Intrepid - fist full of regressions
26 10 2008I have been using Ubuntu Intrepid for over a month now and as the finial release draws near it appears it is going to be quite a disappointing initial release.
Regressions
Intel wireless chips now need to have a country set to make them work on European channels, the problem being that there is no documentation yet on how to do this. Ubuntu's bugs team has marked this as Low Importance. I would personally disagree, but I guess its relative and they have more serious regressions to deal with. This is going to cause massive problems in the near future as wifi chips work on channel > 100 as there are larger variations on which channels can be used in various countries.
VPNC in NetworkManager has turned from something great into a mass confusions of unnecessary dialogs. The worst part is it just doesn't seem to work properly any more using my company's VPN profile, often not being able to connect to sites through the VPN. I would fall back to Cisco's own VPN software, but that is known to be unstable with multi-core systems and especially with wifi, often causing kernel lock-ups.
Whatever they did to Bluetooth it really sucks now, sending photos from my Sony K800i to my PC has never been so painful. Changes to Bluetooth also appeared to the outside to show that Ubuntu doesn't show much regard for the Kubuntu team, I have a feeling if this doesn't change by late KDE 4.2 / early 4.3 then it will really turn to bite them.
There are many other problems but these are a good few to start with.
Theme
We were promised a new theme for Ubuntu Intrepid, there is DarkRoom which is a horrid dark version of Human, and there is a tweaked version of Human with a new background, but beyond that there is no sign of delivery on this. This I find a real shame as the community came up with some fantastic ideas which with a little development I feel could have pushed Ubuntu a bit more mainstream.
Firewall
Mandriva has managed a pretty good firewall from what I have seen in 2009.0. Most other distros have firewalls, why doesn't Ubuntu? Most of the time I am working from my home network which has its own firewall, but I am increasing working at remote sites and abroad. I need certain ports open for my job (NDB ports, MySQL, SSH, etc...). Some kind of external protection for this would be nice, with the push for more on-the-move networking options I would have thought this to be common sense now.
Conclusion
All this said there are some interesting improvements, and the new background is very pretty. I just think there are too many problems to justify the minor enhancements. I'm sorry Ubuntu but unless you pull something out of the hat in the few days left you have before release I give you a solid C- for Intrepid.
I have already found myself looking at other distributions for my 2H 2008 distro fix, I'm even looking at OpenSUSE which is never a good sign. I am most impressed with Mandriva, they have made KDE 4.1 into a really useful distribution, its network suite it far more advanced than the NetworkManager in Ubuntu. Unfortunately Mandriva 2009.0 has too many bugs at the moment for it to a day-to-day distribution for me, but could become a serious contender in the future.
Categories : Linux
Trackbacks : No Trackbacks »



