I'm afraid this is my first Wayland experience, and I'm NOT IMPRESSED!!!
I also find there are other applications that have mis-behaving windows, such as, it appears no longer possible to fix any windows to a specific location or monitor: they all come back to screen #1, upper left corner after boot, and have to be relocated every time.
Besides, I'm aging, too (about to hit 70), I can barely see, but still seem to function (mostly!) :-)
I don't believe software actually ages. Only the concept of applying it seems to age. Software doesn't wear out as mechanical devices may.
The "transition" period has already been more than 4 years, yet Ubuntu can't seem to move forward without major collisions. This is not by any means my only complaint with 22.04: there are many bugs, that weren't in 20.04, but to me, there is no gain in the changes. All I see is that I can no longer run the apps or do the work I used to do with the "upgraded" OS.
Thanks for your efforts.
I understand that Ubuntu is mostly "free" software, and I appreciate the efforts many put into it. But half a product is never a complete product, no matter which way one spins it...
I'm afraid this is my first Wayland experience, and I'm NOT IMPRESSED!!!
I also find there are other applications that have mis-behaving windows, such as, it appears no longer possible to fix any windows to a specific location or monitor: they all come back to screen #1, upper left corner after boot, and have to be relocated every time.
Besides, I'm aging, too (about to hit 70), I can barely see, but still seem to function (mostly!) :-)
I don't believe software actually ages. Only the concept of applying it seems to age. Software doesn't wear out as mechanical devices may.
The "transition" period has already been more than 4 years, yet Ubuntu can't seem to move forward without major collisions. This is not by any means my only complaint with 22.04: there are many bugs, that weren't in 20.04, but to me, there is no gain in the changes. All I see is that I can no longer run the apps or do the work I used to do with the "upgraded" OS.
Thanks for your efforts.
I understand that Ubuntu is mostly "free" software, and I appreciate the efforts many put into it. But half a product is never a complete product, no matter which way one spins it...