Release Announcement Martin Wimpress

Join the Mutiny!

After six months of tireless work we present Ubuntu MATE 17.10, by far the best release we’ve ever produced. I’d like to extended my sincere thanks to everyone who has contributed to this fine release. The development theme for Ubuntu MATE 17.10 has been delivering several different desktop layouts each providing a distinctive workflow. Checkout MATE Tweak to access to these layouts and join the Mutiny!

Shipping snaps by default - Check!

- Check! Feature rich file manager - Check!

- Check! Slick Greeter? - Check!

- Check! Global Menus? - Check!

- Check! Heads-up Display (HUD)? - Check!

- Check! Super key to active menu launchers? - Check!

- Check! Functional alternative to Unity 7 for those that want it and a traditional desktop for those that don’t? - Check!

- Check! Read on to find out more…

We mean it, keep reading! Don’t just go hunting for the download button and skip over our most glorious release notes.

What changed since the Ubuntu MATE 17.04 final release?

We’ve really been burning the midnight oil for the last six months. This is what has been updated or added.

Panel Layouts

We surveyed our community about potentially changing the default UI. The feedback was mixed when factoring in the results from Twitter, Google+ and Straw Poll.

But it was the comments from our users that were most compelling. We decided to leave the default alone, a personally difficult decision, and turned our attention to rationalising the panel layouts and thoughtfully reconfiguring them. Each panel layout is distinctive and now provides a different desktop workflow:

Mutiny mimics the Unity 7 interface

mimics the Unity 7 interface Cupertino provides something similar to macOS

provides something similar to macOS Redmond will be familiar to Windows users

will be familiar to Windows users Pantheon a hybrid for long time desktop Linux users who want some modern conveniences

a hybrid for long time desktop Linux users who want some modern conveniences Contemporary a blend of the best of the old and the sprinkle of the new

a blend of the best of the old and the sprinkle of the new Netbook people still use them and this layout is for them

people still use them and this layout is for them Traditional just like your Dad remembers it, and still the default

Here are a few screenshots to give you a feel for how things look.

Mutiny Panel Layout Cupertino Panel Layout Redmond Panel Layout Pantheon Panel Layout Contemporary Panel Layout Netbook Panel Layout Traditional Panel Layout

Global Menu

Global Menu support is now much improved, even compared to 17.10 Alpha 2, and available via the Contemporary, Cupertino and Mutiny layouts which can be activated via MATE Tweak. Fully functional with GTK, Qt, LibreOffice, Firefox/Thunderbird, Google Chrome, Electron and others. You can now make more of your available screen space while using Ubuntu MATE.

NEW in 17.10 Beta 1 - Thanks to the excellent testing feedback we’ve had since 17.10 Alpha 2 we’ve made the Global Menu far more reliable and now operate correctly regardless of whether the application was launched from the terminal, menu or launcher.

Super key

Complete Super key support is available from several of the panel layouts. We’re thrilled to welcome Victor Kareh to the team who has been busy patching MATE Settings Daemon, MATE Menu, Brisk Menu and MATE Dock Applet to make the Super key work the way you’d all expect. This means Super can be used to activate the menus/launchers and any other key-bindings that include the Super key also continue to function correctly.

MATE Dock Applet, used in the Mutiny layout, also includes launching or switching to docked items based on their position using in the dock using Super + 1 , Super + 2 which will be familiar to Unity 7 users. Super + L is also recognised as a screen lock key-binding along with the usual Ctrl + Alt + L that MATE Desktop users expect.

Heads-Up Display

This is something we started during Ubuntu MATE 16.10 and never perfected, but is now ready for prime time. A favourite of Unity 7 users is the Heads-Up Display (HUD) which provides a way to search for and run menu-bar commands without your fingers ever leaving the keyboard.

So if you’re trying to find that single filter in Gimp but can’t remember which filter category it fits into or if you can’t recall if preferences sits under File, Edit or Tools on your favourite browser, you can just search for it rather than hunting through the menus.

Just like Global Menus the HUD is currently only available via the Contemporary, Cupertino and Mutiny.

HUD improvements since 17.10 Alpha 2

We’ve improved the HUD significantly since Alpha 2 thank to all the great testing feedback.

NEW in 17.10 Beta 1 - The HUD is now activated by just pressing Alt , as you would expect in Unity 7.

- The HUD is now , as you would expect in Unity 7. The HUD is now reliably activated. In Alpha 2 is only responded to about one third of requests.

NEW in 17.10 Beta 1 - The HUD is now locally integrated, so that it overlays on top of the activate application.

