News: 0001552156

  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

Canonical Confirms Ubuntu 25.10 Will Drop Support For GNOME On X.Org

([GNOME] 71 Minutes Ago Ubuntu 25.10: No GNOME X.Org)


In aligning with upstream [1]GNOME 49 expected to ship with X11 support disabled by default , Canonical announced today that the upcoming Ubuntu 25.10 release will also ship without support for running the GNOME desktop on X11.

Jean Baptiste Lallement of the Canonical Desktop Team announced minutes ago that Ubuntu 25.10 will be shipping without support for GNOME on X.Org. Aligned with upstream GNOME, Ubuntu 25.10 will only support running GNOME on the Wayland session. Support for X11 client apps/games though will continue to be maintained via XWayland but there will no longer be X11 session support for the desktop. Other non-GNOME desktops are unaffected by this move.

Jean Baptiste Lallement wrote on [2]Ubuntu Discourse :

"Over the past several cycles, the Wayland experience has matured significantly, including improved support for Nvidia drivers, offering a more robust security model, stable support for most daily workflows, better graphics stack isolation and improved touch and hiDPI support.

Meanwhile, maintaining both X11 and Wayland sessions introduces technical debt and increases maintenance burden, limiting our ability to innovate efficiently.

GNOME is planning to remove Xorg support for GNOME 49. We are taking a proactive step in 25.10 to prepare our users and ecosystem ahead of that deadline."

This shift to GNOME-only-on-Wayland for Ubuntu 25.10 comes one cycle ahead of their all important Ubuntu 26.04 LTS release.



[1] https://www.phoronix.com/news/GNOME-49-Alpha-0-Packages

[2] https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/ubuntu-25-10-drops-support-for-gnome-on-xorg/62538



Modu

Topolino

uwgandalf

philippun

ahrs

AKoskovich

What Did Santa Claus Bring You In 1999? (#1)

LINUS TORVALDS: Santa didn't bring me anything, but Tim O'Reilly just gave
me a large sum of money to publish my new book, "Linus Torvalds' Official
Guide To Receiving Fame, Fortune, and Hot Babes By Producing Your Own
Unix-Like Operating System In Only 10 Years".

ORDINARY LINUX HACKER: I kept hinting to my friends and family that I
wanted to build my own Beowulf Cluster. My grandmother got mixed up and
gave me a copy of "Beowulf's Chocolate Cluster Cookbook". I like
chocolate, but I would've preferred silicon.

LINUX LONGHAIR: My friends sent me a two-year subscription to several
Ziff-Davis publications, much to my dislike. I don't want to read Jesse
Berst's rants against Linux, or John Dvorak's spiels about how great
Windows 2000 is. Still, I suppose this isn't so bad. Ziff-Davis glossy
paper makes an excellent lining for fireplaces.