Update on Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy Heron
Last week I wrote a review about Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy Heron and it turned out to be a quite positive review. But, as always, after some usage, annoying things start to come up. At the time of writing the review, I was quite pleased with Hardy and hadn’t found any major bugs or annoyances. But now, almost two weeks later, there’s some things that I would like to add to my previous comments about Hardy. Unfortunately some of them are negative.
Before I continue, I should also mention up front that I still use Hardy as my main OS right now, so these problems that I faced during last two weeks haven’t yet drived me away from Ubuntu.
Proprietary Nvidia drivers
Ubuntu 8.04 LTS ships with broken Nvidia driver. So did 7.10 Gutsy. Under Gutsy there were some issues running Nvidia proprietary drivers under 64 bit system. The problem this time is that when you’re playing a game in full screen mode, then after few minutes, the game will appear as a window and the whole desktop freezes - neither the mouse or keyboard work. So you have to restart X with ctrl+alt+backspace and login in again. It’s kind of annoying as you might imagine. It also means, that I can’t play games like Frets on Fire or UrbanTerror under Ubuntu (I can always run games in window mode, but I don’t like it that way and it’s really not the solution to the problem).
Actually it was a known bug during beta testing and I was quite sure that It’ll be fixed when the final release comes out. But it hasn’t been fixed (yet). I really hope they’ll push an driver update that fixes the problem in near future.
Updating
Few days ago there was an kernel update that was available from Update Manager. I tend to trust Ubuntu when it comes to updating applications and kernel, because there hasn’t been problems with things braking for me. Unfortunately after update I found out that VirtualBox didn’t work anymore. That’s because the open source version of VirtualBox, which is avilable through Ubuntu repos depend on special kernel module for VirtualBox. So actually update didn’t broke the VB, but just that kernel module didn’t come out with new kernel. For me, it’s not the end of the world when I can’t run VB for few days, but I imagine when I would run a business that depend on VB, it would be a major issue. So my point is that Ubuntu devs should inform developers of different applications that depend on kerner version, that they’re about to push the new kernel into update, so important kernel modules could ship with new kernel.
KDE applications in Gnome desktop
I usually prefer to use Gnome as my default Desktop on distros like Ubuntu and Fedora (on Arch, I use awesome or openbox), but I also need to use Konqueror and Kate at work. Konqueror is great for ftp and sftp access and Kate is one of the best GUI text editors out there (gedit is good for simple text files, but for code editing, Kate is much better). So I use Kate and Konqueror (KDE 3.5) every day on my Gnome desktop.
The problem I have is that when I’m browsing files with Konqueror, sometimes when I go into different folder, the folder content doesn’t change before I press the refresh button. It gets quite annoying when you have to do it after every two or three clicks. With Kate, the issue is when I drag files from Nautilus or Konqueror into Kate, sometimes it doesn’t allow to do that and displays the error cursor. So I have to refresh the folder and drag different files before I can drag the one I need.
It’s a weird issue, because I haven’t noticed the same issue under other distros. I really hope there’ll be a fix for this issue too.
Flash and PulseAudio
I’m quite sure I’m not only one with this problem, because I’ve heard many times different podcasters talk about this issue. The problem is when you’re watching something from YouTube, then after first one or two videos, the sound disappears. Sometimes it helps, when you restart the browser, but sometimes you have to restart the system to have sound back up again.
With flash under 64 bit system the flash player in sites like YouTube and Google Video might not appear at all (especially in Firefox 3 Beta 5, which is now replaced with RC2, but the problem is still there). I understand that Flash is closed source, but still, Adobe is showing some interest into open source lately, so I would like to see some improvements in that area (instead of Adobe Air for example). I think they should fix their core components under Linux before they’ll start pushing new products for the Linux desktop.
Stability
One the positive side of things I would like to say that Ubuntu 8.04 LTS is quite stable. It’s not a Slackware kind of stable in any means (applications still crash often), but for a Ubuntu release, it’s not bad at all. Booting up the system is a lot faster than Gutsy, applications open quickly and the whole desktop just feels quite stable for a desktop oriented Linux distribution.
Conclusion
So, after a month with Hardy, I still use it as my main OS on my Dell Vostro. But that doesn’t mean that I haven’t thought to go back to Arch or try Fedora 9 or OpenSUSE 11 instead. But at the same time, I feel that when I close my eyes for these issues I mentioned above, Ubuntu Hardy Heron is still a great release. Only LTS at the end of the release name hasn’t really prove itself.
Well, that was my two cents.