Here is the eighth issue of This Week in Lubuntu Development. You can read the last issue here.

Translated into: español

Changes

General

Lubuntu 18.04.1 has been released!

Lubuntu 16.04.5 has been released!

We’re taking a new direction.

The past couple of weeks have been focused on more desktop polish and some heavy infrastructure and project changes.

Unfortunately, a lot of the fixes we’ve been working on are blocked by the in-progress Qt 5.11.1 transition. It has been uploaded to the cosmic-proposed pocket, where it awaits automated testing before it becomes generally installable. More technical details about that process are available here.

This transition is also being done in Debian Sid as well.

Huge thanks to UBports for contributing financially to allow Lubuntu contributors to spend time on this! You can help sponsor their work (and therefore, some of our work) here.

Desktop Experience

Calamares

We replaced some awfully complex one-liners with more robust lines, thanks to KDE Neon. This also fixed Calamares so it can be installed on BIOS, non-secure boot UEFI, and secure boot UEFI computers, something that was not previously possible.

By default, GRUB is now installed to /boot/efi/EFI/ubuntu instead of /boot/efi/EFI/lubuntu .

instead of . Make /bin/bash the default shell.

Lubuntu Seed

Miscellaneous

SDDM 0.18.0 has been uploaded to Debian Sid and Ubuntu Cosmic. Packaging changes were made to make it easier for other Ubuntu flavors and derivatives. Instead of hardcoding the Breeze theme in, we now have a theming system in Ubuntu very similar to Debian’s, where a package can install their SDDM theme into the ubuntu-theme directory in a postinst script. This fixes CVE-2018-14345; we’re looking into cherry-picking this patch into previous stable Ubuntu releases.

Thanks to Nate Graham for the pointer, we backported fix for a bug which visually affected KDE-based programs under HiDPI screens.

Infrastructure and Project Changes

Lubuntu Blog

The official Lubuntu blog is now being kept under Git in our Phabricator instance. All blog posts from here on out will be written in Markdown and then published using the scripts there.

We’re (slowly) working on converting all of the posts over to Markdown and keeping them there.

Translations for each post are kept under the l10n directory of each post (with the file being named like LANG_CODE.md ) and the localization code is put in a YAML list in the info.yaml (see the 16.04.5 announcement for an example). This is because Weblate does not support translations for Markdown at the moment.

Lugito

In select repositories, Lugito will automatically comment on bug reports that are in commit messages with a message that the fix is in progress.

Miscellaneous

As always, feedback is appreciated.

Bugs

Incoming / Fix needed

Solved

Want to help?

One of the easiest ways to get involved with Lubuntu and help us make this release the best one yet is to test Lubuntu and report bugs.

You can learn how to write an excellent bug report that helps us solve your issue quicker by reading this guide.

More information about testing on Lubuntu can be found here.

Translations

We have a Weblate instance available for translations. Right now there are not many strings to translate, but as time goes on, we will add more.

Do you speak a language that isn’t available to translate there? Let us know in the comments or elsewhere and we will add that language.

Here are the translators who have contributed so far:

Henrik Christiansen (Danish)

Hans P. Möller (German, Spanish)

Daniel Absmeier (German)

Luís Rafael Gomes (Portuguese)

Lucas A. V. Dantas (Portuguese (Brazil))

Marcin Mikołajczak (Polish)

Tony Cuesta Escobar (Catalan)

This week we have added Norwegian Bokmål! Thanks to Einar Mostad for translating.

Thank you for your valuable contributions!

Spanish group

We have a Lubuntu Spanish Telegram group that has as many members as our (English) Development group at the time of writing!

This is a general-purpose Spanish-only Lubuntu group for enthusiasts and contributors alike. Feel free to join!

Thanks to Wolfenprey, the newly-appointed head of the Lubuntu Spanish Team, for driving this!

Roadmap

You can find the Cosmic Cuttlefish release cycle here.

You can stop expecting features on August 23, 2018 when Feature Freeze is put into effect. The beta is slotted for September 27, 2018 and the final release date for October 18, 2018.

Here are some major, Lubuntu-specific features you can expect before the release:

The beginnings of a welcome center (more details to come).

Calamares polish, including an additional module for more packages to be installed.

A plan for replacing Openbox, the current window manager used in Lubuntu.

Our artwork team is still working on Lenny, and we’ll let you know when we have Lenny Cuttlefish. 🙂

In the Press

This section is for highlighting exceptional Lubuntu coverage since the last issue.

English

Spanish

Did you find any other exceptional stories about Lubuntu? Let us know and we’ll be happy to include them here.

Contact us

Follow us on Twitter for the latest Lubuntu updates! We’re working on having tweets automatically propogate to our Mastodon account for people who prefer not to use Twitter.

Feel free to get in touch with us here for support, and for press/marketing purposes or if you have a private inquiry, you can get in touch with Release Manager Simon Quigley here.