News: 0001569648

  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)

Ubuntu 25.10 Enters Its Feature Freeze Period

([Ubuntu] 6 Hours Ago Ubuntu 25.10)


As of today the [1]Ubuntu 25.10 "Questing Quokka" is now under a feature freeze ahead of the stable release due out in October.

With the beginning of the feature freeze, the Ubuntu development focus shifts primarily to testing and fixing bugs ahead of the anticipated 9 October release date. But feature freeze exceptions can be granted for those developers with late features to land. New point releases of software that don't introduce new features can also continue to land.

The brief feature freeze announcement for Ubuntu 25.10 can be found on the [2]Ubuntu-devel list .

Ubuntu 25.10 is being powered by the Linux 6.17 kernel, features the GNOME 49 desktop atop Wayland, ups the RISC-V support baseline to the RVA23 profile, finally gets the TPM-backed full disk encryption support all in order, sudo-rs and other Rust-based components, Chrony by default, and Dracut is now being used by default too. Ubuntu 25.10 has many new changes in part for vetting ahead of the next cycle that will be for Ubuntu 26.04 LTS.



[1] https://www.phoronix.com/search/Ubuntu+25.10

[2] https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-announce/2025-August/001378.html



Topolino

... an anecdote from IBM's Yorktown Heights Research Center. When a
programmer used his new computer terminal, all was fine when he was sitting
down, but he couldn't log in to the system when he was standing up. That
behavior was 100 percent repeatable: he could always log in when sitting and
never when standing.

Most of us just sit back and marvel at such a story; how could that terminal
know whether the poor guy was sitting or standing? Good debuggers, though,
know that there has to be a reason. Electrical theories are the easiest to
hypothesize: was there a loose wire under the carpet, or problems with static
electricity? But electrical problems are rarely consistently reproducible.
An alert IBMer finally noticed that the problem was in the terminal's
keyboard: the tops of two keys were switched. When the programmer was seated
he was a touch typist and the problem went unnoticed, but when he stood he was
led astray by hunting and pecking.
-- "Programming Pearls" column, by Jon Bentley in CACM February 1985