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Ubuntu version history

Ubuntu releases are made semiannually by Canonical Ltd, the developers of the Ubuntu operating system, using the year and month of the release as a version number. The first Ubuntu release, for example, was Ubuntu 4.10 and was released on 20 October 2004.[1][2] Consequently, version numbers for future versions are provisional; if the release is delayed until a different month (or even year) to that planned, the version number will change accordingly.[3]

Ubuntu 22.10 Kinetic Kudu

Canonical schedules Ubuntu releases to occur approximately one month after GNOME releases, resulting in each Ubuntu release including a newer version of GNOME.[4][5][6]

Every fourth release, occurring in the second quarter of even-numbered years, has been designated as a long-term support (LTS) release.[7] The desktop version of LTS releases for 10.04 and earlier were supported for three years, with server version support for five years. LTS releases 12.04 and newer are freely supported for five years. Through the ESM paid option, support can be extended even longer, up to a total of ten years for 18.04.[8] The support period for non-LTS releases is 9 months.[9] Prior to 13.04, it had been 18 months.

Naming convention

Ubuntu releases are also given code names, using an adjective and an animal with the same first letter – an alliteration, e.g., "Dapper Drake". With the exception of the first two releases, code names are in alphabetical order, and except for the first three releases, the first letters are sequential, allowing a quick determination of which release is newer. As of Ubuntu 17.10, however, the initial letter "rolled over" and returned to "A". Names are occasionally chosen so that animal appearance or habits reflects some new feature, e.g., "Koala's favourite leaf is Eucalyptus"; see below. Ubuntu releases are often referred to using only the adjective portion of the code name, e.g., "Feisty".[10]

Release history

Ubuntu 4.10 (Warty Warthog)

 
Ubuntu 4.10 (Warty Warthog)

Ubuntu 4.10 (Warty Warthog), released on 20 October 2004, was Canonical's first release of Ubuntu, building upon Debian, with plans for a new release every six months and eighteen months of support thereafter.[2] Ubuntu 4.10's support ended on 30 April 2006.[11] Ubuntu 4.10 was offered as a free download and, through Canonical's ShipIt[12] service, was also mailed to users free of charge in CD format.[13]

Ubuntu 5.04 (Hoary Hedgehog)

 
Ubuntu 5.04 (Hoary Hedgehog)

Ubuntu 5.04 (Hoary Hedgehog), released on 8 April 2005,[14][15] was Canonical's second release of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 5.04's support ended on 31 October 2006.[16] Ubuntu 5.04 added many new features including an Update Manager,[17] upgrade notifier, readahead and grepmap, suspend, hibernate and standby support, dynamic frequency scaling for processors, Ubuntu hardware database, Kickstart installation, and APT authentication.[18][19] Ubuntu 5.04 was the first version that allowed installation from USB devices. Beginning with Ubuntu 5.04, UTF-8 became the default character encoding.[20]

Ubuntu 5.10 (Breezy Badger)

 
Ubuntu 5.10 (Breezy Badger)

Ubuntu 5.10 (Breezy Badger), released on 12 October 2005,[21][22] was Canonical's third release of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 5.10's support ended on 13 April 2007.[23] Ubuntu 5.10 added several new features including a graphical bootloader (Usplash), an Add/Remove Applications tool,[24] a menu editor (Alacarte), an easy language selector, logical volume management support, full Hewlett-Packard printer support, OEM installer support, a new Ubuntu logo in the top-left, and Launchpad integration for bug reporting and software development.[25]

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS (Dapper Drake)

 
Ubuntu 6.06 (Dapper Drake)

Ubuntu 6.06 (Dapper Drake), released on 1 June 2006,[26][27][28] was Canonical's fourth release, and the first long-term support (LTS) release. Ubuntu 6.06 was released behind schedule, having been intended as 6.04. It is sometimes jokingly described as their first "Late To Ship" (LTS) release.[29] Development was not complete in April 2006 and Mark Shuttleworth approved slipping the release date to June, making it 6.06 instead.[30]

Ubuntu 6.06's support ended on 14 July 2009 for desktops and ended in June 2011 for servers.[31] Ubuntu 6.06 included several new features, including having the Live CD and Install CD merged onto one disc,[32] a graphical installer on Live CD (Ubiquity), Usplash on shutdown as well as startup, a network manager for easy switching of multiple wired and wireless connections, Humanlooks theme implemented using Tango guidelines, based on Clearlooks and featuring orange colors instead of brown, and GDebi graphical installer for package files.[33][34] Ubuntu 6.06 did not include a means to install from a USB device, but did for the first time allow installation directly onto removable USB devices.

Ubuntu 6.10 (Edgy Eft)

 
Ubuntu 6.10 (Edgy Eft)

Ubuntu 6.10 (Edgy Eft), released on 26 October 2006,[35][36][37] was Canonical's fifth release of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 6.10's support ended on 25 April 2008.[38][39] Ubuntu 6.10 added several new features including a heavily modified Human theme, Upstart init daemon, automated crash reports (Apport), Tomboy note taking application, and F-Spot photo manager. EasyUbuntu, a third party program designed to make Ubuntu easier to use, was included in Ubuntu 6.10 as a meta-package.[40]

Ubuntu 7.04 (Feisty Fawn)

 
Ubuntu 7.04 (Feisty Fawn)

Ubuntu 7.04 (Feisty Fawn), released on 19 April 2007,[41][42][43] was Canonical's sixth release of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 7.04's support ended on 19 October 2008.[44] Ubuntu 7.04 included several new features, among them a migration assistant to help former Microsoft Windows users transition to Ubuntu, support for Kernel-based Virtual Machine, assisted codec and restricted drivers installation including Adobe Flash, Java, MP3 support, easier installation of Nvidia and ATI drivers, Compiz desktop effects, support for Wi-Fi Protected Access, the addition of Sudoku and chess, a disk usage analyzer (baobab), GNOME Control Center, and zeroconf support for many devices.[18][45]

Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon)

 
Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon)

Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon), released on 18 October 2007,[46][47][48] was Canonical's seventh release of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 7.10's support ended on 18 April 2009.[49][50] Ubuntu 7.10 included several new features, among them AppArmor security framework,[51] fast desktop search,[52] a Firefox plug-in manager (Ubufox),[53] a graphical configuration tool for X.Org, full NTFS support (read/write) via NTFS-3G, and a revamped printing system with PDF printing by default.[53] Compiz Fusion was enabled as default in Ubuntu 7.10[54] and Fast user switching was added.[52]

Ubuntu 8.04 LTS (Hardy Heron)

 
Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron)

Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron), released on 24 April 2008,[55][56][57] was Canonical's eighth release of Ubuntu and the second long-term support release.[58][59] Ubuntu 8.04's support ended on 12 May 2011 for desktops[60] and ended on 9 May 2013 for servers as well.[61] Ubuntu 8.04 included several new features, among them Tracker desktop search integration,[62] Brasero disk burner,[63] Transmission BitTorrent client,[63] Vinagre VNC client,[63] system sound through PulseAudio,[64] and Active Directory authentication and login using Likewise Open.[65] In addition Ubuntu 8.04 included updates for better Tango compliance,[66] various Compiz usability improvements, automatic grabbing and releasing of the mouse cursor when running on a VMware virtual machine, and an easier method to remove Ubuntu. Ubuntu 8.04 was the first version of Ubuntu to include the Wubi installer on the Live CD that allows Ubuntu to be installed as a single file on a Windows hard drive without the need to repartition the disk. The first version of the Ubuntu Netbook Remix was also introduced.[67]

Ubuntu 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex)

 
Ubuntu 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex). The default wallpaper depicts an Ibex, with its large curved horns.

Ubuntu 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex), released on 30 October 2008,[68][69] was Canonical's ninth release of Ubuntu. Support ended on 30 April 2010.[70] Ubuntu 8.10 introduced several new features including improvements to mobile computing and desktop scalability, increased flexibility for Internet connectivity, an Ubuntu Live USB creator and a guest account,[71] which allowed others to use a computer allowing very limited user rights (e.g. accessing the Internet, using software and checking e-mail).[72] The guest account had its own home folder and nothing done on it was stored permanently on the computer's hard disk.[73] Intrepid Ibex also included an encrypted private directory for users,[74] the inclusion of Dynamic Kernel Module Support, a tool that allows kernel drivers to be automatically rebuilt when new kernels are released, and support for creating USB flash drive images.[18][75]

Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope)

 
Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope)

Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope), released on 23 April 2009,[76] was Canonical's tenth release of Ubuntu. Support ended on 23 October 2010.[77] New features included faster boot time[78] and integration of web services and applications into the desktop interface. Because of that, they named it after the mythical jackalope.[79] It was the first release named after a mythical animal, the second being Utopic Unicorn. It had a new usplash screen, a new login screen and also support for both Wacom (hotplugging) and netbooks.[78] It also included a new notification system, Notify OSD,[80] and themes. It marked the first time that all of Ubuntu's core development moved to the GNU Bazaar distributed version control system.[81][82]

Ubuntu 9.04 was the first version to support the ARM architecture with native support for ARMv5EL and ARMv6EL-VFP.[83]

Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic Koala)

 
Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic Koala)

Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic Koala), released on 29 October 2009,[84] was Canonical's 11th release of Ubuntu. It was supported until April 2011.[85][86]

In an announcement to the community on 20 February 2009, Mark Shuttleworth explained that 9.10 would focus on improvements in cloud computing on the server using Eucalyptus, saying "... a Koala's favourite leaf is Eucalyptus",[87] as well as further improvements in boot speed and development of the Netbook Remix.[88]

The initial announcement of version 9.10 indicated that this release might include a new theme, but the project was delayed to version 10.04,[88][89] and only minor revisions were made to the default theme. Other graphical improvements included a new set of boot up and shutdown splash screens, a new login screen that transitions seamlessly into the desktop and greatly improved performance on Intel graphics chip-sets.

In June 2009, Canonical created the One Hundred Paper Cuts project, focusing developers to fix minor usability issues. A "paper cut" was defined as, "a trivially fixable usability bug that the average user would encounter on his/her first day of using a brand new installation of the latest version of Ubuntu Desktop Edition."[90]

The desktop installation of Ubuntu 9.10 replaced Pidgin with Empathy Instant Messenger as its default instant messaging client.[91] The default filesystem is ext4, and the Ubuntu One client, which interfaces with Canonical's new online storage system, is installed by default.[92] It introduced Grub 2 beta as default bootloader.[93] It also debuted a new application called the Ubuntu Software Center that unifies package management. Canonical stated their intention for this application to replace Add/Remove Programs (gnome-app-install) in 9.10 and possibly Synaptic, Software Sources, Gdebi and Update Manager in Ubuntu 10.04.[94] Karmic Koala also includes a slideshow during the installation process (through ubiquity-slideshow) that highlights applications and features in Ubuntu.

Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx)

 
Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid Lynx)

Shuttleworth first announced Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid Lynx)[10] on 19 September 2009 at the Atlanta Linux Fest; Canonical released it on 29 April 2010.[95][96] It was Canonical's 12th release of Ubuntu and the third long-term support (LTS) release.

The new release included, among other things, improved support for Nvidia proprietary graphics drivers, while switching to the open source Nvidia graphics driver, Nouveau, by default. Plymouth was also introduced, allowing boot animations. It also included a video editor for the first time, Pitivi.[97][98][99][100]

GIMP was removed from the Lucid installation CD due to its professional-grade complexity and its file size. F-Spot provided normal user-level graphics-editing capabilities and GIMP remained available for download in the repositories.[101]

The distribution emphasized the increasing importance of Web services and of social networking services with integrated interfaces for posting to sites like Facebook and Twitter, complementing the IM and email integration already in Ubuntu.

On 4 March 2010 it was announced that Lucid Lynx would feature a new theme, including new logos, taking Ubuntu's new visual style[102] into account:

The new style in Ubuntu is inspired by the idea of "Light".

We're drawn to Light, because it denotes both warmth and clarity, and intrigued by the idea that "light" is a good value in software. Good software is "light" in the sense that it uses your resources efficiently, runs quickly, and can easily be reshaped as needed. Ubuntu represents a break with the bloatware of proprietary operating systems and an opportunity to delight to those who use computers for work and play. More and more of our communications are powered by light, and in future, our processing power will depend on our ability to work with light, too.

Visually, light is beautiful, light is ethereal, light brings clarity and comfort.

Historical perspective: From 2004–2010, the theme in Ubuntu was "Human". Our tagline was "Linux for Human Beings" and we used a palette reflective of the full range of humanity. Our focus as a project was bringing Linux from the data center into the lives of our friends and global family.

The new theme met with mixed critical responses. Ars Technica's Ryan Paul said: "The new themes and updated color palette are nice improvement for Ubuntu ... After testing the new theme for several hours, I feel like it's a step forward, but it still falls a bit short of my expectations." Paul also noted that the most controversial aspect of the new design amongst users was the placement of the window-control buttons on the left instead of on the right side of the windows.[103][104] TechSource's Jun Auza expressed concern that the new theme was too close to that used by Apple's Mac OS X: "I think Ubuntu is having an identity crisis right now and should seriously consider changing several things in terms of look and feel to avoid being branded as a Mac OS X rip-off, or worse, get sued by Apple." Auza also summarized Ubuntu user feedback: "I believe the fans are divided right now. Some have learned to love the brown color scheme since it uniquely represents Ubuntu, while others wanted change."[105]

The first point release, 10.04.1, was made available on 17 August 2010,[106] and the second update, 10.04.2, was released on 17 February 2011.[107] The third update, 10.04.3, was released on 21 July 2011,[108] and the fourth and final update, 10.04.4, was released on 16 February 2012.[109]

Canonical provided support for the desktop version of Ubuntu 10.04 until 9 May 2013 and for the server version until 30 April 2015.[110]

Ubuntu 10.10 (Maverick Meerkat)

 
Ubuntu 10.10 (Maverick Meerkat)

The naming of Ubuntu 10.10 (Maverick Meerkat) was announced by Mark Shuttleworth on 2 April 2010, along with the release's goals of improving the netbook experience and a server focus on hybrid cloud computing. Ubuntu 10.10 was released on 10 October 2010 (10.10.10) at around 10:10 UTC.[111][112][113][114][115] This is a departure from the traditional schedule of releasing at the end of October to get "the perfect 10",[116] and a playful reference to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, since, in binary, 101010 is equal to the number 42, the "Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe and Everything" within the series.[117] It was Canonical's 13th release of Ubuntu. New features included the new Unity interface for the Netbook Edition, a new default photo manager, Shotwell, replacing F-Spot, the ability to purchase applications in the Software Center, and an official Ubuntu font used by default.[118]

Support for Ubuntu Maverick Meerkat 10.10 was officially ended on 10 April 2012.[119]

Ubuntu 11.04 (Natty Narwhal)

 
Ubuntu 11.04 Desktop (Natty Narwhal) using Unity

The naming of Ubuntu 11.04 (Natty Narwhal) was announced on 17 August 2010 by Mark Shuttleworth.[120] Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal was released on 28 April 2011.[121] It is Canonical's 14th release of Ubuntu.

Ubuntu 11.04 used the Unity user interface instead of GNOME 2 as default. The move to Unity was controversial as some GNOME developers feared it would fracture the community and marginalize GNOME Shell.[122][123] The GNOME desktop environment is still available in Ubuntu 11.04 under the title Ubuntu Classic as a fallback to Unity.

Ubuntu 11.04 employed Banshee as the default music player, replacing Rhythmbox. Other new applications included Mozilla Firefox 4 and LibreOffice, which replaced OpenOffice.org.[124][125][126] The OpenStack cloud computing platform was added in this release.[127][128]

Starting with Ubuntu 11.04, the Ubuntu Netbook Edition was merged into the desktop edition.[129]

In reviewing Ubuntu 11.04 upon its stable release, Ryan Paul of Ars Technica said "There is a lot to like in Ubuntu 11.04, but also a lot of room for improvement." Jesse Smith of DistroWatch said "I'm of the opinion there are good features in this release, but 11.04 definitely suffered from being rushed out the door while it was still beta quality. Ubuntu aims to be novice-friendly, but this release is buggy and I think they missed the mark this time around. I'm limiting my recommendation of 11.04 to people who want to play with an early release of Unity."[130][131]

Support for Ubuntu 11.04 officially ended on 28 October 2012.[132]

Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot)

 
Ubuntu 11.10 final release (13 October 2011) running Unity 4.22.0

The naming of Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot) was announced on 7 March 2011 by Mark Shuttleworth. He explained that Oneiric means "dreamy".[133] Ubuntu 11.10 was released on schedule on 13 October 2011 and is Canonical's 15th release of Ubuntu.[134]

In April 2011, Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 11.10 would not include the classic GNOME desktop as a fall back to Unity, unlike Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal. Instead, 11.10 included a 2D version of Unity as a fallback for computers that lacked the hardware resources for the Compiz-based 3D version. However, the classic GNOME desktop remained available in Ubuntu 11.10 through a package in the Ubuntu repositories.[135] Shuttleworth also confirmed that Unity in Ubuntu 11.10 would run as a shell for GNOME 3 on top of GNOME 3 libraries, unlike in Ubuntu 11.04 where it ran as a shell for GNOME 2. Moreover, users were able to install the entire GNOME 3 stack along with GNOME Shell directly from the Ubuntu repositories; to be presented with a "GNOME 3 desktop" choice at login.[136] During the development cycle there were many changes to Unity, including the placement of the Ubuntu button on the Launcher instead of on the Panel, the autohiding of the window controls (and the global menu) of maximized windows, the introduction of more transparency into the Dash (and the Panel when the Dash was opened) and the introduction of window controls for the Dash.[137]

In May 2011, it was announced that Pitivi would be no longer part of the Ubuntu ISO, starting with Ubuntu 11.10 Oneiric Ocelot. The reasons given for removing it included poor user reception, lack of fit with the default user-case for Ubuntu, lack of polish and the application's lack of development maturity. PiTiVi will not be replaced on the ISO with another video editor. Other changes include removing Computer Janitor, as it caused broken systems for users, and the removal of the Synaptic package manager, which can optionally be installed via the Ubuntu Software Center. Déjà Dup has been added as Ubuntu's backup program.[138] Mozilla Thunderbird has replaced the GNOME Evolution email client. All removed applications will remain available to users for installation from the Ubuntu Software Center and repositories.[100][139][140][141]

Support for Ubuntu Oneiric Ocelot was officially ended on 9 May 2013.

Ubuntu 12.04 LTS (Precise Pangolin)

 
Ubuntu 12.04 LTS desktop

Ubuntu 12.04 LTS (Precise Pangolin) is Canonical's sixteenth release of Ubuntu and its fourth long-term support (LTS) release, made available on schedule on 26 April 2012.[142][143] It is named after the pangolin anteater.[144] Previous LTS releases have been supported for three years for the desktop version and five years for the server version; this release was supported for five years for both versions, with support ending on 28 April 2017.[145][146] Canonical continues to offer extended security maintenance to Advantage customers for an additional two years.[147]

Changes in this release include a much faster startup time for the Ubuntu Software Center and refinements to Unity. This release also switched the default media player from Banshee back to Rhythmbox and dropped the Tomboy note-taking application and the supporting Mono framework as well.[148][149] Also, the window dodge feature has been removed from the Unity launcher starting with Ubuntu 12.04.[150]

Ubuntu 12.04 incorporated a new head-up display (HUD) feature that allows hot key searching for application menu items from the keyboard, without needing the mouse. Shuttleworth said that the HUD "will ultimately replace menus in Unity applications" but for Ubuntu 12.04 at least the menus will remain.[151]

Ubuntu 12.04 is the first Ubuntu release shipped with IPv6 privacy extensions turned on by default. Ubuntu 11.10 already supported IPv6 on the desktop and in the installer (stateless address autoconfiguration SLAAC, stateless DHCPv6 and stateful DHCPv6).[152]

Like previous LTS releases, 12.04 included point releases that bundled updates to shorten downloads for users installing the release later in its life-cycle. The point releases and dates were: 12.04.1 (23 August 2012),[153] 12.04.2 (14 February 2013),[154] 12.04.3 (scheduled for release on 22 August 2013, but actually released on 23 August 2013),[155] 12.04.4 (6 February 2014)[156] and 12.04.5 (7 August 2014).[157]

Jesse Smith of DistroWatch said that many people, like he, had questioned Ubuntu's direction, including Unity, but with Ubuntu 12.04 he felt that the puzzle pieces, which individually may have been underwhelming, had come together to form a whole, clear picture. He said "Unity, though a step away from the traditional desktop, has several features which make it attractive, such as reducing mouse travel. The HUD means that newcomers can find application functionality with a quick search and more advanced users can use the HUD to quickly run menu commands from the keyboard." He wrote that Unity had grown to maturity, while indicating that he was bothered by its lack of flexibility. He did notice issues, however, especially that the HUD did not work in LibreOffice and performance in a virtual machine was unsatisfactory. He concluded that Ubuntu's overall experience was "head and shoulders above anything else in the Linux ecosystem."[158]

Jim Lynch wrote "Ubuntu 12.04 is definitely worth an upgrade if you're running an earlier version. Unity is finally coming into its own in this release, plus there are other enhancements that make upgrading worthwhile. Ubuntu is getting better and better with each release. I was one of the Unity skeptics initially, but I've come to accept it as part of Ubuntu."[159]

Jack Wallen of TechRepublic, who had strongly criticized early versions of Unity, said "Since Ubuntu 12.04 was released, and I migrated over from Linux Mint, I'm working much more efficiently. This isn't really so much a surprise to me, but to many of the detractors who assume Unity a very unproductive desktop ... well, I can officially say they are wrong. [...] I realize that many people out there have spurned Unity (I was one of them for a long time), but the more I use it, the more I realize that Canonical really did their homework on how to help end users more efficiently interact with their computers. Change is hard – period. For many, the idea of change is such a painful notion they wind up missing out on some incredible advancements. Unity is one such advancement."[160]

Ubuntu 12.10 (Quantal Quetzal)

 
Ubuntu 12.10's default desktop

On 23 April 2012 Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 12.10 would be named Quantal Quetzal. As this will be the first of a series of three releases before the next LTS release, Shuttleworth indicated that it will include a refreshed look, with work to be done on typography and iconography. The release takes its name from the quetzal, a species of Central American birds.[161] Ubuntu 12.10 was released on schedule on 18 October 2012 and is Canonical's seventeenth release of the operating system.[162]

Ryan Paul, writing for Ars Technica, said in April 2012 when the name was announced "A Quetzal is a colorful bird that is common to Central America. The most well-known variety, the resplendent quetzal, is known for its beauty. The name is a good fit for Ubuntu, which aims to soar in the cloud, offer visual appeal without compromising function, and avoid smacking into closed windows."[163]

