Calibre 7.22: Better eReader Support, New Restart Option

3 months 2 weeks ago

Calibre 7.22 is out — and yes, I’m making extra special effort to not mangle the version number this release as I always seem to insert an extra period in the string whenever I cover the the app! Unwieldy looking though it can seem, the open-source Calibre ebook manager remains unsurpassed in terms of features, tools, and capabilities. Add in the fact it’s cross-platform too, and it’s easy to see why it remains a go-to for avid e-bookworms. Calibre 7.22 builds on recent feature additions, adding a new option to set the position of the control bar when using ‘Read […]

You're reading Calibre 7.22: Better eReader Support, New Restart Option, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Joey Sneddon

Mozilla Announce Smaller, Faster Firefox Downloads For Linux

3 months 2 weeks ago

Firefox fans on Linux will enjoy smaller download sizes and faster decompressing when using the official binary builds from the Mozilla website. The browser maker today announced its switching to the tar.xz format — yes, that xz —to distribute its Linux builds, which uses the more efficient LZMA compression algorithm to deliver smaller downloads and faster extraction times. Most Linux users get Firefox updates as a regular software update from a distro-maintained repo, e.g., a Firefox Snap on Ubuntu, a Firefox DEB on Linux Mint and Pop!_OS, etc. But Mozilla say by switching from BZIP2 (tar,bz2) to XZ (tar.xz) Linux […]

You're reading Mozilla Announce Smaller, Faster Firefox Downloads For Linux, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Joey Sneddon

elementary OS 8 Released with New Dock, Quick Settings + More

3 months 2 weeks ago

Indie distro fans rejoice: elementary OS 8.0 is now available to download. Built on the Ubuntu 24.04 LTS base and powered by the Linux 6.8 kernel, elementary OS 8 brings a swathe of improvement to both the Pantheon desktop environment, its core apps, and the overall user experience. The elementary team says it focused on several areas for this release, including the creation of a new secure session (using Wayland, but not currently default), improved multitasking with a new dock, and “empowering our diverse community through inclusive design”. Below, I highlight elementary OS 8’s most notable user-facing changes and provide a […]

You're reading elementary OS 8 Released with New Dock, Quick Settings + More, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Joey Sneddon

Firefox 133 Released with Faster Access to Tabs on Other Devices

3 months 2 weeks ago

Mozilla Firefox 133 was released today, furnished with some new features and UI refinements long-time users are sure to appreciate. In the 4 weeks since Firefox 132 brought us certificate compression, tweaked the way the ‘copy link without site tracking’ surfaces, and flicked the switch on hardware acceleration of SVG primitives in WebRender, Mozilla’s developers added the following: Of these, the tab overview menu option is the one most easily spotted (assuming you’re signed into your Mozilla account and you use the browser on other devices). Elsewhere, Firefox 133.0 also introduces Bounce Tracking Protection to the ‘strict’ mode in Enhanced Tracking Protection […]

You're reading Firefox 133 Released with Faster Access to Tabs on Other Devices, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Joey Sneddon

Warp, the AI-infused Terminal, Relaxes Its Login Requirement

3 months 2 weeks ago

If you were put off trying the Warp terminal app on Ubuntu (or another Linux distro) due to the account and login requirement, there’s good news. The team behind the Rust-based, AI-infused terminal tool has relented on the requirement that users sign-up for and log in with a Warp account before they can run a command. As of this week, anyone can download Warp for for macOS or Linux (it’s coming to Windows soon) and access “all of the core features […] with a preview of more advanced features” without an account, and without logging in. Although, having tried the […]

You're reading Warp, the AI-infused Terminal, Relaxes Its Login Requirement, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Joey Sneddon

Want to Install Snap Apps in Linux Mint? Here’s How

3 months 2 weeks ago

Snap is Canonical’s universal package format for Linux. It lets developers build their software once for users on multiple Linux distributions to use. At least, that’s the theory. In reality, few Linux distributions outside of the Ubuntu ecosphere support Snap out of the box. Most carry the underlying Snap daemon package (snapd) in the repositories, so it’s possible for users who want to use snaps, to do so. Linux Mint takes a different approach to that, however. Ubuntu-based it may be, riding the Ubuntu repos and benefitting from the ongoing bug, security, and other patches Canonical’s engineers push out, but […]

You're reading Want to Install Snap Apps in Linux Mint? Here’s How, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Joey Sneddon

FreeCAD 1.0 Released After 22 Years in Development

3 months 3 weeks ago

Good things come to those who wait. And for 3D modelling professionals using open-source software, the wait for FreeCAD 1.0 has been a long one – over 22 years in the making! At long last, this free, open-source alternative to expensive engineering software like Autodesk Fusion 360, AutoCAD, SOLIDWORKS etc., finally issued its first, formal stable release. A major milestone all told. Not that a lack of 1.0 release had put people off using it prior to now, of course. FreeCAD in already widely used – from professionals and engineering students to 3D printing enthusiasts, both on Linux and other […]

You're reading FreeCAD 1.0 Released After 22 Years in Development, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Joey Sneddon

Warehouse Makes Managing Flatpak Apps on Ubuntu Easy

3 months 3 weeks ago

Flatpak is no longer just a promising format whose potential lay in the far future – it’s already the go-to way for developers to package and distribute their software on Linux, including to those of us using Ubuntu. While Ubuntu has no plans to support Flatpak officially, both Flatpaks and Flathub (the main source of Flatpak apps) work great on Ubuntu — well, most of the time! There’s just one thing that puts some users off using Flatpak apps on Ubuntu: managing them. GNOME Software is the main graphical way to handle software in most GNOME-based Linux distros. It lets […]

You're reading Warehouse Makes Managing Flatpak Apps on Ubuntu Easy, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Joey Sneddon
1 hour 58 minutes ago
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