- PeterMoulding.com
- Author
- Trainer
- Speaker
- Business Coach
- How to write a How To book
- PHP Courses
- Speaking
- Web Architect
- Australia
- Books
- Authors
- Akkana Peck
- Alex Berenson
- Andrew Nugent
- Ben Sanders
- Brock Clarke
- Chris Simms
- David Mercer
- Dianna Mullet
- Don Winslow
- Dori Smith
- Harlan Coben
- Jack McDevitt
- James Wines
- Jerry Yudelson
- John Grisham
- Kevin Mullet
- L. E. Modesitt Jr.
- Laurell K. Hamilton
- Marshall Karp
- Martina Cole
- Michael Marshall Smith
- Michel Roux Jr
- Nadia Sawalha
- Philip Pullman
- Raymond Khoury
- Richard North Patterson
- Robert Masello
- Sally Roth
- Sarah Langan
- Stella Rimington
- Stephen Booth
- Stephen King
- Stephen Leather
- T.C. Boyle
- Tom Negrino
- Tony Hillerman
- Urban Waite
- Val McDermid
- Valerio Massimo Manfredi
- Beginning GIMP
- Beginning Visual C++
- Culturalism
- Fiction
- A Drink Before The War
- A Talent for War
- Bag of Bones
- Blood and Ice
- Burn
- Dark Lady
- Dead Line
- Eclipse
- Empress of Eternity
- Exley
- Flipping Out
- Just One Look
- Nightfall
- Pet Sematary
- Savage Moon
- Skinwalkers
- Starvation Lake
- The Fallen
- The Gardens of the Dead
- The Jump
- The Last Templar
- The Mermaids Singing
- The Midnight Mayor
- The Secret Soldier
- The Summons
- The Terror of Living
- The Testament
- The Tower
- Under the Dome
- Virus
- AJAX and PHP
- Aging with Grace
- Food books
- Green Architecture
- Life Is So Good
- SQL: The Complete Reference
- The Backyard Bird Lover's Ultimate How-to Guide
- The Garden Gurus
- Authors
- Sustainability
- -18 hours left to decide the future of Australia
- Campbells vegetable stock or Massel vegetable stock?
- Carbon Sequestration
- Carbon tax for Australia is a fraud
- Copenhagen will fail
- Cost of living in Australia
- Dick Smith jumps on the population bandwagon
- Dry Run: Preventing the Next Urban Water Crisis
- Energy Saving Lights
- Garlic
- How many people can live in Australia?
- Its obsolete, throw it out!
- Julia Gillard offers 9.9 billion dollars bribe to Rob Oakeshott
- Laundry detergent
- Petrol or Diesel?
- Reflective foil batts kill
- RoHS
- Sea level to rise 3mm due to climate change
- Solar power
- Spring again in Sydney
- Sustainable fuels
- The CRUD Tax is back
- The people who make building regulations do not own houses
- Water efficiency
- Which insulation is safer, foil or wool?
- Will Australia reduce greenhouse gas emissions?
- Technology
- Android or Blackberry or iPhone or a flip phone?
- Apple versus Google 2011
- Cameras
- Cars
- Colour
- Burgundy
- Colour Blindness
- Colour Names
- Dulux colours
- Pantone colours
- Safe Colours
- Seculine ProDisk Mini colour balance card
- What Causes Colour Blindness?
- Hardware
- Batteries for the Digital Age
- Cables
- Cases
- Computer reliability
- Computrace
- Disks
- Astone ISO Gear 481E
- Best SSD for your notebook computer
- Disk block size
- Hitachi disk HDS722020ALA330
- LaCie USB 2.0 250 GB mobile hard drive design by F.A. Porsche
- SMART disk
- Samsung 2 TB HD204UI quiet low power disk for mass storage
- Seagate and Samsung merge disk business
- Select the right disk for your RAID array
- USB disk speed
- Western Digital WD20EARX 2 GB SATA 3 disk
- How long should computer hardware last?
- Keyboards
- Mainframe
- Memory cards
- Monitors
- Netbooks, notebooks, tablets, and xPads
- Network Attached Storage
- OLED Displays
- PC's are a thing of the past
- Printers
- Quiet
- Samsung Galaxy S
- Speed
- Television
- Tools
- USB
- Worst computer movies
- Xserve is dead. What next?
- Your backup will not work
- Z68 motherboards
- iPad or Acer Aspire One?
