โŒ

Normale weergave

A Little Bit Now, A Lotta Bit Later

6 Mei 2025 om 02:00

In mid-March we released a big bug fix updateโ€”elementary OS 8.0.1โ€”and since then weโ€™ve been hard at work on even more bug fixes and some new exciting features that Iโ€™m excited to share with you today! Read ahead to find out what weโ€™ve released recently and what you can help us test in Early Access.

Quick Settings

Quick Settings

Quick Settings has a new โ€œPrevent Sleepโ€ toggle

Leo added a new โ€œPrevent Sleepโ€ toggle. This is useful when youโ€™re giving a presentation or have a long-running background task where you want to temporarily avoid letting the computer go to sleep on its normal schedule. We also fixed a bug where the โ€œDark Modeโ€ toggle would cancel the dark mode schedule when used. We now have proper schedule snoozing, so when you manually toggle Dark Mode on or off while using a timed or sunset-to-sunrise schedule, your schedule will resume on the next schedule change instead of being canceled completely. Vishal also fixed an issue that caused some apps to report being improperly closed on system shutdown or restart and on the lock screen we now show the โ€œSuspendโ€ button rather than the โ€œLockโ€ button.

System Settings

Locale settings has a fresh layout thanks to Alain with its options aligned more cleanly and improved links to additional settings.

Locale

Locale Settings has a more responsive design

Weโ€™ve also added the phrase โ€œabout this deviceโ€ as a search term for the System page and improved interface copy when a restart is required to finish installing updates based on your feedback. Plus, Stanisล‚aw improved stylus detection in Wacom settings preventing a crash when no stylus is found.

AppCenter

We now show a small label next to the download button for apps which contain in-app purchases. This is especially useful for easily identifying free-to-play games or alt stores like Steam or Heroic Games Launcher.

AppCenter

AppCenter now shows when apps have in-app purchases

Plus, we now reload app icons on-the-fly as their data is processed, thanks to Italo. That means youโ€™ll no longer get occasionally stuck with an AppCenter which shows missing images for appโ€™s who have taken a bit longer than usual to load.

Get These Updates

As always, pop open System Settings โ†’ System on elementary OS 8 and hit โ€œUpdate Allโ€ to get these updates plus your regular security, bug fix, and translation updates. Or set up automatic updates and get a notification when updates are ready to install!


Early Access

Our development focus recently has been on some of the bigger features that will likely land for either elementary OS 8.1 or 9. Weโ€™ve got a new app, big changes to the design of our desktop itself, a whole lot of under-the-hood cleanup, and the return of some key system services thanks to a new open source project.

Monitor

Monitor

Weโ€™re now shipping a System Monitor app by default

By popular demandโ€”and thanks to the hard work of Stanisล‚awโ€”we have a new system monitor app called โ€œMonitorโ€ shipping in Early Access. Monitor provides usage information for your processor, GPU, memory, storage, network, and currently running processes.

Panel

You can optionally see system information in the panel with Monitor

You can also optionally get a ton of glanceable information shown in the panel. Thereโ€™s currently a lot of work happening to port Monitor to GTK4 and improve its functionality under the Secure Session, so make sure to report any issues you find!

Multitasking

Dock

The Dock is getting a workspace switcher

Probably the biggest change to the Pantheon shell since its early inception, the Dock is getting a new workspace switcher! The workspace switcher works in a familiar way to the one you may have seen in the Multitasking View: Your currently open workspaces are represented as tiles with the icons of apps running on them; You can select a workspace to switch to it; You can drag-and-drop workspaces to rearrange them; And you can use the โ€œ+โ€ button to create a new blank workspace. One new trick however is that selecting the workspace youโ€™re already on will launch Multitasking View. The new workspace switcher makes it so much more accessible to multitask with just the mouse and get an overview of your workflows without having to first enter the Multitasking View. Weโ€™re really excited to hear what people think about it!

You can close apps from Multitasking View by swiping up

Another very satisfying feature for folks using touch input, you can now swipe up windows in the Multitasking View to close them. This is a really familiar gesture for those of us with Android and iOS devices and feels really natural for managing a big stack of windows without having to aim for a small โ€œxโ€ button.

GTK4 Porting

Weโ€™ve recently landed the port of Tasks to GTK4. So far that comes with a few fixes to tighten up its design, with much more possible in the future. Please make sure to help us test it thoroughly for any regressions!

