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Ubuntu 18.04 LTS Bionic Beaver, the seventh LTS release, is a long-term support version that was announced on 24 October 2017 on Shuttleworth's blog and released on 26 April 2018. [220] [221] Ubuntu 18.04 LTS had normal LTS support for five years until May 2023 and has paid ESM support available from Canonical for an additional five years until ...
The first LTS releases were supported for three years on the desktop and five years on the server; since Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, desktop support for LTS releases was increased to five years as well. [ 52 ] [ 53 ] [ 54 ] LTS releases get regular point releases with support for new hardware and integration of all the updates published in that series to ...
8th LTS release, used in Ubuntu 12.04 LTS [290] and optionally in 12.04 ESM, [291] Debian 7 "Wheezy" and Slackware 14.0. [ 1 ] [ 288 ] Canonical promised to (at least) provide long-term support until April 2017; [ 192 ] Support has continued for months after.
Ubuntu 6.10 Slackware 11.0: 2006–11: OpenBSD 4.0: Linux 2.6.19: AmigaOS 4.0 Solaris 10 11/06 2006–12: 2007–01: Windows Vista: DragonFly BSD 1.8: Bharat Operating System Solutions: 2007–02: Windows Mobile 6.0: Linux 2.6.20: Inferno Fourth Edition 2007–03: Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5: ReactOS 0.3.1 ...
Ubuntu and Derivatives [98] Canonical Ltd. Canonical Ltd. 2004 24.10 [99] 24.04.1 LTS [100] Standard releases 9 months, LTS releases 5 years. Flavor LTS releases 3 or 5 years. Ubuntu Pro 10 years. 2024-10-10 2024-08-29 X Debian general, server, desktop, supercomputer, IBM mainframe: None Active Univention Corporate Server: Univention GmbH ...
Ubuntu Budgie started out as an unofficial community flavor in parallel with Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, referred to as "budgie-remix". [2] budgie-remix 16.10 was later released by strictly following the time frame issued for Ubuntu 16.10. [3] It was eventually recognized as an official community flavor of Ubuntu, and was rebranded as Ubuntu Budgie. [4]
The Ubuntu MATE project was founded by Martin Wimpress and Alan Pope [4] and began as an unofficial derivative of Ubuntu, using an Ubuntu 14.10 base for its first release; [5] a 14.04 LTS release followed shortly. [6] As of February 2015, Ubuntu MATE gained the official Ubuntu flavour status from Canonical as per the release of 15.04 Beta 1.
Ubuntu shipped with Wayland by default in Ubuntu 17.10 (Artful Aardvark). [92] However, Ubuntu 18.04 LTS reverted to X.Org by default due to several issues. [93] [94] Since Ubuntu 21.04, Wayland is the default again. [95] Red Hat Enterprise Linux ships Wayland as the default session in version 8, released 7 May 2019. [96]