I'm writing from GMail in a web browser.  I hate using a web browser
for email, and have been using KMail for over 10 years.  I love KMail.

So somewhere after midnight I got the upgrade notification thing from
my running Kubuntu 10.04 LTS that 12.04.1 was available.  Interesting.
 That's the first time in years I've actually gotten one of those
notifications.

I decided to burn some hours fooling around, and give it a go.  How
much breakage could there be?

The clicky link thing failed immediately with error code 1, but no
matter.  I googled it, and figured out I should run some sudo thing
from the command line.

That failed about five times in a row, with several minutes between
each iteration, because I had a lot of trouble freeing sufficient
space on /var, but it did eventually get me there without any
additional issues.

I was pretty impressed that it replaced several thousand packages
without giving me the sense that anything too awful was going to get
broken.  My old installation was, well, old, and full of random little
cruft nuggets.

So that was around 0400 when it first booted, and here it is around
1000 by now, and I'm posting this from my shiny new GNOME Classic
desktop.  I took one look at the non-classic GNOME and could scarcely
decipher the completely mutilated train wreck of a thing it called a
desktop, so I tried the classic version instead, and it looks...
Well, identical.  They're both just spectacularly awful.  I can't
imagine why anybody would use this hideous piece of shit for more time
than it took to find the logout button.

Oh, and every single word I type is in red, because the language stuff
apparently got screwed up in all this too.

As for KDE?  Forget about KDE.  Hours of googling errors later, I
finally gave up and installed GNOME, which is completely unusable, but
at least it doesn't fail instantly with a cryptic error for which
there is no solution in all of google space.

There are many references to the lnusertemp thingie not working, going
back for years and years, but not a single hint or tip contained in a
single one of them was useful.  Not unless you consider it progress
that I graduated from an instant failure to X11 coming up in a black
screen with an endless stream of meaningless errors on the console
anyway.

I've been doing my bit to make all of this better for 10 years now,
and it's extremely depressing to see that everything is just as bad,
if not worse, than it was the first time I tried Linux 11 years ago.
This is progress?  This is a completely and hopelessly broken train
wreck.

I guess I have to figure out how to use the GNOME crap to download and
burn an ISO and do a clean install.  Maybe that will work.

My computer had been up for almost 18 months before I decided to try
upgrading it.  You'd think I would have learned that for every stable
thing in Linux there are 50,000 hopeless train wrecks in between.

I tire of this so-called progress.

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