Tasks

Tasks has a slightly tightened up design

Weโ€™re also making great progress on porting the panel to GTK4. So far we have branches in review for Nightlight, Bluetooth, Datetime, and Network indicators. Power, Keyboard, and Quick Settings indicators all have in-progress branches. That leaves just Applications, Sound, and Notifications. So far these ports donโ€™t come with major feature changes, but they do involve lots of cleaning up and modernizing of these code bases and in some cases fixing bugs! When the port is finished, we should see immediate performance gains and weโ€™ll have a much better foundation for future releases. You can follow along with our progress porting everything to GTK4 in this GitHub Project.

And More

When you take a screenshot using keyboard shortcuts or by secondary-clicking an appโ€™s window handle, we now send a notification letting you know that it was succesful and where to find the resulting image. Plus thereโ€™s a handy button that opens Files with your screenshot pre-selected.

Weโ€™re also testing beaconDB as a replacement for Mozilla Location Services (MLS). If youโ€™re not aware, we relied on MLS in previous versions of elementary OS to provide location information for devices that donโ€™t have a GPS radio. Unfortunately Mozilla discontinued the service last June and weโ€™ve been left without a replacement until now. Without these services, not only did maps and weather apps cease to function, but system features like automatic timezone detection and features that rely on sunset and sunrise times no longer work properly. beaconDB offers a drop-in replacement for MLS that uses Wireless networks, bluetooth devices, and cell towers to provide location data when requested. All of its data is crowd-sourced and opt-in and several distributions are now defaulting to using it as their location services data provider. Iโ€™ve set up a small sponsorship from elementary on Liberapay to support the project. If you can help support beaconDB either by sponsoring or providing stumbler data, Iโ€™d highly encourage you to do so!


Sponsors

At the moment weโ€™re at 23% of our monthly funding goal and 336 Sponsors on GitHub! Shoutouts to everyone helping us reach our goals here. Your monthly sponsorship funds development and makes sure we have the resources we need to give you the best version of elementary OS we can!

Monthly release candidate builds and daily Early Access builds are available to GitHub Sponsors from any tier! Beware that Early Access builds are not considered stable and you will encounter fresh issues when you run them. Weโ€™d really appreciate reporting any problems you encounter with the Feedback app or directly on GitHub.

๐Ÿ’พ

  •  

Ubuntu 25.04 (Plucky Puffin) Released

Door: guiverc
18 April 2025 om 00:42

Ubuntu 25.04, codenamed โ€œPlucky Puffinโ€, is here. This release continues Ubuntuโ€™s proud tradition of integrating the latest and greatest open-source technologies into a high-quality, easy-to-use Linux distribution. The team has been hard at work through this cycle, partnering with the community and our partners, to introduce new features and fix bugs.

Ubuntu 25.04 introduces GNOME 48 with triple buffering for smoother performance, HDR settings, and new features like a Wellbeing Panel and Preserve Battery Health mode. A new modern PDF reader, Papers, is now the default.

The installer now offers a smoother experience when installing alongside other operating systems, with better BitLocker support, and advanced partitioning.

Built on the Linux 6.14 kernel, this release brings a new scheduling system with sched_ext, enhanced Wine/Proton gaming support through the new NTSYNC driver, and better container tooling via decoupled bpftools and linux-perf.

Developer experience takes a leap forward with the introduction of devpacks. These snap bundles deliver the latest Go and Spring ecosystems, alongside updated toolchains for Python, Rust, .NET, LLVM, OpenJDK, and more.

Ubuntu 25.04 also expands confidential computing to on-premise environments with AMD SEV-SNP host support, and introduces a new ARM64 Desktop ISO for next-gen hardware.

Networking and identity management see continued improvements, including secure time sync with NTS, better Active Directory (AD) integration, cloud authentication against EntraID and Google identity, and DNS-aware wait-online logic with Netplan.

The newest Edubuntu, Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Ubuntu Budgie, Ubuntu Cinnamon, Ubuntu Kylin, Ubuntu MATE, Ubuntu Studio, Ubuntu Unity, and Xubuntu are also being released today. More details can be found for these at their individual release notes under the Official Flavours section:

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/plucky-puffin-release-notes/48687#headingโ€“official-flavours

Maintenance updates will be provided for 9 months for all flavours releasing with 25.04.