- IQ
- LG Intello Washing Machine
- Lack of a challenge
- Networks
- 802.11n wireless networking
- D-Link DIR-655 wireless router
- D-Link DWA-160 Xtreme N dual band USB adapter
- D-Link DWA-556 Xtreme N PCI Express desktop adapter
- MIMO
- NBN spends another $12 billion of our tax money on nothing
- National Broadband Network
- Netgear wireless modem router DGND3300 with 300 Mbps 802.11n
- Refrigerator kills wireless broadband
- Small Wireless Network
- TP-LINK TL-SG10005D 5 port gigabit switch
- TP-Link TL-WR1043N wireless N gigabit router
- Telstra Pre-paid Mobile Wi-Fi
- Where are the router plus proxy server combinations?
- Open Source documentation
- Software
- 7-zip
- Accounting
- Asterisk
- Audacity
- Backup software
- Bloat only in Windows
- CAD
- CDex
- Disk imaging software for copying and backup
- Exact Audio Copy
- Filezilla
- Firefox
- Java
- LibreOffice or OpenOffice?
- Linux
- 1 in 5 servers will ship with Linux
- Android phones outsell iPhone
- Another Move to Linux
- CentOS 5.5 installation on SSD and RAID 5
- Debian
- Debian 5.0.5 AMD64 installation
- Debian 5.06 installation
- Fedora
- Fedora or Ubuntu?
- Gnome or KDE?
- K9copy
- Linux 2.6.38
- Linux Gnome login settings lost
- Linux Mint
- Linux RAID, a rant
- Linux Speed
- Linux Time
- Linux reliability as demonstrated by Ubuntu 10.10
- Linux reliability as demonstrated by Ubuntu 11.4
- Linux still a struggle in 2011
- Linux workstation disk RAID 1
- Linux, NT, Windows, and SETI
- Linux, three years of progress
- London Stock Exchange switches to Linux
- Mandrake Linux 9.2
- The partition is misaligned by 48128 bytes - warning from Linux RAID
- Ubuntu
- How to fix the scroll bars in Ubuntu 11.4 Gnome
- Kubuntu 10.10 alternate installation on desktop with RAID 1
- POWbuntu
- Ubuntu 10.10 after 6 months use
- Ubuntu 10.10 alternate installation
- Ubuntu 10.10 desktop RAID 1
- Ubuntu 10.10 desktop RAID 5
- Ubuntu 10.10 desktop install on a netbook
- Ubuntu 10.10 desktop installation
- Ubuntu 10.10 netbook install on a netbook
- Ubuntu 10.10 server AMD64
- Ubuntu 10.10 upgrade to version 11.4 beta 2
- Ubuntu 10.4
- Ubuntu 11.10
- Ubuntu 11.10 first upgrade
- Ubuntu 11.4 after one month use
- Ubuntu 12.04 beta1 desktop amd64
- Ubuntu One
- Ubuntu by Microsoft?
- Ubuntu desktop upgrade 10.4 to 10.10 failed because I did not check the media
- Ubuntu strikes again
- Upgrade Ubuntu to Linux Mint 12 LDXE for extra speed
- Yes, use Linux but not that distribution!
- Nero
- OpenOffice
- OpenOffice is now Apache Office
- Project management
- Scribus
- Software for Windows and Linux
- Text editors
- Time
- Todo applications
- Tomboy notes
- Top text editors
- Version control
- VideoLAN VLC media player
- Visio
- Webmin
- Webmin installation on CentOS for Web development
- Webmin installation on Ubuntu
- What is the most popular open source software today?
- Windows
- Another Windows person goes Linux
- BAD_POOL_CALLER
- Cygwin
- Microsoft Malicious Software Removal Tool cannot find a common virus
- One of the developers of Windows XP is criminally insane
- There are unused icons on your desktop
- W32time
- Which Windows version?
- Windows 7 Home Premium
- Windows XP Stop 0x0000007B during installation
- Windows XP is a disaster
- Windows processes
- XML
- Zip, bzip, gzip, or 7zip?
- configFree
- Technology Succession Planning
- VoIP
- Web Sites
- Drupal
- Do Drupal themes have to use the GPL?
- Drupal 7
- A better search facility for Drupal
- Drupal - performance or flexibility
- Drupal 7 Fields are hard to fix
- Drupal 7 new features
- Drupal 7 ships on January 5
- Drupal 7.14
- Drupal 7.4 hits PeterMoulding.com
- Drupal function sequence
- The evolution of a module
- Undefined index: headers in DefaultMailSystem->mail() (line 54 of /modules/system/system.mail.inc).
