05 May 2018
Index of /ubuntu-mate/releases/18.04/release
Ubuntu MATE 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver)
Select an image
Desktop image
The desktop image allows you to try Ubuntu-MATE without changing your computer at all, and at your option to install it permanently later. This type of image is what most people will want to use. You will need at least 384MiB of RAM to install from this image.
There are two images available, each for a different type of computer:
64-bit PC (AMD64) desktop image
Choose this to take full advantage of computers based on the AMD64 or EM64T architecture (e.g., Athlon64, Opteron, EM64T Xeon, Core 2). If you have a non-64-bit processor made by AMD, or if you need full support for 32-bit code, use the i386 images instead. Choose this if you are at all unsure.
32-bit PC (i386) desktop image
For almost all PCs. This includes most machines with Intel/AMD/etc type processors and almost all computers that run Microsoft Windows, as well as newer Apple Macintosh systems based on Intel processors.
A full list of available files, including BitTorrent files, can be found below.
If you need help burning these images to disk, see the Image Burning Guide.
01 May 2018
BionicBeaver/ReleaseNotes - Ubuntu Wiki
by 1 other (via)ReleaseNotes
Table of Contents
Conteúdo
Introduction
Support lifespan
Official flavor release notes
Get Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Download Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Upgrading from Ubuntu 16.04 LTS or 17.10
New features in 18.04
Updated Packages
Linux kernel 4.15
OpenJDK
Security Improvements
Default CIFS/SMB protocol version change in CIFS mounts
Network configuration
New since 17.10
New since 16.04 LTS
Other base system changes since 16.04 LTS
Ubuntu Desktop
New since 17.10
Other highlights since 16.04 LTS
Ubuntu Server
New since 17.10
Server installer
netplan.io
LXD 3.0
QEMU 2.11.1
libvirt 4.0
DPDK 17.11.x
Open vSwitch 2.9
Chrony
cloud-init
curtin
MAAS
SSSD
Nginx
PHP
Apache
landscape-client
ubuntu-advantage-tools
s390x-specific enhancements (since 17.10)
OpenStack Queens
Known issues
Desktop
Server
Official flavors
More information
Reporting bugs
Participate in Ubuntu
More about Ubuntu
Introduction
These release notes for Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver) provide an overview of the release and document the known issues with Ubuntu 18.04 LTS and its flavors
Support lifespan
The 'main' archive of Ubuntu 18.04 LTS will be supported for 5 years until April 2023. Ubuntu 18.04 LTS will be supported for 5 years for Ubuntu Desktop, Ubuntu Server, and Ubuntu Core. Ubuntu Studio 18.04 will be supported for 9 months. All other flavors will be supported for 3 years.
Official flavor release notes
Find the links to release notes for official flavors here.
Index of /ubuntu-budgie/releases/18.04/release
Ubuntu Budgie 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver)
Select an image
Desktop image
The desktop image allows you to try Ubuntu-Budgie without changing your computer at all, and at your option to install it permanently later. This type of image is what most people will want to use. You will need at least 384MiB of RAM to install from this image.
There are two images available, each for a different type of computer:
64-bit PC (AMD64) desktop image
Choose this to take full advantage of computers based on the AMD64 or EM64T architecture (e.g., Athlon64, Opteron, EM64T Xeon, Core 2). If you have a non-64-bit processor made by AMD, or if you need full support for 32-bit code, use the i386 images instead. Choose this if you are at all unsure.
32-bit PC (i386) desktop image
For almost all PCs. This includes most machines with Intel/AMD/etc type processors and almost all computers that run Microsoft Windows, as well as newer Apple Macintosh systems based on Intel processors.
A full list of available files, including BitTorrent files, can be found below.
If you need help burning these images to disk, see the Image Burning Guide.
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