Thanks to the hard work of Jeremy Bicha and others Ubuntu GNOME is now an official Ubuntu flavour. Flavours get some infrastructure and support benefits such as ISO creation that make it easier to release and support.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
More information on Mir
With the recent announcement of Mir there's been some concern about what this means for Ubuntu and the wider Linux ecosystem. Christopher Halse Rogers who is on the Mir team has written some excellent posts covering some of the major questions: why Mir and not Wayland/Weston, what does this mean for other desktops on Ubuntu and what does this mean for Linux graphics drivers.
Well worth the read.
Well worth the read.
Tuesday, March 05, 2013
Mir
Today
we go public with the Ubuntu graphics stack for the post X world. Since
the beginning Ubuntu has relied on the X server to support the user
experience and while it has worked generally well; it’s time for
something new. My team is working on a big new component for this - Mir. Mir is a graphics technology
that allows us to implement user experience we want for Ubuntu across
all devices we support.
In
many ways, Mir will be completely transparent to the user. Applications
that use toolkits (e.g. Qt, GTK+) will not need to be recompiled. Unity
will still look like Unity. We will support legacy X applications for
the foreseeable future.
This
is a big task. A lot of work has already been done and there’s a lot
more to go. We’re aiming to do incremental improvements, and you can
find more about this on the Wiki page and in the blueprints. You can help.
From today our project is public, it’s GPL licensed and you’re welcome
to use the source and propose changes.
It’s exciting times, and I hope you enjoy the results of this work!
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