- Undefined index: to in DefaultMailSystem->mail() (line 83 of /modules/system/system.mail.inc).
- implode(): Invalid arguments passed in DefaultMailSystem->format() (line 23 of /modules/system/system.mail.inc).
- Drupal 8
- Drupal Code Load Cut
- Drupal How To
- Drupal Modules
- Backup and Migrate
- Browscap
- CKEditor with Drupal WYSIWYG
- Captcha
- Cel
- Colorbox
- Content Construction Kit
- Content type
- Devel module for Drupal
- Drupal Rules as an automation language
- Drupal Spam add-on module
- Form alter to node
- IMCE
- IMCE Wysiwyg bridge
- ImageAPI
- Jdog
- Lightbox2
- Module variable
- Node Gallery Access
- Node_Gallery
- Path
- Path redirect
- Pathauto
- Pet
- Search
- Service links
- Session Variable
- Statistics
- Taxonomy
- Token
- Token ex
- Transliteration
- Trigger
- Watch
- Other modules
- Drupal Training
- Drupal access controls need a major rewrite
- Drupal coding tricks
- Drupal performance
- Drupal themes for the future
- Drupal.org colours
- Import existing data into Drupal
- Multiple Web sites made easy using Drupal multisite and the right start
- drupal_lookup_path()
- Adobe PDF
- Apache
- Apache Mahout
- Audi.com
- Bleet
- CSS Strikes Again
- CSS or xCSS
- Can you believe Facebook or email?
- Content Management Systems
- Databases
- Facebook scam
- Font
- Fonts
- HTML
- Install Apache, MySQL, and PHP 5 in Ubuntu 11.4 using the Ubuntu Software Centre
- Language Codes
- Marketing
- Memcache
- Nginx
- Open source development hits another roadblock
- Oscars
- PHP
- SPDY
- Search software
- Techoni.com.au
- Theme themes
- Things to hate on Web sites
- U.S. Patent No. 6,985,875
- Virtual Private Server
- Visible Improvement
- Web 4.0
- Web browser usage
- Web browsers
- Web site development
- Bluefish
- Crying over spilt code
- Eclipse and PHP
- Getting a Git client, a story of ancient technology and pain
- HTTrack
- MVC
- Netbeans
- PHP or ..., CakePHP/Symfony/ZF versus ...
- Programming
- Superfish
- Web browser emulators for testing your Web site
- Web development frameworks
- Web site books
- Web site development on your own computer
- Webmin or phpMyAdmin or cPanel for creating databases?
- aiki framework
- jQuery
- Views development - Learn Fields first
- Views development - Learn Actions and Rules
- jQuery .each()
- jQuery .has()
- jQuery .is()
- jQuery and Firefox Firebug
- jQuery children
- jQuery for people not using Drupal - Installation and getting started
- jQuery hover
- jQuery hover de-duplication example
- jQuery or CSS?
- jQuery performance
- jQuery tests
- Web site hosting
- Westpac Web site still broken after two years and ten months
- Wordpress wins another CMS survey
- Drupal
Ubuntu 10.10 upgrade to version 11.4 beta 2
Submitted by Peter on Wed, 2011-04-20 19:44
I updating one of my desktop computers from Ubuntu 10.10 desktop to Ubuntu 11.4 beta 2 desktop. (Update April 29: Ubuntu 11.4 is now out and my 11.4 beta 2 machine is updated.)
Update April 29: Ubuntu 11.4 is now out and my 11.4 beta 2 machine is updated to 11.4. My 10.10 desktop also updated cleanly to 11.4.
To upgrade from Ubuntu 10.10 on a desktop system, press Alt+F2, type in "update-manager -d" (without the quotes), and press Enter. Update Manager will open up and display the message, "New distribution release '11.04' is available."
1
You select Upgrade then an upgrade tool starts. The upgrade tool goes through the following steps.
- Preparing to upgrade
- Setting new software channels
- Getting new packages
- Installing the upgrades
- Cleaning up
- Restarting the computer
Setting new software channels
This step issues a warning about third party sources disabled. You have to switch them back on after the upgrade then update whatever software is from those sources.One of my third part sources was for Firefox 4 and Firefox 4 is included in the update, giving me the chance to delete that third party source.
You are then told the download is 659 MegaBytes. Are you on reliable broadband? Is your netbook or notebook on mains power?
