Yesterday I learnt a lesson, now I would not upgrade my linux distro within 3-4 months of release. Normally a new release would have definitely scores of bugs and things get fixed within 3-4 months. Ubuntu community would have by that time addressed all the common problems once can face while installation and running. Therefore, it makes more sense to install a somewhat "matured" distro.
Like when I installed Natty, it was already 4 months old; hence, all the bugs were fixed. I used it once and got hooked to it. Similarly, for Ubuntu 11.10, when I downloaded, it had a few bugs (like the updated linux kernel not working, some difficulty in getting the screen resolution right, etc.). But, once I fixed those, it is simply a great distro to work with. I really like the updated Gwibber client - sleek and fast.
However, once point. Ubuntu doesn't force anyone to update the distribution. It is the user's choice. If you are contended with the distro version you are using, my recommendation would be not to upgrade it. It may not be nice experience if you are upgrading within 3 months of release. You see, the Ubuntu guys really works hard to create a distro which is comparable to Windows (and sometimes more functional) - the credit really goes to them. But, at times it is difficult to envision the broad spectrum of platforms on which the distro is going to run - from a 256 mb 10 year old PC to today's high-tech 4-8GB cool lappy. Hence, take your time and do some research for the common problems before you really decide to upgrade.
Like when I installed Natty, it was already 4 months old; hence, all the bugs were fixed. I used it once and got hooked to it. Similarly, for Ubuntu 11.10, when I downloaded, it had a few bugs (like the updated linux kernel not working, some difficulty in getting the screen resolution right, etc.). But, once I fixed those, it is simply a great distro to work with. I really like the updated Gwibber client - sleek and fast.
However, once point. Ubuntu doesn't force anyone to update the distribution. It is the user's choice. If you are contended with the distro version you are using, my recommendation would be not to upgrade it. It may not be nice experience if you are upgrading within 3 months of release. You see, the Ubuntu guys really works hard to create a distro which is comparable to Windows (and sometimes more functional) - the credit really goes to them. But, at times it is difficult to envision the broad spectrum of platforms on which the distro is going to run - from a 256 mb 10 year old PC to today's high-tech 4-8GB cool lappy. Hence, take your time and do some research for the common problems before you really decide to upgrade.
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