As
it happens with every new release of Ubuntu, it is compared to the last
release. And if the last release is an LTS, a comparison is definitely
required to answer - is the new release good enough to motivate users
leave the long term support version and embrace the latest one? My
current review is focused on the same question.
I am comparing here the latest Quantal
release with the Ubuntu Precise 12.04.1 LTS release, both 32 bit. Also,
point to be considered here is that both releases are just 6 months
apart. So, I wasn't expecting anything radically different between the
two, but just a few incremental innovations.
High level comparison
Ubuntu 12.04.1 ISO (730 MB) is a bit lighter than Ubuntu 12.10 ISO (790 MB). I booted up both of them on my Asus K54C laptop with 2.2 GHz Intel 2nd Gen Ci3 processor and 2 GB DDR3 RAM.
Look and feel wise both the distros seem identical. A high level comparison of Quantal and Precise is given in tabular form below:
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
High level comparison
Ubuntu 12.04.1 ISO (730 MB) is a bit lighter than Ubuntu 12.10 ISO (790 MB). I booted up both of them on my Asus K54C laptop with 2.2 GHz Intel 2nd Gen Ci3 processor and 2 GB DDR3 RAM.
Look and feel wise both the distros seem identical. A high level comparison of Quantal and Precise is given in tabular form below:
Parameters | Ubuntu 12.10 | Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS |
Size of ISO | 790 MB | 730 MB |
Booting time (post installation) | 9 sec | 15 sec |
Desktop | Unity with Gnome 3.6 | Unity with Gnome 3.4 |
Linux kernel | 3.5.0-17 | 3.2.0-29 |
CPU usage (live boot) | 1-10% | 1-10% |
RAM usage (live boot) | 456 MB | 310 MB |
CPU Usage (post installation) | 1-10% | 1-10% |
RAM usage (post installation) | 412 MB | 280 MB* |
Installation time (with 1 MBPS connection) | 30 min. | 30 min. |
Wifi detection | Immediate | Immediate |
Touchpad detection | Works by default | Works by default |
Ease of use | A bit on the slower side | Is actually faster than Quantal |
Eye candy factor | Looks awesome! | Looks awesome |
Repository | Ubuntu Software Center 5.4.1.2 | Ubuntu Software Center 5.2.5 |
File Manager | Nautilus 3.4.2 | Nautilus 3.4.2 |
* With 12.04.2 update, the resource utilization is now even better with 230 MB RAM & 1-10% CPU usage with system monitor running. Even the stability has increased and Unity is actually better now.
Further details available in my review of Ubuntu 12.04.2 LTS.
So, net-net, Quantal has a faster booting time, Unity 6.8 interface actually loads faster than the older (5.2?) Unity interface. Unity seems more refined and a lot more stable in Quantal than Precise. Linux kernel and Gnome shell, too, are upgraded to the latest available release. But, Nautilus is not! It is the same 3.4.2 though 3.6 is available! Possibly Nautilus 3.6, widely disliked, didn't gel well with the Unity interface and hence, developers decided to retain 3.4 version. However, all these upgrades come at a cost - significantly higher resource utilization! Precise is a lot more lighter and less taxing on resources than Quantal. Personally, I felt Precise is a bit faster than Quantal - though you won't feel the difference if you are using a high end machine. Installation process is pretty much the same and takes the same amount of time - no change there!
Application-wise both are pretty similar - only Quantal has all latest versions of the same applications that Precise has, namely: Firefox 16.01, LibreOffice 3.6.2, and Thunderbird 16.01. For movies, Ubuntu is using Totem; for photography, it's Shotwell; and for music, it's Rhythmbox. Anyway, Firefox and Thunderbird upgrades are possibly not that significant as they are upgraded separately to the latest available version irrespective of which Ubuntu release you are using! So, no big change there in.
Incremental changes
Apart from differences in the Gnome, Linux and application versions, Quantal brings in one major change and a few subtle changes from Precise.
Major changes:
New "Web Apps": These are applets that connect the local operating system to web and cloud content. In addition to providing online results to search content, these can add webmail and social networking notifications to Ubuntu's mail menu. Now this search is integrated to Dash and you can see the results I got when I searched for Justin Timberlake songs in my computer. In addition to what was there in my system, it gave me results from Ubuntu music store and Amazon as well.
