/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2012/12/23/#ubuntu-discuss.txt

Captain_Crowdoes ubuntu 12 have a option for traditional desktop environment?14:48
IdleOneyou can install gnome-panel which is similar to gnome2.14:50
IdleOneor the "traditional desktop"14:50
Captain_Crowwhich version of ubuntu"out of the box" can play dvd movies?14:51
IdleOneCaptain_Crow: out of the box they can't for legal reasons, you can install ubuntu-restricted-extras which will give you support for most all codecs.14:53
Captain_Crowhow is linuxmint able to do it legally, but not ubuntu?14:56
IdleOnethey don't.14:58
IdleOnethey ship with the packages installed and they don't worry about it.14:58
Captain_Crowso ubuntu will never be able to play dvds out of the box?15:13
IdleOneNot so long as it is free of charge.15:13
AlanBellCaptain_Crow: the ubuntu ISOs get burned as real CDs, I don't think Mint distribute like that15:18
popeyi wouldn't say "never"15:23
popeyif you buy a computer with a DVD drive and it ships with Ubuntu, then I'm pretty sure we pre-install that stuff15:23
popeye.g. if you buy a dell you get something like PowerDVD installed15:23
chuThere is the opt-in choice at install (which is obviously necessary for the legal reasons mentioned by IdleOne), which is why I said earlier (i.e. yesterday) that it was possible to play DVDs "out of the box". But, technically it needs to download the package so it's not really "out of the box" per se.15:26
popeythe opt-in choice at install doesn't install dvd playback stuff though15:27
Captain_Crowwhat if i have a decade old dell that was owned by several dozen people and dont have an os on it, would ubuntu be a good choice?15:27
popeyit adds codecs, java, flash, fonts15:27
chuAhh, I see.15:27
Captain_Crowso to get a traditional desktop do i need to install gnome-panel, or is there any default options built in?15:33
popeyBy default Ubuntu ships Unity15:33
popeymany other desktop options are available15:34
Captain_Crowi like how it snaps windows to the sides and stuff, does that still work with the other desktops?15:35
chuIs that a Compiz feature?15:36
AlanBellCaptain_Crow: that works with gnome-shell too15:42
AlanBellCaptain_Crow: I would suggest installing the standard unity desktop and adding gnome-shell if you want an alternative option that is going forward15:43
Captain_Crowso i need to install the latest ubuntu, and install gnome-shell, and it'll look like a traditional desktop but with unity features?15:51
AlanBellCaptain_Crow: you will get a choice at the login screen whether you want to start a unity session or a gnome session15:53
AlanBellI don't really know what a traditional desktop is15:53
AlanBellif you have a tradition of using Windows, or Mac OS, or RiscOS or NeXtStep or OS/2 then it will look somewhat familiar because it uses a WIMP interface :)15:54
AlanBellif what you want is a widget at the top left or bottom left for starting applications through a hierachical menu then you might like gnome-shell with https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/6/applications-menu/15:56
Captain_Crowis there a difference between ubuntu 12.10 and 12.04lts?16:18
Captain_Crow"Ubuntu 12.10 will be supported for two years and includes cutting-edge  new features that make your music, videos, documents and apps much  easier to access."16:25
Captain_Crowdoes "videos" mean 12.10 plays dvds?16:25
chuThey all play DVDs.16:25
Captain_Crowso between 12.10 and 12.04, which is the better choice?16:26
chuDepends, do you want bleeding-edge or stability as your first choice? 12.04 is an LTS ("Long-Term Support") version while 12.10 is not. The decision is entirely up to you. Some people tend to use only LTS, others don't mind.16:29
chuIf it's for a server install, you'd obviously want the LTS, for the desktop it (probably) doesn't matter so much.16:30
AlanBellI would go for 12.10 personally16:31
AlanBellit isn't bleeding edge, it is a released stable version16:31
AlanBell13.04 would be the brave choice :)16:31
AlanBellI think for new technologies like unity and gnome-shell you probably want the extra 6 months of newness16:32
chuTrue, "bleeding-edge" wasn't the correct term, but I had nothing else to use :p16:32
chuI think it would be wrong to call it a "testing" or "experimental" release, and other than just saying "one's LTS the other's not" not sure how to really characterise the differences.16:34
popeyi use 12.04 on my main laptop16:42
popeywill probably keep it for a while16:42
Captain_Crowtheres a 13.04?16:43
popeyin development yes16:44
AlanBellCaptain_Crow: raring ringtail, the version in development16:44
popeynot recommended for use yet16:44
chuYou can imagine that after 12.10 was released development, started on 13.04 and Canonical aren't going to hold it back from the community until deployment. Release won't be until April next year, so we've still got a little over 4 months.16:45
* AlanBell was installing it yesterday16:45
* AlanBell has a couple of bugs to file16:46
Captain_Crowdoes ubuntu cost money now?16:48
popeyno16:48
popeynever will16:48
Captain_Crowi clicked on "get ubuntu 12.04" its asking me to "pay with paypal"16:50
AlanBellit is asking if you want to pay for it16:51
AlanBellBug #109330316:52
ubot5bug 1093303 in ubiquity (Ubuntu) "can't switch from orca to ubiquity in the 13.04 install" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/109330316:52
Captain_Crowis the ubuntu 12.04 the same ubuntu 12.04 as several months ago?16:56
AlanBellit will have fixes for things in it16:59
AlanBellso the way it works is every 6 months we put out a release, that might have a bunch of things in it like gedit 3.6.1 in it for example17:00
AlanBellif there are any *fixes* to that version of that software then they get updated through the repositories17:00
AlanBellif gedit 4 comes out with radical new *features* then that goes into the next release of Ubuntu17:00
AlanBellfor 12.04 we would continue providing fixes for 3.6.1 for the next 7 years17:01
AlanBellso 12.04 now is more fixed than 12.04 was several months ago, but it is still 12.04 with the same versions of pretty much everything in it (except for a couple of things like web browsers)17:02
popey5 years, not 717:02
AlanBellah yes, until 201717:02
AlanBellso if you want cool new stuff for one PC then use most recent stable version and upgrade every 6 months. If you have a fleet of 2000 desktops you are managing and you want them to perform consistently with each other and you don't have the time to upgrade every 6 months then it is LTS all the way for you.17:04
Captain_Crowhow long should ubuntu 12.04 take to boot from the disk?20:24
AlanBellCaptain_Crow: from the CD? probably about a minute. When installed it boots in less than 10 seconds on SSD and maybe a bit longer on spinning rust20:27
Captain_Crowoh, i been trying to run it like 20 min at a time and cant even get to the main screen20:34
Captain_Crowit just loads and loads and loads20:34
AlanBellthat isn't right ;)20:36
AlanBellso what did you do so far? downloaded the iso image, put it on CD, got the bios to boot from CD?20:37
AlanBellwhat did you see on screen? did you get as far as an Ubuntu logo and 5 dots?20:37
AlanBelland a picture of a keyboard and the vitruvian man?20:38
Captain_Crowi got to the load screen with 5 dots, im going to try another cd20:39
Captain_Crowi think it was cause the other cd had a scratch on it20:57
Captain_Crowi installed "gnome-shell" and went to the user thing and clicked "gnome (classic)" and i dont see any difference21:45
Captain_Crownvm, i guess it was a glitch21:47

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