OpenOffice is removed and replaced by LibreOffice. Unity is installed to replace Gnome but Gnome is left in place as an alternative. Firefox 3 is replaced by Firefox 4.
Select Start upgrade.
Getting new packages
This step tells me the download will be 44 minutes on my connection running at about 200 kiloBytes per second. After the initial rush, the Ubuntu server slowed down to 170 kBps and the time prediction expanded to 53 minutes.
There are 1389 files downloading where each file is a package. About 140 are new including 14 for LibreOffice. The rest are replacements.
Installing the upgrades
The installation step takes over an hour on a computer with a moderate speed hard disk. The CPU usage on a slow multicore processor is 25%. The memory usage is less than 400 MB. There is not much activity anywhere. I expect the system reads a file then decompresses the file into many little files then copies the decompressed files to other parts of the disk then edits all the settings files with little overlap of processing with disk IO.
There are long periods when one processor is 100% busy and there is no disk activity. There are also long periods when all four processors are 25% busy and there is no disk IO because the processing is stuck in the one thing at a time mode. The installation process is designed to use only one processor and needs a redesign for modern computers.
If the installation used modern methods, there would be one process decompressing into memory and a separate process editing the files and a separate process writing the files direct to their end points. Most of the installation scripts are written by volunteers thinking about single package updates on tiny old computers with almost no memory. I doubt there is any attempt to overlap operations to help a once per year upgrade. Some of the people in the Linux and Unix world appear to be still stuck in the 1970s when Unix tried to emulate the computers of the 1950s.
NTP
The NTP, Network Time Protocol, update replaces the configuration file and you lose your local time server settings. You have to reapply them after the upgrade. Typically you are adding NTP pool servers2. In Australia, you add 0.au.pool.ntp.org, 1.au.pool.ntp.org, 2.au.pool.ntp.org, and 3.au.pool.ntp.org.
PHP
The installation process asks you if you want to keep your current modified php.ini file or replace it. The PHP update is only minor so keep the current file.
Cleaning up
Cleaning up the computer is mostly deleting obsolete packages and takes only a couple of minutes to produce one message where you have to select the Remove button. You then wait a few more minutes then Restart Now.
Unity
After the restart, you login and see Unity. Unity was tried out on the 10.10 Netbook edition of Ubuntu. For 11.4, they merged the netbook edition into the desktop edition. Unity is slower than the Gnome interface. The Gnome interface is still available and can be set as your default. Within the Gnome interface, you can make the interface faster by switching off the 3D effects.
The Unity interface moves some icons from the top menu bar to the left hand column to make better use of the new screens that are too short and too wide. You are supposed to gain more usable vertical reading space. On my 10" netbook screen the giant icons waste a lot of space and there is very little gain in vertical space. Unity would be better if there was an option to move everything from the top menu bar to the sidebar.
Unity creates more pain by mixing the application menu bar with the operating system menu bar. The worst example is selecting a bookmark in Firefox. you have to mouse over the top bar and wait for the Firefox menu entries to replace the Unity rubbish then try to find the Firefox menu entry without the bar reverting to the Unity entry and then you have to select the bookmark. Life would be easier and quicker if the mouseover had a user settable latency so the menu entries would hang around longer if you miss your selection with the mouse.
Life would also be easier if the bookmark list would automatically drop down and again with latency. The strange thing is the Unity sidebar works with some nice latency. Why do they make each part of the screen work a different way?
The Unity interface failed miserably in the Ubuntu 10.10 netbook edition. The 11.4 version no longer fails. It is still slow and difficult. Remember the fashion for overlays that hit the web a few years ago and is now the equivalent of ripped denim pants, obsolete and out of fashion but it will not go away? Unity uses an overlay.
If the overlay was not bad enough, Unity is missing the stepping arrows at the end of scroll bars. It looks and works like a beginner application on a Mac. It might work for scrolling small distances on touch screens, assuming the scroll bars were big enough to select by hand, but it is a real killer on long scrolls because precision is impossible.
Unity looks like it is designed by a committee with some members of the committee working on good user interface design while others just blindly clone things from Apple software without ever asking if a feature works or is useful. On both my 10" non touch netbook screen and my 30" desktop screen, with mouse and graphics pad, the difficult parts of the Unity user interface slow down many common activities.
