OPERATING SYSTEMSOS Linux

23.10 is UBUNTU at its BEST (+Kubuntu, MATE, Xubuntu, Lubuntu, Cinnamon, Budgie…)

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#Ubuntu #Linux #linuxdistro

00:00 Intro
00:31 Enhanced Tiling
02:32 New App Store
05:11 Firmware Tool
05:50 Install Changes
07:24 GNOME 45 Features
09:31 Under the hood
11:05 Official Flavours
14:16 Sponsor: Get a PC made to run Linux
15:29 Support the channel

All GNOME 45 features: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQSA0nZaF6M

You’ll get the whole new tiling assistant extension added, right out of the box. It expands on the edge tiling that GNOME already brings, by letting you do quarter tiling, so you have more flexibility in how you organize your workspace. You also can scale a window to use half of your screen’s height, by dragging it to the bottom edge, or to the top edge.

Ubuntu 23.10 also comes with a brand new Ubuntu App Store, called the App Center. It’s a really well designed application, and it won’t stop you from installing apps from the Ubuntu repos, since debian packages are supported after all.

Ubuntu 23.10 also comes with a new firmware updater application. It uses the linux vendor firmware service as a backend, or course, so it’s basically just a GUI for the FWUPD daemon.

The installer now defaults to a new install, with just the essentials. If you want the full complement of apps Ubuntu usually ships, then you’ll have to select the “full install” option instead.

There’s also a new experimental full disk encryption option that uses the TPM chip in your computer, if it has one.

And, of course, Ubuntu 23.10 ships with GNOME 45. First, the Activities button has been replaced with a workspaces indicator. Background apps have been improved in the quick settings, with the ability to click them to open a window, and a little indicator when closing an app. Still in the quick settings, you’ll get a keyboard backlight toggle, that lets you turn that feature on or off, or select the brightness level you prefer. And, in the panel, you’ll get a camera indicator when an app is accessing your webcam.

In terms of apps, there’s a new split headerbar design for apps like Nautilus and the settings, and Nautilus gained improved search.

In the settings, you’ll get a new system dialog, with more information about your computer, and an easy clickable button to copy all that information. There’s also a new Privacy page, better designed, and a few otehr pages have been touched up, like with virtually every release of every desktop environment.

Finally, the compositor, Mutter, gained support for YUV color space, so it should handle certain movies and shows much better, and it now has a separate thread to handle the mouse pointer under wayland, which will result in a lot less lag and input delay, so that’s a big improvement.

Under the hood, 23.10 ships whit the Linux kernel 6.5, so you should get the latest hardware support, and a bunch of performance improvements. Mantic Minotaur will be supported for 9 months, as it’s not an LTS release, so it’s only suitable if you don’t mind running big upgrades regularly.

The flavour with the most changes is Ubuntu budgie, which updates to Budgie 10.8. THis has a new trash applet, the new Magpie compositor to better support X11 while Budgie plans its transition to being Wayland only, a new dialog to get super user permissions, support for performance modes in the power applet, plus some theme refinements with a green accent color by default, and a lot of smaller changes to the control center, the applets, support for Raspberry Pi, more themes being bundled out of the box, and more.

Ubuntu Cinnamon moves to Cinnamon 5.8.4, which will give you touchpad and touchscreen gestures, with a lot of configuration options, the new global dark mode setting, better support for desktop portals and flatpak apps. You get the new styles feature.

Other flavours are stuck on the same version of heir respective DEs and don’t bring many changes apart from the internals.

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ubuntu

20 thoughts on “23.10 is UBUNTU at its BEST (+Kubuntu, MATE, Xubuntu, Lubuntu, Cinnamon, Budgie…)

  • If Ubuntu starts having World of Warcraft officially from Blizzard and some other games, I will jump on the Linux bandwagon forever. For now, I will settle for UNIX (macOS) in polished form.

  • Battery life is pretty poor with this release on 7840HS 780M. It takes 30W just to play 1080p 30fps YouTube video over WiFi on 1600p 60Hz screen at 100 nits. 😄

  • Hi! I'm new to Ubuntu having to download it for my college and I'm having lots of hard times with it.. I have a huge problem where my Ctrl, Alt, and Shift do the same thing and that is making my letters bigger, other than that they render useless, I can't do a single shortcut… And my windows key can't do anything… I tested again on my Windows 10 OS and it works just fine but when i dual boot into Ubuntu they just don't seem to work, any ideas on how to fix this issue please?

  • I Hope it work well for 12th gen intel cpu with Iris XE i wasn’t able to launch game even a simple one like Turtle Odyssey on a previous version. Games work on Fedora but lack of H264 support is a deal breaker

  • the new app center looks like it doesn’t use the theme though right? looks out of place

  • Interface is so ugly, they should work on color cheme and icons

  • pet peeve 4588: damon or Dæmon not demon. very different things.

  • i like the support of latest linux kernel 6.5 and zfs.

  • I used Ubuntu for a while, but with Dash to Panel extension, but it was broken with each interim upgrade. I just don't like default Ubuntu. Snaps I don't mind except for Thunderbird and Firefox, but I always purge them after I install the tarballs.

  • Can you tile the windows with the super key and arrow keys like you can in Window or do you have to use the mouse?

  • yes must apps need available offfline also…………and new apps must be develop

  • Why didn't they bundle the firmware updates into the updates section of the store? (like GNOME software on Fedora does..)

  • 14:08
    thanks for the mention of Ubuntu Studio.
    I think it could use a little more exposure.
    A great distro with the low latency kernel already installed and it could help a lot of people that just don't even know it exists.
    No need to buy expensive equipment to get your feet wet in audio production (DAW) (Ardour with unlimited channels) and video editing too.
    Jack audio and session managers work way better then the ASIO configurations in Windows IMO.
    And you can run it on a Gen1 I3 no problem.

    Ubuntu Studio with KXStudio repo's is awesome but you have to pick your packages that they share carefully (Carla and Wine for instance).

    But just for the basics Ubuntu Studio has plenty already built in.

  • they should have a hold the shift key to get the top half or bottom half and ctrl for quarter. TPM password encryption, translates to manufacturer or anyone with their keys can access the data, unless I am mistaken, correct me if I am wrong?

  • Somebody needs to start a distro that is exactly like Ubuntu but without snaps and other Canonical Malware.

  • just the standard ubuntu linux without any customizations is way better than windows for most users at this point

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