The first daily ISO images of the upcoming Ubuntu 13.04 (Raring Ringtail) operating system were made available by Canonical on the regular FTP website. Ubuntu 13.04 daily builds are now available for download from Canonical's server.
Ubuntu 13.04 development has started and daily build images are now available for interested users. These are early development builds not recommended for production systems.
Starting with Ubuntu 13.04, there will be no Alpha releases.
I'm trying to upgrade my 13.04 daily builds using ZSync, but it seems to refuse to do anything except download the relevant .iso:
Code:
#################### 100.0% 579.6 kBps DONE
reading seed file raring-desktop-amd64.iso: **********************************************************************************************************************************************************
As we’ve announced yesterday, the development cycle for the next major release of the Ubuntu Linux operating system will start today, May 2, 2013.
latest daily builds are dated 02-Feb-2013 both 32 and 64 bits are a disaster,neither one boots up to install.
not the usb created or the dvd burned.
i do this almost everyday to check if they work or not
real testing here
Attached Images
100_2713.jpg (80.1 KB)
I am thinking about dumping the 486 builds. The 486 images have not been downloaded very much, they received just 2.5% of downloads, compared to 69.5% for 686 and 28% for amd64. Approximate download figures for Statler to date are:i486 downloads: 6,435
i686 downloads: 174,273
amd64 downloads: 70,257Not having the 486 images would release some space on the file servers.
I have some related questions:
For 12.04 (and in general), are the beta releases more stable/less buggy than the daily builds?
If the answer to 1 is yes, then if I install the beta and apt-get upgrade, will I remain at the "stability level" of the beta, or of the daily builds?
At this point, is there any advantage to installing the beta over installing a daily image?
(Background : I am debatin
The first CrunchBang 11 "Waldorf" development builds are now available for testing. For anyone unaware, these are the first builds to be based on Debian Wheezy sources. Wheezy is the current testing branch of Debian and therefore is likely to experience changes, bugs and breakages.
Few days, canonical anounced and released the new Ubuntu Gnome 13.04 Raring ringtail daily images. It available in 32-bit and 64-bit images available for download and testing.