Ubuntu 16.04 - Xenial Xerus - Printable Version +- Las Venturas Playground (https://forum.sa-mp.nl) +-- Forum: Miscellaneous (https://forum.sa-mp.nl/forum-4.html) +--- Forum: Technology (https://forum.sa-mp.nl/forum-26.html) +--- Thread: Ubuntu 16.04 - Xenial Xerus (/thread-32904.html) |
Ubuntu 16.04 - Xenial Xerus - George - 04-20-2016 Tomorrow, 21/04/2016, sees the release of Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial Xerus) Final -- for which I've been very excited about! The last release desktop release I used was 15.04 (Vivid Vervet) with the older Linux 3.19 kernel. 16.04 comes with 4.4, along with Unity 7.4 -- disappointing yet understandable that Unity 8 wasn't included given that this is a LTS release. Sad to see Ubuntu Software Center go - I always liked it, it did everything I asked of it. Similarly, I'm excited to see what's in store with its replacement - GNOME Software https://wiki.ubuntu.com/XenialXerus/ReleaseNotes Anyone else planning to take a look? I'll be sure to post back here tomorrow when I've updated with some screenshots and any other thoughts! (No idea if there's any Ubuntu and/or Linux fans here, but I figured it'd be fun to find out!) RE: Ubuntu 16.04 - Xenial Xerus - Russell - 04-23-2016 I don't know if comparing the kernel update of 3.19 to 4.4 is as significant as you make it appear - it's effectively the same difference as between the 2.6.25 and 2.6.29 releases, just with bigger numbers Are there change-logs of the kernel somewhere? RE: Ubuntu 16.04 - Xenial Xerus - George - 04-28-2016 (04-23-2016, 12:30 AM)Russell Wrote: I don't know if comparing the kernel update of 3.19 to 4.4 is as significant as you make it appear - it's effectively the same difference as between the 2.6.25 and 2.6.29 releases, just with bigger numbers The 2.x kernels I mainly toyed with include 2.6.18 and 2.6.32 (CentOS 5 and 6, respectively) - especially on OpenVZ virtualization nodes: https://download.openvz.org/kernel/ - granted there weren't huge differences between these two. One of the greatest (and much needed) features of the 4 series is the ability to perform kernel updates without rebooting. I relied on third party products to do this in the past, and still do for the majority of my servers (namely, Ksplice and KernelCare) - I come across an overwhelming of systems that are compromised at the root-level, which could have easily been prevented if the administrator were to have installed a kernel update - but the convenience isn't so widely available in Linux ~4.00 - due to the need to reboot. Elsewhere, there's improved hardware support - nothing too magical here though. As for the changelogs, here's a nice place for those: http://kernelnewbies.org/LinuxVersions |