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Ubuntu 6.06 'Dapper Drake' Beta Available 90

Beuno writes "Ubuntu 6.06, aka 'Dapper Drake' has just gone into a stable Beta phase after 5 very successful Alpha versions. There have been a ton of improvements ranging from a new spiffy graphical installation, Gnome 2.14.1, Kernel 2.6.15.6, X.org 7 and a new and improved caramel colored theme. The server version has had kernel tweaks and an easy LAMP installation. A full list of new features and screenshots and be found at the official site. Downloads at the usual place, just try to use torrents please."
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Ubuntu 6.06 'Dapper Drake' Beta Available

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  • by glarvat ( 753298 ) on Thursday April 20, 2006 @12:00PM (#15165454)
    I've been using Linux full time since '97. I'm no crazy kernel hacker, but I've done my share of development. Although Ubuntu is the first Debian based distro I've used, it's by far my favorite. I started with RedHat, then SuSE, was with Mandrake for quite some time, then Gentoo, now Ubuntu. The two main reasons why I love Ubuntu are:
    • Package Management
    • Sudo

    The package management has all the ease of Gentoo's 'emerge,' but without the compiling. Plus, you don't have to worry about something breaking as often. One thing I used to hate about the old RedHat/Mandrake package management was that you'd try to install an rpm, only to be told you don't have its dependencies, you'd get those, and then you'd have new dependencies to track down. I'm told yum has fixed that, but I haven't bothered to look. I know it's much better with up2date on the RHEL4 side, but it still feels less polished than Synaptic.

    Before Ubuntu, I'd never really used sudo, but now I find it difficult to go back. To me, it's just a cleaner way to do system administration, and it certainly helps promote never logging in as root. All of the system administration is sudo oriented, whereas ini RHEL4 you still need to know the root password. On a machine with shared administration, it just seems more clumsy.

    I know distribution choices can be a touchy subject, but I definitely prefer Ubuntu. The whole system just feels cleaner. As a more experienced user, I like it because it stays out of my way and lets me get my work done as quickly and painlessly as possible.

  • by jb.hl.com ( 782137 ) <joe.joe-baldwin@net> on Thursday April 20, 2006 @12:23PM (#15165661) Homepage Journal
    You do realise that Fedora Core isn't a boxed operating system and isn't available in stores, don't you?
  • by just_another_sean ( 919159 ) on Thursday April 20, 2006 @12:41PM (#15165838) Journal
    Well just going by your post and obvious affection for Gentoo, I'd say not much.

    If you've already made up your mind and like a distro, quirks and all, chances are you won't really get any new, instant, where-have-you-been-all-my-life gratification from another distro, even a quality, polished distro like Ubuntu. Gentoo is also a quality and polished distro, just aimed at a techier crowd then Ubuntu.

    Me, I like slackware or debian. But I recommend Ubuntu to my firends and family that don't know or care what "a linux" is. I think that's the appeal of Ubuntu. It's got some Debian in it at the bottom so when I have to support I'm comfortable. My mom likes it because it works and she doesn't have to call me as much anymore becuase her computer is "acting slow".

    You are probably at "power user" status or beyond if you are running three OS's on one machine so if you have invested some time and emotion in Gentoo and it works well for you then you probably aren't really missing anything available in another distro.

    People rail on and on here and elsewhere about how the Linux Community needs to come together and pick a distro, get their shit together and market Linux properly, etc... For the sake of people like you and me, I sure hope that never happens. I like choice and freedom, lot's of it!

  • by mbrubeck ( 73587 ) on Thursday April 20, 2006 @07:22PM (#15169355) Homepage
    The reboot option is displayed only for kernel updates, as you suggested. Users of released Ubuntu versions receive updates only to fix security holes and other critical bugs, so it's probably a good idea to recommend that they reboot into the new kernel as soon as possible.

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