Hi :) A lot of work has gone into Gnome & Unity recently with new releases already done or imminent. It's going to take a while for those to settle down again. Oddly, KDE is completely stable right now so you might be better with a K desktop environment, if you can bear that Windows look. (Allegedly Win7 copied a lot of KDE elements, specifically the new "Start" button) . Ubuntu 11.04's implementation of Gnome DE is very rough compared to Gnome in their previous releases. So the resolution issue is not a huge surprise. Disappointing but not a surprise.
Have you heard that Mark Shuttleworth made a very pro-Lubuntu speech possibly signalling that Lubuntu (with the LXDE) might become an officially supported branch, like Kubuntu (KDE) and Xubuntu (Xfce). Hmmm, that's a thought. I've not heard of a new release of Xfce for a while so that must be rock-solid by now (unless you dislike blue so much that you can't change the colours fast enough). Obviously this doesn't just affect Ubuntu and does have implications for other distros such as openSuse, Mageia/Mandriva, Mint, Fedora etc as they use the same DEs but Ubuntu's officially recognised family is what i am most familiar with at the moment. Regards from Tom :) ________________________________ From: webmaster for Kracked Press Productions <webmas...@krackedpress.com> To: users@libreoffice.org Sent: Tue, 3 May, 2011 22:58:08 Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] do not upgrade to Ubuntu 11.04 with standard resolution widescreen monitor On 05/02/2011 02:58 PM, Tom Davies wrote: > Hi :) > Ok, the trick is to use a LiveCd/Usb to install but when youget to the > Partitioning Sectiopn choose the last option at the bottom of the screen to > do >a > "manual partitioning" sometimes called advanced and now in 11.04 called > "Something else" lol. > I use the Live DVD mostly to install it new. The issue I had was during an upgrade from 10.10 to 11.04. I just wish I knew why it did not except the resolution that was being used for 10.10. Even without having the nVidia driver[s] "active", 10.04 LTS defaulted to the 1366 x 768 resolution of the Acer monitor. Why 11.04 did not, I only have to guess. I also planned on no using Unity as well, since I prefer GNOME over what was written about Unity. I use GNOME as the default with some KDE packages installed as well. > It has to re-scan your drives which takes a slightly worrying time. Select all > the same partitions such as / and /home but make sure they are all UNticked in > the "Format?" column to make sure no partition get re-formatted. The swaps >will > get reformatted anyway but just make sure your /home or / doesn't get > reformatted. > > Once the install has completed look at the hidden folders in your /home/users > folder to check which programs you had installed and re-install any that are > missing. > > See, it's quite straight-forwards really so i don't know why people claim to >not > know of this trick. > Regards from > Tom :) <snip> -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to users+h...@libreoffice.org Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/www/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to users+h...@libreoffice.org Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/www/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted