I upgraded recently from 8.04 to 9.04 and I'm really unhappy with the new version for the following reasons:
GUI
The UI is very nice and seems to be based on the Mac's minimalistic paradigm rather than 8.04, which looked more like Windows. This minimalistic approach though clean looking also obscures how things can be done and forces everyone to use one particular approach that the developers had in mind.
Unfortunately unlike Mac addicts who revel in the "correct" Mac way of doing anything, Unix aficionados have traditionally scorned the UI and seen the command line as the only acceptable way of interacting with an OS. So anyone knowledgeable tends to only offer solutions to everything through CLI making the UI superfluous.
My impression is that the only purpose of this beautiful GUI is to entice Windows people to come to Linux though once they get in, their only choice is to learn the CLI and ignore the UI. There appears to be a disconnect between the UI designers who are looking to create cutting edge GUIs and those working on the underlying OS itself who have no need for anything other than the command line.
This makes the GUI a not very usable though pretty curiosity.
An example is the very useful File Management options in 8.04 tucked away in the advanced tab of the System Settings which no longer exists in 9.04 anywhere that I can find. I could do the same thing in the command line but why should I have to ?
Also in 8.04 if you wanted to edit a file as root, Dolphin had a useful Action of "Edit as Root" which no longer exists in 9.04. As with all things I seem to have to do a "sudo ..." if I want to get this basic task done.
Stability
When I accepted the auto prompt upgrade to 9.04, the process completed but rebooted into a black screen. This type of issue keeps occurring in 9.04 but never happened in 8.04. Considering that stability is one of the hallmarks of Unix and one of the reasons why people would want to leave Windows to come here, issues like this make it difficult to recommend Kubuntu as a development platform.
Like others, I've been experiencing the periodic freezes on an old Dell with Intel video chipsets. Since one of the selling points of Linux has always been that you could reuse old machines and get better performance, this type of problem is a real issue.
Packages
The KPackage manager has a variety of problems unlike the old apt which was simpler but more useful. Also in general, the package approach means that you're limited to the version and modules that are available, making it impossible to take advantage of the amazing diversity of components available on the net to do almost anything.
This is a basic issue and I don't understand how it can be resolved but as a new user it's what I would need addressed to choose Ubuntu as a primary platform.
Ok those are my thoughts after using 9.04 for two weeks. I'm going back to 8.04 if I can ( had problems getting it to install as 9,04 file still seem to exist even after a clean install). To get work done now I'll rely on my XP box which sits by patiently.
GUI
The UI is very nice and seems to be based on the Mac's minimalistic paradigm rather than 8.04, which looked more like Windows. This minimalistic approach though clean looking also obscures how things can be done and forces everyone to use one particular approach that the developers had in mind.
Unfortunately unlike Mac addicts who revel in the "correct" Mac way of doing anything, Unix aficionados have traditionally scorned the UI and seen the command line as the only acceptable way of interacting with an OS. So anyone knowledgeable tends to only offer solutions to everything through CLI making the UI superfluous.
My impression is that the only purpose of this beautiful GUI is to entice Windows people to come to Linux though once they get in, their only choice is to learn the CLI and ignore the UI. There appears to be a disconnect between the UI designers who are looking to create cutting edge GUIs and those working on the underlying OS itself who have no need for anything other than the command line.
This makes the GUI a not very usable though pretty curiosity.
An example is the very useful File Management options in 8.04 tucked away in the advanced tab of the System Settings which no longer exists in 9.04 anywhere that I can find. I could do the same thing in the command line but why should I have to ?
Also in 8.04 if you wanted to edit a file as root, Dolphin had a useful Action of "Edit as Root" which no longer exists in 9.04. As with all things I seem to have to do a "sudo ..." if I want to get this basic task done.
Stability
When I accepted the auto prompt upgrade to 9.04, the process completed but rebooted into a black screen. This type of issue keeps occurring in 9.04 but never happened in 8.04. Considering that stability is one of the hallmarks of Unix and one of the reasons why people would want to leave Windows to come here, issues like this make it difficult to recommend Kubuntu as a development platform.
Like others, I've been experiencing the periodic freezes on an old Dell with Intel video chipsets. Since one of the selling points of Linux has always been that you could reuse old machines and get better performance, this type of problem is a real issue.
Packages
The KPackage manager has a variety of problems unlike the old apt which was simpler but more useful. Also in general, the package approach means that you're limited to the version and modules that are available, making it impossible to take advantage of the amazing diversity of components available on the net to do almost anything.
This is a basic issue and I don't understand how it can be resolved but as a new user it's what I would need addressed to choose Ubuntu as a primary platform.
Ok those are my thoughts after using 9.04 for two weeks. I'm going back to 8.04 if I can ( had problems getting it to install as 9,04 file still seem to exist even after a clean install). To get work done now I'll rely on my XP box which sits by patiently.
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