Sunday, October 23, 2011

First Impression of Ubuntu 11.10, The Oneiric Ocelot

Saw 11.10 release the other day and gave it a go. The experience is less than impressive -- partly because 10.04 the Lynx set the bar pretty high.

The new desktop, Ubuntu Unity, started in 10.10 the Meerkat or maybe even earlier, as the default on netbooks. I remember immediately removing it and installing the classic Gnome back. I feel like doing the same thing with 11.10 -- I have a Asus EEE PC-901. After rebooting, the thing I immediately noticed was the slow boot. The Wow factor from the first time seeing Ubuntu 10.04 giving me the login screen in just 10 seconds was gone.

I have not mentioned the "waiting for network configuration" problem. When that message pops up on the Ubuntu boot splash window, if you press the Esc key, you will see that the boot process has actually gone passed the network configuration stage long ago. (It looks like some one may have been able to fix that problem.)

Unity did not work at all after the upgrade, likely because that I do not have a 3D accelerated video card. Switching to Unity 2D works but that still feels slow, much more sluggish than the classic Gnome in Ubuntu 10.10: Moving a window, you don't see it follow the mouse cursor as responsively as in Lynx or Meerkat.

The top panel bar -- I am not sure what it is called, Indicator panel? -- won't auto-hide, which annoys me. That is fine on a desktop, but a netbook's display real-estate is limited. I would like to use as much of the screen for work as possible.

Much in the System Settings panel seems to be gone as well, not just the icons (e.g., some of the apps in 11.10, both on the right-hand side vertical Launcher panel and in the System Settings window, refuse to display their icons, which I have not had a chance to figure out why.) I used to set the mouse cursor focus to follow the mouse pointer -- which allows one to type into an application without having to raise the window up to the front, rather than having to click a window.


I will give Unity a few more days, or even a few more weeks, before deciding if I will go back to Gnome classic, mostly because that it seems to be the direction Ubuntu is moving into. I will go back to classical Gnome if it continue to be sluggish.

[2011-10-31 Edit]
I decided to go back to Gnome classic on my netbook. It does seem to be a bit faster. While doing that, I also found out that the panel auto-hide setting has changed: Right click on the panel no longer works. One needs to Alt+Right-click the panel to get to the settings, which does not seem to work with Unity's top panel. I guess I am sticking with Gnome classic as long as I can.
Still having trouble with the booting process dropping to a shell on my desktop. Although exit out of the BusyBox shell gets it going, that prevents me from running it with VBoxVMService. Also, I am still having the Waiting for network configuration. . . problem, which is really annoying.
[2011-11-30 Edit]
Finally got around to fix the Waiting for network configuration. . . problem. The solution is to edit out the wired Ethernet interface section (eth0 on my netbook) in /etc/network/interfaces. I am not sure why the network configuration code could not sense that there is nothing plugged in there and skip the configuration in that case.