Locally integrated rationale

The purpose of the HUD is to keep your fingers on the keyboard and improve the efficiency in driving the menus for keyboard centric users. We’ve locally integrated the HUD for similar reasons, if you’re looking at an application why move the HUD to the top of screen away from where your eyes are already focused. Keeping the HUD within the context of the active application eliminates refocusing your attention to a different part of the screen, particularly helpful for users with high resolution or multi-display workstations.

Indicators

We’ve been improving Indicator support from release to release for some time now. But with in Ubuntu MATE 17.10 many of the panel layouts offer a complete line up of Indicators, all of which are fully compatible with MATE. The default Indicators are:

Optimus (only available if you have nvidia prime capable hardware and drivers)

Bluetooth

Network

Power

Messages

Sound

Session

MATE Tweak

MATE Tweak is your gateway to activating different user interface layouts and exploring the contrasting ways you can run Ubuntu MATE. MATE Tweak has been given a coat of fresh paint and adds a couple of much requested features.

Saving your own custom panel layout using a name of your choosing.

Prompts before executing operations that could wipe your custom, but unsaved, tweaks.

NEW in 17.10 Beta 1 - You can also delete previously saved custom panel layouts.

When activating the Compton compositor you should now experience an entirely tear free experience that is optimised for gaming. Thanks to Perdro Mateus from Linux Game Cast podcast for his help test the various GPU, IGP and driver combinations. #LGCCares

While we were tuning compositors we gave some love to Compiz, which now uses less RAM and fixes a number of niggles.

Community Wallpaper

The Ubuntu MATE community participated in a wallpaper competition and have already voted for their favourite. Congratulations to Richard van Liessum for creating the winning entry! You have to install Ubuntu MATE 17.10 to see the full line up of new artwork though ;-)

Slick Greeter

NEW in 17.10 Beta 1 - We’ve switched to Slick Greeter which still uses LightDM under the hood but has a much nicer look and feel.

File manager

NEW in 17.10 Beta 2 - We’ve added some new features to Caja, the MATE file manager.

Added Advanced bulk rename.

Added Hash checking.

Replaced caja-gksu with caja-admin . The obsolete gksu is being removed from Debian and we are aligning with that objective by replacing the use of gksu with PolicyKit.

with . Updated Folder Color. Now supports custom emblems and properly integrates with the Ubuntu MATE default icon theme.

Snaps installed by default

NEW in 17.10 Final - Ubuntu MATE is pioneering pre-installed snap support by being the first distro to ship a snap by default. For the Ubuntu MATE 17.10 release the pulsemixer snap, a console based mixer for PulseAudio, is installed by default.

Pre-installing snaps by default in the desktop images was an outcome of the Ubuntu Rally that took place in New York. Installing the pulsemixer snap by default in Ubuntu MATE 17.10 is being used as a pilot and what we learn will help the Ubuntu Desktop team with their efforts to ship snaps by default in Ubuntu 18.04.

Adding pulsemixer to the default Ubuntu MATE 17.10 has not significantly affected the size of the iso image. We chose pulsemixer because it is a small, useful application, that has never been available in the Debian or Ubuntu archives.

The bit no one reads but probably should

Here’s the full run down of what changed since Ubuntu MATE 17.04:

Ubuntu MATE now features a Global Menu implementation provided via vala-panel-appmenu and most of the Ubuntu indicators are now available with MATE compatibility.

Upgraded to MATE HUD 17.10.9-0ubuntu1 which fixes broken event replay due to synchronous key grab.

17.10.9-0ubuntu1 which fixes broken event replay due to synchronous key grab. Upgraded to MATE Optimus 17.10.1-1ubuntu0 which now features nvidia hardware detection, including external Thunderbolt connected devices.

17.10.1-1ubuntu0 which now features nvidia hardware detection, including external Thunderbolt connected devices. Upgraded to Brisk Menu 0.4.5 has improved Super key support and numerous fixes, plus a few settings that MATE Tweak can manipulate to augment how Brisk is presented in different layouts.

0.4.5 has improved Super key support and numerous fixes, plus a few settings that MATE Tweak can manipulate to augment how Brisk is presented in different layouts. Upgraded to MATE Menu 17.10.8-0ubuntu1 now has better relevance of launcher search results, can now optionally search Duck Duck Go, has numerous fixes and that all important Super key was improved.

17.10.8-0ubuntu1 now has better relevance of launcher search results, can now optionally search Duck Duck Go, has numerous fixes and that all important Super key was improved. Upgraded to MATE Dock Applet 0.79 has improved Super key support and several bug fixes.

