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Kubuntu 6.12 - The Edgy Eft

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    Kubuntu 6.12 - The Edgy Eft

    The Dapper + 1 release of Kubuntu was codenamed The Edgy Eft on April 19

    Full Email:
    This mail charts the territory post-Dapper for those of us who like to
    dream a little.

    First things first. The codename of Dapper+1 will be:

    The Edgy Eft

    And here's why. Edgy is all about cutting edge, perhaps bleeding edge,
    brand new code and infrastructure. It will be the right time to bring in
    some seriously interesting but definitely edgy new technologies which
    lay the groundwork for the next wave of Ubuntu development.

    An Eft is a youthful newt, going through its first exploration of the
    rocky territory just outside the stream. And that's exactly what we hope
    the development team will do with Ubuntu during the Edgy cycle - explore
    slightly unfamiliar and uncharted territory that is perhaps a little out
    of the mainstream.

    So dream a little about Xen for virtualisation, Xgl/AIGLX and other
    wonderful wobbly window bits, the goodness of Network Manager, a first
    flirt with multiarch support for true mixed 32-bit and 64-bit computing
    on AMD64, the interesting possibilities of the SMART package manager...
    and other pieces of infrastructure which have appeared tantalisingly
    on the horizon.

    We can afford to take some risks with Dapper+1, because Dapper has turned
    out so well. We have a great answer for people who need super-solid
    and super-predictable results: Dapper is still fresh, will continue to work
    on modern hardware for some time, and has plenty of legs in its support
    cycle left to run.

    In terms of the management of the release, we will have some fun with the
    core Canonical team. I'm promising to impose (almost ;-) zero from-the-top
    requirements for Edgy, this release is entirely up the to development
    team to envision and implement. Of course, feature proposals need to
    go through a review and approval process, and we'll make sure everyone
    has enough on their plate to keep busy during the cycle, but almost
    everything that lands in Edgy will be driven from the development team,
    who get to play with whatever new technologies they fancy along the way.
    So that should give us a nice big bump in infrastructure and bling.

    I would encourage members of the community who have been thinking of
    a cool new feature or plan to seize the opportunity to get it into Edgy.

    The tradeoff, of course, will be that some of these new ideas will not
    land perfectly first time. So there may be shakiness, or outright
    bumpiness, in Edgy. We will for the first time possibly have to say
    to new users "Edgy gets security updates etc for 18 months but seriously
    consider Dapper if you need the most polished platform". I think that's
    a worthwhile tradeoff, because I think a clean-the-pipes type release
    like Edgy is a good way for us to re-energise the team and the distro.
    Risk is good, when you give it a place and a time. And Dapper+1 is
    the right time for us to take a few risks.

    All of this will be managed using the Launchpad spec tracker, now called
    Blueprint. You can find the current set of "out there maybe" specs for
    Ubuntu at:

    https://launchpad.net/distros/ubuntu/+specs

    Go ahead and start drawing up braindump specs in the wiki for ideas you
    would like to get into Edgy, and registering them there. Don't put too
    much time into the detail of the specs because we should stay focused on
    the business of polishing up Dapper until June 1st. In the week after
    the Dapper release we will open up the Edgy archive and start reviewing
    and prioritising Edgy specs, and two weeks after release we will have
    the next Ubuntu Developer Summit, where the core team's specs will get
    finalised and approved.

    This "meta cycle" of aggressive new features, slowly converging over a
    series of releases on a solid and consistent look-and-feel and underlying
    platform, has worked very well for us over the course of the past two
    years. We didn't plan it this way, but I suspect the next two to three
    years will look similar - we'll start of with a release that has a lot
    of edge and new tech (remember Warty?) and polish that up till we see
    the timing is right for a really polished enterprise "long term support"
    release, like Dapper. We've no concrete plans for the next Dapper, only
    that we'll know a release or two in advance when the time is right.

    The past two years have been a privilege and a pleasure. Dapper is the
    full expression of what we have learned in this first phase, and I have
    every reason to believe it will be a hit. Once that's out the door, it
    will be a great opportunity to rock-'n-roll up our sleeves, play with new
    ideas, kick some new tyres and of course dig some new foundations. We may
    strike gold, we will likely uncover some dirt, but it should be fun and it
    should be funky. Let's live on the Edge a while.

    Mark
    <br /><br />*temp. hiatus from forums due to comp + net broken* :&#039;(

    #2
    Re: Kubuntu 6.12 - The Edgy Eft

    Also, the Kubuntu Dapper 6.06 LTS (long term support) beta was released today, as per the Release Schedule
    <br /><br />*temp. hiatus from forums due to comp + net broken* :&#039;(

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Kubuntu 6.12 - The Edgy Eft

      Cant wait to get home and download the beta


      8)


      lol i never heard of a eft


      [img width=400 height=284]http://museum.gov.ns.ca/mnh/nature/salamand/thumbs/images/red-eft.jpg[/img]

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Kubuntu 6.12 - The Edgy Eft

        The thought of the exciting new implementations  and additions to Kubuntu through the forthcoming Eft made me sit here and think that maybe this time a little bit more cutting edge would be shared to Kubuntu, in the same way that Ubuntu has proudly been presented.....then I looked at that picture and my heart sank....... ITS FLIPPIN GNOME COLOURED!

        Bukunut (NOT taking his posts seriously)
        There are three kinds of people in the world; those who can count and those who can't.

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Kubuntu 6.12 - The Edgy Eft

          These update informations makes my feelings of stickin with Kubuntu more stronger!. I am also into the practice of converting others in neighborhood!

          Comment

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