How to get Ubuntu 25.04 Plucky Puffin

In order to download Ubuntu 25.04, simply visit:

https://ubuntu.com/download

Users of Ubuntu 24.10 will be offered an automatic upgrade to 25.04 if they have selected to be notified of all releases rather than just LTS upgrades. For further information about upgrading, see:

https://ubuntu.com/download/desktop/upgrade

As always, upgrades to the latest version of Ubuntu are entirely free of charge.

We recommend that all users read the release notes, which document caveats, workarounds for known issues, as well as more in-depth notes on the release itself. They are available at:

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/plucky-puffin-release-notes

Find out whatโ€™s new in this release with a graphical overview:

https://ubuntu.com/desktop

https://ubuntu.com/desktop/features

If you have a question, or if you think you may have found a bug but arenโ€™t sure, you can try asking in any of the following places:

https://matrix.to/#/#support:ubuntu.com

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/support

https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users

Help Shape Ubuntu

If you would like to help shape Ubuntu, take a look at the list of ways you can participate at:

https://ubuntu.com/community/contribute

About Ubuntu

Ubuntu is a full-featured Linux distribution for desktops, laptops, IoT, cloud, and servers, with a fast and easy installation and regular releases. A tightly-integrated selection of excellent applications is included, and an incredible variety of add-on software is just a few clicks away.

Professional services including support are available from Canonical and hundreds of other companies around the world. For more information about support, visit:

https://ubuntu.com/support

More Information

You can learn more about Ubuntu and about this release on our website listed below:

https://ubuntu.com

To sign up for future Ubuntu announcements, please subscribe to Ubuntuโ€™s very low volume announcement list at:

https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-announce

Originally posted to the ubuntu-announce mailing list on Thu Apr 17 16:18:26 UTC 2025 by Utkarsh Gupta, on behalf of the Ubuntu Release Team.

  •  

Ubuntu 25.04 (Plucky Puffin) Beta released

28 Maart 2025 om 04:46

The Ubuntu team is pleased to announce the Beta release of the Ubuntu 25.04 Desktop, Server, and Cloud products.

Ubuntu 25.04, codenamed โ€œPlucky Puffinโ€, continues Ubuntuโ€™s proud tradition of integrating the latest and greatest open source technologies into a high-quality, easy-to-use Linux distribution. The team has been hard at work through this cycle, introducing new features and fixing bugs.

This Beta release includes images from not only the Ubuntu Desktop, Server, and Cloud products, but also the Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Ubuntu Budgie, UbuntuKylin, Ubuntu MATE, Ubuntu Studio, Ubuntu Unity and Xubuntu flavours.

The Beta images are known to be reasonably free of showstopper image build or installer bugs, while representing a very recent snapshot of 25.04 that should be representative of the features intended to ship with the final release expected on April 17, 2025.

Ubuntu, Ubuntu Server, Cloud Images:

Plucky Beta includes updated versions of most of our core set of packages, including a current 6.14 kernel, and much more.

To upgrade to Ubuntu 25.04 Beta from Ubuntu 24.10, follow these instructions:

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/PluckyUpgrades

The Ubuntu 25.04 Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://releases.ubuntu.com/25.04/ (Ubuntu and Ubuntu Server on x86)

This Ubuntu Server image features the next generation Subiquity server installer, bringing the comfortable live session and speedy install of the Ubuntu Desktop to server users.

Additional images can be found at the following links:

https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/daily/server/plucky/current/ (Cloud Images)
https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/releases/24.10/beta/ (Non-x86)

As fixes will be included in new images between now and release, any daily cloud image from today or later (i.e. a serial of 20250327 or higher) should be considered a Beta image. Bugs found should be filed against the appropriate packages or, failing that, the cloud-images project in Launchpad.

The full release notes for Ubuntu 25.04 Beta can be found at:

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/plucky-puffin-release-notes/48687

Kubuntu:

Kubuntu is the KDE based flavour of Ubuntu. It uses the Plasma desktop and includes a wide selection of tools from the KDE project.

The Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/kubuntu/releases/25.04/beta/

Lubuntu:

Lubuntu is a flavor of Ubuntu which uses the Lightweight Qt Desktop Environment (LXQt). The projectโ€™s goal is to provide a lightweight yet functional Linux distribution based on a rock-solid Ubuntu base.

The Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/releases/25.04/beta/

Ubuntu Budgie:

Ubuntu Budgie is community developed desktop, integrating Budgie Desktop Environment with Ubuntu at its core.

The Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-budgie/releases/25.04/beta/

UbuntuKylin:

UbuntuKylin is a flavor of Ubuntu that is more suitable for Chinese users.

The Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntukylin/releases/25.04/beta/

Ubuntu Mate:

Ubuntu MATE is a flavor of Ubuntu featuring the MATE desktop environment.

The Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-mate/releases/25.04/beta/

Ubuntu Studio:

Ubuntu Studio is a flavor of Ubuntu that provides a full range of multimedia content creation applications for each key workflow: audio, graphics, video, photography and publishing.

The Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntustudio/releases/25.04/beta/

Ubuntu Unity:

Ubuntu Unity is a flavor of Ubuntu featuring the Unity7 desktop environment.

The Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-unity/releases/25.04/beta/

Xubuntu:

Xubuntu is a flavor of Ubuntu that comes with Xfce, which is a stable, light and configurable desktop environment.

The Beta images can be downloaded at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/xubuntu/releases/25.04/beta/

Regular daily images for Ubuntu, and all flavours, can be found at:

https://cdimage.ubuntu.com
Ubuntu is a full-featured Linux distribution for clients, servers and clouds, with a fast and easy installation and regular releases. A tightly-integrated selection of excellent applications is included, and an incredible variety of add-on software is just a few clicks away.

Professional technical support is available from Canonical Limited and hundreds of other companies around the world. For more information about support, visit https://ubuntu.com/support

If you would like to help shape Ubuntu, take a look at the list of ways you can participate at:

https://ubuntu.com/community/participate

Your comments, bug reports, patches and suggestions really help us to improve this and future releases of Ubuntu. Instructions can be found at:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/ReportingBugs

You can find out more about Ubuntu and about this Beta release on our website, IRC channel and wiki.

To sign up for future Ubuntu announcements, please subscribe to Ubuntuโ€™s very low volume announcement list at:
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-announce

Originally posted to the ubuntu-announce mailing list Thu Mar 27 7:56:41 UTC 2025 by Paride Legovini on behalf of the Ubuntu Release Team

  •  

elementary OS 8.0.1 Available Now

18 Maart 2025 om 01:00

Itโ€™s been a little over 100 days since elementary OS 8 was released, and weโ€™re proud to announce another round of updates, including a fresh new download. Weโ€™ve been hard at work this winter addressing issues that you reported and weโ€™ve added a couple new creature comforts along the way. This bug fix release also includes the latest Ubuntu LTS Hardware Enablement Kernel, so itโ€™s worth checking out if you downloaded OS 8.0 and it disagreed with your hardware.

AppCenter

We now properly use dark mode brand colors and dark mode screenshots thanks to Italo. Plus, when developers provide screenshots for multiple desktop environments, we now prefer the ones intended for our desktop environment, Pantheon. We support the new <Developer> Appstream tag, thanks to Juan. And we now support the contribute URL type.

Harvey on AppCenter

AppCenter now shows dark mode screenshots when available

Italo also fixed some issues with release notes overflowing out of their container, and we slightly redesigned the release notes window in the Updates page. He also addressed a few other issues in the Updates page that could occur while things were being updated or refreshed and made sure AppCenter recovers gracefully when its cache is emptied.

Releases notes on AppCenter

Release notes dialogs have been slightly redesigned

Search is also much faster thanks to Leonhard. And for developers, Ryo fixed loading your local metadata for testing with the --load-local terminal option.

Files & Terminal

Jeremy fixed another half-dozen reported issues in Files, including an issue that prevented entering file paths in search mode, an issue that prevented scrolling after deleting files, and an issue where files would disappear when dropped on an unmounted drive. The New file submenu now respects the hierarchy of folders in Templates. We now also respect the admin:// uri protocol for opening a path as an administrator, and Files is now styled correctly when run as administrator.

He also fixed an issue where Terminal tabs took multiple clicks to focus, and an issue where keyboard shortcuts stopped working for tabs that had been dragged into their own new window. Plus, file paths and names are also now properly quoted when drag-and-dropped from Files into Terminal.

System Settings

System Settings now allows configuring its notifications in System Settings โ†’ Notications. So you can turn off bubbles if you donโ€™t want to receive notifications about updates, for example. Weโ€™ll also no longer automatically download updates when on metered connections and send a notification instead, thanks to Leonhard. Plus we no longer check for updates in Demo Mode.

