

- T PAIN EPIPHANY .TORRENT INSTALL
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- T PAIN EPIPHANY .TORRENT UPGRADE
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- T PAIN EPIPHANY .TORRENT CODE
It's been updated to this release, and the number of posts has increased dramatically since I downloaded it this morning!!Ī list of what it does (copied from the post):Ģ) Installs all Firefox plugins (java, flash, etc) (except Adobe reader and mplayer)ģ) Modifies ALSA, OSS and ESD confs for duplex sound (solves most audio related probs on Ubuntu)Ĥ) Adds midi capability to your Ubuntu box (NEW)ħ) Installs Acrobat reader 7 and firefox plugin for the same.Ĩ) Installs Gnomebaker (CD/DVD burning s/w for GNOME)ĩ) Installs gftp (FTP client for GNOME with ssh capability)ġ0) Configures Ctrl-Alt-Del to start up Gnome System Monitor (aka Windows)ġ1) Disables powernowd on laptops when they are plugged inġ2) Installs DC++ and Limewire (file sharing progs)ġ3) Installs multimedia editors (Audacity (audio), Kino (video), EasyTag (ID3))ġ4) Installs CD (goobox) and DVD (dvdrip) rippersġ5) Installs Mplayer and mplayerplug-in version 3.05 for Firefoxġ6) Installs totem-xine, VLC and Beep Media Player (with docklet)ġ8) Installs Debian Menu (shows all installed applications)ġ9) Installs Bittornado and Azureus (Bittorrent clients)Ģ2) Enables Numlock on (turns numlock on Gnome startup)Ģ3) Installs Programming Tools (Anjuta (C/C++ IDE), Bluefish (HTML editor) and Screem (Web Development Env.))Ģ5) Totem and Mozplugger (Totem embedded with mozplugger)Ģ6) GnomePPP (Graphical Dial up connection tool) (NEW)
T PAIN EPIPHANY .TORRENT SOFTWARE
It installs all the nice-to-have extra software automatically. getting the source from the developers and manually compiling it, not that this is difficult, but it should be unneccessary), I would be happier.Ĭheck out Automatix (Automated GUI installation script) posted on the EasyUbuntu forum. Now, if they had mplayer packaged such that it installed, and played DVDs correctly without as much effort (i.e. A great community that makes this a distro one that anyone can eisily download, install, and set up it is ideal for people who want to migrate, or even for more experenced people who don't want to spend 65% of their time maintaining the computer and the rest actually using it for work or play or whatever. Debian package management (no more difficult then gentoo package management, without having to wait for it to compile) The ubuntuguide is another great plus: it is possible to know very little about setting up a linux box, and get Ubuntu doing what you want it to quickly. Features also tend to work immidately: I spent three months trying to get a TV tuner working in various Redhat/Fedora Core releases and it never worked properly. So, in short, I like what I'm seeing, but what I haven't seen looks even better.
T PAIN EPIPHANY .TORRENT CODE
According to the release notes, the major features of 5.10 are advanced thin client integration, an OEM installer, the Edubuntu project for deploying Ubuntu in schools, and Launchpad integration (" is the new infrastructure that Ubuntu and its derivatives use for translation, bug tracking, sharing code patches, fixes and technical support.").
T PAIN EPIPHANY .TORRENT UPGRADE
Overall, my end user impressions are that this is a worthy and welcome upgrade to my distribution of choice, but apparently I'm only really scratching the surface.
T PAIN EPIPHANY .TORRENT DRIVERS
Ubuntu has also updated their ATI fglrx drivers to 8.16.20, which gives a significant performance boost (from crap to less crap) for those cursed with ATI cards. Under the hood, Ubuntu is now using the 2.6.12 kernel, modular X.org and GCC 4.0.1.
T PAIN EPIPHANY .TORRENT INSTALL
Similarly, 5.10 has shipped with GStreamer 0.8, which is still unusable for video, so you'll want to install totem-xine over totem-gstreamer as soon as possible.

The switch from OpenOffice 1.1.3 to 2.0 (Beta 2) is a substantial one as well xine 1.1 and AbiWord 1.1, unfortunately, were released too late Breezy's dev cycle and aren't included. Namely, the menu editor, disks manager, clipboard daemon, Evince document viewer, drag-and-drop preview, type-ahead-find for Epiphany and GNOME's help browser, and so on. I'm using it right now, and apart from a new splash screen that resembles the forums theme and the replacement of the GNOME foot with the Ubuntu logo in the top left corner, the most immediately obvious changes to the end user are the features introduced by GNOME 2.12.
