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Today is the big day for Canonical and their partners. Ubuntu 20.04 'Focal Fossa' is officially released as their new LTS (Long Term Support) edition along with other desktop flavours like Ubuntu MATE. If you're moving from the previous LTS, you're in for quite a shock. It's a massive release.

Why use a LTS release over the interim Ubuntu releases? The key point is stability. These releases are supposed to be what you go for if you want the best possible experience.

Some of the main changes include:

  • Linux Kernel 5.4 and Mesa 20.0 - bringing with it plenty of new hardware support.
  • Feral GameMode integration (more info).
  • Software Updates: Firefox 75.0, Thunderbird 68.7.0, LibreOffice 6.4.
  • ZFS storage upgrades.
  • OEM logo now displays during boot up.
  • Snap Store replaces the Ubuntu Store.
  • A theme refresh (pictured below) with a Light / Dark switcher.

Pictured: A shot to show the difference in the Light / Dark theme.

You can find out more and download from the below links. Your choice depends on which desktop environment you wish to have. Each edition also has their own release notes and highlighted features, with a lot of work going into each one to improve the out of the box experience:

Something else that's worth a read is Canonical's recent survey for 20.04, which they've now published online. Nice to see them be open about things, quite refreshing indeed.

I have to say, I've been running Ubuntu 20.04 during the development cycle as a daily-driver on my work laptop and it hasn't failed me. It's smooth, responsive and it looks fantastic now. They did a great job on tweaking the look. Most importantly though, it's been as stable as a rock. Possibly my favourite Ubuntu release yet.

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toivop Apr 24, 2020
I have read that prime-select doesn't work properly so if you have Nvidia hybrid graphics it would be a good idea to hold off upgrading
TheSHEEEP Apr 24, 2020
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I do run standard Ubuntu 18.04 on my laptop (need one machine to have the most common Linux), so I guess I'll upgrade that to 20.04 eventually.

No need to hurry, though, I didn't have any problems with 18.04 to begin with.
mcphail Apr 24, 2020
I like snaps. They're convenient to install, use and create. There are still a lot of problems with the confinement, performance and ecosystem but these are improving. Canonical know, from their own survey, that about one third of users are positive about snaps, one third neutral and one third negative. If you follow the forums and IRC channels you'll find they are trying hard to improve things.

Thousands of people run the snaps I've packaged, including games like Wolfendoom: Blade of Agony, Quake Shareware and Tales of Maj'Eyal. Some people love them, some people hate them. Some of the hatred comes from my incompetence in packaging and some comes from flaws in snap technology. But we're all learning and trying to improve. This is a community, after all.

Upgrading to 20.04 will break some games (such as those linking to older versions of libssl) and Steam Controller users may be dismayed to find that sc-controller no longer runs. This is because of the deprecation of python2: something Canonical has no control over. I'm working on an sc-controller snap which will allow it to run on 20.04. It requires a bit of new plumbing to come to snapd before it will be ready to use, but the snapd guys are working on this. As I said, this is a community.

Being a community, it would be nice if we could be kind and respectful to each other. Ubuntu (and its flavours and its remixes) offers plenty of scope to run without snaps. It offers plenty of scope to use PPAs, Appimages and Flatpaks. Maybe the whole snap experiment will be abandoned further down the line but that will be dependent on what the community wants. Canonical are asking them and are being transparent about the results. Is that worth the anger? Let's enjoy what has been created, uninstall whatever annoys us and thank our respective $DEITYs that we have the freedom to do so.
Cyba.Cowboy Apr 24, 2020
Quoting: tuubiBrowsing by category in mintinstall seems to list apt packages only, and flatpaks are under their own special category. Searching for packages does list both. All in all, seems like a fairly passive way to "push" flatpaks, and not really comparable to what Canonical/Ubuntu is doing with snaps, IMHO. It's nice that they're there as an option though.

That's more or less how Ubuntu does it... The only real difference is that the Ubuntu Development Team have chosen to replace certain software with the "Snap" version rather than the "Debian" version (where as with Linux Mint, you actually need to choose to replace some of the default programs with the "Flatpak" version).

But even then, I'd hardly call that "Canonical forcing Snap down your throat"...


Last edited by Cyba.Cowboy on 24 April 2020 at 2:14 pm UTC
Mountain Man Apr 24, 2020
Quoting: CatKiller
Quoting: eldakingI'll wait a bit anyway and probably will update to 20.04 if it isn't too obnoxious to avoid snaps for most things, or if at least it works well.

sudo apt purge snapd will get rid of snaps entirely. Easy enough.
Yes, but my understanding is that will also get rid of your ability to easily install certain software packages. In my case, I use spek to analyze audio files, but it can only be installed through snap now.

Although now that I've actually tested it, it seems that spek is extremely slow to start and doesn't even work (it says "The file contains no audio streams" when I know that's false). So hooray for snap? :p


Last edited by Mountain Man on 24 April 2020 at 4:07 pm UTC
slaapliedje Apr 24, 2020
Quoting: SchattenspiegelStill don't see a usecase for snap (or fatpak) on the desktop that would not be better (less time, less space, more reliable functionality) solved by Appimage if you do not get a native package. Trying to push things onto me made me quit the Windows OS and keeps me away from the Gnome DE, just saying Canonical. On the other hand: I like the new icon theme. ;-)
Yeah, I use the Cura Appimage for 3D Printing, it works fine. I'd prefer one updated through apt myself, as that would put it in my Gnome Launcher, instead of me having to dig into Nautilus to click on an Icon, though I used to do that on the Atari ST back in the day, so not sure how that's any different :P
kaiman Apr 24, 2020
Quoting: SchattenspiegelStill don't see a usecase for snap (or fatpak) on the desktop that would not be better (less time, less space, more reliable functionality) solved by Appimage if you do not get a native package.
Amen! I've been distributing Linux binaries in AppImage format for quite a while, and I really like how they're small and self-contained, with no daemon required in the background for them to run.

