Considering that the interface of Ubuntu12.10 has been frozen, A Ubuntu12.10 is installed for trial. Due to the blocking of a well-known high-performance computer, tea cannot be downloaded to the daily build version of CD. It can only save the country by curve: first install a 12.04 and then replace the 163 source sudoapt-getdist-upgrade. As a result, the following Oolong image is displayed: (after the upgrade to 12.10, it is still shown as 12.04 & hellip; success) 1. Unity
Considering that the Ubuntu 12.10 interface has been frozen, A Ubuntu 12.10 is installed in tea for trial. Due to the blocking of a well-known high-performance computer, tea cannot be downloaded to the daily build version of CD. It can only save the country by curve: first install a 12.04 and then replace the 163 source sudo apt-get dist-upgrade. So the following Oolong event appears:
(Figure: after upgrading to 12.10, it is still shown as 12.04 ...... Token)
1. Unity
1. Appearance
In Ubuntu 12.10, the appearance of Unity has not changed significantly. I think 12.10 is like 10.10, as an improved version of LTS.
Similarly, the tangle of 12.04 is also brought to 12.10:
The filter function is retained. Tea thinks this is a very tangled feature. Because when looking for different software, you must click out the filter representing the previous type of software; otherwise, the two software types are displayed at the same time, which often leaves me confused when looking for software. In addition, the Panel is still divided into "recently used", "installed", and "software available for download", which is very difficult, why can't you let me see all the software at once ?? Tea thinks that "software available for download" can disappear directly and never use it. You can merge "installed" and "recently used" to display all the software in one panel at a time, then, display the frequently used software in front of it.
This is the box that appears when switching the work area. We can see that, due to the obstruction of the Unity panel, the software that maximizes the center is not fully occupied by the entire switching box. This problem also exists in 12.04, but this problem does not occur when you switch the work zone through the buttons on Launcher in 12.04:
2. Lock Screen
Before the release of 12.04, Canonical clamored for replacing the ugly GNOME-style screen lock interface with LightDM, but no LightDM screen lock shadow was found until the 12.10 page was frozen.
3. Stability, smoothness, and resource occupation
Compared with Unity 12.04, 12.10 does not seem to be smoother. When only one terminal runs the top Command, the two are equally different. But it feels a little more stable. After a while, there was no vicious crash. In addition, the dynamic fuzzy algorithm of the Dash panel is still resource-consuming, and the experience is inferior to that of Windows 7.
4. Compiz
Compiz provided by the system is very concise ". Tea has some plug-ins installed, such as scaling and reversed colors (the reversed color function is particularly useful in the dark, equivalent to a night mode ). When the plug-in is opened or closed, Compiz becomes stuck and collapsed.