The Ubuntu Developer Summit held in May 2012 set the priorities for this release. They are forecast to include an improved boot up sequence and log-in screen, dropping Unity 2D in favor of lower hardware requirements for Unity 3D, wrap around dialogs and toolbars for the head-up display and a "vanilla" version of Gnome-Shell as an option. The release would likely include GNOME 3.6, Python 3 and the 3.5 Linux kernel.[164] It would ship with Python 3 in the image, but with Python 2 available in the repositories, via the "Python" package.[165] The kernel will have the PAE switched on by default.[166]

In July 2012, development versions of Ubuntu 12.10 received a new combined user, session and system menu.[167] This release also included Ubuntu Web Apps, a means of running Web applications directly from the desktop, without having to open a browser.[168] It would use Nautilus 3.4 as its file manager, in place of the 3.5 and newer versions, to retain features deleted from later versions.[169]

In September 2012, Canonical's Kate Stewart announced that the Ubuntu 12.10 image would not fit on a compact disc, saying "There is no longer a traditional CD sized image, DVD or alternate image, but rather a single 800MB Ubuntu image that can be used from USB or DVD."[170] However, a third-party project has created a version of Ubuntu 12.10 that fits on a CD. It uses LZMA2 compression instead of the DEFLATE compression used on the official Ubuntu DVD image.[171]

Also in late September 2012, it was announced that the version of Unity to be shipped with Ubuntu 12.10 would by default include searches of Amazon.com for searched terms. This move caused immediate controversy among Ubuntu users, particularly with regard to privacy issues, and caused Mark Shuttleworth to issue a statement indicating that this feature is not adware and labelled many of the objections "FUD" (Fear, uncertainty, and doubt). Shuttleworth stated "What we have in 12.10 isn't the full experience, so those who leap to judgement are at maximum risk of having to eat their words later. Chill out. If the first cut doesn't work for you, remove it, or just search the specific scope you want (there are hotkeys for all the local scopes)." Regardless, users filed a Launchpad bug report on the feature requesting that it be made a separate lens and not included with general desktop searches for files, directories and applications. The degree of community push-back on the issue resulted in plans by the developers to make the dash and where it searches user-configurable via a GUI-setting dialogue. Despite concerns that the setting dialogue would not make the final version of Ubuntu 12.10, it was completed and is present in the final version of 12.10.[172][173][174][175][176][177]

In the week prior to the stable release of Ubuntu 12.10 data-privacy advocate Luís de Sousa indicated that the inclusion of the shopping lens, installed without explicit permission of the user, violates European Directive 95/46/EC on data privacy. That directive requires that the "data subject has unambiguously given his consent" in situations where personal identifying information is sent.[178]

In reviewing Ubuntu 12.10 at the end of October 2012 for DistroWatch, Jesse Smith raised concerns about the Amazon shopping lens, saying, "it has raised a number of privacy concerns in the community and, looking over Ubuntu's legal notice about privacy does not provide any reassurance. The notice informs us Canonical reserves the right to share our keystrokes, search terms and IP address with a number of third parties, including Facebook, Twitter, Amazon and the BBC. This feature is enabled by default, but can be turned off through the distribution's settings panel." He also found that the dash provided very slow performance and that the release was "practically unusable in the VirtualBox environment". He summed up his experiences, "After a day and a half of using Ubuntu 12.10 it was an internal struggle not to wipe my hard drive and just find another distribution to review. During the first twenty-four hours Ubuntu spied on me, provided performance which was distinctly sub par, the interface regularly popped up errors (sometimes so frequently the first pop-up wouldn't have faded out of view before the next one appeared), the update notification didn't work and it wasn't possible to turn off accessibility features through the graphical interface. Adding insult to injury, the Unity dash kept locking up or losing focus while I was trying to use it and the operating system crashed more times than not while trying to shutdown or logout. Switching away from Unity to GNOME Fallback helped the performance issues I had experienced with the Dash, but it didn't remove the annoying pop-up errors and performance (while usable) still wasn't as good as I would expect. And what really makes me scratch my head is Ubuntu 12.04 worked really well on this same hardware."[179]

In early November, the Electronic Frontier Foundation made a statement on the shopping lens issue, "Technically, when you search for something in Dash, your computer makes a secure HTTPS connection to productsearch.ubuntu.com, sending along your search query and your IP address. If it returns Amazon products to display, your computer then insecurely loads the product images from Amazon's server over HTTP. This means that a passive eavesdropper, such as someone sharing a wireless network with you, will be able to get a good idea of what you're searching for on your own computer based on Amazon product images. It's a major privacy problem if you can't find things on your own computer without broadcasting what you're looking for to the world."[180]

Writing about Ubuntu 12.10 in a December 2012 review, Jim Lynch addressed the Amazon controversy:

One of the desktop changes that some folks might not like is the web app link to Amazon.com ... This might come across as a bridge too far in terms of the outright commercialization of Ubuntu. And it is an eery [sic] reminder of all the garbage that gets installed on Windows PCs by default, by the hardware companies. Is this where Ubuntu is going? Will you someday boot into your Ubuntu desktop only to find tons of commercial crapware clogging up your desktop by default? I sure hope not, as it will be another reason for people to avoid Ubuntu.

He concluded by saying, "Overall, Ubuntu 12.10 is a decent upgrade for current Ubuntu users. However, the inclusion of the Amazon icon on the launcher, and the discontinuation of Unity 2D might irritate some people."[181]

Support for Ubuntu 12.10 Quantal Quetzal officially ended on 16 May 2014.

Ubuntu 13.04 (Raring Ringtail)

 
Ubuntu 13.04 (Raring Ringtail)

On 17 October 2012, Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 13.04 would be named Raring Ringtail and said about this release "[In the next six months] we want to have the phone, tablet and TV all lined up. So I think it's time to look at the core of Ubuntu and review it through a mobile lens: let's measure our core platform by mobile metrics, things like battery life, number of running processes, memory footprint, and polish the rough edges that we find when we do that."[182]

The Wubi installer was dropped as of 13.04, due to its incompatibility with Windows 8 and general lack of support and development.[183][184] Previously, on 29 October 2012 at the Ubuntu Developer Summit registration, there had been a discussion of redesigning Wubi for Ubuntu 13.04.[185]

Ubuntu 13.04 was released on schedule on 25 April 2013.[186]

In reviewing Ubuntu 13.04 Jim Lynch from Desktop Linux Reviews said, "I found Ubuntu 13.04 to be a slightly disappointing upgrade. While there are definitely some enhancements in this release, there's also nothing very special about it ... Alas, there's nothing in Ubuntu 13.04 that makes me want to consider it for use as my daily distro. Don't misunderstand me, there's nothing overtly wrong with Ubuntu 13.04 either. It installed and performed very well for me. Unity 7 also has some helpful and attractive updates that Ubuntu users will enjoy, and there are other things in this release that help improve the overall Ubuntu experience ... I suspect it is simply because Ubuntu has settled into a comfortable middle age, it works and it works very well for what it does."[187]

Support for Ubuntu 13.04 officially ended on 27 January 2014.

Ubuntu 13.10 (Saucy Salamander)

 
Ubuntu 13.10 (Saucy Salamander)

Ubuntu 13.10 is named Saucy Salamander.[188] It was released on schedule on 17 October 2013.

Consideration was given to changing the default browser from Mozilla Firefox to Chromium, but problems with timely updates to Ubuntu's Chromium package caused developers to retain Firefox for this release.[189][190]

Ubuntu 13.10 was intended to be the first Ubuntu release to replace the aging X Window System (X11) with the Mir display server, with X11 programs to have operated through the XMir compatibility layer.[191] However, after the development of XMir ran into "outstanding technical difficulties" for multiple monitors, Canonical decided to postpone the default use of Mir in Ubuntu.[188] Mir will still be released as the default display server for Ubuntu Touch 13.10.[192]

Ryan Paul of Ars Technica wrote that although 13.10 brings useful enhancements, it is "a relatively thin update". He also said "the new Dash concept is intriguing, but its usefulness is a bit limited"; and even though he thinks that universal Web search is potentially useful, he's somewhat uncomfortable with how Canonical joins it with local system searches.[188]

In a review of Ubuntu 13.10 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu criticized the new Smart Scopes feature, saying, "it's less of a help and more of a hindrance. With so many web services offering results for a search term – however innocuous it might be – the Dash ends up resembling a wall painted in unintelligible, irrelevant mess." Sneddon noted that internet search engines turn in more useful and better organized results and recommended selectively disabling individual scopes to reduce the noise factor.[193]

Jim Lynch of Linux Desktop Reviews described the release as "boring" and noted, "alas, Ubuntu 13.10 follows in the footsteps of Ubuntu 13.04. The big new desktop feature is Smart Scopes ... Beyond that there's not a whole lot that is interesting or exciting to talk about. It turns out that Saucy Salamander is one truly dull amphibian. Canonical really should rename this release to 'Snoozing Salamander' instead." Lynch described the Smart Scopes, "this is a very useful function, and it can save you a lot of time when looking for information. I understand that some people will regard this as a privacy violation, no problem. There's an easy way to disable Smart Scopes."[194]

Maria Korolov writing for Network World in December 2013 said of the release, "there is a benefit to be had in being able to search for files you own on both local drives and in cloud services such as Google Drive and Flickr. That's the idea behind Unity Smart Scopes ... The result is a cluttered mess. The first thing many users will probably do after installing Ubuntu 13.10 is to get rid of most of these results ... mixing generic Web results in with your own files is just confusing."[195]

In its year-end Readers Choice Awards, Linux Journal readers voted Ubuntu as Best Linux Distribution and Best Desktop Distribution for 2013.[196]

Support for Ubuntu 13.10 ended on 17 July 2014.[197]

Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (Trusty Tahr)

 
Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr

Mark Shuttleworth announced on 31 October 2011 that by Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu would support smartphones, tablets, TVs and smart screens.[198]

On 18 October 2013, it was announced that Ubuntu 14.04 would be dubbed "Trusty Tahr".[199][200]

This version was released on 17 April 2014, and is the 20th release of Ubuntu. Shuttleworth indicated that the focus in this development cycle would be a release characterized by "performance, refinement, maintainability, technical debt" and encouraged the developers to make "conservative choices". Technical debt refers to catching up and refining supporting work for earlier changes. The development cycle for this release focused on the tablet interface, specifically for the Nexus 7 and Nexus 10 tablets. There were few changes to the desktop, as 14.04 used the existing mature Unity 7 interface. Ubuntu 14.04 included the ability to turn off the global menu system and used locally integrated menus instead for individual applications. Other features were the retention of Xorg and not Mir or XMir, a Unity 8 developers' preview, new mobile applications, a redesigned USB Startup Disk Creator tool, a new forked version of the GNOME Control Center, called the Unity Control Center and default SSD TRIM support. GNOME 3.10 is installed by default.[200][201][202][203][204][205][206][207][208]

Point releases included 14.04.1 on 24 July 2014, 14.04.2 on 19 February 2015, 14.04.3 on 6 August 2015, 14.04.4 on 18 February 2016, 14.04.5 on 4 August 2016 and 14.04.6 on 7 March 2019.[201][209] The release initially included Linux kernel 3.13, but this was updated to 4.2 with the point release of 14.04.4 on 18 February 2016.[201][210] Point release 14.04.5, which provided the latest Linux kernel and graphics stacks from Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, was intended to be the final point release for 14.04 LTS,[211] but 14.04.6 was released on 7 March 2019 as a security-targeted update.[212]

Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu noted that recent Ubuntu releases have received lower and lower amounts of mainstream press coverage and termed it an "established product that has, by and large, remained a niche interest".[213]

In reviewing Ubuntu 14.04 LTS in April 2014, Jim Lynch concluded: "Ubuntu 14.04 seems to be all about refining the Ubuntu desktop. While there are not a lot of amazing new features in this release, there are quite a few very useful and needed tweaks that add up to a much better desktop experience. Canonical's designers seem to be listening to Ubuntu users again, and they seem willing to make the changes necessary to give the users what they want. That may be the single most important thing about Ubuntu 14.04. It could be an indication of a sea change in Canonical's attitude toward Ubuntu users."[214]

Jack Wallin writing for TechRepublic termed Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, "as polished a distribution as you'll find. It's cleaner, performs better, and is all around improved. Some users may say that this is the most boring release Canonical has unleashed in years, but I believe it to be one of the finest."[215]

Terry Relph-Knight of ZDNet said, "although there are no amazing 'must-have' new features in Ubuntu 14.04, it is worth upgrading just to get the latest LTS release with a more recent kernel and default applications."[216]

Scott Gilbertson of Ars Technica stated, "Ubuntu is one of the most polished desktops around, certainly the most polished in the Linux world, but in many ways that polish is increasingly skin deep at the expense of some larger usability issues, which continue to go unaddressed release after release."[217]

Normal LTS support continued until 25 April 2019,[218] after which extended security maintenance is available to Ubuntu Advantage customers and as a separate commercial purchase, as was the case previously with 12.04.[219] In September, 2021, Canonical announced[220] that it would extend LTS support for the 14.04 and 16.04 to a total of 10 years, extending the ESM support date for 14.04 until April 2024.

Ubuntu 14.10 (Utopic Unicorn)

 
A screenshot of the Ubuntu 14.10 "Utopic Unicorn" desktop with the mascot wallpaper

On 23 April 2014 Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 14.10 would carry the name Utopic Unicorn.[221][222] Version 14.10 was released on 23 October, having only minor updates to the kernel, Unity Desktop, and included packages such as LibreOffice and Mozilla Firefox and Thunderbird. The kernel was updated to 3.16 for hardware support (e.g. graphics) and has for security, full kernel address space layout randomization applied to the kernel and its modules, plus the closure of a number of information leaks in /proc.[223]

This version is the 21st release. Ubuntu 14.10 was officially characterized as a release that addressed "bug fixes and incremental quality improvements" and so it incorporated very few new features.[224]

Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu wrote in reviewing this release, "Ubuntu 14.10, codenamed "Utopic Unicorn", is saddled with a modest changelog, composed largely of bug fixes, stability improvements and key software updates. All worthy, but falls a little way short of the "fresh ideas and new art" that should "raise the roof" – quotes from Mark Shuttleworth's "U" name announcement ... For the release taking place in the week of Ubuntu's 10th anniversary, this may all read like a bit of an anticlimax. No headline user features, no visual changes (bar a few new icons for the sidebar of Nautilus) – there's not even a new default wallpaper to look at...But on the flip side it's perhaps the most fitting release; the one that shows just how far Ubuntu has come in the past few years. Mature, dependable and sure in its own (Ambiance-themed) skin, buggy feature churn has given way to a sustained era of assured stability ... Ubuntu 14.10 is a rock-solid, hearty and dependable release. Perhaps more here than ever before. There's no getting away from the fact that it's an uninspiring update on paper, and is far from being anything approaching essential."[225]

Michael Larabel of Phoronix wrote, "At the end of the day simple end-users won't see much of a difference over Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, which is a bit sad given that this is the tenth anniversary release of Ubuntu Linux. For everyday Linux desktop users the many upgraded packages are great but there isn't too much more to celebrate about today on the desktop front."[226]

Scott Gilbertson, writing for The Register, explained, "I've been covering Ubuntu for seven of the release's 10 years and 14.10 is the first time I've had to dig deep into the release notes just to find something new to test ... If you needed further proof that Canonical is currently solely focused on bringing its Unity 8 interface to mobile devices, 14.10 is the best evidence yet ... Almost nothing Canonical develops has changed in this release – there isn't even a new desktop wallpaper. There are some updates to be sure, but they don't hail from Canonical ... The lack of updates isn't unexpected, in fact that's been the plan all along ... Desktop Ubuntu is currently in a kind of suspended animation, waiting on Unity 8 and Mir to be ready for its coming metamorphosis. The short story is that it makes no sense for Canonical to keep refining Unity 7 when it will soon be retired."[227]

Ubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet)

 
Ubuntu 15.04 Vivid Vervet

On 20 October 2014 Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 15.04 would be named Vivid Vervet. It was released on 23 April 2015.[228][229][230][231] This was the 22nd Ubuntu release.

Ubuntu 15.04 used systemd instead of Upstart by default.[232] This release also featured locally integrated menus by default, replacing the previous default global menus.[233]

Silviu Stahie, writing for Softpedia, said about this release while it was in beta, "Ubuntu 15.04 is not an exciting release, but that it's only a surface impression. The truth is that it's an important upgrade, because some very important changes have been made, including the adoption of systemd. Users will notice that not too many visual changes have been implemented in Ubuntu 15.04, but that was to be expected. The team is transitioning to a new Unity version that is still not ready for general use, so it's easy to understand why Ubuntu 15.04 is not all that different from Ubuntu 14.10."[234]

This release included modest improvements in Intel Haswell graphics performance and bigger improvements for AMD Radeon graphics cards using the open-source Radeon R600 and RadeonSI Gallium3D drivers.[235]

In reviewing this release, Joey Sneddon, of OMG Ubuntu, said "Ubuntu 15.04 is yet another solid entry in the distribution's long release history. A dependable desktop operating system suited for end users but with plenty of convenient extras to woo developers with. Though the Unity 7 desktop is largely mothballed as work progresses on the new converged experience with Unity 8, the modest refinements received here buff the experience. Unity in Ubuntu 15.04 shines brighter, a glowing example of a desktop that 'just works' for users.".[236]

Jesse Smith of DistroWatch wrote, "One of the changes I was interested in exploring was Ubuntu's switch from the Upstart init software to systemd. In this regard I was pleasantly surprised. I find most distributions, when they initially make the switch to systemd, introduce bugs or, at the very least, break backward compatibility. Sometimes service managers stop working properly and network device names usually change. Even if everything works as it should, the administrator needs to adjust to systemd's approach to logging and adopt a different method of managing services. Ubuntu has taken an approach I like with regards to adopting systemd." He concluded, "on the surface, Ubuntu 15.04 does not bring many changes. There are a few cosmetic adjustments, but nothing major that desktop users are likely to notice. Most of the interesting work appears to be going on behind the scenes ... Ubuntu 15.04 feels very stable and easy to configure. This is an operating system that is virtually effortless to set up and run and I feel the Unity 7 desktop does a nice job of providing lots of features while staying out of the way ... All in all, I like what Canonical has done with Ubuntu 15.04. This feels like a small, incremental evolution for Ubuntu and Unity. The init switch, which has disrupted the users of several other distributions, goes largely unnoticed in Ubuntu and I think that is worthy of praise."[237]

Ubuntu 15.10 (Wily Werewolf)

 
Ubuntu 15.10 Wily Werewolf

Shuttleworth announced on 4 May 2015 that Ubuntu 15.10 would be called Wily Werewolf.[238] He initially expressed hope that the release would include the Mir display server, but it was released on 22 October 2015 without Mir. It was the 23rd release of Ubuntu.[239][240][241]

Ubuntu 15.10 eliminated the disappearing window edge scrollbars in favour of the upstream GNOME scrollbars, a move designed to save developer time in creating patches and updates.[242]

In reviewing the release, Chris Jones wrote, "Ubuntu 15.10 as an operating system for Review is pretty lackluster. There's nothing new as such and there's nothing we can really say that is going to change your opinion from its predecessor, 15.04. Therefore, we recommend you to upgrade either out of habit and according to your regular upgrade schedule rather than out of a specific necessity for a specific feature of this release. Because there is really nothing that could possibly differentiate it from the older, yet still very stable 15.04 release. But if you're going to stick with 15.04 for a little longer, we do recommend that you look at upgrading the kernel to the latest 4.2 branch. It is worth it. If you really want a reason to upgrade? Linux kernel 4.2 would be our sole reason for taking Ubuntu 15.10 into consideration."[243]

Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu noted, "For a release named after a terrifying mythological creature Ubuntu 15.10 is surprisingly tame. There are no dramatic transformations, no bone popping or shirt ripping and certainly no hair sprouting under the milky eye of full moon. In fact, a new wallpaper and change in scrollbar appearance is about as shapeshift-y as this werewolf gets."[244]

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols of ZDNet praised the release for its integration of cloud services, such as the new Ubuntu OpenStack cloud deployment and management tool, OpenStack Autopilot as well as its server tools. Ubuntu's machine container hypervisor, LXD, included by default in 15.10, was singled out. Vaughan-Nichols concluded, "with these advances, chances are you're more likely to use Ubuntu, hidden behind the scenes, on clouds and servers."[245]

A Hectic Geek review noted problems with X.Org Server crashes and concluded "If you use Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and if it's working out for you, then there really is no need to switch to a non-LTS release, especially to the 15.10."[246]

A review on Dedoimedo identified problems with Samba, Bluetooth, desktop searching, battery life and the smartphone interface and found the release inconsistent, saying, "unpredictability is horrible. Give me a good experience, or give me a bad experience, but please try not to seesaw between them erratically. Continuous, steady change in behavior, any which way." The review concluded, "it underperforms compared to some of its siblings and ancestors. Not the best, definitely not worth a perma upgrade, but you might find it more palatable to your hardware and use cases. Overall, though Wily isn't the best of distros. It sure gave me the willies. 7/10."[247]

Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial Xerus)

 
Ubuntu 16.04 LTS Xenial Xerus

Shuttleworth announced on 21 October 2015 that Ubuntu 16.04 LTS would be called Xenial Xerus.[248] It was released on 21 April 2016.[249]

The default desktop environment continues to be Unity 7, with an option for Unity 8. In May 2015, Shuttleworth indicated that Ubuntu 16.04 LTS would include Unity 8 and Mir, but that users have a choice of that or Unity 7 and X.org. He said, "Unity 8 will be an option for 16.04 and we'll let the community decide the default for 16.04."[250]

The release adds support for Ceph and ZFS filesystems, the LXD[251][252] hypervisor (using seccomp) for OpenStack, and Snap packages will be supported.[249][253] It will use systemd instead of Upstart as its init system.[254][255][256] This release will replace the Ubuntu Software Center with GNOME Software and eliminate Empathy and Brasero from the ISO file.[257][258] Reviewer Jack Wallen said, "The truth of the matter is, the Ubuntu Software Center has been a horrible tool for a very long time. Making this move will greatly improve the Ubuntu experience for every user."[259]

This release has online Dash search results disabled by default in Unity 7. "None of your search terms will leave your computer", stated Ubuntu desktop manager Will Cooke.[260][261] Reviewer Jack Wallen said about this, "I've never considered the inclusion of online search results to be spyware. In fact, I have always considered the online results to be an efficient means of searching for products through Amazon (etc.). That being said, with the release of 16.04, this feature is disabled."[259]

Ubuntu 16.04 LTS does not support the AMD Catalyst (fglrx) driver for AMD/ATI graphics cards and instead recommends the radeon and AMDGPU alternatives. These may not provide optimal graphics performance, however.[262] AMDGPU-PRO is available for Ubuntu 16.04[263]

The first point release, 16.04.1, was released on 21 July 2016.[264] Release of Ubuntu 16.04.2 was delayed a number of times, but it was eventually released on 17 February 2017.[265] Ubuntu 16.04.3 was released on 3 August 2017. Ubuntu 16.04.4 was delayed from 15 February 2018 and released on 1 March 2018, providing the latest Linux kernel, 4.13, from Ubuntu 17.10.[266] Ubuntu 16.04.5 was released on 2 August 2018, and Ubuntu 16.04.6 was released on 28 February 2019.[267] Ubuntu 16.04.7 was released on 13 August 2020.[268]

In September, 2021, Canonical announced[220] that it would extend LTS support for the 14.04 and 16.04 to a total of 10 years, extending the ESM support date for 16.04 until April 2026.

