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Contributor papukaija




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Desktop loading in the background, while waiting for single user to log in  
Written by Carroarmato0 the 24 Aug 08 at 16:48. Category: Brainstorm. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
If you are the only user on your pc, the system could already start loading your desktop in the background while waiting for you to login for instant use.

See the 13 comments (latest comment the 6 Sep 08 at 16:28) >>

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Fix Suspend and Hibernate   forum
Written by tighem the 28 Feb 08 at 17:22. Category: System. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
Suspend and hibernate still seems to be a big issue based on forum posts. Really focus on fixing it, even with proprietary drivers.

See the 245 comments (latest comment the 6 Sep 08 at 01:02) >>

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Offer to create a separate /home partition and use existing ones  
offer to create a separate /home partition (#156177)

In : ubiquity (ubuntu)
Status : Confirmed
Importance : Wishlist
Assignee :
10 comments, 5 subscribers and 0 duplicates
bug
Written by frandavid100 the 22 Mar 08 at 10:55. Category: Installation. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
A separate partition for /home has been proposed for a long time in the forums. It implies some risks, though, so based on disk size Ubiquity should estimate the amount of space that should be left for / or whether a separate partition should be made at all. Then...

-The first time an user installs Ubuntu, he is given the option to set a separate /home. This option is selected by default, with a size for each partition based on a sane guess:

http://img155.imageshack.us/img155/7958/firstinstallaro2.png

-Of course, he can just choose not to set a separate /home. This option will be selected by default if the results of the system test suggest that's the best thing to do.

http://img186.imageshack.us/img186/6498/firstinstallbfs6.png

-Manual install is also possible. Selecting it greys out everything related to separate /home, since it's implied that the user doesn't want to be guided.

http://img177.imageshack.us/img177/7976/firstinstallcvc2.png

-If the user set a separate /home, the next time he installs Ubuntu a new option appears and is selected by default, prompting to use the existing /home partition. All other options are still available, though.

http://img155.imageshack.us/img155/9034/secondinstalliq1.png

[....]

Developer comments
I have always used a separate /home as well. Keeping /home after reinstallations is one major reason which has been mitigated by ubiquity preserving /home now (I didn't test that yet, though).

Either way ubiquity (the Live CD installer) should point this out clearly.

The other reason is that I want to use it from multiple Linux installations, but that's mostly a geek use case.

I have no idea what size / and /home should have by default,
I always use 6 GB for / and the rest for /home, but if someone wants to use huge databases, that'll break.

Thus I think we should stick to our current partitioning and rather improve the UI for keeping /home. There is always manual partitioning for people who actually care.

See the 46 comments (latest comment the 5 Sep 08 at 18:49) >>

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Clean up Preferences and Administration.  
Launchers under "System > Preferences"
and "System > Administration" have
similar names, leads to confusion. (#174277)


In : ubuntu
Status : Confirmed
Importance : Wishlist
Assignee : Oumar Aziz OUATTARA
20 comments, 7 subscribers and 0 duplicates
bug
Ubuntu

In :  
Priority : Undefined
Definition : New (Needs guidance)
Implementation : Unknown
Assignee :
spec
forum
Written by writser the 28 Feb 08 at 16:49. Category: System. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
First of all: What is the difference between Preferences and Administration? For example: why do I see 'Encryption and Keyrings' in Preferences and 'Keyring Manager' in Administration? What is the difference between 'Default Printer' and 'Printing'? Why do I have to disable the Tracker under Sessions and not under Search and Indexing? And why are these menu's so large? I have 24 items in Preferences (they don't even fit on my screen!) and 18 items in Administration. To put all this stuff in a popup menu is bad interface design imho. Besides, the number of option should be much smaller. A few suggestions:

- Merge 'Screensaver', 'Screen Resolution' and 'Screens and Graphics'.
- Merge 'Network', 'Network Proxy' and 'Network Tools'.
- Merge 'Update Manager, Synaptic Package Manager, Software Sources'.
- Merge 'Encryption and Keyrings', 'Authorizations', 'Keyring Manager'.


Below are all settings I can visit via the System menu. This is just way too much.


-- Preferences --
Universal Access
About Me
Appearance
Bluetooth
Default Printer
Encryption and Keyrings
Keyboard
Keyboard Shortcuts
Main Menu
Mouse
Network Proxy
PalmOS Devices (I don't have one)
Power Management

[....]