I will wait for the final release of Unity after Ubuntu 11.4 leaves beta then look for ways to customise Unity. If Unity cannot be switched to non overlay mode or cannot fix the scroll bars, I will revert to Gnome. I may also revert if Unity does not provide a way to display icons at an efficient size.
Encryption passphrase
If you encrypted your home drive, recommended for portable devices, you can display the encryption passphrase in case you have to recover the data. I backup everything from my netbook to my desktop or server so I do not have to recover from the netbook.
LibreOffice
LibreOffice replaces OpenOffice and looks similar. The LibreOffice Writer does not use the unit approach under Unity and keeps a separate menu bar. When you enter other parts of LibreOffice, the credits page is an example, both the menu and the window control icons disappear leaving you stranded.
Manual cleanup
I deleted Mozilla Firefox as a source in the Ubuntu software centre.
Where are all the system tools hiding?
Searching through the Unity interface for common system tools is a pain. Select the on/off switch icon in the top right hand corner. Select the Systems Settings option at the bottom. This opens a Control Center
. Note the American spelling. The Ubuntu Software Centre retains the English spelling. On the left you have several categories and on the right you have all the programs from the old system menu. Perhaps Unity will be less bad than what it looks like when you first try to navigate through the icon bar.
Update
An hour after installing Ubuntu 11.4 beta 2, I ran the system update and it installed 1 MB. A few hours later, I ran the system update again and it installed 98 MB including a new LibreOffice. 16 MB of updates failed to install including a major component of Linux. The failure will have to be fixed then Ubuntu 11.4 will have to go through a beta 3 to test all the changes.









Comments
Hi Peter, I've done the same
Hi Peter,
I've done the same via update-manager -d, and my login screen (as well, as Gtk themes) were lost.
I had to reinstall after all, because the upgrade didn't work well with the latest kernel I'd installed.
Well, after re-installing, I did a do-dist-upgrade -d, and that went well. I am, however, not using Unity, since I use Xubuntu, but overall - it's rather nice, except for one thing - hibernation. After the netbook comes back from hibernation, the interface is not showing - I get stripes instead of text, images, etc. I think I can live without hibernation until April 28th, when 11.04 is due to be released.
Just a side note: I love the Greybird theme, which is the default theme, replacing Bluebird. Goes well with Clarity icons.
Ubuntu 11.4 upgrade
I attempted to upgrade two of my four Ubuntu computers to 11.4. One desktop and one laptop.
The laptop took about 1.5 hours to upgrade and I am still trying to find my way around.
The desktop failed. It left the following message:
An unresolvable problem occurred while calculating the upgrade:
E:Error, pkgProblemResolver::Resolve generated breaks, this may be caused by held packages.
This can be caused by:
* Upgrading to a pre-release version of Ubuntu
* Running the current pre-release version of Ubuntu
* Unofficial software packages not provided by Ubuntu
If none of this applies, then please report this bug against the 'update-manager' package and include the files in /var/log/dist-upgrade/ in the bug report.
I am thinking about stripping the laptop down and installing 11.4 from scratch. There is nothing I have to worry about losing on it and I would rather condense windows into a smaller hdd space anyway. A clean install would be good to use to get used to the new OS.
As for the other two systems I did not upgrade, They are running long-term support versions. One is a server, the other is for playing movies and games for my child. I would prefer not bother either of those unless necessary.
I am not upgrading my Desktop
I am not upgrading my Desktop either. I use it to play movies, and my Mom uses it to type work related documentation. I'd rather not touch the desktop.
Test LibreOffice somewhere else
Hello Val, The Ubuntu 11.4 upgrade replaces OpenOffice with LibraOffice without asking your permission. There are extensive comments online about the steps needed to make LibraOffice a complete replacement for OpenOffice and the work remaining. If someone is using OpenOffice for work or any complex document creation, you need to test LibraOffice before switching over. I tested LibraOffice only with basic word processing and it worked. The bits missing appear to be in the spreadsheet, draw, presentation, and database area.
Ubuntu Unity Plugin
Hello
I have recently upgrade to Ubuntu 11.4, my problem arrive when I accidentally uncheck UbuntuUnityPlugin in Computerconfig, and now I do not have to top pannel nor the sidebar, please help
Thank
Anh
Check the options list at login
Hello Ahn, When you select your user name for the login, you should see a list of options at the bottom of the screen. They include Gnome and Gnome without effects. Select one of the Gnome options and log in. You should see a normal desktop. From there you can update Unity in Ubuntu.
Also read Linux Gnome login settings lost.