Ubuntu 16.10 (Yakkety Yak)

 
Ubuntu 16.10 Yakkety Yak

Mark Shuttleworth announced on 21 April 2016 that Ubuntu 16.10 would be called Yakkety Yak.[269] It was released on 13 October 2016.[270]

This release features a maintenance version of Unity 7, but offers Unity 8 packages included in the ISO, so that users can test them. Other improvements include a new version of Ubuntu Software that supports faster loading, better support for installing command-line-only non-GUI applications, support for installing fonts and multimedia codecs and introduction of paid applications.[271] It is based on Linux kernel version 4.8.[272]

This version of Ubuntu introduced only minor incremental changes. These included LibreOffice 5.2, GTK3 version by default, the Update Manager shows changelog entries for Personal Package Archives (PPAs), as well as repository software, GNOME applications updated to version 3.20, with some using version 3.22. Also, systemd now handles user sessions as well as the previously implemented system sessions.[272]

Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu said, "Ubuntu 16.10 is not a big update over Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, released back in April. If you were hoping it'd be a compelling or must-have upgrade you'll be sadly disappointed." He did find some improvements, "The Ubuntu Software app is also significantly faster in use. This solves a real pet peeve of mine on the incumbent LTS desktop. Thankfully, Yakkety makes it quicker to find, browser, search and install applications," but concluded, "Ubuntu 16.10 is not a must-have upgrade—not for most people."[273]

Marius Nestor of Softpedia noted, "Ubuntu 16.10 is not an exciting release for fans of the open source operating system. Probably the most important feature of Yakkety Yak is Linux kernel 4.8, which brings support for the latest hardware, but other than that, you'll get some updated components that are mostly based on the old GNOME 3.20 Stack."[274]

Writing in Makeuseof, Bertel King, Jr. said, "If you're feeling underwhelmed, you probably remember the Ubuntu of yesteryear. Back in the days of 8.10, 9.04, and 10.04 each release brought forth a new theme or ambitious feature. Unity first appeared in 10.10 as a netbook interface before replacing the regular desktop in 11.04. By comparison, modern Ubuntu updates feel relatively stagnant. You would be forgiven for not being able to distinguish between 12.04 and 16.10."[275]

Ubuntu 17.04 (Zesty Zapus)

 
Ubuntu 17.04 Zesty Zapus

On 17 October 2016, Mark Shuttleworth announced that the codename of Ubuntu 17.04, released on 13 April 2017, would be Zesty Zapus.[276]

This release dropped support for the 32-bit PowerPC architecture, following the same move by the upstream Debian project. Other changes include the default DNS resolver now being systemd-resolved, Linux kernel 4.10, and support for printers, which allow printing without printer-specific drivers.[277][278][279]

Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu said of this release, "this is no normal release of Ubuntu. It's potentially the last version of the distribution that will come with the Unity 7 desktop by default. That's not a certainty, of course, but we know that Ubuntu will switch to GNOME for Ubuntu 18.04 LTS next year. It's reasonable to expect developers to want to kick a few tyres on that switch ahead of time, in the next interim release. A bittersweet release then, Ubuntu 17.04 sees the distro reach the end of the alphabet in codenames, and the end of an era in everything else. Sadly there's not an awful lot to say. Unity is, by and large, the same as it is in the 16.04 LTS ... Ubuntu 17.04 is an iterative update with modest appeal. While there is little compelling reason for anyone running Ubuntu 16.04 LTS to upgrade (especially for those who opt receive the newer hardware enablement stack) it's not an irrelevant release. Ubuntu 16.10 users will want to upgrade to Ubuntu 17.04 for the general around improvements, access to newer apps, and because the truncated support period of these short term releases necessitates it."[278]

Maruis Nestor of Softpedia called it, "a powerful release, both inside and outside" and noted, "the default desktop environment remains Unity 7, so your beloved Ubuntu desktop environment is not going anyway at the moment. It will also be available in the upcoming Ubuntu 17.10 release, whose development will start next month. After that, starting with Ubuntu 18.04 LTS, the GNOME desktop will be used by default."[279]

Ubuntu 17.10 (Artful Aardvark)

 
Ubuntu 17.10 Artful Aardvark

The name of this release, Artful Aardvark, was announced via Launchpad on 21 April 2017, instead of on Shuttleworth's blog as had been the case in the past. It was released on 19 October 2017.[280][281][282]

This was the first release of Ubuntu to use the GNOME Shell interface, and replaced X11 with the Wayland display server.[283][284][285] In May 2017, Ken VanDine, a Canonical Software Engineer on the Ubuntu desktop team tasked with the switch to GNOME, confirmed that the intention is to ship the most current version of GNOME, with very few changes from a stock installation.[286]

This release also dropped support for 32-bit desktop images but a 32-bit system can still be installed from the minimal ISO.[287][288][289][290][291][292]

Writer J.A. Watson of ZDNet said, "I have not been much of an Ubuntu fan for a long time now, but this release includes a lot of significant changes, many of which might address some of my most serious objections about Ubuntu. So I think I should take a closer look at it than I normally do." He noted on printer configuration, "I got a notice that our wireless printer had been successfully configured. I hadn't even thought about trying to set up a printer yet, so that was a very nice surprise – and a good thing to point out to those who are still going around spouting 5+ years out of date information about how difficult it is to use printers with Linux."[293]

Reviewer Scott Gilbertson of Ars Technica wrote, "Ubuntu 17.10 is a huge departure for Ubuntu, but one that sees the distro seemingly getting its footing back. The transition to GNOME, while not without its pitfalls for some users, is surprisingly smooth. Unity did have some features you won't find in GNOME, but Canonical has done a good job of making things familiar, if not identical. More important than individual features in 17.10, this release sees Ubuntu starting over to some degree. The long development process of Unity 8 was threatening to turn it into Godot, but now Ubuntu is free of Unity 8. Its users no longer have to wait for anything."[294]

The first point release, 17.10.1, was released on 12 January 2018. It fixed a problem that prevented the firmware of some Lenovo computers from booting.[295]

Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver)

 
Ubuntu 18.04 LTS Bionic Beaver

Ubuntu 18.04 LTS Bionic Beaver[296] is a long-term support version that was released on 26 April 2018,[297][298] Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS was released three months later on 26 July 2018.[299] Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS was released six months after Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS, on 15 February 2019.[300] Further incremental update releases of the 18.04 LTS cycle were released as 18.04.3[301] and 18.04.4[302] at an approximately six-month release cycle, on August 8, 2019, and February 12, 2020, respectively. Version 18.04.5 was released six months later, on 13 August 2020.[303] Ubuntu 18.04.6 LTS was released thirteen months later, on 17 September 2021.

Plans to include a new theme, created by the Ubuntu community, were announced on 5 February 2018.[304] However, as the development of the theme was unfinished and buggy as of 13 March 2018, Ubuntu 18.04 LTS did not include a new theme, and instead retained the Ambiance theme from 2010 as its default theme.[305] The new theme was available as a Snap package.

Ubuntu 18.04 LTS introduced new features, such as colour emoticons,[306] a new To-Do application preinstalled in the default installation,[307] and added the option of a "Minimal Install" to the Ubuntu 18.04 LTS installer, which only installs a web browser and system tools.[308] Ubuntu 18.04 LTS's default display server was returned to Xorg for more stability and reliability, however, Wayland was still included as part of the default install.[309]

This release employed Linux kernel version 4.15, which incorporated a CPU controller for the cgroup v2 interface, AMD secure memory encryption support and improved SATA Link Power Management[310]

For the first time some applications were delivered by default as snaps.[311]

In reviewing Ubuntu 18.04 LTS, Michael Larabel of Phoronix wrote, "Ubuntu 18.04 is mostly an incremental upgrade over Ubuntu 17.10 with updated packages, the switch back to X.Org session by default rather than Wayland, continued presence of Snaps, and a variety of minor user-interface updates. It's really not a big deal going from 17.10 to 18.04 besides the LTS extended support nature, but it is quite a change if upgrading from Ubuntu 16.04 LTS. For that upgrade you now have the GCC 7 compiler, Unity 7 to GNOME Shell by default, and a wealth of other package updates."[312]

In reviewing the Ubuntu 18.04 LTS server version, Michael Larabel of Phoronix indicated that the newly developed text-based installer is an improvement over previous installers.[313]

Ubuntu 18.04 LTS has normal LTS support for five years, until April 2023 and has paid ESM support available from Canonical for an additional five years, until April 2028.[314][315][316]

Ubuntu 18.10 (Cosmic Cuttlefish)

 
Ubuntu 18.10 Cosmic Cuttlefish

On 8 May 2018, Mark Shuttleworth announced that the codename of Ubuntu 18.10, which was released on 18 October 2018,[317] would be Cosmic Cuttlefish.[318]

The Ubuntu 18.10 installation includes a new theme, named Yaru[319][320] and the new icon theme, Suru.

Installation speeds are faster due to a lossless compression algorithm known as Zstandard. Startup speeds of pre-installed Snap applications were also improved.[321]

In a review of 18.10 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu wrote, "Ubuntu 18.10 'Cosmic Cuttlefish' is a modest update compared to 18.04. The vast majority of notable improvements are tucked away out of sight, 'under the hood' ... Upstream GNOME Shell developers spent the past six months trying to lower GNOME Shell's memory usage and improve the overall performance of the shell, its animations, display manager, and parts of the GNOME extension framework (specifically Gjs), as we touched on in our recap of the new features in GNOME 3.30. Invisible and abstract though these changes are, they're appreciable. So much so that, if I had to describe this release in just one word it'd be 'peppy'. That's testament to the power of collaboration; with upstream devs and Canonical's engineering team working together."[322]

Michael Larabel of Phoronix wrote, "Overall, Ubuntu 18.10 "Cosmic Cuttlefish" is quite a modest six-month upgrade for being the first past the Ubuntu 18.04 cycle. Exciting me the most, of course, is simply the package upgrades with riding Linux 4.18 + Mesa 18.2 for a much better Linux gaming experience and having moved on now to GCC8 ... What didn't get achieved for the Ubuntu 18.10 cycle is the long-awaited data viewer to the Ubuntu software/hardware survey introduced in 18.04 LTS ... As of writing there's still no public means of being able to view the statistics on these opt-in Ubuntu survey installations. Additionally, the plans for better Android phone integration with the Ubuntu 18.10 desktop by means of bundling GS Connect also didn't happen as planned for the Ubuntu 18.10 cycle."[323]

Ubuntu 19.04 (Disco Dingo)

 
Ubuntu 19.04 Disco Dingo

Ubuntu 19.04, codenamed Disco Dingo, was released on 18 April 2019.[324] It incorporates the Linux kernel version 5.0, which adds support for AMD FreeSync technology for liquid-crystal displays, Raspberry Pi touchscreens, Adiantum encryption, Btrfs swap files as well as many USB 3.2 and Type-C improvements and several new hardware.[325][326]

Ubuntu 19.04 uses GNOME Shell Desktop 3.32, which includes a new icon set, increased performance, smoother animations, night-light intensity control and advanced application permissions. The updated Nautilus 3.32 file manager now supports favoriting files. A new header bar, as well as 'find' and 'read only' modes have been added to the default terminal emulator. Version 19 of the open-source graphics drivers Mesa is also natively available in this version of Ubuntu. Furthermore, the Grub menu now allows a 'safe graphics' mode, in case of issues with graphics cards or graphics drivers. This option will boot Ubuntu with "NOMODESET" turned on and will allow the installation any proprietary drivers needed by the system. Geoclue integration and fractional scaling in the GNOME Shell for HiDPI displays (currently available only in Wayland sessions and experimentally in Xorg sessions) are also included.[327]

Improvements for running Ubuntu on a VMWare virtual machine include integration of open-vm-tools within Ubuntu, allowing for bi-directional clipboard and file sharing.[328]

Ubuntu Server 19.04 updated QEMU to version 3.1, allowing for creation of a virtual 3D GPU inside QEMU virtual machines. libvirt was updated to version 5.0 and Samba was updated to version 4.10.x. Samba and its dependencies were updated to Python 3, with the exception of tdb, which still builds a Python 2 package, namely python-tdb. Ubuntu Server 19.04 includes the latest OpenStack release, Stein, and has vSwitch version 2.11.[325]

Ubuntu 19.10 (Eoan Ermine)

 
Ubuntu 19.10 Eoan Ermine

Ubuntu 19.10, codenamed "Eoan Ermine" (/ˈən/),[329] was released on 17 October 2019. Based on the Linux kernel 5.3 which, among others, introduces compatibility for third-generation Ryzen CPU motherboards and associated Intel Wireless devices as well as AMD's 7 nm Navi GPUs,[330][331] this release improves on loading speeds and adds several new features.[332] Experimental support for the ZFS filesystem is now available from the installer and can be chosen besides the ext4 filesytem. NVIDIA-specific improvements were made. Proprietary NVIDIA graphics drivers are embedded within the Ubuntu ISO image and therefore are available for direct installation from the installer without the need to be downloaded, in place of the open-source Nouveau drivers. Support for the Raspberry Pi 4 platform was added. The installation media now uses LZ4 compression which, compared to the previously used compression algorithm, gzip, offers faster installation times. This was decided following benchmarking of a variety of compression algorithms conducted by the Ubuntu kernel team.[333][334] Kernel load and decompression times were tested and LZ4 was found to offer decompression as much as seven times faster. Ubuntu 19.10 uses GNOME 3.34 which, among others, adds the ability to group application icons into folders, introduces a background settings panel and a separate Night Light tab as well as improves upon performance and smoothness.[335] A new Yaru light theme was introduced with this release as well.

In a November 2019, Ars Technica review by Scott Gilbertson, he concluded, "Ubuntu 19.10 is unusual for an October Ubuntu release in that I would call it a must-have upgrade. While it retains some of the experimental elements Ubuntu's fall releases have always been known for, the speed boosts to GNOME alone make this release well worth your time ... Ubuntu 19.10 is quite possibly the best release of Ubuntu Canonical has ever delivered. It's well worth upgrading if you're already an Ubuntu user, and it's well worth trying even if you're not."[336]

Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (Focal Fossa)

 
Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Focal Fossa

Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, codenamed Focal Fossa, is a long-term support release and was released on 23 April 2020.[337] Ubuntu 20.04.1 LTS was released on 6 August 2020.[338]

As an LTS release, it will provide maintenance updates for 5 years, until April 2025. This release is based on the long-term supported Linux kernel 5.4 which adds support for new hardware, including Intel Comet Lake CPUs and initial Tiger Lake platforms, Qualcomm's Snapdragon 835 and 855 SoCs as well as AMD Navi 12 and 14 GPUs.[339] It also enables support for the exFAT filesystem and the open-source WireGuard VPN, as well as integration with Livepatch which allows for reboot-free kernel updates. A new Linux Security Module named Lockdown, disabled by default, was introduced in this kernel release and aims to prevent high-privileged root accounts from interacting with the underlying kernel by restricting certain kernel functionality, disallowing execution of arbitrary code and enforcing kernel module signatures among others.[340][341]

An updated toolchain offers glibc 2.31, OpenJDK 11, Python 3.8.2, php 7.4, perl 5.30 and Go 1.13. Python 2 is no longer used and has been moved to the universe repository. This release uses GNOME 3.36 which brings improvements to the user interface including a revamped login screen and refreshed Yaru theme. Improvements have also been made to the system menu and the installation screen, which now shows a graphical drive checking routine.[342] Moreover, the OEM logo is now displayed during boot. The Ubuntu Software Center will now install packages from the Snap Store, while it also adds an option for selecting the desired release channel to install from. This release also ended all support for the 32-bit architecture.[343][344]

The recommended minimum system requirements for the desktop edition of this release are:[345]

  • 2 GHz dual-core processor
  • 4 GiB of RAM
  • 25 GB of hard-drive, USB stick, memory card or external drive space
  • VGA capable of 1024x768 screen resolution
  • a CD/DVD drive or a USB port for the installer media
  • Internet access is desirable, but not essential

Reviewer Joey Sneddon noted in OMG Ubuntu, "tradition dictates that Ubuntu LTS releases play things safer than the interim so-called "short-term releases" by only including features that Ubuntu developers can commit to maintain for at least five years. Focal doesn't buck that trend. But while this means there are few "omg!" changes in 20.04 there are a number of iterative improvements, usability and user interface refinements, and some much needed updates, spread throughout the whole of the system."[343]

Dave McKay, writing for HowToGeek, concluded, "Ubuntu 20.04 Is a Great Release. This is a polished, good-looking, and fast release from Canonical."[346]

Writing in It's FOSS, Abhishek Prakash wrote, "Since it's an LTS release, stability is of the upmost importance. Canonical team is not going to try any radical changes here. Ubuntu 18.04 LTS users would surely notice the visual changes and performance improvements but I don't think you’ll see many changes between 19.10 and 20.04."[347]

In a review in DistroWatch, Jesse Smith detailed a number of problems found in testing this release, including boot issues, the decision to have Ubuntu Software only offer Snaps, which are few in number, slow, use a lot of memory and do not integrate well. He also criticized the ZFS file system for not working correctly and the lack of Flatpak support. He concluded, "these issues, along with the slow boot times and spotty wireless network access, gave me a very poor impression of Ubuntu 20.04. This was especially disappointing since just six months ago I had a positive experience with Xubuntu 19.10, which was also running on ZFS. My experience this week was frustrating - slow, buggy, and multiple components felt incomplete. This is, in my subjective opinion, a poor showing and a surprisingly unpolished one considering Canonical plans to support this release for the next five years."[348]

In a 29 May 2020 review in Full Circle, Adam Hunt concluded, 20.04 was a "virtually flawless release".[349]

Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla)

 
Ubuntu 20.10 Groovy Gorilla

Ubuntu 20.10, codenamed Groovy Gorilla, was released on 22 October 2020. This release is based on the Linux kernel 5.8 which introduces support for several modern hardware devices and protocols. Notable features include support for USB4, AMD Zen 3 CPUs and Intel Ice Lake and Tiger Lake graphics as well as initial support for booting Power10 processors. GNOME 3.38 brings enhancements to the core GNOME apps and tweaked the app grid, among other user experience improvements. Ubuntu 20.10 is the first release to feature desktop images for the Raspberry Pi 4 (4GB and 8GB models) and the Compute Module 4. Older Pi models with less memory may still be able to boot but they are not officially supported.[350][351]

An updated toolchain set includes glibc 2.32, OpenJDK 11, rustc 1.41, GCC 10, LLVM 11, Python 3.8.6, ruby 2.7.0, php 7.4.9, perl 5.30 and golang 1.13. In addition to these, nftables is now the default firewall backend, replacing iptables.[350]

In an October 2020 review in HowToGeek, Dave McKay concluded, "we recommend that most people stick with Ubuntu 20.04 LTS for stability. Ubuntu 20.10 doesn’t offer any huge improvements. Rather, it just shows that Ubuntu is still a solid platform, making good progress toward its next LTS release in 2022 ... Canonical estimates that 95% of Ubuntu installations are LTS versions. If that’s true, then plainly interim builds won’t appeal to many people who use Ubuntu. Even if Canonical’s figures are slightly off, it’s obvious the vast majority prefer stability and guaranteed long-term support over the incremental benefits of interim builds."[351]

Tim Anderson of The Register concluded, "...this is not the biggest of Ubuntu releases but keeps the momentum going for Canonical's distribution, hugely popular for server use on public cloud and becoming more polished for desktop users too."[352]

Bogdan Popa, writing for Softpedia, noted of this release, "Ubuntu was, is, and will probably remain the leading Linux distribution out there, at least as far as the number of users is considered."[353]

A review in Full Circle magazine concluded:

While Ubuntu 20.10 is a really solid release, it has surprisingly few new features for a release that initiates a new Ubuntu development cycle. In many ways this is probably a good sign, though. After 33 releases over 16 years, Ubuntu [is] a very mature Linux distribution and it gets almost everything right. There is not really a lot that needs changing, beyond updating the hardware support for the next generation of computers and also updating the default applications, both of which this release does. These days most Ubuntu users run the current LTS release and only upgrade when a new LTS version comes out. This standard release offers very little to entice most Ubuntu users to switch, especially since it has only nine months of support.[354]

Ubuntu 21.04 (Hirsute Hippo)

 
Ubuntu 21.04 Hirsute Hippo

Ubuntu 21.04, codenamed Hirsute Hippo, was released on 22 April 2021.[355][356]

Ubuntu 21.04 uses the 5.11 Linux kernel, which introduces smartcard authentication and support for Intel's Software Guard Extensions and improves support for AMD CPUs and GPUs. Wayland is now used as the default on hardware, other than those that have Nvidia graphics processors. Support for drag and drop from the file manager to the desktop was also added.[356][357]

This release was to have used the new GNOME 40 release, but a developer decision was made to retain GNOME 3.38 instead, the same version used in Ubuntu 20.10. This decision was made to give time to address questions about the stability of the GTK4 toolkit, a major GNOME interface redesign and the unknown impact on GNOME extensions and Ubuntu's default Yaru GTK theme.[358][359]

In a review, Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu, wrote, "Ubuntu 21.04 isn’t a game-changing release. Despite the hirsute moniker there’s little nothing hair-raising included, perhaps save for the switch to Wayland — but even that isn’t as prickly as it used to be! But it’s not a release totally devoid of value. Ubuntu 21.04 features a striking new dark theme and makes a raft of smaller UI tweaks that add up to an impressive, polished whole. There are also new installer features, a new desktop icons experience, and (of course) a new wallpaper."[360]

Dave McKay wrote in How To Geek, "the Hirsute Hippo behaved well in testing and feels like a solid, stable build. What it lacks in surface glitter it makes up for with many significant changes beneath the hood—even without GNOME 40. The 5.11 kernel, refreshed applications, and system-wide bug fixes and security enhancements are all advantageous. The change of permissions on the home directories is a welcome change, too. It’s nothing that you couldn’t do by hand in other releases, but how many actually bothered?"[357]

