-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 micah anderson: > > I can't wait for the day when Google accidentally pushes an update > out that actually bricks their devices, because when that happens, > there is no way to "simply reinstall the OS from scratch". -- > Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password at: > https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech >
Funny you should mention that. I have a Galaxy Nexus and I accepted an OTA update 4.2 or 4.2.1 I forget. Anyway that particular device had file system encryption enabled. After the update it was in a permanent reboot loop and I had to re-flash the entire device with the stock ROM. Fortunately I'd backed up my data with Titanium Backup so restoration was easy. Another handset I have also a Galaxy Nexus without encryption upgraded properly without any issues. Likewise with a Nexus 7 I also own. Maybe this was an example of a Google update going awry. I do agree though Ubuntu wouldn't be the best solution (although I do use Kubuntu on my workstation). I know my way around Linux, and it's not mission critical. If it screwed up I'd have time to fix it, others in hot areas trying to do a news report might not. :) The other thing is Unity is distribution specific, Ubuntu's packages are based off Debian testing/unstable. This is actually one of the reasons I like KDE very much because they haven't aligned themselves with a linux provider. In my opinion it also contains the right amount of ease of use and reconfigurability to remain useful, unlike some other environments aimed at being "easy to use". For stable desktop usage something like CentOS or Debian stable would probably be better. That said hardening those systems does take some knowledge of Linux. I guess if you really wanted to use Ubuntu, you'd have to stick to LTS releases those tend to be a fair bit more conservative. - -- scarp | A4F7 25DB 2529 CB1A 605B 3CB4 5DA0 4859 0FD4 B313 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQIcBAEBCgAGBQJRE32mAAoJEF2gSFkP1LMTW5AP/2Haa+jqdQBzB+3L455kji6K d9b7CuFJrbC2JFogT631wVS2ZH+yiImHDXHDfYlvtgO8PvwHW3eztrdB01bQaG9e VqI4tCvw8pA7zRc+V0fOhjeaRxP5LLPlLkN9vF8cv4xjtD73L81ysvwLUQigr35X MsW2cn2rcG8mAZU60l7DYSZpazNaP2NmNhKzy/ulBpMq9JPYeJ697VIGJsfI3Aw2 LEHn94NhwCLccXonHAn+V61EtebkP3s9QWkbI642htZFWHGjOiOHOcQG6ofr7Vyi lSBYlvCL1pnwKZwH1a2PL+wUZ5mAihj4vMo+IxxiQ86RxzehWSg++2llyNV8qufC 4LWZz2WpAtNkYAJaoEenrPkyULWPMlzSa8qKxr6LvFWgRFeNDcplvZIUOxYVu2bm JAy99Iydt+kf799tfmJzoQ7BRVhtxAo0nCEh39WeUr7e+8Jg4pLuN7SSkqLVeMmw J4jsaqEfmCR46LnNPcarDH9IpID+nfYcmSD6INLq+Y5SW5jY4NsDs/zEXeFG4m+u sUSXAx+i72prsugg92kAcGCPV7EcrN87Et5iF6g8BvCwII2pHLem5lg2eqhdY6ud gjMNiEeTwvpWRbSt6//n6PNflCcRXK4Z6FwyWatC3zFtSaHv63t5FVVb3s5UwPh0 eiSUp/4ej9f/fnbdTCFp =OT+R -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password at: https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech
