This is actually--as it turns out--#1 Testimonial.
#2 Testimonial is below in Post #8 where I installed it in dual-boot with Windows on a laptop.
#1 Testimonial.
Took the plunge and installed 18.04.1. In fact, cowboy-style.
I've been using 14.04. I got the 18.04.1 iso, checked it, used dd to make a live USB flash drive, and thought I'd run it and just mess around. I did that. For maybe 3 minutes (might of been 2.6, not real sure), and decided WTH to go ahead and do it.
I usually take my time to upgrade, line up all the ducks, do my data backups, and proceed carefully. This time was different, to say the least. In the live session, I gathered all my user data on my /home, put it in one folder, and dragged it off to a flash drive. Backup done. Still in live session, installed gparted, ran it against my HDD where I had 12 partitions (on a GPT), including three ESPs and six OSs. I kept only sad1 = ESP (for my 14.04), wiped out the rest, reformatted the ESP FAT32, made a /, home, and swap, exited and started the 18.04.1 "Manual" installation, which went good and quick.
I note that the installer does offer to make (via its "Use for" drop-downlist) an ESP for the user, a good thing. As for where to place the grub bootloader ... since mine is UEFI, it doesn't matter because GRUB will go into the active (my one and only) ESP; but I said "sda" because you have to say something.
So, all went well. Just two glitches (remember, I d/l'd the 18.04.1 iso--not sure if that matters):
-- In the live session, when I was ready I clicked Install Kubuntu, but it didn't work; so I rebooted and hit Install Kubuntu.
-- After finishing the installation, I got "Please remove installation media and reboot." I removed the flash drive, hit Enter waited, but no re-boot! So I hit a hard re-boot and all went well.
Setting up and configuring some apps went easy. I noticed that some of the apps took care of a lot of the configuring by default. E.g., my printer was recognized and hplip got installed. Chrome found my Firefox bookmarks on its own. A lot of apps are standard now, like Firefox, VLC, LibreOffice, etc. So the setup and configuring was just a lot of routine monkey motion this time, one app after another, and went smoothly. And I dragged my data (all in that one folder from 14.04) off that data flash drive and on to my new Desktop, which I'll sort out later.
I wasn't much use to configuring Plasma, pretty much ran my 14.04 the way I ran XP, but didn't have much trouble getting the hang of the panels and widgets thing, kind of by trial and error. Losing your entire panel and losing your Trashcan are humbling experiences. For new people reading this, the kde.org support is pretty good; for example, start here and click on the links as you read:
https://userbase.kde.org/Plasma#Panels .
For some reason, the 18.04 seems to handle the browsers better than 14.04. I opened both Firefox and Chromium, opened multiple tabs in each, in each tab ran various puzzle-games-vids (like slots, tic-tac-toe, video ads, etc.), and it all seemed real snappy and quick with no crashes.
I still have a short list to work through, but I've already concluded that 18.04.1 is great. Lucky that it is great -- as I wiped all the other OSs I had on the HDD. Like I said, this upgrade went cowboy-style.
#2 Testimonial is below in Post #8 where I installed it in dual-boot with Windows on a laptop.
#1 Testimonial.
Took the plunge and installed 18.04.1. In fact, cowboy-style.
I've been using 14.04. I got the 18.04.1 iso, checked it, used dd to make a live USB flash drive, and thought I'd run it and just mess around. I did that. For maybe 3 minutes (might of been 2.6, not real sure), and decided WTH to go ahead and do it.
I usually take my time to upgrade, line up all the ducks, do my data backups, and proceed carefully. This time was different, to say the least. In the live session, I gathered all my user data on my /home, put it in one folder, and dragged it off to a flash drive. Backup done. Still in live session, installed gparted, ran it against my HDD where I had 12 partitions (on a GPT), including three ESPs and six OSs. I kept only sad1 = ESP (for my 14.04), wiped out the rest, reformatted the ESP FAT32, made a /, home, and swap, exited and started the 18.04.1 "Manual" installation, which went good and quick.
I note that the installer does offer to make (via its "Use for" drop-downlist) an ESP for the user, a good thing. As for where to place the grub bootloader ... since mine is UEFI, it doesn't matter because GRUB will go into the active (my one and only) ESP; but I said "sda" because you have to say something.
So, all went well. Just two glitches (remember, I d/l'd the 18.04.1 iso--not sure if that matters):
-- In the live session, when I was ready I clicked Install Kubuntu, but it didn't work; so I rebooted and hit Install Kubuntu.
-- After finishing the installation, I got "Please remove installation media and reboot." I removed the flash drive, hit Enter waited, but no re-boot! So I hit a hard re-boot and all went well.
Setting up and configuring some apps went easy. I noticed that some of the apps took care of a lot of the configuring by default. E.g., my printer was recognized and hplip got installed. Chrome found my Firefox bookmarks on its own. A lot of apps are standard now, like Firefox, VLC, LibreOffice, etc. So the setup and configuring was just a lot of routine monkey motion this time, one app after another, and went smoothly. And I dragged my data (all in that one folder from 14.04) off that data flash drive and on to my new Desktop, which I'll sort out later.
I wasn't much use to configuring Plasma, pretty much ran my 14.04 the way I ran XP, but didn't have much trouble getting the hang of the panels and widgets thing, kind of by trial and error. Losing your entire panel and losing your Trashcan are humbling experiences. For new people reading this, the kde.org support is pretty good; for example, start here and click on the links as you read:
https://userbase.kde.org/Plasma#Panels .
For some reason, the 18.04 seems to handle the browsers better than 14.04. I opened both Firefox and Chromium, opened multiple tabs in each, in each tab ran various puzzle-games-vids (like slots, tic-tac-toe, video ads, etc.), and it all seemed real snappy and quick with no crashes.
I still have a short list to work through, but I've already concluded that 18.04.1 is great. Lucky that it is great -- as I wiped all the other OSs I had on the HDD. Like I said, this upgrade went cowboy-style.
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