A review in Full Circle magazine note, "So far in this development cycle we have seen very few substantive changes. Perhaps the most important is the use of Wayland by default. Even though that is a developer accomplishment, it is pretty much 'user-transparent'. So far the next LTS release, 22.04, is shaping up to be very similar to the last LTS release, 20.04, and that is actually a good thing. In a mature distribution that already works well, like Ubuntu, wholesale changes are not needed and would cause a lot of user unhappiness. Ubuntu users today largely like how Ubuntu looks and works and don’t think much in the way of changes are needed. People who don’t like Ubuntu are probably already using something else."[361]

Ubuntu 21.10 (Impish Indri)

 
Ubuntu 21.10 Impish Indri

Ubuntu 21.10, codenamed Impish Indri, was released on 14 October 2021.[362]

Ubuntu 21.10 uses the 5.13 Linux kernel, which introduces rudimentary support for Apple M1 chips, FreeSync HDMI support for AMD GPUs, a new ‘Landlock‘ security module and support for several new hardware among other changes and improvements.[363][364] This release transitions from GNOME 3.38 to GNOME 40, introducing a horizontal workspace switcher and an improved Activities Overview design. The Ubuntu Dock remains vertically placed on the left of the screen and now features separators between pinned and running applications as well as a persistent trash can icon and USB drive shortcuts. A change was made in the default GNOME 40 behavior so that after logging in, the user will be shown the desktop instead of the Activities Overview.[365] Despite Ubuntu 21.10 shipping with GNOME 40, a few GNOME 41 apps are available. A Firefox Snap is now installed by default on Ubuntu 21.10 instead of the deb package, which remains available for the time being.[366]

Furthermore, the Nvidia proprietary drivers now support Wayland sessions. The default Yaru theme was also updated with new icons and Zstd compression was enabled in the main archive, making installations faster.[365]

Joey Sneddon wrote in OMG! Ubuntu!, "for me what makes this release most appealing isn’t a specific one-thing, it’s the aggregate total; the combination of new apps, new kernel, new GNOME Shell, new look, and new installer (though not default for now) make the Impish Indri a particularly inspiring iteration of this iconic distro."[367]

Dave McKay of How-To-Geek wrote in his review, "If you’re an existing user and any of the hardware support or security features of the kernel are going to have a positive impact on your particular use case, then go ahead and update. If you don’t have an issue that is going to be resolved by upgrading, it’s hard to justify the effort—and risk—of an upgrade. Certainly, there’s nothing here to compel an avid LTS user to leave that safe haven and move to 21.10."[368]

Ubuntu 22.04 LTS (Jammy Jellyfish)

 
Ubuntu 22.04 LTS Jammy Jellyfish

Ubuntu 22.04, codenamed Jammy Jellyfish, was released on 21 April 2022, and is a long-term support release, supported for five years, until April 2027.[369]

Ubuntu 22.04 LTS Desktop uses the 5.17 Linux kernel, with the 5.15 HWE rolling kernel for hardware that does not support the newer kernel. While Ubuntu 22.04 LTS Server uses the 5.15 Linux kernel, and Ubuntu Cloud and Ubuntu for IoT uses an optimized kernel based on the 5.15 Linux kernel. It updates Python to 3.10 and Ruby to 3.0. The init system is systemd 249.11 and the desktop is a mix of GNOME 41 and 42 applications. The default web browser, Firefox is available as a snap package and the release repositories no longer provide an alternative .deb package. This release offers users two Yaru themes, light and dark, but with a choice of ten different accent colors for customization.[370][371]

In his review of this release, Steven Vaughan-Nichols noted in an article for ZDNet, "all-in-all, I think the new Ubuntu 22.04 is an excellent Linux desktop. Beyond that, it's also a great Linux distribution for almost any purpose."[372]

Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu! termed the release "pretty rad".[373]

Writing for The Register, Richard Speed stated, "those upgrading from 20.04 LTS will find a number of changes to the environment; as well as accent colors that are easier to set and inevitable dark mode enhancements, the arrival of GNOME 42 (and its screenshotting improvements) have made for a slicker, if not revolutionary, desktop appearance."[374]

DistroWatch reviewer Jesse Smith was critical of the release, writing:

"I think the launch of Ubuntu 22.04 is a clear sign Canonical is much more interested in publishing releases on a set schedule than producing something worthwhile. This version was not ready for release and it's is probably going to be a costly endeavour to maintain this collection of mixed versioned software and mixed display server and mixed designs for a full five years. It's a platform I would recommend avoiding."[375]

Ubuntu 22.10 (Kinetic Kudu)

 
Ubuntu 22.10 Kinetic Kudu

Ubuntu 22.10, codenamed Kinetic Kudu, is interim release and was made on 20 October 2022.[376]

The release uses the 5.19 Linux kernel, which improves the power efficiency on Intel-based computers and supports multithreaded decompression. It also upgrades the GNOME desktop environment to version 43, with support for GTK4 theming.[377]

Ubuntu 22.10 also adds support for MicroPython on microcontrollers such as the Raspberry Pi Pico W, as well as support for RISC-V processors. It also adds rshell, thonny, and mpremote to the Ubuntu repositories.[378]

In a review in OMG Ubuntu, writer Joey Sneddon stated, "if anything, the Kinetic Kudu is not as energetic as its codename intimates. As interim releases it is a passably interesting yet largely iterative issue. Formulaic? That's not a bad thing. Releases like this are sure-footed foundations on which more ambitious changes can later rest."[379]

Ubuntu 23.04 (Lunar Lobster)

Ubuntu 23.04 Lunar Lobster is an interim release, scheduled 20 April 2023.[380]

Table of versions

Version Code name Release date Standard support until Extended security
maintenance until
Initial kernel version
Desktops Servers
4.10 Warty Warthog 2004-10-20 Old version, no longer maintained: 2006-04-30 2.6.8
5.04 Hoary Hedgehog 2005-04-08 Old version, no longer maintained: 2006-10-31 2.6.10
5.10 Breezy Badger 2005-10-13 Old version, no longer maintained: 2007-04-13 2.6.12
6.06 LTS Dapper Drake 2006-06-01 Old version, no longer maintained: 2009-07-14 Old version, no longer maintained: 2011-06-01 2.6.15
6.10 Edgy Eft 2006-10-26 Old version, no longer maintained: 2008-04-25 2.6.17
7.04 Feisty Fawn 2007-04-19 Old version, no longer maintained: 2008-10-19 2.6.20
7.10 Gutsy Gibbon 2007-10-18 Old version, no longer maintained: 2009-04-18 2.6.22
8.04 LTS Hardy Heron 2008-04-24 Old version, no longer maintained: 2011-05-12 Old version, no longer maintained: 2013-05-09 2.6.24
8.10 Intrepid Ibex 2008-10-30 Old version, no longer maintained: 2010-04-30 2.6.27
9.04 Jaunty Jackalope 2009-04-23 Old version, no longer maintained: 2010-10-23 2.6.28
9.10 Karmic Koala 2009-10-29 Old version, no longer maintained: 2011-04-30 2.6.31
10.04 LTS Lucid Lynx 2010-04-29 Old version, no longer maintained: 2013-05-09 Old version, no longer maintained: 2015-04-30 2.6.32
10.10 Maverick Meerkat 2010-10-10 Old version, no longer maintained: 2012-04-10 2.6.35
11.04 Natty Narwhal 2011-04-28 Old version, no longer maintained: 2012-10-28 2.6.38
11.10 Oneiric Ocelot 2011-10-13 Old version, no longer maintained: 2013-05-09 3.0
12.04 LTS Precise Pangolin 2012-04-26[381] Old version, no longer maintained: 2017-04-28[382] Old version, no longer maintained: 2019-04-26 3.2[383]
12.10 Quantal Quetzal 2012-10-18 Old version, no longer maintained: 2014-05-16[384] 3.5[385]
13.04 Raring Ringtail 2013-04-25 Old version, no longer maintained: 2014-01-27[9] 3.8[386]
13.10 Saucy Salamander 2013-10-17[387] Old version, no longer maintained: 2014-07-17[197] 3.11
14.04 LTS Trusty Tahr 2014-04-17[201] Old version, no longer maintained: 2019-04-25[388] Older version, yet still maintained: 2024-04-25 3.13
14.10 Utopic Unicorn 2014-10-23[222] Old version, no longer maintained: 2015-07-23[389] 3.16[390]
15.04 Vivid Vervet 2015-04-23[230] Old version, no longer maintained: 2016-02-04[391] 3.19[392]
15.10 Wily Werewolf 2015-10-22[241] Old version, no longer maintained: 2016-07-28[393] 4.2[394]
16.04 LTS Xenial Xerus 2016-04-21[249] Old version, no longer maintained: 2021-04-30[395] Older version, yet still maintained: 2026-04-23 4.4[396]
16.10 Yakkety Yak 2016-10-13[270] Old version, no longer maintained: 2017-07-20[397] 4.8
17.04 Zesty Zapus 2017-04-13[398] Old version, no longer maintained: 2018-01-13[399] 4.10[400]
17.10 Artful Aardvark 2017-10-19[401] Old version, no longer maintained: 2018-07-19[402] 4.13[403]
18.04 LTS Bionic Beaver 2018-04-26[298] Older version, yet still maintained: 2023-04-26[315][316] Older version, yet still maintained: 2028-04-26 4.15[404]
18.10 Cosmic Cuttlefish 2018-10-18[405] Old version, no longer maintained: 2019-07-18[406] 4.18[407]
19.04 Disco Dingo 2019-04-18[324] Old version, no longer maintained: 2020-01-23[408] 5.0
19.10 Eoan Ermine 2019-10-17[409] Old version, no longer maintained: 2020-07-17[410] 5.3
20.04 LTS Focal Fossa 2020-04-23[411][412] Older version, yet still maintained: 2025-04-23 Older version, yet still maintained: 2030-04-23 5.4[413]
20.10 Groovy Gorilla 2020-10-22[414] Old version, no longer maintained: 2021-07-22[415] 5.8
21.04 Hirsute Hippo 2021-04-22[416] Old version, no longer maintained: 2022-01-20[417] 5.11[418]
21.10 Impish Indri 2021-10-14 Old version, no longer maintained: 2022-07-14[419] 5.13
22.04 LTS Jammy Jellyfish 2022-04-21 Older version, yet still maintained: 2027-04-21 Older version, yet still maintained: 2032-04-21 5.15
22.10 Kinetic Kudu 2022-10-20[376] Current stable version: 2023-07 5.19[420]
23.04 Lunar Lobster 2023-04-20[380] Future release: 2024-01-20 TBA
Legend:
Old version
Older version, still maintained
Latest version
Latest preview version
Future release

Version timeline


Version end-of-life

After each version of Ubuntu has reached its end-of-life time, its repositories are removed from the main Ubuntu servers and consequently the mirrors.[421] Older versions of Ubuntu repositories and releases can be found on the old Ubuntu releases website.[422][423]

