Those who have not tried Manjaro should, and now there are more reasons than ever. The team recently released the version 0.9.0 but this time they have renamed to 2015-09-27. With this update (remember that it is rolling release) change to a more familiar numbering.
In this release they have changed to the new Firefox 41, Pulseaudio to 7.0, Linux kernel 3.13 to 3.13.11.27, Linux kernel 3.19 to 3.19.8.7, some minor fixes.
Shortly after they have updated to a new version (2015-10-02) and this one comes more loaded with: The update to
- Table 11.
- Re-packaged Pulseaudio 7.0 (although they keep version 6.0 for the one having problems)
- Linux kernel 3.10 to 3.10.90
- Linux kernel 3.14 to 3.14.54
- Linux kernel 4.1 to 4.1.9
- Linux kernel 4.2 to 4.2.2
- Linux kernel 4.3 to rc3
- Firefox, Thunderbird have been updated
- Squid have been updated back to 1.1.4
- octopi has been updated to 0.7.3.
But as if that were not enough, 4 community versions of it have been updated to this version, among them is the version with Gnome, i3, Lxde and Lxqt.
The rest of the community versions will surely be updated in the next few days, but if you want to try one, don't hesitate, once installed it takes little time to update to the latest.
As always more information on the website of Manjaro posts are in order so no loss.
and in this new update of manjaro would gnome 3.18 come?
I just installed manjaro on a virtual machine. I was surprised. Very stable. Quick. Good for the Manjaro.
Manjaro is what I use and I will use, much better than Ubuntu, more stable, faster (the problem of the games at 30FPS to Fullscreen disappeared, what I am talking about is in a thread of my forum, with which I speak with Yukiteru-sama : v), damn, Manjaro is the only thing I'll use. Currently I am passing GTA San Andres and then I will pass Marathon, I already arrived at San Fierro: v /.
I've been using Ubuntu for a while I was doing fine but now it hangs sometimes I guess it's the comp. Out of curiosity I have been switching to linux and I even get to use it more frequently than windows I test the distros by VM.
But I have this doubt that you can install a new distro without damaging your files. Normally when you install linux, they recommend doing it by partitions to avoid that.