Weekly newsletter 28th July 2017

Will Cooke will.cooke at canonical.com
Fri Jul 28 15:20:58 UTC 2017


Hi all,

Here's this week's goings on in the desktop:

= GNOME =

We’ve been looking at ways to port the feature of allowing the sound to go
above 100%.  This is needed because some computers (e.g. Thinkpad X220)
have a fairly low volume at 100% and so adding some software amplification
is a useful addition.  While this does already work in GNOME Shell, using
the keyboard volume buttons is still limited to 100% - if you have the
volume set to more than 100% and press the volume up key - the volume would
max out at 100%, and so effectively turn the volume down.

= Snaps =

Promoted gnome-dictionary, gnome-calculator, quadrapassel, gnome-clocks,
and gnome-sudoku to the stable channel.  You can get these fresh GNOME apps
on Xenial with a simple snap install.

We explored adding more themes to the default desktop launcher for Snaps.
However, this substantially increases both the size of the snaps and the
build time.  There is work going on to make theme support “just work”  for
Snaps, so we will focus our efforts on getting that implemented soon.

= Video, Audio & Network =

It seems that our work on getting video acceleration working across the
whole graphics stack is starting to inspire others to work on this complex
problem as well, or perhaps it’s a happy accident.  An engineer at Intel
has proposed some patches to Chromium to get video acceleration working on
Linux:
https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/532294/

Work continues on captive portal work in Network Manager.  This week we’ve
added support for enabling/disabling captive portal support via a d-bus
API.  These patches are pending a review upstream:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785117
Once that’s done we can add a toggle switch to the Control Center.

BlueZ 5.46 is being tested in a PPA before we decide if we’ll upload it to
Artful.

= Updates =

Gtk+3.0 is updated to 3.22.17 in Artful

= LivePatch =

We’ve added code to the root daemon to send events and a user daemon to
listen to those events and display notifications for when Live Patch events
occur.  The architecture and design of this is under review however, and
this is likely to change again in the coming weeks, specifically with a
view to not require another daemon running in the user session.

= In The News =
Linux Action News covers the July bug shakedown and the application survey:
http://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/116841/linux-action-news-11/
https://popey.com/blog/posts/ubuntu-artful-desktop-july-shakedown.html
https://insights.ubuntu.com/2017/07/21/dustin-kirkland-ubuntu-18-04-lts-desktop-default-application-survey/

And so does the Ubuntu Podcast:
http://ubuntupodcast.org/2017/07/27/s10e21-godly-heady-airport/

OMG Ubuntu also covers the application survey:
http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2017/07/ubuntu-wants-know-apps-think-default-survey

That's it for this week.  We're at GUADEC, and if you are too please come
and say hi.

Cheers, Will
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