See also

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ubuntu, version, history, ubuntu, releases, made, semiannually, canonical, developers, ubuntu, operating, system, using, year, month, release, version, number, first, ubuntu, release, example, ubuntu, released, october, 2004, consequently, version, numbers, fu. Ubuntu releases are made semiannually by Canonical Ltd the developers of the Ubuntu operating system using the year and month of the release as a version number The first Ubuntu release for example was Ubuntu 4 10 and was released on 20 October 2004 1 2 Consequently version numbers for future versions are provisional if the release is delayed until a different month or even year to that planned the version number will change accordingly 3 Ubuntu 22 10 Kinetic Kudu Canonical schedules Ubuntu releases to occur approximately one month after GNOME releases resulting in each Ubuntu release including a newer version of GNOME 4 5 6 Every fourth release occurring in the second quarter of even numbered years has been designated as a long term support LTS release 7 The desktop version of LTS releases for 10 04 and earlier were supported for three years with server version support for five years LTS releases 12 04 and newer are freely supported for five years Through the ESM paid option support can be extended even longer up to a total of ten years for 18 04 8 The support period for non LTS releases is 9 months 9 Prior to 13 04 it had been 18 months Contents 1 Naming convention 2 Release history 2 1 Ubuntu 4 10 Warty Warthog 2 2 Ubuntu 5 04 Hoary Hedgehog 2 3 Ubuntu 5 10 Breezy Badger 2 4 Ubuntu 6 06 LTS Dapper Drake 2 5 Ubuntu 6 10 Edgy Eft 2 6 Ubuntu 7 04 Feisty Fawn 2 7 Ubuntu 7 10 Gutsy Gibbon 2 8 Ubuntu 8 04 LTS Hardy Heron 2 9 Ubuntu 8 10 Intrepid Ibex 2 10 Ubuntu 9 04 Jaunty Jackalope 2 11 Ubuntu 9 10 Karmic Koala 2 12 Ubuntu 10 04 LTS Lucid Lynx 2 13 Ubuntu 10 10 Maverick Meerkat 2 14 Ubuntu 11 04 Natty Narwhal 2 15 Ubuntu 11 10 Oneiric Ocelot 2 16 Ubuntu 12 04 LTS Precise Pangolin 2 17 Ubuntu 12 10 Quantal Quetzal 2 18 Ubuntu 13 04 Raring Ringtail 2 19 Ubuntu 13 10 Saucy Salamander 2 20 Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Trusty Tahr 2 21 Ubuntu 14 10 Utopic Unicorn 2 22 Ubuntu 15 04 Vivid Vervet 2 23 Ubuntu 15 10 Wily Werewolf 2 24 Ubuntu 16 04 LTS Xenial Xerus 2 25 Ubuntu 16 10 Yakkety Yak 2 26 Ubuntu 17 04 Zesty Zapus 2 27 Ubuntu 17 10 Artful Aardvark 2 28 Ubuntu 18 04 LTS Bionic Beaver 2 29 Ubuntu 18 10 Cosmic Cuttlefish 2 30 Ubuntu 19 04 Disco Dingo 2 31 Ubuntu 19 10 Eoan Ermine 2 32 Ubuntu 20 04 LTS Focal Fossa 2 33 Ubuntu 20 10 Groovy Gorilla 2 34 Ubuntu 21 04 Hirsute Hippo 2 35 Ubuntu 21 10 Impish Indri 2 36 Ubuntu 22 04 LTS Jammy Jellyfish 2 37 Ubuntu 22 10 Kinetic Kudu 2 38 Ubuntu 23 04 Lunar Lobster 3 Table of versions 4 Version timeline 5 Version end of life 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksNaming convention EditUbuntu releases are also given code names using an adjective and an animal with the same first letter an alliteration e g Dapper Drake With the exception of the first two releases code names are in alphabetical order and except for the first three releases the first letters are sequential allowing a quick determination of which release is newer As of Ubuntu 17 10 however the initial letter rolled over and returned to A Names are occasionally chosen so that animal appearance or habits reflects some new feature e g Koala s favourite leaf is Eucalyptus see below Ubuntu releases are often referred to using only the adjective portion of the code name e g Feisty 10 Release history EditUbuntu 4 10 Warty Warthog Edit Ubuntu 4 10 Warty Warthog Ubuntu 4 10 Warty Warthog released on 20 October 2004 was Canonical s first release of Ubuntu building upon Debian with plans for a new release every six months and eighteen months of support thereafter 2 Ubuntu 4 10 s support ended on 30 April 2006 11 Ubuntu 4 10 was offered as a free download and through Canonical s ShipIt 12 service was also mailed to users free of charge in CD format 13 Ubuntu 5 04 Hoary Hedgehog Edit Ubuntu 5 04 Hoary Hedgehog Ubuntu 5 04 Hoary Hedgehog released on 8 April 2005 14 15 was Canonical s second release of Ubuntu Ubuntu 5 04 s support ended on 31 October 2006 16 Ubuntu 5 04 added many new features including an Update Manager 17 upgrade notifier readahead and grepmap suspend hibernate and standby support dynamic frequency scaling for processors Ubuntu hardware database Kickstart installation and APT authentication 18 19 Ubuntu 5 04 was the first version that allowed installation from USB devices Beginning with Ubuntu 5 04 UTF 8 became the default character encoding 20 Ubuntu 5 10 Breezy Badger Edit Ubuntu 5 10 Breezy Badger Ubuntu 5 10 Breezy Badger released on 12 October 2005 21 22 was Canonical s third release of Ubuntu Ubuntu 5 10 s support ended on 13 April 2007 23 Ubuntu 5 10 added several new features including a graphical bootloader Usplash an Add Remove Applications tool 24 a menu editor Alacarte an easy language selector logical volume management support full Hewlett Packard printer support OEM installer support a new Ubuntu logo in the top left and Launchpad integration for bug reporting and software development 25 Ubuntu 6 06 LTS Dapper Drake Edit Ubuntu 6 06 Dapper Drake Ubuntu 6 06 Dapper Drake released on 1 June 2006 26 27 28 was Canonical s fourth release and the first long term support LTS release Ubuntu 6 06 was released behind schedule having been intended as 6 04 It is sometimes jokingly described as their first Late To Ship LTS release 29 Development was not complete in April 2006 and Mark Shuttleworth approved slipping the release date to June making it 6 06 instead 30 Ubuntu 6 06 s support ended on 14 July 2009 for desktops and ended in June 2011 for servers 31 Ubuntu 6 06 included several new features including having the Live CD and Install CD merged onto one disc 32 a graphical installer on Live CD Ubiquity Usplash on shutdown as well as startup a network manager for easy switching of multiple wired and wireless connections Humanlooks theme implemented using Tango guidelines based on Clearlooks and featuring orange colors instead of brown and GDebi graphical installer for package files 33 34 Ubuntu 6 06 did not include a means to install from a USB device but did for the first time allow installation directly onto removable USB devices Ubuntu 6 10 Edgy Eft Edit Ubuntu 6 10 Edgy Eft Ubuntu 6 10 Edgy Eft released on 26 October 2006 35 36 37 was Canonical s fifth release of Ubuntu Ubuntu 6 10 s support ended on 25 April 2008 38 39 Ubuntu 6 10 added several new features including a heavily modified Human theme Upstart init daemon automated crash reports Apport Tomboy note taking application and F Spot photo manager EasyUbuntu a third party program designed to make Ubuntu easier to use was included in Ubuntu 6 10 as a meta package 40 Ubuntu 7 04 Feisty Fawn Edit Ubuntu 7 04 Feisty Fawn Ubuntu 7 04 Feisty Fawn released on 19 April 2007 41 42 43 was Canonical s sixth release of Ubuntu Ubuntu 7 04 s support ended on 19 October 2008 44 Ubuntu 7 04 included several new features among them a migration assistant to help former Microsoft Windows users transition to Ubuntu support for Kernel based Virtual Machine assisted codec and restricted drivers installation including Adobe Flash Java MP3 support easier installation of Nvidia and ATI drivers Compiz desktop effects support for Wi Fi Protected Access the addition of Sudoku and chess a disk usage analyzer baobab GNOME Control Center and zeroconf support for many devices 18 45 Ubuntu 7 10 Gutsy Gibbon Edit Ubuntu 7 10 Gutsy Gibbon Ubuntu 7 10 Gutsy Gibbon released on 18 October 2007 46 47 48 was Canonical s seventh release of Ubuntu Ubuntu 7 10 s support ended on 18 April 2009 49 50 Ubuntu 7 10 included several new features among them AppArmor security framework 51 fast desktop search 52 a Firefox plug in manager Ubufox 53 a graphical configuration tool for X Org full NTFS support read write via NTFS 3G and a revamped printing system with PDF printing by default 53 Compiz Fusion was enabled as default in Ubuntu 7 10 54 and Fast user switching was added 52 Ubuntu 8 04 LTS Hardy Heron Edit Ubuntu 8 04 Hardy Heron Ubuntu 8 04 Hardy Heron released on 24 April 2008 55 56 57 was Canonical s eighth release of Ubuntu and the second long term support release 58 59 Ubuntu 8 04 s support ended on 12 May 2011 for desktops 60 and ended on 9 May 2013 for servers as well 61 Ubuntu 8 04 included several new features among them Tracker desktop search integration 62 Brasero disk burner 63 Transmission BitTorrent client 63 Vinagre VNC client 63 system sound through PulseAudio 64 and Active Directory authentication and login using Likewise Open 65 In addition Ubuntu 8 04 included updates for better Tango compliance 66 various Compiz usability improvements automatic grabbing and releasing of the mouse cursor when running on a VMware virtual machine and an easier method to remove Ubuntu Ubuntu 8 04 was the first version of Ubuntu to include the Wubi installer on the Live CD that allows Ubuntu to be installed as a single file on a Windows hard drive without the need to repartition the disk The first version of the Ubuntu Netbook Remix was also introduced 67 Ubuntu 8 10 Intrepid Ibex Edit Ubuntu 8 10 Intrepid Ibex The default wallpaper depicts an Ibex with its large curved horns Ubuntu 8 10 Intrepid Ibex released on 30 October 2008 68 69 was Canonical s ninth release of Ubuntu Support ended on 30 April 2010 70 Ubuntu 8 10 introduced several new features including improvements to mobile computing and desktop scalability increased flexibility for Internet connectivity an Ubuntu Live USB creator and a guest account 71 which allowed others to use a computer allowing very limited user rights e g accessing the Internet using software and checking e mail 72 The guest account had its own home folder and nothing done on it was stored permanently on the computer s hard disk 73 Intrepid Ibex also included an encrypted private directory for users 74 the inclusion of Dynamic Kernel Module Support a tool that allows kernel drivers to be automatically rebuilt when new kernels are released and support for creating USB flash drive images 18 75 Ubuntu 9 04 Jaunty Jackalope Edit Ubuntu 9 04 Jaunty Jackalope Ubuntu 9 04 Jaunty Jackalope released on 23 April 2009 76 was Canonical s tenth release of Ubuntu Support ended on 23 October 2010 77 New features included faster boot time 78 and integration of web services and applications into the desktop interface Because of that they named it after the mythical jackalope 79 It was the first release named after a mythical animal the second being Utopic Unicorn It had a new usplash screen a new login screen and also support for both Wacom hotplugging and netbooks 78 It also included a new notification system Notify OSD 80 and themes It marked the first time that all of Ubuntu s core development moved to the GNU Bazaar distributed version control system 81 82 Ubuntu 9 04 was the first version to support the ARM architecture with native support for ARMv5EL and ARMv6EL VFP 83 Ubuntu 9 10 Karmic Koala Edit Ubuntu 9 10 Karmic Koala Ubuntu 9 10 Karmic Koala released on 29 October 2009 84 was Canonical s 11th release of Ubuntu It was supported until April 2011 85 86 In an announcement to the community on 20 February 2009 Mark Shuttleworth explained that 9 10 would focus on improvements in cloud computing on the server using Eucalyptus saying a Koala s favourite leaf is Eucalyptus 87 as well as further improvements in boot speed and development of the Netbook Remix 88 The initial announcement of version 9 10 indicated that this release might include a new theme but the project was delayed to version 10 04 88 89 and only minor revisions were made to the default theme Other graphical improvements included a new set of boot up and shutdown splash screens a new login screen that transitions seamlessly into the desktop and greatly improved performance on Intel graphics chip sets In June 2009 Canonical created the One Hundred Paper Cuts project focusing developers to fix minor usability issues A paper cut was defined as a trivially fixable usability bug that the average user would encounter on his her first day of using a brand new installation of the latest version of Ubuntu Desktop Edition 90 The desktop installation of Ubuntu 9 10 replaced Pidgin with Empathy Instant Messenger as its default instant messaging client 91 The default filesystem is ext4 and the Ubuntu One client which interfaces with Canonical s new online storage system is installed by default 92 It introduced Grub 2 beta as default bootloader 93 It also debuted a new application called the Ubuntu Software Center that unifies package management Canonical stated their intention for this application to replace Add Remove Programs gnome app install in 9 10 and possibly Synaptic Software Sources Gdebi and Update Manager in Ubuntu 10 04 94 Karmic Koala also includes a slideshow during the installation process through ubiquity slideshow that highlights applications and features in Ubuntu Ubuntu 10 04 LTS Lucid Lynx Edit Ubuntu 10 04 Lucid Lynx Shuttleworth first announced Ubuntu 10 04 Lucid Lynx 10 on 19 September 2009 at the Atlanta Linux Fest Canonical released it on 29 April 2010 95 96 It was Canonical s 12th release of Ubuntu and the third long term support LTS release The new release included among other things improved support for Nvidia proprietary graphics drivers while switching to the open source Nvidia graphics driver Nouveau by default Plymouth was also introduced allowing boot animations It also included a video editor for the first time Pitivi 97 98 99 100 GIMP was removed from the Lucid installation CD due to its professional grade complexity and its file size F Spot provided normal user level graphics editing capabilities and GIMP remained available for download in the repositories 101 The distribution emphasized the increasing importance of Web services and of social networking services with integrated interfaces for posting to sites like Facebook and Twitter complementing the IM and email integration already in Ubuntu On 4 March 2010 it was announced that Lucid Lynx would feature a new theme including new logos taking Ubuntu s new visual style 102 into account The new style in Ubuntu is inspired by the idea of Light We re drawn to Light because it denotes both warmth and clarity and intrigued by the idea that light is a good value in software Good software is light in the sense that it uses your resources efficiently runs quickly and can easily be reshaped as needed Ubuntu represents a break with the bloatware of proprietary operating systems and an opportunity to delight to those who use computers for work and play More and more of our communications are powered by light and in future our processing power will depend on our ability to work with light too Visually light is beautiful light is ethereal light brings clarity and comfort Historical perspective From 2004 2010 the theme in Ubuntu was Human Our tagline was Linux for Human Beings and we used a palette reflective of the full range of humanity Our focus as a project was bringing Linux from the data center into the lives of our friends and global family The new theme met with mixed critical responses Ars Technica s Ryan Paul said The new themes and updated color palette are nice improvement for Ubuntu After testing the new theme for several hours I feel like it s a step forward but it still falls a bit short of my expectations Paul also noted that the most controversial aspect of the new design amongst users was the placement of the window control buttons on the left instead of on the right side of the windows 103 104 TechSource s Jun Auza expressed concern that the new theme was too close to that used by Apple s Mac OS X I think Ubuntu is having an identity crisis right now and should seriously consider changing several things in terms of look and feel to avoid being branded as a Mac OS X rip off or worse get sued by Apple Auza also summarized Ubuntu user feedback I believe the fans are divided right now Some have learned to love the brown color scheme since it uniquely represents Ubuntu while others wanted change 105 The first point release 10 04 1 was made available on 17 August 2010 106 and the second update 10 04 2 was released on 17 February 2011 107 The third update 10 04 3 was released on 21 July 2011 108 and the fourth and final update 10 04 4 was released on 16 February 2012 109 Canonical provided support for the desktop version of Ubuntu 10 04 until 9 May 2013 and for the server version until 30 April 2015 110 Ubuntu 10 10 Maverick Meerkat Edit Ubuntu 10 10 Maverick Meerkat The naming of Ubuntu 10 10 Maverick Meerkat was announced by Mark Shuttleworth on 2 April 2010 along with the release s goals of improving the netbook experience and a server focus on hybrid cloud computing Ubuntu 10 10 was released on 10 October 2010 10 10 10 at around 10 10 UTC 111 112 113 114 115 This is a departure from the traditional schedule of releasing at the end of October to get the perfect 10 116 and a playful reference to The Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy since in binary 101010 is equal to the number 42 the Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life the Universe and Everything within the series 117 It was Canonical s 13th release of Ubuntu New features included the new Unity interface for the Netbook Edition a new default photo manager Shotwell replacing F Spot the ability to purchase applications in the Software Center and an official Ubuntu font used by default 118 Support for Ubuntu Maverick Meerkat 10 10 was officially ended on 10 April 2012 119 Ubuntu 11 04 Natty Narwhal Edit Ubuntu 11 04 Desktop Natty Narwhal using Unity The naming of Ubuntu 11 04 Natty Narwhal was announced on 17 August 2010 by Mark Shuttleworth 120 Ubuntu 11 04 Natty Narwhal was released on 28 April 2011 121 It is Canonical s 14th release of Ubuntu Ubuntu 11 04 used the Unity user interface instead of GNOME 2 as default The move to Unity was controversial as some GNOME developers feared it would fracture the community and marginalize GNOME Shell 122 123 The GNOME desktop environment is still available in Ubuntu 11 04 under the title Ubuntu Classic as a fallback to Unity Ubuntu 11 04 employed Banshee as the default music player replacing Rhythmbox Other new applications included Mozilla Firefox 4 and LibreOffice which replaced OpenOffice org 124 125 126 The OpenStack cloud computing platform was added in this release 127 128 Starting with Ubuntu 11 04 the Ubuntu Netbook Edition was merged into the desktop edition 129 In reviewing Ubuntu 11 04 upon its stable release Ryan Paul of Ars Technica said There is a lot to like in Ubuntu 11 04 but also a lot of room for improvement Jesse Smith of DistroWatch said I m of the opinion there are good features in this release but 11 04 definitely suffered from being rushed out the door while it was still beta quality Ubuntu aims to be novice friendly but this release is buggy and I think they missed the mark this time around I m limiting my recommendation of 11 04 to people who want to play with an early release of Unity 130 131 Support for Ubuntu 11 04 officially ended on 28 October 2012 132 Ubuntu 11 10 Oneiric Ocelot Edit Ubuntu 11 10 final release 13 October 2011 running Unity 4 22 0 The naming of Ubuntu 11 10 Oneiric Ocelot was announced on 7 March 2011 by Mark Shuttleworth He explained that Oneiric means dreamy 133 Ubuntu 11 10 was released on schedule on 13 October 2011 and is Canonical s 15th release of Ubuntu 134 In April 2011 Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 11 10 would not include the classic GNOME desktop as a fall back to Unity unlike Ubuntu 11 04 Natty Narwhal Instead 11 10 included a 2D version of Unity as a fallback for computers that lacked the hardware resources for the Compiz based 3D version However the classic GNOME desktop remained available in Ubuntu 11 10 through a package in the Ubuntu repositories 135 Shuttleworth also confirmed that Unity in Ubuntu 11 10 would run as a shell for GNOME 3 on top of GNOME 3 libraries unlike in Ubuntu 11 04 where it ran as a shell for GNOME 2 Moreover users were able to install the entire GNOME 3 stack along with GNOME Shell directly from the Ubuntu repositories to be presented with a GNOME 3 desktop choice at login 136 During the development cycle there were many changes to Unity including the placement of the Ubuntu button on the Launcher instead of on the Panel the autohiding of the window controls and the global menu of maximized windows the introduction of more transparency into the Dash and the Panel when the Dash was opened and the introduction of window controls for the Dash 137 In May 2011 it was announced that Pitivi would be no longer part of the Ubuntu ISO starting with Ubuntu 11 10 Oneiric Ocelot The reasons given for removing it included poor user reception lack of fit with the default user case for Ubuntu lack of polish and the application s lack of development maturity PiTiVi will not be replaced on the ISO with another video editor Other changes include removing Computer Janitor as it caused broken systems for users and the removal of the Synaptic package manager which can optionally be installed via the Ubuntu Software Center Deja Dup has been added as Ubuntu s backup program 138 Mozilla Thunderbird has replaced the GNOME Evolution email client All removed applications will remain available to users for installation from the Ubuntu Software Center and repositories 100 139 140 141 Support for Ubuntu Oneiric Ocelot was officially ended on 9 May 2013 Ubuntu 12 04 LTS Precise Pangolin Edit Ubuntu 12 04 LTS desktop Ubuntu 12 04 LTS Precise Pangolin is Canonical s sixteenth release of Ubuntu and its fourth long term support LTS release made available on schedule on 26 April 2012 142 143 It is named after the pangolin anteater 144 Previous LTS releases have been supported for three years for the desktop version and five years for the server version this release was supported for five years for both versions with support ending on 28 April 2017 145 146 Canonical continues to offer extended security maintenance to Advantage customers for an additional two years 147 Changes in this release include a much faster startup time for the Ubuntu Software Center and refinements to Unity This release also switched the default media player from Banshee back to Rhythmbox and dropped the Tomboy note taking application and the supporting Mono framework as well 148 149 Also the window dodge feature has been removed from the Unity launcher starting with Ubuntu 12 04 150 Ubuntu 12 04 incorporated a new head up display HUD feature that allows hot key searching for application menu items from the keyboard without needing the mouse Shuttleworth said that the HUD will ultimately replace menus in Unity applications but for Ubuntu 12 04 at least the menus will remain 151 Ubuntu 12 04 is the first Ubuntu release shipped with IPv6 privacy extensions turned on by default Ubuntu 11 10 already supported IPv6 on the desktop and in the installer stateless address autoconfiguration SLAAC stateless DHCPv6 and stateful DHCPv6 152 Like previous LTS releases 12 04 included point releases that bundled updates to shorten downloads for users installing the release later in its life cycle The point releases and dates were 12 04 1 23 August 2012 153 12 04 2 14 February 2013 154 12 04 3 scheduled for release on 22 August 2013 but actually released on 23 August 2013 155 12 04 4 6 February 2014 156 and 12 04 5 7 August 2014 157 Jesse Smith of DistroWatch said that many people like he had questioned Ubuntu s direction including Unity but with Ubuntu 12 04 he felt that the puzzle pieces which individually may have been underwhelming had come together to form a whole clear picture He said Unity though a step away from the traditional desktop has several features which make it attractive such as reducing mouse travel The HUD means that newcomers can find application functionality with a quick search and more advanced users can use the HUD to quickly run menu commands from the keyboard He wrote that Unity had grown to maturity while indicating that he was bothered by its lack of flexibility He did notice issues however especially that the HUD did not work in LibreOffice and performance in a virtual machine was unsatisfactory He concluded that Ubuntu s overall experience was head and shoulders above anything else in the Linux ecosystem 158 Jim Lynch wrote Ubuntu 12 04 is definitely worth an upgrade if you re running an earlier version Unity is finally coming into its own in this release plus there are other enhancements that make upgrading worthwhile Ubuntu is getting better and better with each release I was one of the Unity skeptics initially but I ve come to accept it as part of Ubuntu 159 Jack Wallen of TechRepublic who had strongly criticized early versions of Unity said Since Ubuntu 12 04 was released and I migrated over from Linux Mint I m working much more efficiently This isn t really so much a surprise to me but to many of the detractors who assume Unity a very unproductive desktop well I can officially say they are wrong I realize that many people out there have spurned Unity I was one of them for a long time but the more I use it the more I realize that Canonical really did their homework on how to help end users more efficiently interact with their computers Change is hard period For many the idea of change is such a painful notion they wind up missing out on some incredible advancements Unity is one such advancement 160 Ubuntu 12 10 Quantal Quetzal Edit Ubuntu 12 10 s default desktop On 23 April 2012 Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 12 10 would be named Quantal Quetzal As this will be the first of a series of three releases before the next LTS release Shuttleworth indicated that it will include a refreshed look with work to be done on typography and iconography The release takes its name from the quetzal a species of Central American birds 161 Ubuntu 12 10 was released on schedule on 18 October 2012 and is Canonical s seventeenth release of the operating system 162 Ryan Paul writing for Ars Technica said in April 2012 when the name was announced A Quetzal is a colorful bird that is common to Central America The most well known variety the resplendent quetzal is known for its beauty The name is a good fit for Ubuntu which aims to soar in the cloud offer visual appeal without compromising function and avoid smacking into closed windows 163 The Ubuntu Developer Summit held in May 2012 set the priorities for this release They are forecast to include an improved boot up sequence and log in screen dropping Unity 2D in favor of lower hardware requirements for Unity 3D wrap around dialogs and toolbars for the head up display and a vanilla version of Gnome Shell as an option The release would likely include GNOME 3 6 Python 3 and the 3 5 Linux kernel 164 It would ship with Python 3 in the image but with Python 2 available in the repositories via the Python package 165 The kernel will have the PAE switched on by default 166 In July 2012 development versions of Ubuntu 12 10 received a new combined user session and system menu 167 This release also included Ubuntu Web Apps a means of running Web applications directly from the desktop without having to open a browser 168 It would use Nautilus 3 4 as its file manager in place of the 3 5 and newer versions to retain features deleted from later versions 169 In September 2012 Canonical s Kate Stewart announced that the Ubuntu 12 10 image would not fit on a compact disc saying There is no longer a traditional CD sized image DVD or alternate image but rather a single 800MB Ubuntu image that can be used from USB or DVD 170 However a third party project has created a version of Ubuntu 12 10 that fits on a CD It uses LZMA2 compression instead of the DEFLATE compression used on the official Ubuntu DVD image 171 Also in late September 2012 it was announced that the version of Unity to be shipped with Ubuntu 12 10 would by default include searches of Amazon com for searched terms This move caused immediate controversy among Ubuntu users particularly with regard to privacy issues and caused Mark Shuttleworth to issue a statement indicating that this feature is not adware and labelled many of the objections FUD Fear uncertainty and doubt Shuttleworth stated What we have in 12 10 isn t the full experience so those who leap to judgement are at maximum risk of having to eat their words later Chill out If the first cut doesn t work for you remove it or just search the specific scope you want there are hotkeys for all the local scopes Regardless users filed a Launchpad bug report on the feature requesting that it be made a separate lens and not included with general desktop searches for files directories and applications The degree of community push back on the issue resulted in plans by the developers to make the dash and where it searches user configurable via a GUI setting dialogue Despite concerns that the setting dialogue would not make the final version of Ubuntu 12 10 it was completed and is present in the final version of 12 10 172 173 174 175 176 177 In the week prior to the stable release of Ubuntu 12 10 data privacy advocate Luis de Sousa indicated that the inclusion of the shopping lens installed without explicit permission of the user violates European Directive 95 46 EC on data privacy That directive requires that the data subject has unambiguously given his consent in situations where personal identifying information is sent 178 In reviewing Ubuntu 12 10 at the end of October 2012 for DistroWatch Jesse Smith raised concerns about the Amazon shopping lens saying it has raised a number of privacy concerns in the community and looking over Ubuntu s legal notice about privacy does not provide any reassurance The notice informs us Canonical reserves the right to share our keystrokes search terms and IP address with a number of third parties including Facebook Twitter Amazon and the BBC This feature is enabled by default but can be turned off through the distribution s settings panel He also found that the dash provided very slow performance and that the release was practically unusable in the VirtualBox environment He summed up his experiences After a day and a half of using Ubuntu 12 10 it was an internal struggle not to wipe my hard drive and just find another distribution to review During the first twenty four hours Ubuntu spied on me provided performance which was distinctly sub par the interface regularly popped up errors sometimes so frequently the first pop up wouldn t have faded out of view before the next one appeared the update notification didn t work and it wasn t possible to turn off accessibility features through the graphical interface Adding insult to injury the Unity dash kept locking up or losing focus while I was trying to use it and the operating system crashed more times than not while trying to shutdown or logout Switching away from Unity to GNOME Fallback helped the performance issues I had experienced with the Dash but it didn t remove the annoying pop up errors and performance while usable still wasn t as good as I would expect And what really makes me scratch my head is Ubuntu 12 04 worked really well on this same hardware 179 In early November the Electronic Frontier Foundation made a statement on the shopping lens issue Technically when you search for something in Dash your computer makes a secure HTTPS connection to productsearch ubuntu com sending along your search query and your IP address If it returns Amazon products to display your computer then insecurely loads the product images from Amazon s server over HTTP This means that a passive eavesdropper such as someone sharing a wireless network with you will be able to get a good idea of what you re searching for on your own computer based on Amazon product images It s a major privacy problem if you can t find things on your own computer without broadcasting what you re looking for to the world 180 Writing about Ubuntu 12 10 in a December 2012 review Jim Lynch addressed the Amazon controversy One of the desktop changes that some folks might not like is the web app link to Amazon com This might come across as a bridge too far in terms of the outright commercialization of Ubuntu And it is an eery sic reminder of all the garbage that gets installed on Windows PCs by default by the hardware companies Is this where Ubuntu is going Will you someday boot into your Ubuntu desktop only to find tons of commercial crapware clogging up your desktop by default I sure hope not as it will be another reason for people to avoid Ubuntu He concluded by saying Overall Ubuntu 12 10 is a decent upgrade for current Ubuntu users However the inclusion of the Amazon icon on the launcher and the discontinuation of Unity 2D might irritate some people 181 Support for Ubuntu 12 10 Quantal Quetzal officially ended on 16 May 2014 Ubuntu 13 04 Raring Ringtail Edit Ubuntu 13 04 Raring Ringtail On 17 October 2012 Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 13 04 would be named Raring Ringtail and said about this release In the next six months we want to have the phone tablet and TV all lined up So I think it s time to look at the core of Ubuntu and review it through a mobile lens let s measure our core platform by mobile metrics things like battery life number of running processes memory footprint and polish the rough edges that we find when we do that 182 The Wubi installer was dropped as of 13 04 due to its incompatibility with Windows 8 and general lack of support and development 183 184 Previously on 29 October 2012 at the Ubuntu Developer Summit registration there had been a discussion of redesigning Wubi for Ubuntu 13 04 185 Ubuntu 13 04 was released on schedule on 25 April 2013 186 In reviewing Ubuntu 13 04 Jim Lynch from Desktop Linux Reviews said I found Ubuntu 13 04 to be a slightly disappointing upgrade While there are definitely some enhancements in this release there s also nothing very special about it Alas there s nothing in Ubuntu 13 04 that makes me want to consider it for use as my daily distro Don t misunderstand me there s nothing overtly wrong with Ubuntu 13 04 either It installed and performed very well for me Unity 7 also has some helpful and attractive updates that Ubuntu users will enjoy and there are other things in this release that help improve the overall Ubuntu experience I suspect it is simply because Ubuntu has settled into a comfortable middle age it works and it works very well for what it does 187 Support for Ubuntu 13 04 officially ended on 27 January 2014 Ubuntu 13 10 Saucy Salamander Edit Ubuntu 13 10 Saucy Salamander Ubuntu 13 10 is named Saucy Salamander 188 It was released on schedule on 17 October 2013 Consideration was given to changing the default browser from Mozilla Firefox to Chromium but problems with timely updates to Ubuntu s Chromium package caused developers to retain Firefox for this release 189 190 Ubuntu 13 10 was intended to be the first Ubuntu release to replace the aging X Window System X11 with the Mir display server with X11 programs to have operated through the XMir compatibility layer 191 However after the development of XMir ran into outstanding technical difficulties for multiple monitors Canonical decided to postpone the default use of Mir in Ubuntu 188 Mir will still be released as the default display server for Ubuntu Touch 13 10 192 Ryan Paul of Ars Technica wrote that although 13 10 brings useful enhancements it is a relatively thin update He also said the new Dash concept is intriguing but its usefulness is a bit limited and even though he thinks that universal Web search is potentially useful he s somewhat uncomfortable with how Canonical joins it with local system searches 188 In a review of Ubuntu 13 10 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu criticized the new Smart Scopes feature saying it s less of a help and more of a hindrance With so many web services offering results for a search term however innocuous it might be the Dash ends up resembling a wall painted in unintelligible irrelevant mess Sneddon noted that internet search engines turn in more useful and better organized results and recommended selectively disabling individual scopes to reduce the noise factor 193 Jim Lynch of Linux Desktop Reviews described the release as boring and noted alas Ubuntu 13 10 follows in the footsteps of Ubuntu 13 04 The big new desktop feature is Smart Scopes Beyond that there s not a whole lot that is interesting or exciting to talk about It turns out that Saucy Salamander is one truly dull amphibian Canonical really should rename this release to Snoozing Salamander instead Lynch described the Smart Scopes this is a very useful function and it can save you a lot of time when looking for information I understand that some people will regard this as a privacy violation no problem There s an easy way to disable Smart Scopes 194 Maria Korolov writing for Network World in December 2013 said of the release there is a benefit to be had in being able to search for files you own on both local drives and in cloud services such as Google Drive and Flickr That s the idea behind Unity Smart Scopes The result is a cluttered mess The first thing many users will probably do after installing Ubuntu 13 10 is to get rid of most of these results mixing generic Web results in with your own files is just confusing 195 In its year end Readers Choice Awards Linux Journal readers voted Ubuntu as Best Linux Distribution and Best Desktop Distribution for 2013 196 Support for Ubuntu 13 10 ended on 17 July 2014 197 Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Trusty Tahr Edit Ubuntu 14 04 Trusty Tahr Mark Shuttleworth announced on 31 October 2011 that by Ubuntu 14 04 Ubuntu would support smartphones tablets TVs and smart screens 198 On 18 October 2013 it was announced that Ubuntu 14 04 would be dubbed Trusty Tahr 199 200 This version was released on 17 April 2014 and is the 20th release of Ubuntu Shuttleworth indicated that the focus in this development cycle would be a release characterized by performance refinement maintainability technical debt and encouraged the developers to make conservative choices Technical debt refers to catching up and refining supporting work for earlier changes The development cycle for this release focused on the tablet interface specifically for the Nexus 7 and Nexus 10 tablets There were few changes to the desktop as 14 04 used the existing mature Unity 7 interface Ubuntu 14 04 included the ability to turn off the global menu system and used locally integrated menus instead for individual applications Other features were the retention of Xorg and not Mir or XMir a Unity 8 developers preview new mobile applications a redesigned USB Startup Disk Creator tool a new forked version of the GNOME Control Center called the Unity Control Center and default SSD TRIM support GNOME 3 10 is installed by default 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 Point releases included 14 04 1 on 24 July 2014 14 04 2 on 19 February 2015 14 04 3 on 6 August 2015 14 04 4 on 18 February 2016 14 04 5 on 4 August 2016 and 14 04 6 on 7 March 2019 201 209 The release initially included Linux kernel 3 13 but this was updated to 4 2 with the point release of 14 04 4 on 18 February 2016 201 210 Point release 14 04 5 which provided the latest Linux kernel and graphics stacks from Ubuntu 16 04 LTS was intended to be the final point release for 14 04 LTS 211 but 14 04 6 was released on 7 March 2019 as a security targeted update 212 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu noted that recent Ubuntu releases have received lower and lower amounts of mainstream press coverage and termed it an established product that has by and large remained a niche interest 213 In reviewing Ubuntu 14 04 LTS in April 2014 Jim Lynch concluded Ubuntu 14 04 seems to be all about refining the Ubuntu desktop While there are not a lot of amazing new features in this release there are quite a few very useful and needed tweaks that add up to a much better desktop experience Canonical s designers seem to be listening to Ubuntu users again and they seem willing to make the changes necessary to give the users what they want That may be the single most important thing about Ubuntu 14 04 It could be an indication of a sea change in Canonical s attitude toward Ubuntu users 214 Jack Wallin writing for TechRepublic termed Ubuntu 14 04 LTS as polished a distribution as you ll find It s cleaner performs better and is all around improved Some users may say that this is the most boring release Canonical has unleashed in years but I believe it to be one of the finest 215 Terry Relph Knight of ZDNet said although there are no amazing must have new features in Ubuntu 14 04 it is worth upgrading just to get the latest LTS release with a more recent kernel and default applications 216 Scott Gilbertson of Ars Technica stated Ubuntu is one of the most polished desktops around certainly the most polished in the Linux world but in many ways that polish is increasingly skin deep at the expense of some larger usability issues which continue to go unaddressed release after release 217 Normal LTS support continued until 25 April 2019 218 after which extended security maintenance is available to Ubuntu Advantage customers and as a separate commercial purchase as was the case previously with 12 04 219 In September 2021 Canonical announced 220 that it would extend LTS support for the 14 04 and 16 04 to a total of 10 years extending the ESM support date for 14 04 until April 2024 Ubuntu 14 10 Utopic Unicorn Edit A screenshot of the Ubuntu 14 10 Utopic Unicorn desktop with the mascot wallpaper On 23 April 2014 Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 14 10 would carry the name Utopic Unicorn 221 222 Version 14 10 was released on 23 October having only minor updates to the kernel Unity Desktop and included packages such as LibreOffice and Mozilla Firefox and Thunderbird The kernel was updated to 3 16 for hardware support e g graphics and has for security full kernel address space layout randomization applied to the kernel and its modules plus the closure of a number of information leaks in proc 223 This version is the 21st release Ubuntu 14 10 was officially characterized as a release that addressed bug fixes and incremental quality improvements and so it incorporated very few new features 224 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu wrote in reviewing this release Ubuntu 14 10 codenamed Utopic Unicorn is saddled with a modest changelog composed largely of bug fixes stability improvements and key software updates All worthy but falls a little way short of the fresh ideas and new art that should raise the roof quotes from Mark Shuttleworth s U name announcement For the release taking place in the week of Ubuntu s 10th anniversary this may all read like a bit of an anticlimax No headline user features no visual changes bar a few new icons for the sidebar of Nautilus there s not even a new default wallpaper to look at But on the flip side it s perhaps the most fitting release the one that shows just how far Ubuntu has come in the past few years Mature dependable and sure in its own Ambiance themed skin buggy feature churn has given way to a sustained era of assured stability Ubuntu 14 10 is a rock solid hearty and dependable release Perhaps more here than ever before There s no getting away from the fact that it s an uninspiring update on paper and is far from being anything approaching essential 225 Michael Larabel of Phoronix wrote At the end of the day simple end users won t see much of a difference over Ubuntu 14 04 LTS which is a bit sad given that this is the tenth anniversary release of Ubuntu Linux For everyday Linux desktop users the many upgraded packages are great but there isn t too much more to celebrate about today on the desktop front 226 Scott Gilbertson writing for The Register explained I ve been covering Ubuntu for seven of the release s 10 years and 14 10 is the first time I ve had to dig deep into the release notes just to find something new to test If you needed further proof that Canonical is currently solely focused on bringing its Unity 8 interface to mobile devices 14 10 is the best evidence yet Almost nothing Canonical develops has changed in this release there isn t even a new desktop wallpaper There are some updates to be sure but they don t hail from Canonical The lack of updates isn t unexpected in fact that s been the plan all along Desktop Ubuntu is currently in a kind of suspended animation waiting on Unity 8 and Mir to be ready for its coming metamorphosis The short story is that it makes no sense for Canonical to keep refining Unity 7 when it will soon be retired 227 Ubuntu 15 04 Vivid Vervet Edit Ubuntu 15 04 Vivid Vervet On 20 October 2014 Shuttleworth announced that Ubuntu 15 04 would be named Vivid Vervet It was released on 23 April 2015 228 229 230 231 This was the 22nd Ubuntu release Ubuntu 15 04 used systemd instead of Upstart by default 232 This release also featured locally integrated menus by default replacing the previous default global menus 233 Silviu Stahie writing for Softpedia said about this release while it was in beta Ubuntu 15 04 is not an exciting release but that it s only a surface impression The truth is that it s an important upgrade because some very important changes have been made including the adoption of systemd Users will notice that not too many visual changes have been implemented in Ubuntu 15 04 but that was to be expected The team is transitioning to a new Unity version that is still not ready for general use so it s easy to understand why Ubuntu 15 04 is not all that different from Ubuntu 14 10 234 This release included modest improvements in Intel Haswell graphics performance and bigger improvements for AMD Radeon graphics cards using the open source Radeon R600 and RadeonSI Gallium3D drivers 235 In reviewing this release Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu said Ubuntu 15 04 is yet another solid entry in the distribution s long release history A dependable desktop operating system suited for end users but with plenty of convenient extras to woo developers with Though the Unity 7 desktop is largely mothballed as work progresses on the new converged experience with Unity 8 the modest refinements received here buff the experience Unity in Ubuntu 15 04 shines brighter a glowing example of a desktop that just works for users 236 Jesse Smith of DistroWatch wrote One of the changes I was interested in exploring was Ubuntu s switch from the Upstart init software to systemd In this regard I was pleasantly surprised I find most distributions when they initially make the switch to systemd introduce bugs or at the very least break backward compatibility Sometimes service managers stop working properly and network device names usually change Even if everything works as it should the administrator needs to adjust to systemd s approach to logging and adopt a different method of managing services Ubuntu has taken an approach I like with regards to adopting systemd He concluded on the surface Ubuntu 15 04 does not bring many changes There are a few cosmetic adjustments but nothing major that desktop users are likely to notice Most of the interesting work appears to be going on behind the scenes Ubuntu 15 04 feels very stable and easy to configure This is an operating system that is virtually effortless to set up and run and I feel the Unity 7 desktop does a nice job of providing lots of features while staying out of the way All in all I like what Canonical has done with Ubuntu 15 04 This feels like a small incremental evolution for Ubuntu and Unity The init switch which has disrupted the users of several other distributions goes largely unnoticed in Ubuntu and I think that is worthy of praise 237 Ubuntu 15 10 Wily Werewolf Edit Ubuntu 15 10 Wily Werewolf Shuttleworth announced on 4 May 2015 that Ubuntu 15 10 would be called Wily Werewolf 238 He initially expressed hope that the release would include the Mir display server but it was released on 22 October 2015 without Mir It was the 23rd release of Ubuntu 239 240 241 Ubuntu 15 10 eliminated the disappearing window edge scrollbars in favour of the upstream GNOME scrollbars a move designed to save developer time in creating patches and updates 242 In reviewing the release Chris Jones wrote Ubuntu 15 10 as an operating system for Review is pretty lackluster There s nothing new as such and there s nothing we can really say that is going to change your opinion from its predecessor 15 04 Therefore we recommend you to upgrade either out of habit and according to your regular upgrade schedule rather than out of a specific necessity for a specific feature of this release Because there is really nothing that could possibly differentiate it from the older yet still very stable 15 04 release But if you re going to stick with 15 04 for a little longer we do recommend that you look at upgrading the kernel to the latest 4 2 branch It is worth it If you really want a reason to upgrade Linux kernel 4 2 would be our sole reason for taking Ubuntu 15 10 into consideration 243 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu noted For a release named after a terrifying mythological creature Ubuntu 15 10 is surprisingly tame There are no dramatic transformations no bone popping or shirt ripping and certainly no hair sprouting under the milky eye of full moon In fact a new wallpaper and change in scrollbar appearance is about as shapeshift y as this werewolf gets 244 Steven J Vaughan Nichols of ZDNet praised the release for its integration of cloud services such as the new Ubuntu OpenStack cloud deployment and management tool OpenStack Autopilot as well as its server tools Ubuntu s machine container hypervisor LXD included by default in 15 10 was singled out Vaughan Nichols concluded with these advances chances are you re more likely to use Ubuntu hidden behind the scenes on clouds and servers 245 A Hectic Geek review noted problems with X Org Server crashes and concluded If you use Ubuntu 14 04 LTS and if it s working out for you then there really is no need to switch to a non LTS release especially to the 15 10 246 A review on Dedoimedo identified problems with Samba Bluetooth desktop searching battery life and the smartphone interface and found the release inconsistent saying unpredictability is horrible Give me a good experience or give me a bad experience but please try not to seesaw between them erratically Continuous steady change in behavior any which way The review concluded it underperforms compared to some of its siblings and ancestors Not the best definitely not worth a perma upgrade but you might find it more palatable to your hardware and use cases Overall though Wily isn t the best of distros It sure gave me the willies 7 10 247 Ubuntu 16 04 LTS Xenial Xerus Edit Ubuntu 16 04 LTS Xenial Xerus Shuttleworth announced on 21 October 2015 that Ubuntu 16 04 LTS would be called Xenial Xerus 248 It was released on 21 April 2016 249 The default desktop environment continues to be Unity 7 with an option for Unity 8 In May 2015 Shuttleworth indicated that Ubuntu 16 04 LTS would include Unity 8 and Mir but that users have a choice of that or Unity 7 and X org He said Unity 8 will be an option for 16 04 and we ll let the community decide the default for 16 04 250 The release adds support for Ceph and ZFS filesystems the LXD 251 252 hypervisor using seccomp for OpenStack and Snap packages will be supported 249 253 It will use systemd instead of Upstart as its init system 254 255 256 This release will replace the Ubuntu Software Center with GNOME Software and eliminate Empathy and Brasero from the ISO file 257 258 Reviewer Jack Wallen said The truth of the matter is the Ubuntu Software Center has been a horrible tool for a very long time Making this move will greatly improve the Ubuntu experience for every user 259 This release has online Dash search results disabled by default in Unity 7 None of your search terms will leave your computer stated Ubuntu desktop manager Will Cooke 260 261 Reviewer Jack Wallen said about this I ve never considered the inclusion of online search results to be spyware In fact I have always considered the online results to be an efficient means of searching for products through Amazon etc That being said with the release of 16 04 this feature is disabled 259 Ubuntu 16 04 LTS does not support the AMD Catalyst fglrx driver for AMD ATI graphics cards and instead recommends the radeon and AMDGPU alternatives These may not provide optimal graphics performance however 262 AMDGPU PRO is available for Ubuntu 16 04 263 The first point release 16 04 1 was released on 21 July 2016 264 Release of Ubuntu 16 04 2 was delayed a number of times but it was eventually released on 17 February 2017 265 Ubuntu 16 04 3 was released on 3 August 2017 Ubuntu 16 04 4 was delayed from 15 February 2018 and released on 1 March 2018 providing the latest Linux kernel 4 13 from Ubuntu 17 10 266 Ubuntu 16 04 5 was released on 2 August 2018 and Ubuntu 16 04 6 was released on 28 February 2019 267 Ubuntu 16 04 7 was released on 13 August 2020 268 In September 2021 Canonical announced 220 that it would extend LTS support for the 14 04 and 16 04 to a total of 10 years extending the ESM support date for 16 04 until April 2026 Ubuntu 16 10 Yakkety Yak Edit Yakkety Yak redirects here For the pop song see Yakety Yak For other uses see Yakety Yak disambiguation Ubuntu 16 10 Yakkety Yak Mark Shuttleworth announced on 21 April 2016 that Ubuntu 16 10 would be called Yakkety Yak 269 It was released on 13 October 2016 270 This release features a maintenance version of Unity 7 but offers Unity 8 packages included in the ISO so that users can test them Other improvements include a new version of Ubuntu Software that supports faster loading better support for installing command line only non GUI applications support for installing fonts and multimedia codecs and introduction of paid applications 271 It is based on Linux kernel version 4 8 272 This version of Ubuntu introduced only minor incremental changes These included LibreOffice 5 2 GTK3 version by default the Update Manager shows changelog entries for Personal Package Archives PPAs as well as repository software GNOME applications updated to version 3 20 with some using version 3 22 Also systemd now handles user sessions as well as the previously implemented system sessions 272 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu said Ubuntu 16 10 is not a big update over Ubuntu 16 04 LTS released back in April If you were hoping it d be a compelling or must have upgrade you ll be sadly disappointed He did find some improvements The Ubuntu Software app is also significantly faster in use This solves a real pet peeve of mine on the incumbent LTS desktop Thankfully Yakkety makes it quicker to find browser search and install applications but concluded Ubuntu 16 10 is not a must have upgrade not for most people 273 Marius Nestor of Softpedia noted Ubuntu 16 10 is not an exciting release for fans of the open source operating system Probably the most important feature of Yakkety Yak is Linux kernel 4 8 which brings support for the latest hardware but other than that you ll get some updated components that are mostly based on the old GNOME 3 20 Stack 274 Writing in Makeuseof Bertel King Jr said If you re feeling underwhelmed you probably remember the Ubuntu of yesteryear Back in the days of 8 10 9 04 and 