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 <provider_name>Rainbow Dash Network</provider_name>
 <provider_url>http://rainbowdash.net/</provider_url>
 <title>Omni (omni)'s status on Wednesday, 24-Oct-12 15:17:56 UTC</title>
 <author_name>Omni (omni)</author_name>
 <author_url>http://rainbowdash.net/omni</author_url>
 <url>http://rainbowdash.net/notice/2027219</url>
 <html>@&lt;span class=&quot;vcard&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://rainbowdash.net/user/8447&quot; class=&quot;url&quot; title=&quot;Eric&quot;&gt;&lt;span class=&quot;fn nickname&quot;&gt;fortecadenza&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt; I find Ubuntu's design to be of limited user-friendly-ness. Especially in the newer versions, because Canonical thinks it's a good idea to give you &amp;quot;related Amazon results&amp;quot; when you type anything in the Ubuntu &amp;quot;start&amp;quot; menu. For real. Ubuntu also isn't &amp;quot;simple&amp;quot;, especially if you need to quickly fix something. Layer on layer of nonsense makes finding the real culprit of a problem terribly awful, an the graphical interfaces are of limited use when trying to find the problem. Unity's workspace system is also a complete mess. Being honest, I find GNOME3 (which Unity is build on top of: &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.gnome.org/gnome-3/&quot; title=&quot;https://www.gnome.org/gnome-3/&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow external&quot;&gt;https://www.gnome.org/gnome-3/&lt;/a&gt;) much nicer. Also, Ubuntu is terribly slow with updates and has small repositories, which creates additional security risks (people have to download from untrusted sources or will be behind on security fixes).</html>
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