Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting our team. We will be in touch shortly.Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Will Cooke
on 7 July 2017

Ubuntu Desktop Weekly Update: July 7, 2017


 

GNOME

We’ve been working on the migration and transition processes for users going from Unity 7 to GNOME Shell. We’ve worked on migrating favourites, the Amazon launcher, resetting scaling factors and migrating unity-control-center shortcuts to gnome-control-center. You can read more about the changes to the GNOME session here.

This has now been released into Artful, and we’d be very interested in getting bug reports for things which are not migrating correctly. Please log bugs here.

LivePatch

We’ve updated the software properties window which displays the current state of Live Patches installed or available following work with the design team, another design iteration is in progress and we’ll refresh the design once that’s completed. The LivePatch team are working on an authentication API to allow us to register and obtain a key within a Live Patch setup tool.

Snaps

A new version of the LibreOffice Snap is available for testing. We’d appreciate your feedback.

Video & Audio

We’re making progress on accelerated video playback on Intel, but we’re uncovering a lot of bugs along the way. Bugs in the Intel VA driver, bugs in Totem and bugs in GStreamer – but we’re chipping away at them. As always, this wiki page has more details.
While we’re focusing on Intel at the moment, Nvidia and AMD will be worked on in time.

At the Snappy sprint last week we were talking to the Elementary developers about Pulse Audio and the Cork plugin which should mute/pause audio when a call comes in.

They logged a bug and we now have a PPA up for testing. If you’re interested in testing this out, please read this post.

Updates

  • Chromium 59.0.3071.109 was published to all supported releases
  • Updated Chromium beta to 60.0.3112.50
  • Pulse Audio 1:8.0-0ubuntu3.3 now released into Xenial.

Unity 7

Unity 7 is supported in the current releases, and we’re working on landing some further improvements and bug fixes to the low graphics mode in Xenial. This will be of most use to people running Unity 7 over a remote desktop protocol or on computers without advanced graphics cards. Specifically the improvements are with the fade-out animation which was still happening despite having a duration of zero, optimising the damage events when resizing windows to only redraw the border when necessary and some improvements in the colour averaging routines used in opaque regions of the shell.

We also expect the Unity 7 session to still work in 17.10, but there will be some issues along the way. We’ve started to list the known and expected issues.

As always, testing and bug reports are welcome.

In The News

Robert shares his update from the Snappy sprint
Iain shares some insights into the move from Unity to GNOME
Ubuntu Testing Days for GNOME

Related posts


Gokhan Cetinkaya
30 September 2024

How to deploy AI workloads at the edge using open source solutions

AI Partners

Running AI workloads at the edge with Canonical and Lenovo AI is driving a new wave of opportunities in all kinds of edge settings—from predictive maintenance in manufacturing, to virtual assistants in healthcare, to telco router optimisation in the most remote locations. But to support these AI workloads running virtually everywhere, com ...


Cedric Gegout
30 September 2024

The waiting game is over. 5G is coming to the edge.

Telecommunications Article

Canonical and Omdia’s report reveals that 96% of CSPs will launch commercial 5G edge computing within 2 years. In this blog, we examine the drivers behind this optimism. ...


Stephanie Domas
30 September 2024

What the Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) means for IoT manufacturers

Compliance Hardening

The EU Cyber Resilience Act has considerable repercussions for the IoT device manufacturers. In this blog, we explore these new regulatory requirements and give our blueprint for compliant, market-ready devices. ...