I had looked at both snap and flatpak as alternatives, but the whole idea of distributing binaries in the first place was for stuff to just work across distributions with minimal dependencies.

In general though, I'll want to use the regular binaries, managed via the package repository. With the image based applications, if some library they include has vulnerabilities, all the applications need to be patched and updated individually. With regular programs, the library in question can be updated and all the dependent applications are golden.
Redface Apr 24, 2020
Quoting: toivopI have read that prime-select doesn't work properly so if you have Nvidia hybrid graphics it would be a good idea to hold off upgrading

Do you have any links to bug reports or forum posts regarding that?
prime-select via command line or via the mate-optimus seems to work without problems for me.

It could be some problems for only certain hardware, or the users had something broken before or its widespread problem, a link to a report would be nice.


Last edited by Redface on 24 April 2020 at 6:08 pm UTC
Redface Apr 24, 2020
Quoting: eldaking
Quoting: CatKiller
Quoting: eldakingI'll wait a bit anyway and probably will update to 20.04 if it isn't too obnoxious to avoid snaps for most things, or if at least it works well.

sudo apt purge snapd will get rid of snaps entirely. Easy enough.

Sure, but will any default programs be removed by that - like say, the calculator? (I legit don't know what would happen to installed snaps)

And will the Ubuntu repositories contain non-snap alternatives for stuff? If they stop maintaining stuff in the repos because they now use snaps, it becomes impractical to use the distro without it. (While, presumably, other distros could still have those normally... at least for now)

The calculator will be switched back to the .deb on upgrade, or installed on a new install, same as the other packages that where used to test snaps as the system monitor.

Only the software store will be installed as a snap as default now. And chromium is only as a snap in Ubuntu now, but available in PPAs as a deb, but that is not a default package.

The software store is also available as a deb, so all default programs can be installed without snap, but its possible one wants to use other programs only available as a snap.
Redface Apr 24, 2020
Quoting: The_Aquabat
Quoting: CatKillerI read it but their reasoning was that chromium usage isn't that high (so the test wouldn't inconvenience too many people) and that a browser is exactly the kind of thing that you'd want to be run in a sandbox. That decision doesn't affect me, personally, since I use chromium from a PPA anyway for the hardware video decoding.

I also use chromium pa, some little annoying thing is that every time I launch it , I get a message of chromium missing Google API dev keys. Do you know a way of getting rid of those messages?

Quoting: scratchi
Quoting: eldakingIt actually looks like a meaningful improvement in most aspects; there were many important updates to hardware support and big applications since 18.04, which I mostly had to backport or install in some way (newer mesa fixed several games, newer KDE had some nice features and look for those of us that use Kubuntu, newer libre office had a few important features, and I expect the version of wine in their repositories will be less awful). Plus generally looking nice and bugfixes, as always.

But the way they keep trying to push snaps almost makes me want to not update at all, or switch distros permanently. I used to assume that snaps weren't that bad, but after actually having more contact with them I was shocked by how horrible it is. First, snaps had ridiculously bad performance problems; so it was not even a "non-technical users wouldn't even notice" - people did notice, for example how ridiculously slow chromium was. Second, as a system it is way too closed and centralized, which is particularly bad for something that is intended to work across distros (other distros can't just host their own snap repositories, the backend isn't FOSS, and it is entirely developed by Canonical without any cooperation with other distros). And third, Canonical are actively pushing for it to replace other alternatives, which means we can't even ignore it if we don't like it.

I'll wait a bit anyway and probably will update to 20.04 if it isn't too obnoxious to avoid snaps for most things, or if at least it works well. But frankly, I'm already looking to jump boat from Kubuntu, and particularly for something better to recommend for newbies.

Yea, I agree, snaps suck. I have a use case where I run Ubuntu vdis in Docker container (full UI in docker, it's sick! :D ), and as of 19.10, they no longer have a chromium deb package. If you apt-get install chromium, you get the snapd migration package (it's called something along those lines, i don't remember anymore) and there is no official deb.

The thing is, because snap is basically a container, you can't install it in a Docker container...the snapd service doesn't even work in docker. There are some hacky ways to get it working, but chromium still does not launch. So this was a big problem for me.

To work around this, I have a separate pipeline that builds chromium from source and spits out a deb that I host in a different location (should probably use aptly to host a local repo, haven't got there yet) and then my docker image pipeline fetches the deb from there and installs it. Basically a shitload of work needed to be done to get chromium working in Docker. I haven't tested 20.04 yet, but if they start doing the same for other applications I use in the VDI, I'll probably move to debian or something.

You could either use a PPA for chromium, or maintain your own.

As far as I know there is the PPA from the chromium developers which just has the latest development version, and then the latest released from popos, but that is not in a ppa of its own but together with a lot of other popos packages. (I have not checked popos 20.04, but that is the case for popos 19.10)
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