System Settings โ†’ System

Updates now show their download size and you can see progress towards our monthly sponsorship goal

In System, Vishal made sure we show how large an update will be before downloading it and that we skip held-back packagesโ€”such as phased or staged updatesโ€”when preparing the updates bundle so that it will more reliably succeed. Alain added a progress bar while downloading. And Ryo made sure the last refresh time is more accurate when no updates are available. Alain also added a new progress bar that represents how close we are to meeting our monthly sponsorship goal.

In Applications, you can now disallow notifications access. This is especially useful for apps which use the notifications portal, but donโ€™t properly report their notification usage and canโ€™t be controlled in the Notifications settings page.

System Settings โ†’ Applications

Reign in apps that donโ€™t appear in Notifications settings

In Network there are two new settings: whether a network should be automatically connected to when available and whether to reduce background data usage when connected to that network.

System Settings โ†’ Network

Disable autoconnect or mark a network as metered

We also updated the pointer icons in Mouse & Touchpad settings and the checkmarks in Locale settings will now respect your chosen accent color. Plus settings pages with sidebars now remember the width you adjusted them to, thanks to Alain.

Installation & Onboarding

David fixed a crash with certain partitioning schemes in the Installerโ€™s custom install view. And the Encryption step was redesigned to fit on a single page, solving an issue with confusing navigation. Plus, onboarding will now always stay centered on the screen, even when resized.

Panel & Quick Settings

Ilya fixed an issue with the panel height when using the Classic session and HiDPI displays. The app context menu in the Applications menu now shows a โ€œKeep in Dockโ€ checkbox, just like in the Dock thanks to Stella. In the Power menu, we now show the device model if available, and avoid erroneously showing an empty battery icon thanks to Alain. In the Sound menu, Dmitry fixed loading album art from certain apps like Google Chrome, and we fixed an issue where player icons could become too large.

Accounts in Quick Settings

See who else is logged in and quickly switch accounts from Quick Settings

In Quick settings, Leonhard fixed an issue with performing updates while shutting down. And Alain added a new page where you can see which other people are logged in and quickly switch between accounts.

Dock

Leo added a bit more spacing between launchers and their running indicators, and fixed an issue where larger icons could be clipped at the peak of their bounce animation. Apps who donโ€™t notify on startup will no longer bounce in the dock indefinitely, thanks to Leonhard. We fixed an issue where the dock would still receive click events while hidden in the Classic session. Plus the dock now has an opaque style when โ€œPanel Translucencyโ€ is turned off in System Settings โ†’ Desktop โ†’ Dock & Panel.

Window Manager

We have another huge release of our window manager thanks to Leonhard and Leo. This release fixes five potential crashes, over a dozen reported issues, fixes related to both the Classic and Secure sessions, issues related to HiDPI, and more, plus performance improvements. Itโ€™s worth reading the full release notes on GitHub if you have been waiting for the fix for a specific issue.

And More

OS 8.0.1 includes the latest long-term support Hardware Enablement stack from Ubuntu, including Linux 6.11. This brings improved performance for AMD processors, support for Intel โ€œLunar Lakeโ€ processors, and filesystem performance improvements in some cases. Plus support for certain webcams, USB network devices, joysticks, and more.

Leo fixed an issue where connecting Bluetooth devices could cause the Lock Screen to freeze. You can now close the captive network assistant with the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + Q, thanks to Stanisล‚aw. And Alain fixed copying screenshots to the clipboard.

We fixed an issue where wired network connections could fail to connect due to a change in Ubuntu. Weโ€™re pursuing this issue upstream and working on a way to ship the fix as an update, but for now fixing this issue requires either manual intervention through Terminal or a reinstall.

We also now pre-install an AppArmor profile that fixes a number of Flatpak-related issues like not being to install certain runtime updates or apps not launching in the guest session or Demo mode. Special thanks to Uncle Tallest for investigating this issue and helping folks in our Discord who ran into it.

And of course this release comes with a ton of translation updates! Special thanks to our hard-working internationalization community and especially Ryo who fixed a number of issues with things that couldnโ€™t be localized properly in the previous release.


Get elementary OS 8.0.1

elementary OS 8.0.1 is available as a pay-what-you-can purchase at elementary.io today. Localized direct downloads and a torrent magnet link are provided.

Sponsors have been able to download OS 8.0.1 release candidates since last week, so if getting things before anyone else is important to you, consider sponsoring us on GitHub

๐Ÿ’พ

  •  
โŒ