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Hace pocos minutos, Ubuntu ha confirmado oficialmente que la versión 7.04, denominada Ubuntu Feisty, no llevará activados de serie los drivers propietarios gráficos de Nvidia y ATI, con lo cual se esclarecen los rumores que decían que Ubuntu Fesity podría preguntar al usuario, durante la instalación, si instalar el sistema gráfico con drivers propietarios o los que han sido desde los inicios, los libres.
Seguro esta notícia dará mucho que hablar, puesto que la instalación de estos drivers no es trivial para la mayoría de usuarios noveles y siempre ha dado dolores de cabeza a más de uno. También se ha anunciado, como ya se comentó, que la arquitectura PowerPC queda relegada a no oficial, aunque habrá una comunidad de usuarios que la mantendrán viva, actualizando el software y demás necesidades del mismo. A continucación os pego el correo (en inglés) del anuncio oficial que ha mandado Ubuntu.com:
The Ubuntu Technical Board has made two technical decisions of which we would like to inform the Ubuntu community. Both of these decisions concern the upcoming 7.04 release of Ubuntu, scheduled for mid-April.
Proprietary Drivers -------------------
Summary:
Ubuntu 7.04 will preserve the status quo with respect to proprietary video drivers. As in previous releases, these drivers will be provided for the convenience of users who choose to use them, but they will not be activated by default.
Full decision:
There has been a great deal of discussion within the Ubuntu community regarding a technical proposal (the enabling of Composite support by default) which would necessitate the use of certain closed-source video drivers in a default installation of Ubuntu. In response to this controversy, a meeting was convened among representatives of the Technical Board and Community Council to evaluate the issues. The following conclusions were reached by this group:
* The desktop effects technology involved in this proposal is important in enabling a richer, more immersive desktop experience, and as such, is relevant to the mission of the Ubuntu project.
* There is a clear need for wider testing of open source software under development in this area, including both desktop tools and video drivers.
* The exception granted to the Ubuntu Licence Policy at the project's inception, which allows the use of closed-source components where necessary to provide sufficient hardware support, remains valid and pragmatic. For example, this exception has been applied in the past with regard to wireless network drivers. We consider making full use of video hardware to be an important component of that hardware support.
* However, some of the relevant software necessary to implement this proposal is not yet considered mature enough to deploy in the default Ubuntu configuration.
Therefore:
* The proposal will be modified such that the default configuration of Ubuntu remains the same with regard to the selection of video drivers.
* However, new infrastructure will be implemented which allows the user to trivially enable both enhanced desktop effects and the necessary driver support.
* The Ubuntu project reaffirms that it will not include closed-source components in its default configuration except where allowed by the existing exception for the provision of sufficient hardware support.
* Decisions on what hardware support is sufficient for these purposes will be made on a case-by-case basis by the Technical Board and the Community Council.
* Ubuntu will monitor and support the progress of the free Nouveau driver, which offers the prospect of supporting enhanced desktop effects for users of NVIDIA hardware without the need for closed-source drivers.
* When the factors involved in this decision change, further consideration will be given to the possibility of changing the default configuration.
The PowerPC Architecture ------------------------
Summary:
Beginning with Ubuntu 7.04, the PowerPC edition of Ubuntu will be reclassified as unofficial. The PowerPC software itself and supporting infrastructure will continue to be available, and supported by a community team.
Full decision:
The Ubuntu Technical Board has decided to reclassify PowerPC as an unofficial architecture, rather than a fully supported architecture, for Ubuntu 7.04 and subsequent releases. This means that packages and ISO images will continue to be produced, but releases will not be delayed due to problems which are specific to PowerPC, and the quality of the PowerPC release itself will depend very much on the extent to which members of the Ubuntu community drive PowerPC testing and bug fixes.
The rationale for this decision has been recorded in the PowerPC Review document at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/PowerPCReview, which was derived from a discussion at our developer summit in November. The conversation has continued, and for some time we have pursued a number of sources for funding to continue the official testing and support for the architecture. Unfortunately those resources have not been obtained, and we can not make the necessary commitments to continue official support for this architecture.
A team of PowerPC users and developers has been formed at https://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-powerpc and will be the focus of efforts to keep Ubuntu's PowerPC support at high quality. We welcome wider participation in that team, and if developers devote some additional time to the work then there is no reason that Ubuntu on PowerPC should not continue to deliver high quality releases.
It is possible that PowerPC will once again become a fully supported architecture in the future, if the resources needed to guarantee its quality are found. The architecture is certainly gaining large numbers of users in embedded and console devices, and there are many reasons to continue to work with the platform. These uses are outside of the core Ubuntu mandate, however, so resources cannot be diverted from our server and desktop efforts just to address their needs.
Existing Ubuntu PowerPC releases will continue to be maintained for the duration of their supported life cycles, including Ubuntu 6.06 LTS which will be supported on PowerPC servers until 2011.
-- Matt Zimmerman Chairman, Ubuntu Technical Board
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