See the 93 comments (latest comment the 3 Sep 08 at 21:09) >>

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Speed Up Ubuntu-Gnome boot time   forum
Written by Arioch the 28 Feb 08 at 15:26. Category: System. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
I guess everybody has experienced the rather long boot up times in Ubuntu (particularly with laptops). I know they are already working on it, but the change from feisty to gutsy was a pain in the ass in terms of boot up speed.
A default WinXP installation beats Ubuntu's boot up time by far!! That shouldn't be allowed fellas!!

I therefore propose to the development team (both Ubuntu and by extension Gnome)to work on the improvement of boot up times in Ubuntu systems.

See the 90 comments (latest comment the 3 Sep 08 at 12:50) >>

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Power Management  
Ubuntu

In :  
Priority : Low
Definition : Pending Approval (Needs guidance)
Implementation : Slow progress
Assignee : Amit Kucheria
spec
Written by jsmidt the 28 Feb 08 at 16:49. Category: Others. Related to: Nothing/Others. In development
Ubuntu needs to go green. Powertop, Lesswatts and other tools have finally hit the Linux scene to pave the way for better power management. It needs to be said, "if you want your battery to last longest, or have your energy bill be the lowest, you better use Ubuntu Linux."

See the 71 comments (latest comment the 3 Sep 08 at 12:46) >>

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Provide a simple graphical interface to manage _any_ type of network connection  
Ubuntu

In :  
Priority : Medium
Definition : New (Needs guidance)
Implementation : Unknown
Assignee :
spec
Written by Alan Pope the 28 Feb 08 at 13:50. Category: Internet & Networking. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
At the moment it's possible to manage traditional wired and WiFi connections using Network Manager. To connect via a modem, a 3G/GPRS card, over bluetooth to a cell phone or via USB to another device requires that the user installs extra packages, and does a fair amount of configuration that isn't found in Network Manager.

A single unified tool should be provided which allows the user to connect to a network (or internet) via any supported method. It would also be useful to provide an extension to this tool to manage firewall rules and network connection sharing.

See the 103 comments (latest comment the 3 Sep 08 at 12:33) >>

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Shutdown and update  
Written by on5sl the 27 Aug 08 at 15:26. Category: System. Related to: Update manager. New
When you have a slow computer, you really don't want to update while working. It slows down everything you do. So i would like to see an option in the shut-down menu update and shut-down. Or when there are new updates detected, you already can choose for installing them on shut-down.
A lot of people i know would find this very handy, especially the ones I've convinced to use ubuntu because it stays fast instead of microsoft.

this is not the same idea as http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea 4511

See the 15 comments (latest comment the 29 Aug 08 at 14:02) >>

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Ubuntu should recognize hardware changes  
Written by nxvl the 28 Feb 08 at 19:11. Category: System. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
When i change some hardware pieces i need to configure them manually, ubuntu should recognize there has been a hardware change and configure it.

See the 29 comments (latest comment the 24 Aug 08 at 11:35) >>

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Allocate Programming resources towards Grub2 for rapid completion  
Written by Auzy the 6 May 08 at 05:04. Category: System. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
It has become obvious that Grub2 needs some extra programming help, as Grub-legacy will no longer be adding new features and the end of Grub2 is nowhere in sight. Canonical should allocate 1 or 2 programmers for a few months to help complete grub2 quickly, so that X86 support might be complete in time for Interpid Ipex.

One could argue that the boot loader is the most important part of the operating system, because if it doesn't work properly (which it hasn't been for some of us), it can prevent every OS from working on the computer. We should treat it with respect, and help them. Despite grubs importance, programmers generally enjoy working on more exciting projects like Gnome or KDE, which is one reason why development is slow.

Grub2 fixes a lot of previous brainstorm ideas including many booting issues (like mine), so completion would close a lot of bugs, whilst also making Ubuntu more user friendly because Grub2 deals with booting issues better.

Voting for this ensures that Canonical allocates some developers to the Grub2 project, which would be a big win for both Ubuntu and linux in general!

Planned Features for Grub 2
* Rescue mode saves unbootable cases. Stage 1.5 was eliminated.
* Dynamic loading of modules in order to extend itself at the run time rather than at the build time.
* Graphical interface.
* Fix design mistakes in GRUB Legacy, which could not be solved for backward-compatibility, such as the way of numbering partitions.
* Scripting support, such as conditionals, loops, variables and functions.
* Cross-platform installation which allows for installing GRUB from a different architecture.
* Internationalization. This includes support for non-ASCII character code, message catalogs like gettext, fonts, graphics console, and so on.
* Portability for various architectures.
* Modular, hierarchical, object-oriented framework for file systems, files, devices, drives, terminals, commands, partition tables and OS loaders.

