
Lock Screen (lxlock) does not work by default:.(*** NOTE *** Alternate installer does not have this bug). In partitioner ‘select something else’ deleting and adding a partition causes crash.Only the second of two devices available for installation side-by-side.Guided install has a bug when selecting ‘max’ ( 1163908).PPC has several issues and workarounds, please refer to the documentation on the wiki.
If you have a Celeron M or Pentium M CPU without a PAE flag but with PAEĬapability, use fake- PAE according to this linkįor PowerPC, it is known to run on a G4 running at 867MHz with 640MB RAM.įor Intel based Macs, lubuntu should run on all models. If you have a pre-Pentium II CPU, start from the Ubuntu 12.04 mini.iso.Īnd please consider the tips in this link “PAE is provided by Intel Pentium Pro and above CPUs, including all later Pentium-series processors (except most 400 MHz-bus versions of the Pentium M).”
Several fixes for the image viewer gpicview.Ī Pentium II or Celeron system with 128 MB of RAM is probably a bottom-line configuration that may yield slow yet usable system with a reduced lubuntu desktop.ġ3.10 32 bit ISO require your CPU to have Physical Address Extensions, or PAE. Fix a very old bug causing gnome-mplayer to crash with some CPU (P4). Removing catfish, since pcmanfm has its own search utility. Artwork improvements, including new wallpapers, community wallpapers, new icons …. New version of pcmanfm / libfm (1.1.0) including a built-in search utility. See the complete list of current lubuntu applications on Improvements since Lubuntu 13.04 … and, of course, based on Ubuntu 13.10. Firefox, as the new choice for lubuntu 13.10. Openbox, the fast and extensible, default windows-manager of LXDE. Pcmanfm, a fast and lightweight files manager using gio/gvfs. Based on the lightweight LXDE desktop environment. The Lubuntu project wiki contains more information on the project and the applications used available. With many LXDE components, Lubuntu also uses well-known applications, such as Firefox, Openbox, Pidgin, to name a few. Such users may not know how to use command line tools, and in most cases they just don’t have enough resources for all the bells and whistles of the “full-featured” mainstream distributions.
Lubuntu is targeted at “normal” PC and laptop users running on low-spec hardware. The goal is to provide a very lightweight distribution, with all the advantages of the Ubuntu world (repositories, support, etc.). Lubuntu is a flavor of Ubuntu based on the Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment (LXDE), as its default GUI. Julien Lavergne has released lubuntu 13.10.