The only great thing I see in Lucid is that I actually got it to install on my machine this time! I was an avid Kubuntu user for years until I could no longer run it, and I mean on any of my 6 machines. There was always a problem. The install went well, and it even got the graphics and the mouse right. (Which is an amazing feat)
I would rank Lucid as a 1st Beta rather than an LTS. There are multitudes of bugs and things not working without a major overhaul. First of all, there is a media player, Dragon player, but no useful codecs are installed until you try to play something and it says you have to download the "extra" files. The files necessary to play media files should come with the player (wouldn't you call that a dependency?), what if you don't have the internet to rely on?
The widgets on the desktop did not stay where I put them at first, now after a re-boot, my clock is all messed up with huge hands that cover the entire desktop. <-- signs of NOT LTS.
Akonadi is still not operational, where am I to keep my contacts? ALL major OS's have a PIM. Very few are released that this feature does not work. <-- signs of NOT LTS.
The fonts in Firefox are really hard to read. so much so that even with an O, the top and bottom of the O are cut out completely.
A lot of programs to be installed have no decent default settings. ALL major OS's have default settings that the OS can operate on "as-is" and if you don't like the way it works, THEN you change the default settings. Not here, too many of the programs I installed, and that were installed during install, require you to know the command line options for a program you've have never used before with little or no help in setting it up.
UBUNTU SHOULD HAVE SORTED THIS OUT YEARS AGO.
It shouldn't take a rocket scientist to install and enjoy an OS. Ubuntu has been on the straight path to practically asking it's users to go to Massachusetts Institute of Technology for install tips. I have been involved with different OS's for over 25 years, and the only one that rivals Ubuntu as the hardest to install is OS/2 from IBM. At least they had the excuse that it came on 22 floppy disks.
I will continue setting this thing up, unless I give up, and post an "After Overhaul" review.
I would rank Lucid as a 1st Beta rather than an LTS. There are multitudes of bugs and things not working without a major overhaul. First of all, there is a media player, Dragon player, but no useful codecs are installed until you try to play something and it says you have to download the "extra" files. The files necessary to play media files should come with the player (wouldn't you call that a dependency?), what if you don't have the internet to rely on?
The widgets on the desktop did not stay where I put them at first, now after a re-boot, my clock is all messed up with huge hands that cover the entire desktop. <-- signs of NOT LTS.
Akonadi is still not operational, where am I to keep my contacts? ALL major OS's have a PIM. Very few are released that this feature does not work. <-- signs of NOT LTS.
The fonts in Firefox are really hard to read. so much so that even with an O, the top and bottom of the O are cut out completely.
A lot of programs to be installed have no decent default settings. ALL major OS's have default settings that the OS can operate on "as-is" and if you don't like the way it works, THEN you change the default settings. Not here, too many of the programs I installed, and that were installed during install, require you to know the command line options for a program you've have never used before with little or no help in setting it up.
UBUNTU SHOULD HAVE SORTED THIS OUT YEARS AGO.
It shouldn't take a rocket scientist to install and enjoy an OS. Ubuntu has been on the straight path to practically asking it's users to go to Massachusetts Institute of Technology for install tips. I have been involved with different OS's for over 25 years, and the only one that rivals Ubuntu as the hardest to install is OS/2 from IBM. At least they had the excuse that it came on 22 floppy disks.
I will continue setting this thing up, unless I give up, and post an "After Overhaul" review.
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