Time to warm up your little board as the Raspberry Pi OS has a big new releasing up for those of you sticking with the official Debian Linux based system. Sounds like it's a pretty huge update with a lot of work that went into it, which is great as the Raspberry Pi is a wonderful device for all sorts of uses (and yes gaming too!).
For starters, this finally brings with it a major update to Chromium with version 84. They mentioned it took longer than they wanted but getting video hardware acceleration integrated takes a lot of work. Thanks to that you should see smooth video playback in browser and they've also paid special attention to the likes of Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, and Zoom due to the pandemic. This is the last release they support Flash with too.
One big background change is their move to the PulseAudio sound server. Since Linux audio can be a little…complicated, PulseAudio deals with most of the interfaces available and puts it under one roof. Most normal distributions use it by default and so with this change Bluetooth audio on the Raspberry Pi OS should now be easier too. They're also automating some of the Bluetooth stuff to make it simpler for users.
They're also now including Printing support out of the box, along with CUPS (Common Unix Printing System) and the system-config-printer UI to make it a smoother experience.
On top of all that they've improved accessibility support with the Orca screen reader, there's new system options to deal with units that have an LED like the Raspberry Pi Zero or the new Raspberry Pi 400 as well. If you missed it, they also recently announced a cheap and cheerful Raspberry Pi 4 Case Fan for $5 and the system settings have been updated in this new OS release so you can configure it.
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Really nice to see the RPi team expand all areas of the system, as it's become a much more general-purpose unit for computing considering the amount of power it has now for the still very low cost.
Let us know in the comments what distribution you're using if you have a Raspberry Pi and what you've been doing with it. I am tempted to hop on over to Ubuntu, now it's officially supported.
Quoting: nadrolinuxThey switched to PulseAudio, meanwhile Fedora planning switch from PulseAudio to PipeWire in the next release, so good timing. IMO they could wait, switch directly to PipeWire too and totally abandon PulseAudio.
For the moment gamers should use Pulseaudio as long as pipewire is not fully supported by all game related app.
Some games and wine does not support fully Pipewire, you can find a lot of issues reported by gamers on different forum.
Last edited by legluondunet on 4 December 2020 at 3:04 pm UTC
Quoting: Nick_AvemStill no true 64-bit support which is somewhat of a pain
You can still install Ubuntu or Arch which provide 64 bits OS for pi4.
Cool updates to the Pi OS though. I have a Pi myself.
Quoting: SolarwingWell I bought Raspberry pi 4 with 8 G ram when I heard about Ubuntu 20.10 desktop support on Raspberry 4. And experiences? Really confusing.You can do basic things like use firefox to view the net and write text documents on ubuntu 20.10 ofc. But still it seems that proper support for Raspberry 4 is still lacking.Or I don't know how to configure it. When I tried to install updates for example it told me that there was no internet connection on Raspberry 4.Even if I had one. And Ubuntu 20.10 desktop was a bit slow but what else can you expect?Nevertheless Raspberry 4 has potential and if I were you, it would be better to wait couple of months and when the support is better and some problems are fixed then if you have Raspberry 4 try to use ubuntu desktop on it.My guess is the slow feeling is your memory card. The CPU and RAM should run Ubuntu pretty great I think.
Quoting: legluondunetQuoting: Nick_AvemStill no true 64-bit support which is somewhat of a pain
You can still install Ubuntu or Arch which provide 64 bits OS for pi4.
There is also a 64 bit version of Debian for the Pi, but I haven't tried it.
Quoting: GuestThank you pulse for now deciding to output audio on a completely different path and not actually save settings when I change them.
(I'm one of those people who has neverending problems with pulseaudio....just lucky I guess.)
Pulseaudio not easily saving settings changes is probably my biggest current peeve with the program.
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