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
Web apps are currently offered for 40 sites like Amazon, Facebook, Twitter, etc. and can be installed by accessing the websites in Firefox and accepting the automatic installation request. By default, Ubuntu 12.10 has the following web apps:
- Amazon app: I won't call it an app, it is merely a bookmark on the Unity sidebar. Once you click it, it will open Amazon.com site in Firefox browser.
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
- Ubuntu Music Store: Again similar to Unity one and Amazon bookmarks, Ubuntu music store is integrated to the Unity sidebar to be accessed through Firefox. Its content is rich and I could search a lot of Indian artists as well including the legends like Kishore Kumar. Similarly, popular social networks like Facebook and Twitter can also be saved on Unity sidebar as bookmarks.
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
- Online integration of social network and email: In Quantal, Ubuntu achieves a lot more integration of social and email networks with a single point of sign in.
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
- Preview mode: Once you right click an application icon on dash, it takes you to preview mode. Currently it looks like at work in progress phase and doesn't offer much!
- New Grub2 boot loader: This is specifically designed for Windows 8 OS, which has UEFI secure boot feature that doesn't allow dual boot with any other OS. Hence, if you are already tired of Windows 8 Metro interface and want to install a Linux OS alongside, you'll need to install Quantal; Precise won't work on your system!
- Remote Desktop Protocol: It's a new feature and allows users to set up a RDP account to access any remote machine added to the account. Very good, but hardly any use for me at this point in time.
- No Unity 2D: Till Precise, there was an option of Unity 2D for machines with limited resources. Now, it has been dropped.
- Python 3: Still, Python 2 is supported.
- New Dash photo lens along with the already existing music and video lens and Gwibber lens, with a changed Gwibber icon.
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
- LVM support: Now you can install in a logical volume and increase its size, if required, without needing to reinstall the entire system again.
Well,
honestly I don't care about the upgraded applications, I can add
quantal ppa's and install them in Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS. Already I added
GIMP 2.8 and planning to add LibreOffice 3.6. So, the question boils
down to the incremental features like web apps, LVM support, RBP, Python
3, etc. I used them quite for last two days and in my opinion, Ubuntu
12.10 integrates social media much more than its predecessors. Of
course, preview and dash lens are promising and can potentially
integrate my system to web in a much better way in future. Unity is much
better and smoother to use in Quantal. Unity is getting good with every
release but it remains inflexible as ever - you simply can't change the looks!
So, based on all these facts and numbers that I gave above, it depends on users taste whether s(he) would like to upgrade or not. Definitely Quantal has some significant improvements, especially in social network integration and web apps, over Precise and is graphically more appealing. However, there are some drawbacks as well like too much of Amazon, more resource consumption, a bit slower than Precise, among others.
Personally, I feel all of these incremental innovations as work in progress for bigger things to come in future. I'll wait for the future and give Ubuntu 12.10 a miss for now, sticking to Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS. We'll see where it goes possibly in 13.04 or 13.10.
So, based on all these facts and numbers that I gave above, it depends on users taste whether s(he) would like to upgrade or not. Definitely Quantal has some significant improvements, especially in social network integration and web apps, over Precise and is graphically more appealing. However, there are some drawbacks as well like too much of Amazon, more resource consumption, a bit slower than Precise, among others.
Personally, I feel all of these incremental innovations as work in progress for bigger things to come in future. I'll wait for the future and give Ubuntu 12.10 a miss for now, sticking to Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS. We'll see where it goes possibly in 13.04 or 13.10.
Hi, Arindam!
ReplyDelete"Which Ubuntu should I install?"
For me: NONE! No *buntus! ;D
Hahaha ,,, good one :)
DeleteCiao a tutti (Hi to everybody!).
ReplyDeleteMy opinion about "Which Ubuntu should I install?". I think that, at the moment, Ubuntu is one of the linux distro easier to install and, after, richest of software. Then, the choice between 12.04 or 12.10; till now, I'm always curious about the latest news and if I want to know something more technical... I wait for your "A non-techie's view...".
If I may ask... about the upgrade of kernel; is always required to install the newest version (eg: from 3.5 to 3.7) or upgrade the version that I have?
That's my big question... I see that something change between 12.04 and 12.10 but what about the kernel? Why upgrade the same version when is available the new one?