0.79 has improved Super key support and several bug fixes. Upgraded to Ubuntu MATE Welcome 17.10.15 has been stocked with even more new applications for you to discover and The all new Software Boutique is not ready yet, so this is the Boutique you know and love. Just better stocked.

17.10.15 has been stocked with even more new applications for you to discover and Added PulseMixer snap to the default install.

Removed Synapse and HexChat from the default install.

Added Redshift , which adjusts the colour temperature of your screen according to your surroundings, is installed by default but not enabled by default.

, which adjusts the colour temperature of your screen according to your surroundings, is installed by default but not enabled by default. Dropped caja-gksu and migrated gdebi to PolicyKit - Thanks Simon Quigley caja-admin has replaced caja-gksu gksu is being removed from Debian so we are aligning with that objective by removing gksu from Ubuntu MATE.

and migrated to PolicyKit - Thanks Simon Quigley Caja now includes the GtkHash and Caja Rename extensions .

. New Ubiquity Slide Show Completely redesigned to introduce users to more of the features unique to Ubuntu MATE. Added Ubuntu MATE logo to Ubiquity .

Patched unity-gtk-module to fix ghosting artefacts when dragging and dropping icons.

to fix ghosting artefacts when dragging and dropping icons. Many of the Ubuntu MATE defaults have been changed or updated Replaced lightdm-gtk-greeter with slick-greeter . Added keybindings for Shift + Print Screen to grab a screen area when taking a screenshot. Added defaults for Chromium , which will show the Ubuntu MATE Start page, should you install it. Added sane defaults and tookit integration for smplayer , should you install it.

MATE Desktop 1.18 has seen many updates, with lots of bugs fixes. Nothing new, just be more stability. Some long standing bugs with systemd integration and DBus session activation have been fixed.

The Ubuntu MATE themes have been improved via the release of ubuntu-mate-artwork 17.10.10 Several improvements Plymouth splash screens, both text and graphical varieties. Add missing panel-grid to Radiant-MATE. Improve linked button styling for message dialogs . Add syntax for panel-grid image to support MATE 1.20. Improve clock-applet-button so it is consistent with other buttons . Add top border-radius for .titlebar > headerbar - workaround for incorrect upstream use of the GTK API Improved notebook (tab) styling . Updated GtkSourceView themes (used by text editors). Add bold style classes for Global Menu . Fix color of grey-out arrows in menus. Fix padding of primary/secondary image in GtkEntry. Improve menu items by adding slightly more padding. Add a minimal padding to na-tray-applets. Add the Ubuntu MATE logo as the distributor-logo. Fix incorrect CSS syntax for Caja. Fix world-map border color in clock-applet. Fix GtkScale slider mouse-selection if slider is out of range. Fix height of headerbar for metacity-theme-viewer - workaround for incorrect upstream use of the GTK API Fix border color of scrollbars. Remove obsolete chrom{e ium} styling. Remove unwanted backdrop states.

via the release of 17.10.10 Experimental HiDPI support is a little less experimental.

…and a whole lot of other little improvements and fixes.

The above in addition to the general changes that Ubuntu 17.10 introduced.

Download Ubuntu MATE 17.10 We’ve even redesigned the download page so it’s even easier to get started. Download

Upgrading from 17.04

To upgrade on a desktop system:

Open Software & Updates from the Control Centre

Select the 3rd Tab called Updates.

Set the Notify me of a new Ubuntu version dropdown menu to For any new version.

Press Alt + F2 and type in update-manager -c into the command box.

+ and type in into the command box. Update Manager should open up and tell you: New distribution release ‘17.10’ is available.

If not you can also use /usr/lib/ubuntu-release-upgrader/check-new-release-gtk

Click Upgrade and follow the on-screen instructions.

Known Issues

Here are the known issues.

Ubuntu MATE

Nothing critical.

Ubuntu family issues

This is our known list of bugs that affect all flavours.

The Ubiquity installer may auto select US keyboard layout To work around this manually, select the correct regional keyboard layout for your computer.

Ubiquity is uninstalling chosen locale language packs After a successful installation, your computer may not have all the appropriate language packs installed. To work around this issue, open Language Support in the Control Centre and follow the prompts to automatically install the required language packs.

Ubiquity slide shows are missing for OEM installs of Ubuntu Budgie and Ubuntu MATE To work around this, run apt install oem-config-slideshow-ubuntu-mate in the OEM prepare session.



You’ll also want to check the Ubuntu MATE bug tracker to see what has already been reported. These issues will be addressed in due course.

Feedback

Is there anything you can help with or want to be involved in? Maybe you just want to discuss your experiences or ask the maintainers some questions. Please come and talk to us.