The official Linux packages are available for download at the link below:
Grab the package, extract, and run the executable to launch the IDE. You may manually create an application shortcut to be able to start it from app launcher.
For Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 16.04, Ubuntu 17.04, Ubuntu 17.10, you can also use the installer script that automatically downloads the IDE from JetBrains’ web server, installs it to /opt/, and finally creates an app shortcut for it.
Mozilla Firefox reached the 57.0 release earlier today. The new release, Firefox Quantum, features a completely new browsing engine makes it over twice as fast as before.
Mozilla Firefox 57.0 release highlights:
A completely new browsing engine.
A redesigned interface, and optimizations for touch screens
A unified address and search bar.
A revamped new tab page that includes top visited sites, recently visited pages, and recommendations from Pocket
An updated product tour to orient new and returning Firefox users
AMD VP9 hardware video decoder support for improved video playback with lower power consumption
An expanded section in preferences to manage all website permissions
Also various security fixes and other changes. See release note.
How to install Firefox 57 in Ubuntu:
For Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 16.04, Ubuntu 17.04, Ubuntu 17.10, the latest Firefox 57 will be published through Ubuntu security & updates repository.
Once it’s published (check Firefox in launchpad), you can upgrade Firefox via Software Updater:
Can’t wait? Mozilla offers non-install Linux packages (select i686 for 32-bit, x86_64 for 64-bit os):
Linux Kernel 4.14 stable was released yesterday. Linus Torvalds announced that:
No surprises this week, although it is probably worth pointing out how the 0day robot has been getting even better (it was very useful before, but Fengguang has been working on making it even better, and reporting the problems it has found).
Sure, some of the new reports turned out to be just 0day doing things that just don’t work (ie KASAN with old gcc versions, but also doing things like loading old ISA drivers in situations that just don’t make sense – remember when you couldn’t even ask if the hardware existed or not, and just had to know), but even then it’s been all good.
The appended shortlog is obviously only for the (small) haul since rc8, and it really is tiny. Not very many commits, and they are small. The biggest thing that stands out in the diffstat is the “leaking_addresses” perl script, which is actually under active development, but I put the first version in for 4.14 just so that people could see that initial state and start looking at the end result and perhaps ask themselves “should my code make these kernel addresses visible to user space”.
…
How to Install Kernel 4.14 in Ubuntu / Linux Mint:
The mainline kernel PPA has made the new kernel binaries for Ubuntu, available for download at the link below:
Depends on your OS type, download and install the packages in turns:
Select generic for common system, and lowlatency for a low latency system (e.g. for recording audio), amd64 for 64bit system, i386 for 32bit system, or armhf, arm64, etc for other OS types.
To get the Kernel 4.14 from the command console, run the commands below one by one:
Start/restart your machine and select boot with the previous kernel in Grub2 -> Advanced menu. Then use Ubuntu Tweak, or other system tool to remove the Kernel 4.14, or you may see this how to remove old kernels tutorial.
Audacity, free and open-source audio editing and recording software, reached the new major 2.2.0 release a few days ago with great new features and tons of bug-fixes.
Four supplied user interface themes, and customizability of themes for advanced users.
Playback of MIDI files (requires cooperating software synthesizer programs on macOs or Linux)
Better organized menus
Help link buttons in many dialogs lead to the relevant manual pages
198 bugs/annoyances in 2.1.3 fixed, most importantly
Improved recovery from full file system errors
Thorough update of the manual with new images, more hover texts, and more cross-references.
Complete support for macOS 10.12 (Sierra) and 10.13 (High Sierra)
How to Install Audacity 2.2.0 in Ubuntu:
The Audacity team does not offer pre-compiled Linux binaries. Besides building from source, a third-party PPA is available with Audacity 2.2.0 for Ubuntu 16.04, Ubuntu 17.04, and Ubuntu 17.10.
1. Open terminal via Ctrl+Alt+T or by searching for ‘terminal’ from app launcher. When it opens, run command:
The SMPlayer media player reached the 17.11.0 release earlier today. The new release features a few small bug-fixes and improvements.
Changes in SMPlayer 17.11 include:
The video equalizer by software has been fixed.
The thumbnail generator is now more precise with short videos.
The audio quality of the audio equalizer has been improved.
The option “add black borders on fullscreen” has been fixed.
The option “AC3/DTS passthrough over S/PDIF” has been fixed.
How to Install SMPlayer 17.11 in Ubuntu via PPA:
The new release has made into the official PPA, available for Ubuntu 17.10, Ubuntu 17.04, Ubuntu 16.04, Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 12.04, and their derivatives.
1. Open terminal and run the following command to add the PPA:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:rvm/smplayer
For those who prefer Qt4 version, use the another PPA instead:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:rvm/smplayer-qt4
2. Then you can upgrade SMPlayer from a previous release via Software Updater (Update Manager) after checking for updates:
Or you can run the commands below in terminal to do install or upgrade SMPlayer:
MuseScore, free music composition and notation software, reached the 2.1 release months ago. However, it can’t be built in Ubuntu 16.04 due to old system Qt libraries.
Besides using non-install Appimage, MuseScore 2.1 is finally available as Snap package for Ubuntu 16.04 and higher after a few months of testing in beta channel.
1. Simply open terminal via Ctrl+Alt+T or by searching for “terminal” from application launcher. When it opens, run command:
sudo snap install musescore
Input your password (no visual feedback while typing) when it prompts and hit Enter.
Or install it via Ubuntu Software (need sign in with your Ubuntu account).
2. Some interfaces need to be connected manually via commands: