The upcoming GNOME 40 desktop is bringing plenty of UX changes thanks to the new shell design and GTK 4. GNOME 40 will be releasing in March and Ubuntu 21.04 arrives in April. The tradition so far is that the new Ubuntu release consists of the new GNOME release as they both release a new version every six months.
You should be thinking “Does Ubuntu have Gnome 40?”
GNOME 40 will also feature in Fedora 34 (due for release soon), and be available in most rolling release. The Ubuntu 21.04 release does not include GNOME 40 in full, but a handful of GNOME 40 apps available out-of-the-box (with more available to install from the repo).
The Gnome 40 upgrades your existing Gnome packages from 3.0 versions to 4.0 versions. If you do not upgrade these packages, Gnome 40 will not function correctly.
I found the answer was if you’re familiar with GNOME Shell 3.30 and up you will have no problems getting to grips with all that’s new and gnarly in GNOME Shell 40. You’ll notice a lot of rounded corners in GNOME 40, including on the workspace switcher, the dash, and the ‘active’ states of items in the Top Bar.
How to update Yaru theme to GNOME 40?
As the default Yaru theme is not updated for Gnome 40, you have to install and use Gnome Session instead of the Ubuntu Session. To install it, run command: 5.) And run command for the rest packages: Finally reboot your machine. When you’re in login screen, DO SELECT “Gnome” or “Gnome on Xorg” before logging in.
What is the release date of Ubuntu Xenial?
So Xenial is released in 2016 in the month of April. This is how Ubuntu releases their operating system. Every two years on the forth month – ready or not – a new Long Term Support version of their OS is released. Oh sure it may have unresolved bugs in it but it was released on time.
Xenial Xerus is the Ubuntu codename for version 16.04 of the Ubuntu Linux-based operating system.
So, what’s the difference between Ubuntu trusty and Ubuntu Xenial?
My chosen answer is 16.04 has a newer kernel, newer applications, newer everything. Plus two extra years of support with updates. All in all, horse sense simply makes sense. Re: What’s the difference between Ubuntu Trusty and Ubuntu Xenial?