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回報翻譯問題
April when 13.04 is out which everyone is going to upgrade to anyway (and they should, kernel 3.8, full gtk3 and many other improvements to stability and speed).
* It's LTS so it will be supported for longer
* It doesn't come with the controversial Amazon adds
* There are no real significant differences between it and 12.10
You should install the Linux 3.5 kernel, however, which I don't think comes with 12.04 (it used 3.2 when I installed it, but that may have changed now with the .2 update)
Not yet for me, AMD gives no support for kernels higher than 3.5 yet.
*LTS is for workstations and servers, not for gamers :) Gamers want constant improvements to performance which can be found only in latest versions etc, especially now when linux gaming is growing so fast.
*Amazon Lens can be disabled with one click in System > Privacy or by uninstalling
*True, that's why there is no point with rolling back to older version, better wait for 13.04
12.04 has 3.2 kernel, 12.10 has 3.5.
Oh! – Just in the case that some programs got improvements in between - otherwise it should be fine. - And also only if you would like to keep your home-files… If you start fresh and clean with a new installation all should be fine (but then you have some work to configure everything just again as it should ;) - well, probably …)
source: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/PrecisePangolin/ReleaseNotes/UbuntuDesktop
Oh, nice :)
That is NOT correct. While LTS releases are supported for 5 years, the regular releases get 18 months (3 Ubuntu upgrade cycles - always gets you to next LTS at least) of support/updates.
If everything works fine for you on 12.10 it makes no sense to change anything.
And we'll have to see how LTS vs interim releases works out for Steam on Linux.
I expect most players to upgrade every 6 months. Especially as the proprietary drivers also update in time for the 6-month cycle.
12.10 works fine. I have Steam running on it since the second round of closed beta invitations.
I like latest and greatest packages and 12.10 is first Gnome Remix spinoff (I love Gnome Shell), works great so far :)