Crashed Pips - Computers, politics, emetic trash

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Fedora screenshots

Filed under: Linux — Tags: , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 16:32

Having now configured Fedora as I like it, I can now show you some screenshots of the current desktop.

The desktop with the two gnome-panels on autohide

The desktop with the two gnome-panels on autohide

I appreciate that this particular image is quite unremarkable. However, what the screenshot can’t tell you is how fast it is. It boots very quickly (boot to login prompt in under a minute, which considering the fact it’s Unix, and without optimisation, isn’t bad at all) and Compiz works without a hitch.

Wireless, bluetooth over USB, sleep, display, video chip, trackpad, et al ALL worked straight out of the box. Don’t ask me how they did that.

OpenOffice.org 3.0, which, you will note, IS in the repositories, unlike in Ubuntu.

OpenOffice.org 3.0, which, you will note, IS in the repositories, unlike in Ubuntu.

OpenOffice 3.0 works very well, even if the installation process is somewhat fiddly (you have to yum each individual component.) I might have been able to save a bit of time with package groups… probably not, though.

Fedora has an About this Computer option in the System menu, which links to this panel in System Monitor

Fedora has an About this Computer option in the System menu, which links to this panel in System Monitor

Overall, Fedora is very impressive, very fast, and very polished - more polished that Ubuntu Intrepid, in fact (yes, even the GNOME variant). There are still some issues (WLAN won’t work when waking from sleep, for example) but that’s SELinux’s fault, it seems. After generating a policy around it, it worked just fine.



Thursday, November 27, 2008

I think I’m in love

Filed under: Linux — Tags: , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 23:17

I installed Fedora this evening, and I am absolutely in love with it. I downloaded it over BitTorrent over two days (yes, it is that slow) and popped it on an SD card, and then booted the Eee PC from it.

The first thing I noticed was that it is incredibly fast. Boot-up happens without Plymouth (modesetting support for Intel chips is still in development, and will probably appear when it gets merged into the mainline kernel) but still uses a nice little ASCII boot screen. It’s fast - I haven’t timed it yet, but it’s speedier than Ubuntu.

It boots into GNOME 2.24 (through a brilliant implementation of GDM) starting X in less than three seconds. And - perhaps most surprisingly - everything on the Eee PC worked out of the box. WLAN, Ethernet, display, compositing, touchpad, webcam, everything. When Ubuntu’s traditionally been better in this respect, I’m thoroughly impressed that everything works out of the box in this release.

The only immediate problem I’m having at the moment is the fact that because my Internet connection’s been quite slow lately, downloading OpenOffice.org and LaTeX is taking a lot of time. It’s been going for hours now… and will keep on going for a lot longer.

Another issue I have with Fedora is the fact that a superuser password is required. I’m aware this is the norm on Unix systems, but I would like a simple (GUI) system whereby it could switch to an Ubuntu-style system (i.e. root login disabled, first user added to /etc/sudoers). Aside from these gripes, however, Fedora is incredibly solid. I’ll be using it on the Eee PC for the forseeable future from now on: I still think Ubuntu is a great OS, but for now, it’ll be Fedora on my main Linux box.



Tuesday, November 4, 2008

THIS is what Fedora 10’s boot sequence will look like

Filed under: Linux — Tags: , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 00:17


I must admit, when I first saw this, I was floored. It is staggeringly beautiful.

It uses a new bootsplash system called Plymouth, which takes advantage of the modesetting abilities available in some kernels. Hopefully modesetting will make it into the next release of the mainline kernel so that Plymouth can be used more easily on other distributions: whilst it requires compilation into the initramfs, it looks gorgeous and will certainly increase the ‘wow’ factor for Fedora.



Friday, October 31, 2008

OMG! It’s KDE!

Filed under: Linux — Tags: , , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 17:54

A pretty desktop! On KDE4! OMGWTFBBQ!

A pretty desktop! On KDE4! OMGWTFBBQ!

I never thought I’d be saying this. This is a KDE4 desktop: or, more specifically, it’s my KDE desktop.

It’s quite a surprise - Ubuntu’s famed for its rather rubbish implementation of KDE. However, the installation went quite smoothly on the Eee PC (if a bit buggily) and after a reboot and a little tweaking, everything worked wonderfully.

There are one or two rough edges. I don’t like the size of the Kickoff menu, and I also think that more work is needed on Firefox integration. KMail is also obnoxious towards Gmail’s IMAP server. However, I’ll be sticking with KDE on Kubuntu 8.10 - for now at least. I’m impressed by KDE 4.1: while it’s still not perfect, it’s better than the original KDE4 release by an order of magnitude. It’s also quite a lot speedier (although not as fast as GNOME).

I hate to say it, but I may have to eat my words about KDE. The way it is, it has a lot going for it.



Thursday, October 30, 2008

Does KDE still suck?