[....]

See the 17 comments (latest comment the 15 Aug 08 at 12:44) >>

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Enable OpenID for Ubuntu Sites  
Launchpad should support OpenID (#1169)

In : launchpad-foundations
Status : In Progress
Importance : Medium
Assignee : Francis J. Lacoste
57 comments, 37 subscribers and 0 duplicates
bug
Launchpad itself

In :  
Priority : Essential
Definition : Approved (Needs guidance)
Implementation : Implemented
Assignee : Francis J. Lacoste
spec
Written by redyaky the 28 Feb 08 at 14:22. Category: Others. Related to: Nothing/Others. In development
Allow users to log into Ubuntu Forums and other Ubuntu sites (such as ubuntu brainstorm) using their OpenID.

Developer comments
Work is being done along to make that possible (though I don't know an ETA).

See the 18 comments (latest comment the 8 Aug 08 at 00:05) >>

implemented
Already done!
(3253)
Codec Manager  
Written by intarwub the 29 Feb 08 at 00:32. Category: Multimedia. Related to: Nothing/Others. Already implemented
As a user I want to be able to listen to audio or watch videos with the least amount of setup. I would like to have a single interface (Codec Manager) that lists all of the most common audio and video formats and shows me if I am missing the necessary codec for playback.

Use Case: Enable MP3 playback.
Precondition: MP3s are not currently playable.
1. User logs into the system.
2. User opens the Codec Manager.
3. System displays a list of common audio/video formats.
4. User selects MP3s.
5. System displays some info about MP3s.
6. System displays a list of available codecs.
7. User selects a codec and clicks Apply.
8. System downloads and installs the selected codec.
9. System informs the user when completed.

Other possible features:
- Display a list of audio/video types that are missing codecs.
- An auto-setup function, that grabs the recommended codec for all formats.

Audio and Video formats that should be supported:

Audio:
- MP3
- OGG
- AAC
- FLAC
- Real Audio

Video:
- MP4

[....]

Developer comments
Attacks the problem from the wrong angle. I don't think many users would care about a "codec manager", that sounds very much like a geek tool. Heck, *I* wouldn't care about a codec manager. I care about watching my videos. :-)

To me this already seems solved very elegantly with the existing easy-codec-installation.

See the 65 comments (latest comment the 4 Aug 08 at 00:53) >>

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Eject CD/DVD  
Written by jhanely the 30 Apr 08 at 18:27. Category: System. Related to: Nothing/Others. In development
Currently (Hardy Heron) if the user tries to eject a CD which is locked by a process, a pop-up appears saying:

Cannot unmount volume

An application is preventing the volume 'CDROM Volume' from being unmounted.

Sometimes it may be obvious what to do to get your CD back. Close down an app, or whatever. Sometimes there will be no visible application windows, and no way for an average user to get the disk out short of rebooting.

I propose adding a list of locking processes to the pop-up, with an option to close them and eject the disc.

CONS: Users might kill something they didn't mean to.

PROS: The user has complete control, as it should be.

Developer comments
Upstream bug (GNOME #528559) has a patch in discussion.Volunteering to work on it.

See the 11 comments (latest comment the 28 Jul 08 at 13:42) >>

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DSA/RSA/SSH bug - how to FULLY fix it. Upgrade is NOT enough.  
ssh-vulnkey doesnt check all keys. Also, it would
be nice to extend the warning message. (#230632)


In : openssh (ubuntu)
Status : Won't Fix
Importance : Undecided
Assignee : Kees Cook
2 comments, 2 subscribers and 0 duplicates
bug
Written by limcore the 15 May 08 at 08:19. Category: Security. Related to: Nothing/Others. New
After this famous SSH/DSA/RSA bug,
users think that after upgrading affected packages (openssh server etc) they are safe.

This is unfortunately not fully correct.

Many users do not realize that:

1) Systems into which user logged into using weak dsa kay may have been compromised already. Also, your own box, if you had ssh enabled using public key.

2) Need to check (and regenerate if broken) ALL your keys. Also in non standard locations or on USB keys etc.


Therefore my idea is to:
- Warn users about above
- also, it may be nice to path ssh application to always check the key that is about to be used.








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