Ciao
Lorenzo
Hi Lorenzo,
DeleteI guess, with every new kernel release, new features are getting added like improved security features, more efficiency and better driver support along with most importantly, stability. Given Ubuntu 12.04 has kernel 3.2 and Ubuntu 12.10 has kernel 3.5 (possibly Ubuntu 13.04 will have kernel 3.7!), each new release brings in better hardware support, more stability and better performance (at least that is the expectation :)). For example, Ubuntu 12.04 will get new upgrades for Linux kernel 3.2 but it won't be upgraded to kernel 3.5.
However, kernel is just a part of the overall user experience. At an user level, I won't bother much about which kernel I am using. The overall user experience will be of more importance to me. Here still Ubuntu 12.04 is better than 12.10.
Regards,
Arindam
you talk about adding ubuntu 12.10 ppa's to 12.04 to upgrade the applications. Can you explain how you do that please?
ReplyDeletesorry for my bad english I am Belgium.
Type in the terminal
Deletesudo leafpad /etc/apt/sources.list
then you'll see several precise ppa's added there. Below these, paste the following:
deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ quantal main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ quantal-updates main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ quantal-security main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://archive.canonical.com/ubuntu/ quantal partner
deb http://packages.medibuntu.org/ quantal free non-free
Save it and then do a system update and upgrade by:
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade
Now, if you open Ubuntu software center, you'll see the 12.10 version of applications visible in the software center.
Thanks.
Thanks for the fast reply
DeleteWould you recommend Linux Mint or Ubuntu with Cinnamon? I have been using Ubuntu with Cinnamon, mainly because the Ubuntu repositories have privative applications like Nitro... But on Ubuntu there's no way to install the Linux Mint Mint-X GTK theme, because it's GTK 3.4 and Ubuntu 12.10 uses GTK 3.6...
ReplyDeleteSo, which one should run Cinnamon better?
I checked both Ubuntu 12.10 with Cinnamon & Linux Mint 14 with Cinnamon - integration and performance of Linux Mint is better. So, my preference is Linux Mint Cinnamon over Ubuntu with Cinnamon. On Repos, Linux Mint repo has Ubuntu integrated to it. For private applications, you have to just un-comment the third party repo ppa from Linux Mint sources.list.
DeleteThanks,
Arindam
Thanks!
DeleteWhich line should I uncomment? I have the Canonical lines uncommented but nitro still isn't available...
Hello, Arindam!
ReplyDeleteHave you tried elementary OS? - http://elementaryos.org/journal/when-its-ready
If so, what do you think of it?
Thanks,
Dan
Hi Dan:
DeleteI did a detailed review of Elementary OS and found it to be both aesthetically pleasing and functional. Please find my review in the link given below:
http://mylinuxexplore.blogspot.in/2012/12/elementary-os-02-beta-1-review-who.html
Thanks.
Arindam
I am new to Linux, which one should I install?
ReplyDeleteInstall Ubuntu 12.04.2 LTS if you have a modern Corei3 or better. If you are running a dual core, possibly Xubuntu 12.04.2 or Lubuntu 12.04 will be better for you.
DeleteHi Arindam,
ReplyDeleteWhich one is suitable be on core2duo 4 GB RAM ?
I am looking to install MS Office and MS Outlook 2010 too via playonlinux or wine (whichever works find for me)
Regards,
Vikas
Hi Vikas,
DeletePlease give a shot to Ubuntu 12.04.2 LTS. It should work well on your system. I have seen Outlook icon getting created in playonlinux, but never tried it as such :). Ideally if the installation is correct, outlook should work.
Thanks,
Arindam
Thanks for the very quick response Arindam. I am also trying Crossover too for along with PlayOnLinux and Wine.
DeleteI have been supporting/playing with RHEL only for last 7 years, never ventured into any other Linux flavor. But now I have decided to ditch Windows on my office Laptop and try my hands Ubuntu/Mint.
The first thing which came into my mind was Outlook. Lets see how things goes for me :)
Thanks again for your suggestion.
Regards,
Vikas
You are welcome. On MS Office installation via PlayonLinux, one piece of advice from my personal experience is not to get frustrated if things don't work in a couple of efforts. It takes at times 5-7 efforts to successfully install MS Office :).
DeleteThanks,
Arindam