Another big Linux distribution release is upon us. Ubuntu 24.04 is a new long-term support release from Canonical available today.
Since it's an LTS it will be supported until June 2029. Although Canonical do suggest waiting for the first point release if you're on the previous LTS for the best experience possible. The point release Ubuntu 24.04.1 is due out August 15th, 2024.
Pictured - Ubuntu 24.04 LTS with Dark Sode
I went through various changes in the article going over the recent Beta but to reiterate some of the goodies:
- Higher vm.max_map_count (1048576) to stop various games crashing (matches Fedora and Arch).
- Linux kernel 6.8 with lots of new and improved hardware support.
- Mesa 24.0.5 open source graphics drivers.
- The first LTS release supporting the Raspberry Pi 5 with both arm64 server and desktop images.
- Updated to GNOME 46.
- A more modern slimmer version of the Ubuntu font family is now shipped as standard.
- Lots of software updates like Firefox 124, LibreOffice 24.2, Thunderbird 115 (now a Snap package), BlueZ 5.72, Pipewire 1.0.4, OpenJDK LTS 21 now the default and so on.
- Various security improvements like the Ubuntu kernel now restricting the use of unprivileged user namespaces. I suggest reading a little more into that specifically, as it sounds a bit complicated.
Full release notes on their Discourse Forum.
Will you be upgrading, or switching to Ubuntu for this latest release? Let me know what you're excited about from it in the comments. As a Kubuntu user since I prefer KDE Plasma, I'll be upgrading at some point over the next week.
Thanks for all your hard work at Canonical in midst of demands and accusations (and special thanks for Popey for arranging manual checks to Snap Store apps!)
While I don't use Ubuntu anymore, it's still a distro I appreciate for this reason.
Last edited by Calinou on 25 Apr 2024 at 5:53 pm UTC
Higher vm.max_map_count (1048576) to stop various games crashing
I can't wait to use this feature... in Mint 22
Last edited by MiZoG on 25 Apr 2024 at 5:57 pm UTC
Every Ubuntu LTS release feels special, since it's often treated as the baseline for shipping apps that are portable across distributions. Of course, the oldest still-supported Ubuntu LTS is usually the one developers are targeting (currently 20.04), but in a few years from now, this will be Ubuntu 24.04.
While I don't use Ubuntu anymore, it's still a distro I appreciate for this reason.
I am surprised devs would not be targeting 22.04 instead of 20.04. It is already 2 years old and I would imagine most users have upgraded to 22.04 by this point.
Now I should decide whether to reinstall with base Ubuntu or use Kubuntu. Choices, choices.
Personally I am going to reinstall with the base Ubuntu. I am excited to try out the new Gnome 46.
Kubuntu looked less interesting to me because it is using using Plasma 5 instead of the newer Plasma 6.
Hopefully Ubuntu 22.04 works okay with my old (ancient) video card GTX 770. In 22.04 my monitor goes to sleep after a while and will not turn again and I forced to do a hard restart.
Well you can set it right this minute, nothing stopping you. :)Higher vm.max_map_count (1048576) to stop various games crashing
I can't wait to use this feature... in Mint 22
On another note, I could have sworn I saw at least one game needing a lot higher value than 1M to function properly. Perhaps an outlier...
I've used 16M for a long time and had no issues. Then we saw the Valve guys setting some completely insane value like 2 billion which I really can't recommend, but what the heck do I know.
sadly lubuntu dont have lxqt 2.0 and kde dont have plasma 6, maybe appear for 24.10 around october
Now I should decide whether to reinstall with base Ubuntu or use Kubuntu. Choices, choices.
Personally I am going to reinstall with the base Ubuntu. I am excited to try out the new Gnome 46.
Kubuntu looked less interesting to me because it is using using Plasma 5 instead of the newer Plasma 6.
For me it's kind of weighing plusses and minuses. I seriously dislike the tabletification of the UI that Gnome is doing. KDE is more a proper desktop UI and a much better usage experience. On the other hand, Gnome is just technically better. Everything feels faster and I have way less issues with the compositor. I can't even count how many times KWin restarted itself over the year I used it.
in my case stay using around november and many things runs good
sadly lubuntu dont have lxqt 2.0 and kde dont have plasma 6, maybe appear for 24.10 around october
KDE Neon should have you covered for that.
I am surprised devs would not be targeting 22.04 instead of 20.04. It is already 2 years old and I would imagine most users have upgraded to 22.04 by this point.
It's just been released, so most users definitely haven't upgraded. But history is a good teacher. It's not just Ubuntu but other operating systems have had significant issues in their early post-launch days. As a result, some people prefer to play it safe and either wait for .1 to be released or, at the very least, give it a month or so to make sure that any leftover bugs are discovered by the early adopters, and fixed by the developers.
I am surprised devs would not be targeting 22.04 instead of 20.04. It is already 2 years old and I would imagine most users have upgraded to 22.04 by this point.
It's just been released, so most users definitely haven't upgraded.
They were talking about the two and the four years old release...
Can you screencap with 24.04?
After upgrading to 22.04 from 20.04, I can not take screenshots anymore with the keyboard.. And that is an usefull feature for me.
Can you screencap with 24.04?
shift+prtsc works for me in 23.10, perhaps check that the shortcut haven't accidentally been changed?
Every Ubuntu LTS release feels special, since it's often treated as the baseline for shipping apps that are portable across distributions. Of course, the oldest still-supported Ubuntu LTS is usually the one developers are targeting (currently 20.04), but in a few years from now, this will be Ubuntu 24.04.
While I don't use Ubuntu anymore, it's still a distro I appreciate for this reason.
I am surprised devs would not be targeting 22.04 instead of 20.04. It is already 2 years old and I would imagine most users have upgraded to 22.04 by this point.
Because it's much easier to only change your build environment every 4 years instead of every 2 years.
Last edited by F.Ultra on 26 Apr 2024 at 5:27 pm UTC
Because it's much easier to only change your build environment every 4 years instead of every 2 years.
Not sure about that. You shouldn't sink too deep in the mud...
After upgrading to 22.04 from 20.04, I can not take screenshots anymore with the keyboard.. And that is an usefull feature for me.
Can you screencap with 24.04?
Also upgrade from 22.04 from 20.04 here, print screen button works great, starting a little tool for capturing or recording the screen. You can choose between the whole screen or a selected area.
Because it's much easier to only change your build environment every 4 years instead of every 2 years.
Not sure about that. You shouldn't sink too deep in the mud...
I am a developer of enterprise software so yes this is exactly how at least that part of the industry works and thinks. Not sure what mud you talk about, I have build environments that work for CentOS 4 still due to customer demand :)
Last edited by F.Ultra on 27 Apr 2024 at 4:50 pm UTC
Because it's much easier to only change your build environment every 4 years instead of every 2 years.
Not sure about that. You shouldn't sink too deep in the mud...
I am a developer of enterprise software so yes this is exactly how at least that part of the industry works and thinks.
Yeah. I'm developer of industry software too, and we're doing our best to not do such things anymore. Bits do rot.
Not sure what mud you talk about, I have build environments that work for CentOS 4 still due to customer demand :)
For old software, we're keeping old environments around as well.
Last edited by Eike on 27 Apr 2024 at 7:55 pm UTC
Last edited by TactikalKitty on 28 Apr 2024 at 2:02 am UTC
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