Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

An error occurred while submitting your form. Please try again or file a bug report. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Will Cooke
on 8 September 2017

Ubuntu Desktop Weekly Update: September 8, 2017


GNOME

GNOME Shell 3.25.91 is now in Artful in preparation for the move to 3.26 before release.

We’re adding notification badge support to the Dock extension. This branch has been proposed to the upstream project and is awaiting review.

We’ve packaged the KStatusNotifier extension to provide support for indicators. This will provide support for apps which use libappindicators which was removed from GNOME 3.26. You can read more about this here.

Didier has also been tidying up the work we did at the Fit and Finish hackfest and you can see more about that here.

We’ve updated the test plan for the Ubuntu Session to ensure we catch regressions and bugs in the default session for new installs and upgrades. You can read the test plan here.

People with non-hybrid NVIDIA graphics cards can not normally use the Wayland session unless they are adventurous and enable KMS. If that is done, however, X11 sessions then break. This week we have incorporated a change into GDM (also proposed upstream) to hide the X11 sessions in this scenario so that we make the system a bit more usable even for people who like to tweak. More information on the bug.

Ubiquity (the Ubuntu installer) now shows the correct theme in ‘install only’ mode, as well as in the live session. Previously it was using GNOME’s default theme “Adwaita”.

Video, Audio, Bluetooth, Networking

We’ve spent time on a deep dive into the performance issues of video playback in Totem. Daniel has tracked down an issue and is working on a fix to reduce CPU usage by approximately 50%.

Out-of-the-box installation of accelerated video drivers (on Intel) is close to completion, pending a bit more checking and packaging updates.

Captive portal detection is now in the Ubuntu default install.

Mobile broadband provider info has been updated from Debian and is now in sync with Debian Sid. Thanks Bhavani. You can see the changes here.

Snaps

Initial support for authenticating using PolicyKit has landed in snapd master. It is now possible to log in to snapd using your username/password on the machine instead of having to have an Ubuntu One account. Further changes are awaiting review to allow you to actually install and remove snaps in this way too.

gnome-system-monitor was uploaded to the snap store.

Libreoffice 5.4.1 is available for testing in the edge channel (but doesn’t work under wayland yet)

Printing

We landed PCLm print output support. With this all known driverless printing standards are supported, making most modern printers work under Linux.

In The News

Phoronix covers the new dock and the theme improvements.

OMG also talks about the improved theme work and the new login screen.

Linux Action News talk about the upcoming Ubuntu Rally.

 

Related posts


Benjamin Ryzman
10 December 2025

Harnessing the potential of 5G with Kubernetes: a cloud-native telco transformation perspective

5G Article

Telecommunications networks are undergoing a cloud-native revolution. 5G promises ultra-fast connectivity and real-time services, but achieving those benefits requires an infrastructure that is agile, low-latency, and highly reliable. Kubernetes has emerged as a cornerstone for telecom operators to meet 5G demands. In 2025, Canonical Kube ...


Maksim Beliaev
10 December 2025

The rhythm of reliability: inside Canonical’s operational cadence

People and culture Article

At Canonical, time is fixed. Ubuntu releases never slip because we run on a strict rhythm: six-month cycles, two-week pulses, and in-person sprints. Every change is deliberate, ensuring stability without losing agility. This discipline is what enables us to provide 15 years of Long-Term Support. Reliability is built into everything we do. ...


Canonical
9 December 2025

Canonical to distribute AMD ROCm AI/ML and HPC libraries in Ubuntu

Canonical announcements Canonical News

Canonical is pleased to announce an expanded collaboration with AMD to package and maintain AMD ROCm™ software directly in Ubuntu. AMD ROCm is an open software ecosystem to enable hardware-accelerated AI/ML and HPC workloads on AMD Instinct™ and AMD Radeon™ GPUs, simplifying the deployment of AI infrastructure with long term support from ...