10 04 each release brought forth a new theme or ambitious feature Unity first appeared in 10 10 as a netbook interface before replacing the regular desktop in 11 04 By comparison modern Ubuntu updates feel relatively stagnant You would be forgiven for not being able to distinguish between 12 04 and 16 10 275 Ubuntu 17 04 Zesty Zapus Edit Ubuntu 17 04 Zesty Zapus On 17 October 2016 Mark Shuttleworth announced that the codename of Ubuntu 17 04 released on 13 April 2017 would be Zesty Zapus 276 This release dropped support for the 32 bit PowerPC architecture following the same move by the upstream Debian project Other changes include the default DNS resolver now being systemd resolved Linux kernel 4 10 and support for printers which allow printing without printer specific drivers 277 278 279 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu said of this release this is no normal release of Ubuntu It s potentially the last version of the distribution that will come with the Unity 7 desktop by default That s not a certainty of course but we know that Ubuntu will switch to GNOME for Ubuntu 18 04 LTS next year It s reasonable to expect developers to want to kick a few tyres on that switch ahead of time in the next interim release A bittersweet release then Ubuntu 17 04 sees the distro reach the end of the alphabet in codenames and the end of an era in everything else Sadly there s not an awful lot to say Unity is by and large the same as it is in the 16 04 LTS Ubuntu 17 04 is an iterative update with modest appeal While there is little compelling reason for anyone running Ubuntu 16 04 LTS to upgrade especially for those who opt receive the newer hardware enablement stack it s not an irrelevant release Ubuntu 16 10 users will want to upgrade to Ubuntu 17 04 for the general around improvements access to newer apps and because the truncated support period of these short term releases necessitates it 278 Maruis Nestor of Softpedia called it a powerful release both inside and outside and noted the default desktop environment remains Unity 7 so your beloved Ubuntu desktop environment is not going anyway at the moment It will also be available in the upcoming Ubuntu 17 10 release whose development will start next month After that starting with Ubuntu 18 04 LTS the GNOME desktop will be used by default 279 Ubuntu 17 10 Artful Aardvark Edit Ubuntu 17 10 Artful Aardvark The name of this release Artful Aardvark was announced via Launchpad on 21 April 2017 instead of on Shuttleworth s blog as had been the case in the past It was released on 19 October 2017 280 281 282 This was the first release of Ubuntu to use the GNOME Shell interface and replaced X11 with the Wayland display server 283 284 285 In May 2017 Ken VanDine a Canonical Software Engineer on the Ubuntu desktop team tasked with the switch to GNOME confirmed that the intention is to ship the most current version of GNOME with very few changes from a stock installation 286 This release also dropped support for 32 bit desktop images but a 32 bit system can still be installed from the minimal ISO 287 288 289 290 291 292 Writer J A Watson of ZDNet said I have not been much of an Ubuntu fan for a long time now but this release includes a lot of significant changes many of which might address some of my most serious objections about Ubuntu So I think I should take a closer look at it than I normally do He noted on printer configuration I got a notice that our wireless printer had been successfully configured I hadn t even thought about trying to set up a printer yet so that was a very nice surprise and a good thing to point out to those who are still going around spouting 5 years out of date information about how difficult it is to use printers with Linux 293 Reviewer Scott Gilbertson of Ars Technica wrote Ubuntu 17 10 is a huge departure for Ubuntu but one that sees the distro seemingly getting its footing back The transition to GNOME while not without its pitfalls for some users is surprisingly smooth Unity did have some features you won t find in GNOME but Canonical has done a good job of making things familiar if not identical More important than individual features in 17 10 this release sees Ubuntu starting over to some degree The long development process of Unity 8 was threatening to turn it into Godot but now Ubuntu is free of Unity 8 Its users no longer have to wait for anything 294 The first point release 17 10 1 was released on 12 January 2018 It fixed a problem that prevented the firmware of some Lenovo computers from booting 295 Ubuntu 18 04 LTS Bionic Beaver Edit Ubuntu 18 04 LTS Bionic Beaver Ubuntu 18 04 LTS Bionic Beaver 296 is a long term support version that was released on 26 April 2018 297 298 Ubuntu 18 04 1 LTS was released three months later on 26 July 2018 299 Ubuntu 18 04 2 LTS was released six months after Ubuntu 18 04 1 LTS on 15 February 2019 300 Further incremental update releases of the 18 04 LTS cycle were released as 18 04 3 301 and 18 04 4 302 at an approximately six month release cycle on August 8 2019 and February 12 2020 respectively Version 18 04 5 was released six months later on 13 August 2020 303 Ubuntu 18 04 6 LTS was released thirteen months later on 17 September 2021 Plans to include a new theme created by the Ubuntu community were announced on 5 February 2018 304 However as the development of the theme was unfinished and buggy as of 13 March 2018 Ubuntu 18 04 LTS did not include a new theme and instead retained the Ambiance theme from 2010 as its default theme 305 The new theme was available as a Snap package Ubuntu 18 04 LTS introduced new features such as colour emoticons 306 a new To Do application preinstalled in the default installation 307 and added the option of a Minimal Install to the Ubuntu 18 04 LTS installer which only installs a web browser and system tools 308 Ubuntu 18 04 LTS s default display server was returned to Xorg for more stability and reliability however Wayland was still included as part of the default install 309 This release employed Linux kernel version 4 15 which incorporated a CPU controller for the cgroup v2 interface AMD secure memory encryption support and improved SATA Link Power Management 310 For the first time some applications were delivered by default as snaps 311 In reviewing Ubuntu 18 04 LTS Michael Larabel of Phoronix wrote Ubuntu 18 04 is mostly an incremental upgrade over Ubuntu 17 10 with updated packages the switch back to X Org session by default rather than Wayland continued presence of Snaps and a variety of minor user interface updates It s really not a big deal going from 17 10 to 18 04 besides the LTS extended support nature but it is quite a change if upgrading from Ubuntu 16 04 LTS For that upgrade you now have the GCC 7 compiler Unity 7 to GNOME Shell by default and a wealth of other package updates 312 In reviewing the Ubuntu 18 04 LTS server version Michael Larabel of Phoronix indicated that the newly developed text based installer is an improvement over previous installers 313 Ubuntu 18 04 LTS has normal LTS support for five years until April 2023 and has paid ESM support available from Canonical for an additional five years until April 2028 314 315 316 Ubuntu 18 10 Cosmic Cuttlefish Edit Ubuntu 18 10 Cosmic Cuttlefish On 8 May 2018 Mark Shuttleworth announced that the codename of Ubuntu 18 10 which was released on 18 October 2018 317 would be Cosmic Cuttlefish 318 The Ubuntu 18 10 installation includes a new theme named Yaru 319 320 and the new icon theme Suru Installation speeds are faster due to a lossless compression algorithm known as Zstandard Startup speeds of pre installed Snap applications were also improved 321 In a review of 18 10 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu wrote Ubuntu 18 10 Cosmic Cuttlefish is a modest update compared to 18 04 The vast majority of notable improvements are tucked away out of sight under the hood Upstream GNOME Shell developers spent the past six months trying to lower GNOME Shell s memory usage and improve the overall performance of the shell its animations display manager and parts of the GNOME extension framework specifically Gjs as we touched on in our recap of the new features in GNOME 3 30 Invisible and abstract though these changes are they re appreciable So much so that if I had to describe this release in just one word it d be peppy That s testament to the power of collaboration with upstream devs and Canonical s engineering team working together 322 Michael Larabel of Phoronix wrote Overall Ubuntu 18 10 Cosmic Cuttlefish is quite a modest six month upgrade for being the first past the Ubuntu 18 04 cycle Exciting me the most of course is simply the package upgrades with riding Linux 4 18 Mesa 18 2 for a much better Linux gaming experience and having moved on now to GCC8 What didn t get achieved for the Ubuntu 18 10 cycle is the long awaited data viewer to the Ubuntu software hardware survey introduced in 18 04 LTS As of writing there s still no public means of being able to view the statistics on these opt in Ubuntu survey installations Additionally the plans for better Android phone integration with the Ubuntu 18 10 desktop by means of bundling GS Connect also didn t happen as planned for the Ubuntu 18 10 cycle 323 Ubuntu 19 04 Disco Dingo Edit Ubuntu 19 04 Disco Dingo Ubuntu 19 04 codenamed Disco Dingo was released on 18 April 2019 324 It incorporates the Linux kernel version 5 0 which adds support for AMD FreeSync technology for liquid crystal displays Raspberry Pi touchscreens Adiantum encryption Btrfs swap files as well as many USB 3 2 and Type C improvements and several new hardware 325 326 Ubuntu 19 04 uses GNOME Shell Desktop 3 32 which includes a new icon set increased performance smoother animations night light intensity control and advanced application permissions The updated Nautilus 3 32 file manager now supports favoriting files A new header bar as well as find and read only modes have been added to the default terminal emulator Version 19 of the open source graphics drivers Mesa is also natively available in this version of Ubuntu Furthermore the Grub menu now allows a safe graphics mode in case of issues with graphics cards or graphics drivers This option will boot Ubuntu with NOMODESET turned on and will allow the installation any proprietary drivers needed by the system Geoclue integration and fractional scaling in the GNOME Shell for HiDPI displays currently available only in Wayland sessions and experimentally in Xorg sessions are also included 327 Improvements for running Ubuntu on a VMWare virtual machine include integration of open vm tools within Ubuntu allowing for bi directional clipboard and file sharing 328 Ubuntu Server 19 04 updated QEMU to version 3 1 allowing for creation of a virtual 3D GPU inside QEMU virtual machines libvirt was updated to version 5 0 and Samba was updated to version 4 10 x Samba and its dependencies were updated to Python 3 with the exception of tdb which still builds a Python 2 package namely python tdb Ubuntu Server 19 04 includes the latest OpenStack release Stein and has vSwitch version 2 11 325 Ubuntu 19 10 Eoan Ermine Edit Ubuntu 19 10 Eoan Ermine Ubuntu 19 10 codenamed Eoan Ermine iː ˈ oʊ e n 329 was released on 17 October 2019 Based on the Linux kernel 5 3 which among others introduces compatibility for third generation Ryzen CPU motherboards and associated Intel Wireless devices as well as AMD s 7 nm Navi GPUs 330 331 this release improves on loading speeds and adds several new features 332 Experimental support for the ZFS filesystem is now available from the installer and can be chosen besides the ext4 filesytem NVIDIA specific improvements were made Proprietary NVIDIA graphics drivers are embedded within the Ubuntu ISO image and therefore are available for direct installation from the installer without the need to be downloaded in place of the open source Nouveau drivers Support for the Raspberry Pi 4 platform was added The installation media now uses LZ4 compression which compared to the previously used compression algorithm gzip offers faster installation times This was decided following benchmarking of a variety of compression algorithms conducted by the Ubuntu kernel team 333 334 Kernel load and decompression times were tested and LZ4 was found to offer decompression as much as seven times faster Ubuntu 19 10 uses GNOME 3 34 which among others adds the ability to group application icons into folders introduces a background settings panel and a separate Night Light tab as well as improves upon performance and smoothness 335 A new Yaru light theme was introduced with this release as well In a November 2019 Ars Technica review by Scott Gilbertson he concluded Ubuntu 19 10 is unusual for an October Ubuntu release in that I would call it a must have upgrade While it retains some of the experimental elements Ubuntu s fall releases have always been known for the speed boosts to GNOME alone make this release well worth your time Ubuntu 19 10 is quite possibly the best release of Ubuntu Canonical has ever delivered It s well worth upgrading if you re already an Ubuntu user and it s well worth trying even if you re not 336 Ubuntu 20 04 LTS Focal Fossa Edit Ubuntu 20 04 LTS Focal Fossa Ubuntu 20 04 LTS codenamed Focal Fossa is a long term support release and was released on 23 April 2020 337 Ubuntu 20 04 1 LTS was released on 6 August 2020 338 As an LTS release it will provide maintenance updates for 5 years until April 2025 This release is based on the long term supported Linux kernel 5 4 which adds support for new hardware including Intel Comet Lake CPUs and initial Tiger Lake platforms Qualcomm s Snapdragon 835 and 855 SoCs as well as AMD Navi 12 and 14 GPUs 339 It also enables support for the exFAT filesystem and the open source WireGuard VPN as well as integration with Livepatch which allows for reboot free kernel updates A new Linux Security Module named Lockdown disabled by default was introduced in this kernel release and aims to prevent high privileged root accounts from interacting with the underlying kernel by restricting certain kernel functionality disallowing execution of arbitrary code and enforcing kernel module signatures among others 340 341 An updated toolchain offers glibc 2 31 OpenJDK 11 Python 3 8 2 php 7 4 perl 5 30 and Go 1 13 Python 2 is no longer used and has been moved to the universe repository This release uses GNOME 3 36 which brings improvements to the user interface including a revamped login screen and refreshed Yaru theme Improvements have also been made to the system menu and the installation screen which now shows a graphical drive checking routine 342 Moreover the OEM logo is now displayed during boot The Ubuntu Software Center will now install packages from the Snap Store while it also adds an option for selecting the desired release channel to install from This release also ended all support for the 32 bit architecture 343 344 The recommended minimum system requirements for the desktop edition of this release are 345 2 GHz dual core processor 4 GiB of RAM 25 GB of hard drive USB stick memory card or external drive space VGA capable of 1024x768 screen resolution a CD DVD drive or a USB port for the installer media Internet access is desirable but not essentialReviewer Joey Sneddon noted in OMG Ubuntu tradition dictates that Ubuntu LTS releases play things safer than the interim so called short term releases by only including features that Ubuntu developers can commit to maintain for at least five years Focal doesn t buck that trend But while this means there are few omg changes in 20 04 there are a number of iterative improvements usability and user interface refinements and some much needed updates spread throughout the whole of the system 343 Dave McKay writing for HowToGeek concluded Ubuntu 20 04 Is a Great Release This is a polished good looking and fast release from Canonical 346 Writing in It s FOSS Abhishek Prakash wrote Since it s an LTS release stability is of the upmost importance Canonical team is not going to try any radical changes here Ubuntu 18 04 LTS users would surely notice the visual changes and performance improvements but I don t think you ll see many changes between 19 10 and 20 04 347 In a review in DistroWatch Jesse Smith detailed a number of problems found in testing this release including boot issues the decision to have Ubuntu Software only offer Snaps which are few in number slow use a lot of memory and do not integrate well He also criticized the ZFS file system for not working correctly and the lack of Flatpak support He concluded these issues along with the slow boot times and spotty wireless network access gave me a very poor impression of Ubuntu 20 04 This was especially disappointing since just six months ago I had a positive experience with Xubuntu 19 10 which was also running on ZFS My experience this week was frustrating slow buggy and multiple components felt incomplete This is in my subjective opinion a poor showing and a surprisingly unpolished one considering Canonical plans to support this release for the next five years 348 In a 29 May 2020 review in Full Circle Adam Hunt concluded 20 04 was a virtually flawless release 349 Ubuntu 20 10 Groovy Gorilla Edit Ubuntu 20 10 Groovy Gorilla Ubuntu 20 10 codenamed Groovy Gorilla was released on 22 October 2020 This release is based on the Linux kernel 5 8 which introduces support for several modern hardware devices and protocols Notable features include support for USB4 AMD Zen 3 CPUs and Intel Ice Lake and Tiger Lake graphics as well as initial support for booting Power10 processors GNOME 3 38 brings enhancements to the core GNOME apps and tweaked the app grid among other user experience improvements Ubuntu 20 10 is the first release to feature desktop images for the Raspberry Pi 4 4GB and 8GB models and the Compute Module 4 Older Pi models with less memory may still be able to boot but they are not officially supported 350 351 An updated toolchain set includes glibc 2 32 OpenJDK 11 rustc 1 41 GCC 10 LLVM 11 Python 3 8 6 ruby 2 7 0 php 7 4 9 perl 5 30 and golang 1 13 In addition to these nftables is now the default firewall backend replacing iptables 350 In an October 2020 review in HowToGeek Dave McKay concluded we recommend that most people stick with Ubuntu 20 04 LTS for stability Ubuntu 20 10 doesn t offer any huge improvements Rather it just shows that Ubuntu is still a solid platform making good progress toward its next LTS release in 2022 Canonical estimates that 95 of Ubuntu installations are LTS versions If that s true then plainly interim builds won t appeal to many people who use Ubuntu Even if Canonical s figures are slightly off it s obvious the vast majority prefer stability and guaranteed long term support over the incremental benefits of interim builds 351 Tim Anderson of The Register concluded this is not the biggest of Ubuntu releases but keeps the momentum going for Canonical s distribution hugely popular for server use on public cloud and becoming more polished for desktop users too 352 Bogdan Popa writing for Softpedia noted of this release Ubuntu was is and will probably remain the leading Linux distribution out there at least as far as the number of users is considered 353 A review in Full Circle magazine concluded While Ubuntu 20 10 is a really solid release it has surprisingly few new features for a release that initiates a new Ubuntu development cycle In many ways this is probably a good sign though After 33 releases over 16 years Ubuntu is a very mature Linux distribution and it gets almost everything right There is not really a lot that needs changing beyond updating the hardware support for the next generation of computers and also updating the default applications both of which this release does These days most Ubuntu users run the current LTS release and only upgrade when a new LTS version comes out This standard release offers very little to entice most Ubuntu users to switch especially since it has only nine months of support 354 Ubuntu 21 04 Hirsute Hippo Edit Ubuntu 21 04 Hirsute Hippo Ubuntu 21 04 codenamed Hirsute Hippo was released on 22 April 2021 355 356 Ubuntu 21 04 uses the 5 11 Linux kernel which introduces smartcard authentication and support for Intel s Software Guard Extensions and improves support for AMD CPUs and GPUs Wayland is now used as the default on hardware other than those that have Nvidia graphics processors Support for drag and drop from the file manager to the desktop was also added 356 357 This release was to have used the new GNOME 40 release but a developer decision was made to retain GNOME 3 38 instead the same version used in Ubuntu 20 10 This decision was made to give time to address questions about the stability of the GTK4 toolkit a major GNOME interface redesign and the unknown impact on GNOME extensions and Ubuntu s default Yaru GTK theme 358 359 In a review Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu wrote Ubuntu 21 04 isn t a game changing release Despite the hirsute moniker there s little nothing hair raising included perhaps save for the switch to Wayland but even that isn t as prickly as it used to be But it s not a release totally devoid of value Ubuntu 21 04 features a striking new dark theme and makes a raft of smaller UI tweaks that add up to an impressive polished whole There are also new installer features a new desktop icons experience and of course a new wallpaper 360 Dave McKay wrote in How To Geek the Hirsute Hippo behaved well in testing and feels like a solid stable build What it lacks in surface glitter it makes up for with many significant changes beneath the hood even without GNOME 40 The 5 11 kernel refreshed applications and system wide bug fixes and security enhancements are all advantageous The change of permissions on the home directories is a welcome change too It s nothing that you couldn t do by hand in other releases but how many actually bothered 357 A review in Full Circle magazine note So far in this development cycle we have seen very few substantive changes Perhaps the most important is the use of Wayland by default Even though that is a developer accomplishment it is pretty much user transparent So far the next LTS release 22 04 is shaping up to be very similar to the last LTS release 20 04 and that is actually a good thing In a mature distribution that already works well like Ubuntu wholesale changes are not needed and would cause a lot of user unhappiness Ubuntu users today largely like how Ubuntu looks and works and don t think much in the way of changes are needed People who don t like Ubuntu are probably already using something else 361 Ubuntu 21 10 Impish Indri Edit Ubuntu 21 10 Impish Indri Ubuntu 21 10 codenamed Impish Indri was released on 14 October 2021 362 Ubuntu 21 10 uses the 5 13 Linux kernel which introduces rudimentary support for Apple M1 chips FreeSync HDMI support for AMD GPUs a new Landlock security module and support for several new hardware among other changes and improvements 363 364 This release transitions from GNOME 3 38 to GNOME 40 introducing a horizontal workspace switcher and an improved Activities Overview design The Ubuntu Dock remains vertically placed on the left of the screen and now features separators between pinned and running applications as well as a persistent trash can icon and USB drive shortcuts A change was made in the default GNOME 40 behavior so that after logging in the user will be shown the desktop instead of the Activities Overview 365 Despite Ubuntu 21 10 shipping with GNOME 40 a few GNOME 41 apps are available A Firefox Snap is now installed by default on Ubuntu 21 10 instead of the deb package which remains available for the time being 366 Furthermore the Nvidia proprietary drivers now support Wayland sessions The default Yaru theme was also updated with new icons and Zstd compression was enabled in the main archive making installations faster 365 Joey Sneddon wrote in OMG Ubuntu for me what makes this release most appealing isn t a specific one thing it s the aggregate total the combination of new apps new kernel new GNOME Shell new look and new installer though not default for now make the Impish Indri a particularly inspiring iteration of this iconic distro 367 Dave McKay of How To Geek wrote in his review If you re an existing user and any of the hardware support or security features of the kernel are going to have a positive impact on your particular use case then go ahead and update If you don t have an issue that is going to be resolved by upgrading it s hard to justify the effort and risk of an upgrade Certainly there s nothing here to compel an avid LTS user to leave that safe haven and move to 21 10 368 Ubuntu 22 04 LTS Jammy Jellyfish Edit Ubuntu 22 04 LTS Jammy Jellyfish Ubuntu 22 04 codenamed Jammy Jellyfish was released on 21 April 2022 and is a long term support release supported for five years until April 2027 369 Ubuntu 22 04 LTS Desktop uses the 5 17 Linux kernel with the 5 15 HWE rolling kernel for hardware that does not support the newer kernel While Ubuntu 22 04 LTS Server uses the 5 15 Linux kernel and Ubuntu Cloud and Ubuntu for IoT uses an optimized kernel based on the 5 15 Linux kernel It updates Python to 3 10 and Ruby to 3 0 The init system is systemd 249 11 and the desktop is a mix of GNOME 41 and 42 applications The default web browser Firefox is available as a snap package and the release repositories no longer provide an alternative deb package This release offers users two Yaru themes light and dark but with a choice of ten different accent colors for customization 370 371 In his review of this release Steven Vaughan Nichols noted in an article for ZDNet all in all I think the new Ubuntu 22 04 is an excellent Linux desktop Beyond that it s also a great Linux distribution for almost any purpose 372 Joey Sneddon of OMG Ubuntu termed the release pretty rad 373 Writing for The Register Richard Speed stated those upgrading from 20 04 LTS will find a number of changes to the environment as well as accent colors that are easier to set and inevitable dark mode enhancements the arrival of GNOME 42 and its screenshotting improvements have made for a slicker if not revolutionary desktop appearance 374 DistroWatch reviewer Jesse Smith was critical of the release writing I think the launch of Ubuntu 22 04 is a clear sign Canonical is much more interested in publishing releases on a set schedule than producing something worthwhile This version was not ready for release and it s is probably going to be a costly endeavour to maintain this collection of mixed versioned software and mixed display server and mixed designs for a full five years It s a platform I would recommend avoiding 375 Ubuntu 22 10 Kinetic Kudu Edit Ubuntu 22 10 Kinetic Kudu Ubuntu 22 10 codenamed Kinetic Kudu is interim release and was made on 20 October 2022 376 The release uses the 5 19 Linux kernel which improves the power efficiency on Intel based computers and supports multithreaded decompression It also upgrades the GNOME desktop environment to version 43 with support for GTK4 theming 377 Ubuntu 22 10 also adds support for MicroPython on microcontrollers such as the Raspberry Pi Pico W as well as support for RISC V processors It also adds rshell thonny and mpremote to the Ubuntu repositories 378 In a review in OMG Ubuntu writer Joey Sneddon stated if anything the Kinetic Kudu is not as energetic as its codename intimates As interim releases it is a passably interesting yet largely iterative issue Formulaic That s not a bad thing Releases like this are sure footed foundations on which more ambitious changes can later rest 379 Ubuntu 23 04 Lunar Lobster Edit Ubuntu 23 04 Lunar Lobster is an interim release scheduled 20 April 2023 380 Table of versions EditVersion Code name Release date Standard support until Extended securitymaintenance until Initial kernel