On Sat, Oct 25, 2014 at 10:25 AM, Julien Lavergne <julien.laver...@gmail.com> wrote: > A big thank to all for this release :-) And a special thank for our > new release manager for his great work on this release :-)
Aw, thank you, thank you. Couldn't do it without you, though, boss. Speaking of thank yous, I'd like to thank silverlion, our Team Leader of Communications, for all of his hard work getting the word about Lubuntu out there. He wrote a great press release that I neglected to include in the original release note I included (sorry, buddy!). That being said, it's now on the blog for your perusal: http://lubuntublog.blogspot.com/2014/10/lubuntu-14.html But the text is here, too: The blue Unicorn set free! After the success[1] of their first Long-Term-Support (LTS) version in April this year, the Head of the Developer Team, Julien Lavergne, has finished work on the Utopic Unicorn which can now be downloaded at https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Lubuntu/GetLubuntu. Acting Release Manager, Walter Lapchynski, shortly after the release: “This cycle we mainly focused on fixing known bugs. But”, he adds “there is a downside, too: due to several serious bugs, we had to skip PPC versions of the Unicorn. We recommend using of the LTS version for now and do hope, that we are able to present a PPC Version in April next year. For the moment we are still working on our plans to implement LXQt in either 15.04 or 15.10.” The Unicorn itself comes with eliminated known bugs[2], software such as Pcmanfm,Openbox and LightDM brought to state of the art technology and new wallpapers which were sent in by Lubuntu users via Flickr [3]. Artwork Director Rafael Laguna explains: “We try to get a little contest going each cycle in which we offer a chance for users to become part of this great distribution.” What is Lubuntu? As the name suggests, Lubuntu is the lightweight of the Ubuntu family. Based on the LXDE technology, Lubuntu takes only 512 MB RAM for simple actions such as surfing the internet or word processing with LibreOffice. Once again Walter Lapchynski: “We do recommend to have at least a Pentium 4 or Pentium M or AMD K8 with 1 GB RAM to prevent advanced internet services like Google+, Youtube, Google Docs and Facebook from failing to work.” [1] https://twitter.com/montyjanderson/status/505362281468006400 [2] For issues and features common to Ubuntu, please refer to the Ubuntu release notes. [3] https://www.flickr.com/groups/lubuntu1410contest/ -- @wxl Lubuntu Release Manager, Head of QA Ubuntu PPC Point of Contact Ubuntu Oregon LoCo Team Leader -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~lubuntu-qa Post to : lubuntu-qa@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~lubuntu-qa More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp