards are really picky about what they will boot from! I've
got one
that can boot UDB sticks but usually rejects the CD or DVD drive no matter what
is on
the disk, and also rejects some older USB images that work in other machines.
Before condemning the motherboard, put a
That's a good point. Consider this scenario: People put their names on
everything.
and the software is used by insurgents against a repressive regime. Unable to
catch
the insurgents, the regime in question simply goes after any and all persons
whose
names can be tied to the work, copyright
Those who expect paid service quality are probably better off paying
for it. On the other hand, Windows 10 is so malicious they will need
to pay for 3ed party tech support to stop the spying.
Maybe direct them to a known good Ubuntu or Mint LTS, then to paid
apps that run on it and have paid tech
That is so true! For years I used Audacity in UbuntuStudio to make radio pieces
about exactly that sort of thing. Someone mentioned the "loudness wars," well
you would not believe how much compression is needed for a low powered station
(especially AM) when there is no analog compressor/limiter in
For something totally tuned and optimized to one system and one user, the
usual recommendation is something like Gentoo. probably better for my uses
but no way in hell I'd want to have to tech support this for someone else. For
those who are not hackers, Ubuntu-based distros still have a lot
In my experience if you want to use Linux in general it pays to pre-research
any new or newly purchased hardware and screen out things like Nvidia
graphics that work poorly with FOSS software and drivers. For instance,
I would not accept any camera that wrote only to an internal hard drive
unless
Not everyone has ever used a Windows or MAC workstation, I've done low
power radio audio and activist video on Audacity and Kdenlive respectively.
I do not have money to buy paid software, nor do I trust closed packages not
to phone home with my sensitive raw material.
In audio I have added
There is another advantage of going independent: you can decouple
your fate from that of the underlying distro. If something happens to
Canonical (or to Debian) there are more options that way. Same if
the underlying distro makes changes not compatable with your goals.
With Ubuntu now providing
The linked post or one of it's replies warns of bricking windows, if it is
moved
off the disk, the exe file executed from the windows drive, and installer mode
selected. I have no idea if that is true or not, but be sure to do any testing
of this beyond the reboot greeter on an expendable
Has anyone with a Windows box tested it lately?
On 8/21/2015 at 10:39 AM, Jimmy Sjölund ji...@sjolund.se wrote:
On Fri, Aug 21, 2015 at 10:44 AM, Kaj Ailomaa
zeque...@mousike.me wrote:
Anyone feel any love for wubi at all?
If not, I will make sure it is removed from Ubuntu Studio at
least.
All of the debates about Ubuntu and things like privacy only concern the Unity
DE and all that phone-centric stuff. UbuntuStudio, Xubuntu, Ubuntu MATE,
Kubuntu at all should be considered exempt. The only worry there is if they
will be around in the future if either Canonical runs into too much
There's enough buggy UEFI setups out there that I advise people to never buy
new anymore without searching the exact model they plan to buy online along
with the word Ubuntu and/or Linux to see what pops up. Long has this been
so for printers and wireless devices, not it's also true for laptops,
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