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73 comments
  • Yeah; if I was picking the aspects of Ubuntu where they were making a mistake, 'minimal default install but easy to download more' would not be what I'd have selected - that actually sounds a good thing. Having too much out-of-date crud was starting to be a problem. 'Everything is a snap, which runs like a three-legged dog even on a powerful machine, and causes me disk space issues on less powerful ones too' - that's a problem. 'Keeping on messing with Firefox, and replacing my ppa version with an out of date snap, which means I've changed my works machine over to Mint to avoid their nonsense?' - that's a problem.

  • I love it. Ubuntu is already bloated enough and have been using the minimal install for a long time. It's actually better imo. because now the "minimal" version will hopefully include just a bit more so have to manually install a bit less. If I ever got lazy and took the full install I alway uninstall or remove the bloat from my sidebar as the first thing anyway. Hopefully this will strike a nice ballance instead

  • I like the minimal install, but think there should be a choice to install an office friendly version.

  • This is great, less bloat by default is good.

    If they add a window that comes up on first start that lets people pick some apps from a default list, that would be the ideal setup.

  • There's a lot of ridicule regarding this article but chiming in my opinion. This makes Ubuntu less appealing for me. Granted I would use Mint anyway but, the entire focus of Ubuntu is supposed to be to bring new people in. If I'm helping a friend convert to the OS from Microsoft, I'm not going to want to have to info dump "ok so you will also need x y z and m" for it to properly work. It will be hard enough to have had to explain the install process. This is without mentioning the live aspects of it. I always tell people "try the live version first and if you like it go for it" well if the live process is now a dumbed down minimal.... what's the appeal for new members. I think this is counterproductive to be honest, if I was looking for a skim distro I would just recommend another system, that's the glory of Ubuntu and why it was recommended for starters, it just "works"

  • I can see the reasoning behind having a slim installation media available. I think if they're planning to test this, 23.10 being a testing version, they should have two actual media builds. A full-fat one and a slim one. That way they can measure what people download. They should also measure this over an LTS cycle as many of us don't use non-LTS versions. Perhaps they already have data from the existing installer where people can choose between minimal and standard install. I feel Joey has a point about throwing new users at a barebones install. That would not be a good experience. Even if a slim install media is available, I think so should full-fat.

73 comments