Filed under: Linux — Tags: , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 15:50

I don’t like KDE. It sucks. But, then again, if you read this blog often, you probably know that and are sick to death of hearing about it.

Therefore, today, to coincide with the release of Ubuntu 8.10, I’m going to give KDE a go. When I tried KDE4 a couple of months ago, I hated it. However, KDE 4.1, which, from what I’ve read, looks a lot better than the initial KDE4 release. I’ll be throwing Kubuntu Intrepid on a USB stick and attempting to install it on the Eee PC. If it works, I could be swayed from my GNOME loyalty. If not… well, it’ll continue to be on my suck list. For now, at least.

I might liveblog the upgrade later this evening. Then again, I might not.

Either way, this has the potential to be very interesting.



Saturday, August 16, 2008

BREAKING NEWS: NewHuman is DEAD!

Filed under: Linux — Tags: , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 01:05

I caused a bit of a stir with my post decrying how ugly the NewHuman theme in the Ubuntu 8.10 alphas is. Well, it seems Mark Shuttleworth (or someone at Human Towers) agrees with me, and in the latest alpha of Intrepid, NewHuman has gone.

The old Human theme is back, even if the wrong GTK engine is applied by default (this will end up being fixed, one presumes). There have been some subtle changes to the buttons, which are very nice, and there are plans to swap the font out before the final release at the end of October. (Softpedia has the scoop.)

Now the theme is sorted out, we can think more about the nicer points of Intrepid, including:

  • a new, encrypted, ~/Private folder
  • GNOME 2.23, including the new, more flexible GDM and guest user capability
  • NetworkManager 0.7, with 3G and better PPP support
  • X.org 1.5, with better plug and play capabilities
  • The 2.6.26 kernel.

So, I think I can consider that a little victory for the sake of Ubuntu users. One for the CV methinks… :-)



Saturday, August 9, 2008

Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid Ibex looks DISGUSTING

Filed under: Linux, Software, UNIX — Tags: , , , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 16:06

Ubuntu 8.10, the Intrepid Ibex, is starting to take shape. It’s going to be similar in spirit to Edgy Eft (6.10), in that it’s focussed on introducing radical new features, as opposed to polish and stability. Now, I’m all in favour of new features. And, in my opinion, Ubuntu needs a new theme. Perhaps it should be something with a little more colour this time. It also needs a new font (Bitstream Vera? DejaVu Sans? EUCH!)

However, looking at the radical new theme included in the alphas of Intrepid Ibex, I am horribly disappointed. Just look at it! LOOK AT IT!

Yes, that really is Ubuntu. God, is that ugly. Image from softpedia.com, but it\'s free software anyway.

Yes, this really is Ubuntu. It's fugly, yes.

I can see so many problems with this it’s unreal that this wasn’t killed before it even entered the launchpad repository.

  • It’s the colour of excrement.
  • Readability is rubbish on the window backgrounds (black on brown - baad).
  • It’s the colour of excrement.
  • The active window highlight is not immediately obvious.
  • The font is still revolting.
  • It’s not remotely radical. The interface is still practically the same.
  • It’s the colour of excrement.
  • Look at it! JUST LOOK AT IT!

In my opinion, Ubuntu should now try something more radical. Scrap the existing panel arrangement, and try something like this.

Espresso, a mock-up created by an Ubuntu user as a possible interface for Intrepid. Its page is <a href=If they didn’t want something so radical, they at least need something that looks better than Pooman. Here’s my desktop configuration:

New Wave theme applied, with smaller title bars and the bottom panel on autohide.

New Wave theme applied, with smaller title bars and the bottom panel on autohide.

Now look at that. It’s pretty, yet it’s still distinctly Ubuntu. It could have some orange hints added if necessary - but either way it’s better than the new “Feces Flavour” of Human.

EDIT: Since this post was made, NewHuman has been removed from Alpha 4 of Intrepid. This pleased me.



Monday, July 14, 2008

Why I Dislike KDE

Filed under: Linux, Software, UNIX — Tags: , , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 18:42

In the world of *nix FOSS desktop environments, you generally have three choices - you can use GNOME, KDE or cobble together something from the various window mangers, file managers and other trimmings available out there on the Internet. The latter is the most complicated, and the first two are the most well-integrated and most convenient, which is why they are more likely to be tied to distributions.

There’s often in-fighting between GNOME and KDE users about whose desktop environment is best. A bit like the vi vs. emacs argument. Each environment has its own advantages, but each has his own preference.

Linus Torvalds, the creator of the Linux kernel, is a vehement KDE supporter. He dislikes the fact that GNOME is less configurable than KDE and that it apparently mollycoddles its users.

However, I’m on the opposite side of things. There are many things I dislike about KDE, and I’m going to list some of them here.

For starters, it seems to be very egotistical. Everything has some connection to the letter K, and it’s just ridiculously in-your-face and n00b-unfriendly. Remember that the average Joe User can’t tell the difference between his OS and his desktop environment, so there must be a lot of ‘K’ keys on keyboards out there with worn out springs.

Another irritation is its pointless flamboyance. Why does the tooltip automatically animate on with a circles animation? Why is there a silly bouncing icon next to the cursor when an app is started? This is pointless. There’s no reason why it can’t be available if asked for, but the eye candy switched on by default should only be that that is explicitly productive.

Then we come to Konqueror, The Most Pointless Piece Of Software In History. I don’t want to use my file browser as a web browser! You might as well go the full hog and get it to launch every application within itself when a document is selected. And Konqueror’s HTML rendering is sometimes simply awful. And why perform this function when Firefox will do exactly the same?

Another thing that irks me is that it’s just plain ugly. Most of it looks like a cheap rip-off of Vista/OS X, but so poorly executed it’s laughable.

Take this screenshot of KDE4’s default desktop as an example.

I mean, look at that. It’s awful. The default choice of font is awful (why not FreeSans?) and I detest the kickoff button and the clock. I mean, why does the taskbar have to be SO big? It’s twice as big as it needs to be, and that little reflection, both on the taskbar buttons and at the top of the panel, is completely and utterly awful.

True, GNOME uses a font like Verdana as its default, but it’s easier to change. And KDE is also far more buggy than GNOME in my experience, and it also seems ridiculously unprofessional.

I mean, why have a dragon amongst some clouds in the login window by default? Cutesy mascots should NOT be default. And when I installed Kubuntu in a virtual machine not so long ago, I was continuously plagued by sound problems, ugly notifications and the fact that KDE had lost its helpfile index.

In a way, KDE is like that idiot who used to be in your science class at school. He would always be the only person in the school to break the class cock-o-meter, would spend most of his day farting around and being an idiot, and then complain to the teacher because he hasn’t got a pencil. KDE is just so unprofessional and pointlessly flamboyant and bloated, I simply can’t see why anyone would describe it as ’sexy’.



Saturday, July 12, 2008

Ubuntu Netbook Remix: Very Interesting

Filed under: Linux — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 13:36

I’ve just installed bits of Ubuntu Netbook Remix on Hammond (the Eee PC). And my God, is it beautiful. Just look at it! Look at it!

OMG just LOOK at it!

And look at what it looks like when a window is open! Look at it… it’s unbelievably slick!

What Firefox looks like in Ubuntu Netbook Remix.

Note how smoothly the window picker slips into the Firefox window! It’s stunning!

That said, it’s by no means perfect, yet. The installation process is rather messy at the moment, but by the time Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid Ibex appears (in October) it should be a painless process. At present, one has to

  1. Add the repository to /etc/apt/sources.list
  2. Disable Compiz
  3. Install all the packages EXCEPT ume-config
  4. Add maximus to the session startup script
  5. Rearrange the panels
  6. Log out and in
  7. Set the theme to Human Netbook
  8. Add favourites and launch them to get rid of the irritating star emblem
  9. Set the wallpaper to something prettier, but set it to “Center” or “Stretch”, otherwise it will be ugly
  10. Restart the computer and hope nothing breaks

However, after that, everything appears in the shiny newness you see here. However, there are still a couple of rough edges:

What’s wrong here is that there’s nothing there to stop the icon labels if their text overflows into the space occupied by the icon immediately below. Here’s another caveat:

Misplaced scrollbar

The problem here is that the scrollbar has badly misplaced itself - outside the box. However, this strangely manages to look artistic, somewhat like one of those silly installations at the Tate Modern.

What you see here is ume-launcher, Canonical’s answer to the default Asus Eee launcher. Personally, I think it beats the Eee launcher hands down.

There’s also the window picker applet at the top, which is specially designed for small screens, and maximus, somethig that maximises every window to make the best use of available screen space.

The reason it all looks so pretty is because of the new system it uses. It’s called Clutter, and uses OpenGL to render truly stunning user interface graphics. Somewhere on the Internet, there is a demo floating about of a GDM theme using Clutter - it looks simply stunning. The animations for ume-launcher are still a bit messy in some places, but my God are they beautiful.

It easily beats the Eee’s ugly default launcher, in my opinion. But there are still a few things I think wouldn’t go amiss in ume-launcher:

  • Customisable menus
  • A search box in, say, the corner of the ‘window’, above the shortcut to the home folder, which links to Tracker
  • (Very) occasionally, maximus plays up and doesn’t maximise windows properly.
  • A better file manager than Nautilus. Howsabout something using Miller columns, to make things more space-effective?

Other than these small gripes, I’m finding it difficult to fault, even at this early release. I suspect the final version that will appear with Intrepid will be even more shiny and wonderful.



Thursday, May 1, 2008

Hammond just had a big crash

Filed under: Linux, My Computers — Tags: , , , , , — Jonathan Rothwell @ 19:58

…and recovered somewhat quickly afterwards.

Here’s an image. Sorry, but Swiftfox decided it wasn’t going to let me thumb this.



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