versionDesktops Servers4 10 Warty Warthog 2004 10 20 Old version no longer maintained 2006 04 30 2 6 85 04 Hoary Hedgehog 2005 04 08 Old version no longer maintained 2006 10 31 2 6 105 10 Breezy Badger 2005 10 13 Old version no longer maintained 2007 04 13 2 6 126 06 LTS Dapper Drake 2006 06 01 Old version no longer maintained 2009 07 14 Old version no longer maintained 2011 06 01 2 6 156 10 Edgy Eft 2006 10 26 Old version no longer maintained 2008 04 25 2 6 177 04 Feisty Fawn 2007 04 19 Old version no longer maintained 2008 10 19 2 6 207 10 Gutsy Gibbon 2007 10 18 Old version no longer maintained 2009 04 18 2 6 228 04 LTS Hardy Heron 2008 04 24 Old version no longer maintained 2011 05 12 Old version no longer maintained 2013 05 09 2 6 248 10 Intrepid Ibex 2008 10 30 Old version no longer maintained 2010 04 30 2 6 279 04 Jaunty Jackalope 2009 04 23 Old version no longer maintained 2010 10 23 2 6 289 10 Karmic Koala 2009 10 29 Old version no longer maintained 2011 04 30 2 6 3110 04 LTS Lucid Lynx 2010 04 29 Old version no longer maintained 2013 05 09 Old version no longer maintained 2015 04 30 2 6 3210 10 Maverick Meerkat 2010 10 10 Old version no longer maintained 2012 04 10 2 6 3511 04 Natty Narwhal 2011 04 28 Old version no longer maintained 2012 10 28 2 6 3811 10 Oneiric Ocelot 2011 10 13 Old version no longer maintained 2013 05 09 3 012 04 LTS Precise Pangolin 2012 04 26 381 Old version no longer maintained 2017 04 28 382 Old version no longer maintained 2019 04 26 3 2 383 12 10 Quantal Quetzal 2012 10 18 Old version no longer maintained 2014 05 16 384 3 5 385 13 04 Raring Ringtail 2013 04 25 Old version no longer maintained 2014 01 27 9 3 8 386 13 10 Saucy Salamander 2013 10 17 387 Old version no longer maintained 2014 07 17 197 3 1114 04 LTS Trusty Tahr 2014 04 17 201 Old version no longer maintained 2019 04 25 388 Older version yet still maintained 2024 04 25 3 1314 10 Utopic Unicorn 2014 10 23 222 Old version no longer maintained 2015 07 23 389 3 16 390 15 04 Vivid Vervet 2015 04 23 230 Old version no longer maintained 2016 02 04 391 3 19 392 15 10 Wily Werewolf 2015 10 22 241 Old version no longer maintained 2016 07 28 393 4 2 394 16 04 LTS Xenial Xerus 2016 04 21 249 Old version no longer maintained 2021 04 30 395 Older version yet still maintained 2026 04 23 4 4 396 16 10 Yakkety Yak 2016 10 13 270 Old version no longer maintained 2017 07 20 397 4 817 04 Zesty Zapus 2017 04 13 398 Old version no longer maintained 2018 01 13 399 4 10 400 17 10 Artful Aardvark 2017 10 19 401 Old version no longer maintained 2018 07 19 402 4 13 403 18 04 LTS Bionic Beaver 2018 04 26 298 Older version yet still maintained 2023 04 26 315 316 Older version yet still maintained 2028 04 26 4 15 404 18 10 Cosmic Cuttlefish 2018 10 18 405 Old version no longer maintained 2019 07 18 406 4 18 407 19 04 Disco Dingo 2019 04 18 324 Old version no longer maintained 2020 01 23 408 5 019 10 Eoan Ermine 2019 10 17 409 Old version no longer maintained 2020 07 17 410 5 320 04 LTS Focal Fossa 2020 04 23 411 412 Older version yet still maintained 2025 04 23 Older version yet still maintained 2030 04 23 5 4 413 20 10 Groovy Gorilla 2020 10 22 414 Old version no longer maintained 2021 07 22 415 5 821 04 Hirsute Hippo 2021 04 22 416 Old version no longer maintained 2022 01 20 417 5 11 418 21 10 Impish Indri 2021 10 14 Old version no longer maintained 2022 07 14 419 5 1322 04 LTS Jammy Jellyfish 2022 04 21 Older version yet still maintained 2027 04 21 Older version yet still maintained 2032 04 21 5 1522 10 Kinetic Kudu 2022 10 20 376 Current stable version 2023 07 5 19 420 23 04 Lunar Lobster 2023 04 20 380 Future release 2024 01 20 TBALegend Old versionOlder version still maintainedLatest versionLatest preview versionFuture releaseVersion timeline EditviewtalkeditVersion end of life EditAfter each version of Ubuntu has reached its end of life time its repositories are removed from the main Ubuntu servers and consequently the mirrors 421 Older versions of Ubuntu repositories and releases can be found on the old Ubuntu releases website 422 423 See also EditDebian version history Fedora version history openSUSE version historyPortals Free and open source software LinuxReferences Edit About Ubuntu The Ubuntu story Canonical Ltd Archived from the original on 10 October 2010 Retrieved 12 August 2018 a b Shuttleworth Mark 20 October 2004 Ubuntu 4 10 announcement ubuntu announce Mailing list Retrieved 19 August 2008 TimeBasedReleases Ubuntu Team Wiki Canonical Ltd Retrieved 27 August 2010 Releases Canonical Ltd Retrieved 28 February 2010 GNOME s Time Based Release Schedule Gnome Live Wiki Retrieved 27 August 2010 Stone Daniel 30 August 2009 New release process xorg devel Mailing list Retrieved 27 August 2010 LTS Ubuntu Team Wiki Canonical Ltd Retrieved 27 August 2010 Release end of life Canonical Ltd Retrieved 28 April 2018 a b Ubuntu Technical Board Looks at Shuttleworth s Proposal for Release Management Methodology Ubuntu Fridge Retrieved 20 March 2013 a b DevelopmentCodeNames Ubuntu Team Wiki Canonical Ltd Retrieved 8 May 2009 Zimmerman Matt 28 March 2006 Ubuntu 4 10 reaches end of life on 30 April 2006 ubuntu announce Mailing list Retrieved 19 August 2008 ShipIt has closed Retrieved 21 November 2012 Announcing Ubuntu 4 10 The Warty Warthog Release Mailing list 20 October 2004 Retrieved 20 April 2013 Zimmerman Matt 8 April 2005 Ubuntu 5 04 announcement ubuntu announce Mailing list Retrieved 27 August 2010 5 04 Release Notes 8 April 2005 Archived from the original on 30 April 2008 Retrieved 19 August 2008 Armstrong Christina 23 October 2006 Ubuntu 5 04 reaches end of life on 31 October 2006 ubuntu security announce Mailing list Retrieved 19 August 2008 Get Ubuntu Upgrade Canonical Ltd Retrieved 27 August 2010 a b c Tux Radar 23 April 2009 The road to Jaunty a look back at Ubuntu s history Archived from the original on 26 April 2009 Retrieved 19 August 2008 DraftHoaryReleaseAnnouncement Ubuntu Team Wiki Canonical Ltd 31 July 2005 Archived from the original on 10 November 2006 Retrieved 5 March 2008 HoaryGoals Ubuntu Wiki Canonical Archived from the original on 10 November 2006 Retrieved 3 September 2010 Zimmerman Matt 12 October 2005 Ubuntu 5 10 announcement ubuntu announce Mailing list Retrieved 19 August 2008 Ubuntu 5 10 release notes Canonical Ltd Archived from the original on 28 May 2014 Retrieved 12 August 2018 Fog Heen Tollef 14 March 2007 Ubuntu 5 10 reaches end of life on 13 April 2007 ubuntu security announce Mailing list Retrieved 19 August 2008 Add Remove Applications Community Ubuntu Documentation Canonical Ltd Archived from the original on 5 July 2007 Retrieved 11 October 2010 BreezyReleaseNotes Ubuntu Team Wiki Canonical Ltd 31 July 2005 Archived from the original on 10 November 2006 Retrieved 5 March 2008 Zimmerman Matt 1 June 2006 Ubuntu 6 06 announcement ubuntu announce Mailing list Retrieved 27 August 2010 Ubuntu 6 06 LTS release notes Canonical Ltd Archived from the original on 14 May 2008 Retrieved 19 August 2008 Ubuntu 6 06 LTS announcement Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 19 August 2008 Remnant Scott James 19 October 2014 Happy 10th Birthday Ubuntu Archived from the original on 24 November 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 Full Circle Magazine Issue 0 Full Circle April 2007 Archived from the original on 28 December 2008 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Langasek Steve 8 July 2009 Ubuntu 6 06 LTS Desktop Edition reaches end of life on 14 July 2009 ubuntu 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release Retrieved 2 June 2008 a b Gutsy Gibbon Tribe 4 test release Retrieved 2 June 2008 a b Gutsy Gibbon Tribe 5 test release Retrieved 2 June 2008 Gutsy Gibbon Tribe 2 test release Retrieved 2 June 2008 Ubuntu Announcements 24 April 2008 Ubuntu 8 04 LTS released ubuntu announce Mailing list Retrieved 27 August 2010 Milestone ubuntu 8 04 for Ubuntu due 24 April 2008 Retrieved 19 August 2008 Introducing the Hardy Heron 29 August 2007 Archived from the original on 1 May 2008 Retrieved 19 August 2008 Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter Issue 36 Ubuntu Team Wiki Canonical Ltd Retrieved 2 July 2008 Ubuntu s new Linux sports debugging tool Retrieved 19 August 2008 Handler N April 2011 Ubuntu 8 04 reaches end of life on 12 May 2011 Retrieved 15 May 2011 Ubuntu 8 04 Hardy Heron End of Life reached on May 9 2013 Ubuntu Fridge 10 May 2013 Retrieved 12 August 2018 Ubuntu developer summit Boston 1 November 2007 Archived from the original on 7 May 2008 Retrieved 2 June 2008 a b c Pitt Martin 14 January 2008 Accepted ubuntu meta 1 87 source hardy changes Mailing list Retrieved 21 January 2008 Blueprint Fix the Linux audio mess once and for all Retrieved 19 July 2008 Latest Server Release Expands Ubuntu Enterprise Profile 21 April 2008 Retrieved 5 July 2008 Hardy Heron Artwork Ubuntu Team Wiki Canonical Ltd Retrieved 19 August 2008 Download Ubuntu Eee 8 04 1 for your Eee PC Webtrickz Retrieved 29 October 2008 Ubuntu Announcements 30 October 2008 Ubuntu 8 10 released ubuntu announce Mailing list Retrieved 27 August 2010 Milestone ubuntu 8 10 for Ubuntu due 30 October 2008 Retrieved 28 April 2008 Langasek Steve 29 March 2010 Ubuntu 8 10 reaches end of life on 30 April 2010 ubuntu security announce Mailing list Archived from the original on 15 December 2012 Retrieved 27 August 2010 Guest account specification Ubuntu Team Wiki Canonical Ltd Retrieved 19 August 2008 Thomas Keir 31 October 2008 A User s Look at Ubuntu 8 10 Intrepid Ibex Retrieved 27 August 2010 Ubuntu Intrepid Ibex Features 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Retrieved 9 September 2011 OneiricReleaseSchedule Ubuntu Wiki Wiki ubuntu com 7 October 2011 Retrieved 21 October 2011 Andrew 24 August 2011 Installing Using Classic GNOME Desktop in Ubuntu 11 10 Oneiric Ocelot Web Upd8 Ubuntu Linux blog Webupd8 org Retrieved 4 January 2012 Mark Shuttleworth Celebrating Gnome 3 0 Dash takes shape for 11 10 Unity Mark Shuttleworth 16 August 2011 Retrieved 21 October 2011 synaptic removed from ubuntu 11 10 June 2011 Retrieved 23 June 2011 Sneddon Joey May 2011 App changes for Ubuntu 11 10 See ya Computer Janitor and Hello Deja Dup OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 14 May 2011 Sneddon Joey May 2011 Thunderbird on track to be default e mail app in Ubuntu 11 10 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 14 May 2011 Sneddon Joey August 2011 Thunderbird Confirmed as Default Mail App For Ubuntu 11 10 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 10 August 2011 Mark Shuttleworth Next after Natty PreciseReleaseSchedule Ubuntu Wiki Wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 26 April 2012 Shuttleworth Mark October 2011 P is for Retrieved 5 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Retrieved 15 August 2018 Ubuntu 12 04 3 LTS released Ubuntu Fridge 23 August 2013 Retrieved 15 August 2018 Kernel team IRC meeting 7 January 2014 Minutes from the Ubuntu Kernel Team meeting 2014 01 07 Retrieved 27 January 2014 PrecisePangolin ReleaseSchedule Ubuntu Wiki Wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 31 January 2013 Smith Jesse 7 May 2012 Review of Ubuntu 12 04 DistroWatch Retrieved 1 November 2013 Lynch Jim 9 May 2012 Ubuntu 12 04 Linux Desktop Reviews Archived from the original on 18 May 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2012 Wallen Jack 25 June 2012 Ubuntu Unity Making the desktop seriously efficient again TechRepublic Retrieved 1 November 2013 Shuttleworth Mark 23 April 2012 Quality has a new name Retrieved 23 April 2012 Canonical Ltd 23 April 2012 Quantal Quetzal Release Schedule Retrieved 24 April 2012 Paul Ryan 25 April 2012 Theming update planned for Ubuntu 12 10 codenamed Quantal Quetzal Ars Technica Retrieved 30 April 2012 Sneddon Joey 12 May 2012 UDS Q Summary Bye Bye Unity 2D Hello GNOME 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Amazon search results in the Dash Retrieved 25 September 2012 Bug 1054776 Don t include remote searches in the home lens Bugs unity lens shopping package Ubuntu Bugs launchpad net 20 September 2012 Retrieved 25 September 2012 Sneddon Joey 23 September 2012 Mark Shuttleworth Explains Ubuntu s New Amazon Suggestions Feature OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 25 September 2012 Sneddon Joey 25 September 2012 Ubuntu 12 10 Amazon Shopping Results to be Made Optional OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 26 September 2012 Sneddon Joey 10 October 2012 Blogger Claims Ubuntu s New Shopping Lens Breaks EU Law OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 11 October 2012 Smith Jesse 29 October 2012 Ubuntu 12 10 Desktop DistroWatch Retrieved 3 November 2012 DistroWatch staff 5 November 2012 DistroWatch Weekly Issue 481 5 November 2012 DistroWatch Retrieved 6 November 2012 Lynch Jim 5 December 2012 Ubuntu 12 10 Linux Desktop Reviews Archived from the original on 10 December 2012 Retrieved 6 December 2012 Shuttleworth Mark 17 October 2012 Not the Runty Raccoon the Rufflered Rhino or even the Randall Ross Retrieved 18 October 2012 Intention to drop Wubi from 13 04 release Lists ubuntu com Retrieved 28 April 2013 WUBI To Be Dropped from Ubuntu 13 04 Windows Users Lose Out OMG Ubuntu April 2013 Retrieved 9 April 2013 Phoronix Ubuntu Looks To Improve Its Windows Installer Phoronix com Retrieved 1 November 2012 RaringRingtail ReleaseSchedule Ubuntu Wiki Wiki ubuntu com 14 March 2013 Retrieved 28 April 2013 Lynch Jim 25 April 2013 Ubuntu 13 04 Desktop Linux Reviews Retrieved 28 April 2013 a b c Paul Ryan 17 October 2013 Ubuntu 13 10 review The Linux OS of the future remains a year away Ars Technica Retrieved 2 November 2013 Sneddon Joey 16 May 2013 Chromium Likely to Replace Firefox As Default Browser in Ubuntu 13 10 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 13 August 2013 Sneddon Joey 13 August 2013 Firefox To Remain Default Browser in Ubuntu 13 10 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 13 August 2013 Sneddon Joey 27 June 2013 Mir To Ship As Default Display Server in Ubuntu 13 10 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 13 August 2013 Tran Sam 2 October 2013 XMir Dropped from Ubuntu 13 10 Default Due to Technical Difficulties OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 3 October 2013 Sneddon Joey 17 October 2013 Title of Article OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 18 October 2013 Lynch Jim 15 October 2013 Ubuntu 13 10 Saucy Salamander Linux Desktop Reviews Retrieved 18 October 2013 Korolov Maria 9 December 2013 Ubuntu 13 10 The good the bad and the ugly Network World Retrieved 3 April 2014 Powers Shawn 2 December 2013 Readers Choice Awards 2013 Linux Journal Retrieved 9 December 2013 a b Ubuntu 13 10 Saucy Salamander reaches End of Life on July 17 2014 Lists ubuntu com 17 October 2013 Retrieved 18 July 2014 Shuttleworth Mark 31 October 2011 Ubuntu on phones tablets TV s and smart screens everywhere Joey Elijah Sneddon 18 October 2013 Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Named Trusty Tahr OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 19 October 2013 a b Shuttleworth Mark 18 October 2013 Quantal raring saucy Retrieved 18 October 2013 a b c d Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Release Schedule Ubuntu Wiki Retrieved 15 August 2018 Sneddon Joey 15 November 2013 Ubuntu Tablet Will be Key Focus During Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Cycle OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 15 November 2013 Joey Elijah Sneddon 29 November 2013 Ubuntu 14 04 Adds Global Menu Off Switch OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 30 November 2013 Joey Elijah Sneddon 19 November 2013 What to Expect in Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Next April Omgubuntu co uk Retrieved 30 November 2013 Joey Elijah Sneddon 14 December 2013 Ubuntu Confirm GNOME Control Centre Fork for 14 04 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 14 December 2013 Sneddon Joey Elijah 19 December 2013 Ubuntu 14 04 to Feature SSD TRIM Support By Default OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 19 December 2013 Sneddon Joey Elijah 18 January 2013 GNOME 3 10 Will Be Available To Install In Ubuntu 14 04 LTS OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 18 January 2013 Sneddon Joey 20 February 2014 Better Late Than Never Ubuntu To Offer Locally Integrated Menus in 14 04 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 24 February 2014 Zemczak Lukasz Ubuntu 14 04 6 LTS released lists ubuntu com Retrieved 7 March 2019 Release notes Retrieved 3 October 2015 For details of the changes applied since 14 04 4 please see the 14 04 5 change summary Nestor Marius 7 July 2016 Ubuntu 14 04 5 LTS to Deliver the Kernel amp Graphics Stack from Ubuntu 16 04 LTS softpedia com Retrieved 7 July 2016 Distribution Release Ubuntu 14 04 6 DistroWatch com Retrieved 7 March 2019 Sneddon Joey 23 April 2014 How has the Press Reacted to Ubuntu 14 04 We Round Up the Reviews OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 23 April 2014 Lynch Jim 17 April 2014 Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Linux Desktop Reviews Retrieved 22 April 2014 Wallin Jack 18 April 2014 Ubuntu 14 04 wows through subtlety Tech Republic Retrieved 23 April 2014 Relph Knight Terry 17 April 2014 Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Trusty Tahr review Solid and stable but no big changes ZDNet Retrieved 23 April 2014 Gilbertson Scott 23 April 2014 Ubuntu 14 04 review Missing the boat on big changes Ars Technica Retrieved 23 April 2014 Extended Security Maintenance for Ubuntu 14 04 Trusty Tahr begins April 25 2019 Canonical 14 March 2019 Retrieved 20 April 2019 Announcing Extended Security Maintenance for Ubuntu 14 04 LTS Trusty Tahr Canonical 19 September 2018 Retrieved 4 November 2018 a b Ubuntu 14 04 and 16 04 lifecycle extended to ten years Ubuntu Retrieved 23 September 2021 Shuttleworth Mark 23 April 2014 U talking to me Retrieved 23 April 2014 a b Utopic Unicorn Schedule wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 10 June 2014 UtopicUnicorn ReleaseNotes wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 20 October 2014 Wong Anthony 23 October 2014 Ubuntu 14 10 Release Notes Retrieved 25 October 2014 Sneddon Joey 23 October 2014 Ubuntu 14 10 Released Ready to Download Now OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 24 October 2014 Larabel Michael 23 October 2014 Ubuntu 14 10 Officially Released Phoronix Retrieved 24 October 2014 Gilbertson Scott 24 October 2014 Ubuntu s shiny 10th birthday Unicorn An upgrade fantasy The Register Retrieved 25 October 2014 Shuttleworth Mark 20 October 2014 V is for Vivid Retrieved 20 October 2014 Sneddon Joey 20 October 2014 This is the name of Ubuntu 15 04 And It s Not Velociraptor OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 20 October 2014 a b Sneddon Joey 18 November 2014 Ubuntu 15 04 Gets Tentative Release Date of April 23 2015 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 18 November 2014 Canonical Ltd 5 December 2014 Vivid Vervet Release Schedule Retrieved 19 December 2014 Ubuntu Cloud Switches Over To Using Systemd By Default phoronix com Retrieved 27 April 2015 Andrei Alin 27 March 2015 Ubuntu 15 04 Vivid Vervet Final Beta Available For Download webupd8 Retrieved 27 March 2015 Stahie Silviu 2 April 2015 See What s New in Ubuntu 15 04 Vivid Vervet Softpedia Retrieved 15 April 2015 Larabel Michael 24 April 2015 Ubuntu 15 04 Offers Faster OpenGL For AMD Radeon GPUs on Open Source Phoronix Retrieved 27 April 2015 Sneddon Joey 23 April 2015 Ubuntu 15 04 Released This Is What s New OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 23 April 2015 Smith Jesse 27 April 2015 First impressions of Ubuntu 15 04 DistroWatch Retrieved 28 April 2015 Shuttleworth Mark 4 May 2015 Announcing the wily werewolf Retrieved 4 May 2015 Ubuntu 15 04 Makes a Snappy Entrance eweek com Retrieved 4 May 2015 Heath Nick 11 October 2013 Mark Shuttleworth on how the Ubuntu Edge dream lives on in the iPhone ZDNet Retrieved 23 October 2014 a b WilyWerewolf ReleaseSchedule Ubuntu Wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 24 May 2015 Joey Elijah Sneddon 20 August 2015 Ubuntu 15 10 Ditches Unity Overlay Scrollbars OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 23 August 2015 Jones Chris 22 October 2015 Ubuntu 15 10 Codenamed Wily Werewolf Review Unix Men Retrieved 22 October 2015 Sneddon Joey 22 October 2015 Ubuntu 15 10 Available to Download This Is What s New OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 22 October 2015 Steven J Vaughan Nichols The Wily Werewolf Ubuntu 15 10 is unleashed ZDNet Retrieved 24 October 2015 Ubuntu 15 10 Review Less Exciting amp Largely Unchanged Hectic Geek 26 October 2015 Retrieved 3 November 2015 Ubuntu 15 10 Wily Werewolf review Fast and spurious dedoimedo com Retrieved 3 November 2015 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November 2015 Ubuntu 16 04 LTS to Drop Ubuntu Software Center for GNOME Software Softpedia Retrieved 5 November 2015 a b Jack Wallen 10 March 2016 Ubuntu 16 04 Something to Get Excited About Linux com The source for Linux information Retrieved 22 April 2016 Bug 1054776 Don t include remote searches in the home lens Bugs unity lens shopping package Ubuntu launchpad net Retrieved 17 December 2015 Joey Elijah Sneddon 8 January 2016 Ubuntu Spyware Will Be Disabled in Ubuntu 16 04 LTS OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 15 January 2016 Joey Elijah Sneddon 11 March 2016 Why AMD GPU Users May Want to Avoid Ubuntu 16 04 LTS OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 16 March 2016 AMDGPU PRO Driver for Linux Release Notes support amd com Retrieved 29 October 2017 Larabel Michael 21 July 2016 Ubuntu 16 04 1 LTS Released Phoronix Retrieved 21 July 2016 Nestor Marius 9 February 2017 Ubuntu 16 04 2 LTS Has Been Delayed Once Again Should Land on Monday Now Softpedia Retrieved 10 February 2017 Zemczak Lukasz 1 March 2018 Ubuntu 16 04 4 LTS released Retrieved 3 March 2018 Ubuntu 16 04 6 LTS released 28 February 2019 Ubuntu 16 04 7 LTS released 24 August 2019 Shuttleworth Mark 21 April 2016 Mark Shuttleworth Blog Archive Y is for markshuttleworth com Retrieved 22 April 2016 a b YakketyYak Release Notes 22 April 2016 Retrieved 22 April 2016 Bouvier Scott 9 May 2016 What To Expect from Unity 7 in Ubuntu 16 10 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 9 May 2016 a b YakketyYak ReleaseNotes Ubuntu Wiki Retrieved 6 October 2016 Ubuntu 16 10 Released Ready to Download Now omgubuntu co uk 13 October 2016 Retrieved 16 October 2016 Nestor Marius 13 October 2016 Ubuntu 16 10 Yakkety Yak Launches Officially with Linux Kernel 4 8 Download Now softpedia com Retrieved 16 October 2016 5 Reasons Why Ubuntu 16 10 Yakkety Yak Is Worth a Look makeuseof com November 2016 Retrieved 5 April 2017 Shuttleworth Mark 17 October 2016 The mouse that jumped markshuttleworth com Retrieved 17 October 2016 ZestyZapus ReleaseNotes Ubuntu Wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 13 April 2017 a b Sneddon Joey 13 April 2017 Ubuntu 17 04 Available to Download Now This is What s New OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 13 April 2017 a b Nestor Marius 13 April 2017 Ubuntu 17 04 Zesty Zapus Officially Released Available to Download Now Softpedia Retrieved 13 April 2017 Sneddon Joey 21 April 2017 Ubuntu 17 10 Is Named Artful Aardvark OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 22 April 2017 Sneddon Joey 22 April 2017 This is the Ubuntu 17 10 Release Date OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 22 April 2017 Canonical Ltd 20 April 2017 Artful Aardvark Release Schedule wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 23 April 2017 Nestor Marius 19 April 2017 Canonical to Make GNOME Default Session in Ubuntu 17 10 Softpedia Retrieved 20 April 2017 Sneddon Joey 5 April 2017 Ubuntu 18 04 To Ship with GNOME Desktop Not Unity OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 5 April 2017 Shuttleworth Mark Growing Ubuntu for Cloud and IoT rather than Phone and convergence Canonical Retrieved 5 April 2017 Sneddon Joey 16 May 2017 Ubuntu Desktop Team Discuss Their Plans for GNOME in Ubuntu 17 10 OMG Ubuntu Retrieved 17 May 2017 Ledkov Dimitri John 27 September 2017 Change of scope and target market for i386 ubuntu com Retrieved 15 March 2019 Pay Attention Ubuntu is Officially Dropping 32 bit Desktop Images itsfoss com Retrieved 2 November 2017 Ubuntu 17 10 Will Drop The 32 bit Desktop ISO Phoronix www phoronix com Retrieved 15 March 2019 Ubuntu Is Dropping 32 Bit Images But the Rest of the Flavors Will Keep Them Softpedia News Ubuntu 17 10 won t have a 32 bit installation option The Inquirer Ubuntu Is Dropping 32 bit Desktop Images OMG Ubuntu 27 September 2017 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Watson J A Ubuntu 17 10 Hands on with Artful Aardvark ZDNet ZDNet Retrieved 29 October 2017 Gilbertson Scott 27 November 2017 Ubuntu 17 10 Return of the GNOME Ars Technica Retrieved 2 December 2017 Ubuntu 17 10 1 Linux Distro Now Available Download ISO Files And Torrents For All Official Flavors fossbytes com 13 January 2018 Retrieved 19 January 2018 Ubuntu 18 04 LTS is Called Bionic Beaver omgubuntu co uk 24 October 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Ubuntu 18 04 LTS Release Schedule OMG Ubuntu omgubuntu co uk 29 October 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 a b BionicBeaver ReleaseSchedule Ubuntu Wiki wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 29 October 2017 Ubuntu Fridge Ubuntu 18 04 1 LTS released fridge ubuntu com Retrieved 15 March 2019 Conrad Adam 15 February 2019 Ubuntu 18 04 2 LTS released Conrad Adam 8 August 2019 Ubuntu 18 04 3 LTS released Zemczak Lukasz 12 February 2020 Ubuntu 18 04 4 LTS released Brian Murray 13 August 2020 Ubuntu 18 04 5 LTS released Retrieved 3 September 2020 How to Try the New Ubuntu Theme OMG Ubuntu 5 February 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Dang it Ubuntu 18 04 Won t Include a New GTK Theme After All OMG Ubuntu OMG Ubuntu 13 March 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Ubuntu 18 04 Will Support Color Emoji OMG Ubuntu OMG Ubuntu 8 November 2017 Retrieved 15 March 2018 Ubuntu 18 04 Adds a To Do App to Default Install OMG Ubuntu OMG Ubuntu 27 January 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2018 Ubuntu adds Minimal Install option to installer OMG Ubuntu OMG Ubuntu 14 February 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2018 Ubuntu Drops Wayland Switches back to Xorg OMG Ubuntu OMG Ubuntu 25 January 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2018 BionicBeaver ReleaseNotes Ubuntu Wiki wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 27 April 2018 BionicBeaver ReleaseAnnouncement Ubuntu Wiki wiki ubuntu com Larabel Michael 26 April 2018 Ubuntu 18 04 LTS Bionic Beaver Official Images Now Available Phoronix Retrieved 27 April 2018 Larabel Michael 27 April 2018 The New Ubuntu 18 04 Server Installer Is Working Out Nicely Phoronix Retrieved 27 April 2018 Kerner Sean Michael 15 November 2018 Canonical Extends Ubuntu 18 04 LTS Linux Support to 10 Years Serverwatch Retrieved 16 November 2018 a b Ubuntu Extended Security Maintenance Ubuntu www ubuntu com Retrieved 15 March 2019 a b Releases Ubuntu Wiki wiki ubuntu com Retrieved 15 March 2019 Ubuntu 18 10 Everything You Need to Know OMG Ubuntu 2 June 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2018 Mark Shuttleworth 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announces the release of Ubuntu 19 04 Disco Dingo Neowin Retrieved 18 April 2019 Eoan definition and meaning Collins English Dictionary Retrieved 7 February 2020 The New Features amp Improvements of the Linux 5 3 Kernel Retrieved 17 October 2019 cite, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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