Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Will Cooke
on 16 June 2017

Ubuntu Desktop Weekly Update: June 16, 2017


GNOME

  • Further theme fixes have been made in Artful to get GNOME Shell and Ambiance looking just right.
  • Network Manager is updated to 1.8. It is currently awaiting the resolution of some test issues before it migrates to the release, but that should take place in the coming days.
  • GNOME Terminal received a small fix to make it easier to create custom terminals. Andy Whitcroft from the kernel team blogs about it here

LivePatch

Work is continuing on the Live Patch client UI. We can now install, enable and disable the Live Patch Snap from the Software Properties window. Next up will be showing notifications when the Live Patch service is protecting your computer.

Snaps

  • GNOME Software now works with the Snap Store to show promoted Snaps, or “Editors Picks”. This is released into Artful and other supported releases will follow.
  • We debugged and fixed some desktop Snap theming issues. There were some file sharing changes needed in snapd in the “Unity7” interface (which will need renaming) and these are now merged. More fixes to the desktop launcher scripts were done to provide further default theming, and these were added to the GNOME Platform Snap as well.
  • James Henstridge has been working on getting Snaps to work with Portals, and he’s making great progress. You can read more about it, and how to test it, here:
    https://forum.snapcraft.io/t/xdg-desktop-portal-proof-of-concept-demo/1027

QA

We’re reviewing and updating the desktop test plan. Once this is finalised (due next week) we’ll be announcing a call-for-testing programme with small, quick tests you can perform regularly and feedback your findings. This will help us to ensure the overall quality of the desktop images is kept high throughout the development cycle. More on this soon.

We’re also running our automated tests on real hardware with Intel, Nvidia and AMD graphics cards to cover the main bases.

Video Acceleration

We’re working through all the various links in the chain to get to a situation where we can playback video using hardware acceleration by default. At the moment our focus is getting it to work on Intel graphics hardware, but there are a few issues around using Intel’s SDK with open-source LibVA, but these are being worked on upstream:

https://github.com/Intel-Media-SDK/MediaSDK/issues/10

In the meantime you can read the current state of play here: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/IntelQuickSyncVideo

Updates

  • Chromium 59.0.3071.86 was promoted to stable, but we found a couple of issues. They’re being worked on right now and the test plan has been updated to catch them in the future.
  • Chromium beta is 60.0.3112.24 and dev is 61.0.3124.4.
  • Network Manager 1.8 has been merged from Debian into Artful.
  • BlueZ 5.45 made it out of testing into Artful.
  • Evolution got updated to the 3.24 series.

News

Related posts


Lidia Luna Puerta
12 February 2026

When an upstream change broke smartcard FIPS authentication – and how we fixed it

Ubuntu Article

This is the story of how Canonical’s Support team provided bug-fix support: we tracked down an upstream change in OpenSC that inadvertently broke FIPS compatibility, coordinated with upstream developers across distributions, and delivered both a hotfix and a proper universal solution. ...


Benjamin Ryzman
12 February 2026

Open platforms, edge AI, and sovereign telco clouds: Ecrio & Canonical at MWC Barcelona

AI Article

Building telco clouds with open source At MWC Barcelona 2026, Canonical is demonstrating how telecommunications operators and enterprises can design and operate a cloud on their own terms: sovereign, cost-effective, and built on open platforms that span from core data centers to the intelligent edge. One of the demos is the result of Cano ...


Benjamin Ryzman
11 February 2026

What is RDMA?

AI Networking

Modern data centres are hitting a wall that faster CPUs alone cannot fix. As workloads scale out and latency budgets shrink, the impact of moving data between servers is starting to become the most significant factor in overall performance. Remote Direct Memory Access, or RDMA, is one of the technologies reshaping how that data moves, ...