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Le nuove icone delle cartelle di Ubuntu 26.04 cambiano ancora Ubuntu 26.04 aggiorna di nuovo le icone delle cartelle Yaru, migliorando contrasto e leggibilità in light e dark mode.

Ubuntu 26.04 ritocca ancora le sue nuove cartelle Yaru: più contrasto, emblemi più leggibili e un look più coerente tra light e dark mode. Un altro passo verso il tema definitivo della LTS. #Ubuntu #Yaru #GNOME #Linux #Ubuntu2604

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**The redesigned folder icons for Ubuntu 26.04 LTS have been redesigned again, albeit slightly.** A big Yaru theme update hit Ubuntu 26.04 LTS last week, delivering a set of colourful new directory icons to development desktops (alongside other theme changes, like consistent radii and bolder text in UI elements and no dock transparency by default). It swapped Yaru’s slate folder icons for squatter, full-colour glyphs that reflect the system accent colour wholly. They also use an engraved treatment for standard XDG directories emblems, like _Music_ , _Pictures_ and _Downloads_. However, feedback on the new set indicated that the folder colour contrast wasn’t quite right, appearing too light under light and dark mode settings on the Ubuntu desktop. This contrast affected the prominence of the inset emblems placed on top. Enter a revised folder set, hashed out by the contributor of the new folder approach, Vincent Renzo Quilon (ochi12) and other Yaru design team members, in concert with Canonical’s Marco Trevisan. Contrast has been increased for all folder colours (default orange accent colour set pictured below) in both light and dark mode, and the inset pictograms made darker (most notably under dark mode versus the previous iteration): Yaru’s new folders, take 2. Better? Worse? I cheekily heading my initial look at the folder changes with a note that “you’ll have opinions” – chances are you will over the revised set as well. General consensus on the new approach (I say new; in some ways it’s switching _back_ to coloured folder icons, but the slate scheme has been in use since 2019) appears resolutely (groan) positive on the switch, even if some have felt things were a smidge light or teensy bit dark. It’s that early feedback that helped give the Yaru design team pointers on way to refine the set ahead of the stable Ubuntu 26.04 LTS release in April – which is the development process working as the development process should: responsively.

Ubuntu 26.04’s new folder icons undergo another revamp The redesigned folder icons for Ubuntu 26.04 LTS have been redesigned again, albeit slightly. A big Yaru theme update hit Ubuntu 26.04 LTS l...

#News #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

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Ubuntu 26.04’s new folder icons undergo another revamp The redesigned folder icons for Ubuntu 26.04 LTS have been redesigned again, albeit slightly. A big Yaru theme update hit Ubuntu 26.04 LTS l...

#News #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

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Ubuntu 26.04 Will Look More Like Vanilla GNOME Shell Ubuntu’s default desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but before you panic unduly, I should stress that ...

#News #adwaita #Eye #Candy #GNOME #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

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In 26.04, Ubuntu Will Look More Like Vanilla GNOME Ubuntu’s desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but lest you panic, we’re not talking majorly. The Yaru th...

#News #adwaita #GNOME #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

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**Ubuntu’s desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but lest you panic unduly, it’ll still look like Ubuntu.** The Yaru theme team — try saying that several times in a row — has embarked on a refactor of its GNOME Shell theme aimed at the next long-term support release, Ubuntu 26.04 LTS. Instead of maintaining a separate, customised stylesheet for GNOME Shell it will use the default GNOME Shell theme and apply changes on top. Thought they were already doing that? Not quite. **Yaru is a GTK, icon, sound and GNOME Shell theme. This article is on changes to the latter**. Currently, Ubuntu’s ‘Shell’ theme is structurally custom, i.e., the Yaru team maintains its own separate stylesheet. While this is based on the upstream stylesheet, and ‘syncs’ every 6 months, the Yaru team has manually patch, fit and adapt it each time. This can introduce minor visual inconsistencies as some bits of the updated upstream stylesheet are adapted for, but others bits aren’t — e.g., when Yaru was using different radii for calendar/notification applet than for desktop notifications. Hence the new approach, outlined in a pull request on the Yaru GitHub, is simpler: use symlinks to point directly at the default style files. This way, Yaru’s GNOME Shell styling goes from “custom theme that’s based on upstream” to “actual upstream, with Ubuntu overrides”. Ubuntu’s overrides will continue to offer specify its own typography (use the Ubuntu font and specific font sizes & weights); tweak panel and dock sizing (upstream is larger by default); and use an interface accent colour (Ubuntu orange by default). But other elements, like corner radius on panel applets, notifications and pop-overs or the shape, contrast and spacing of buttons in modal dialogs, etc will adopt their upstream settings. ### Why the change? Although it may sound like a game of musical chairs (the same thing, done a different way) it’s not without reason: to reduce the maintenance burden and veer closed to upstream’s design intentions. Ubuntu’s Yaru theme is developed by a community team, albeit with technical guidance from Canonical’s Marco Trevisan and input from the Canonical design team). This effort is to reduce their effort in maintaining the Shell-side component of the theme. Ubuntu desktop will look more ‘upstream’ in 26.04 But more importantly, it does mean that Ubuntu is presenting GNOME Shell _better_ : the way the people who design, build and undertake user-testing of GNOME Shell intend it to be. Adjusting radii, button spacing and fonts may sound inconsequential, but it adds up. If you’re testing Ubuntu 26.04 in the coming months, be sure to keep an eye out for the shape, spacing, and roundness of GNOME Shell UI elements, modal dialogs, pop-overs, buttons, and notifications to change, in keeping with upstream. Ubuntu-ification of GNOME Shell isn’t going away, it’s just becoming more considered using targeted overrides on the default stylesheet.

Ubuntu 26.04 Will Look More Like Vanilla GNOME Shell Ubuntu’s default desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but before you panic unduly, I should stress that ...

#News #adwaita #Eye #Candy #GNOME #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

Origin | Interest | Match

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**Ubuntu’s desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but lest you panic unduly, it’ll still look like Ubuntu.** The Yaru theme team — try saying that several times in a row — has embarked on a refactor of its GNOME Shell theme aimed at the next long-term support release, Ubuntu 26.04 LTS. Instead of maintaining a separate, customised stylesheet for GNOME Shell it will use the default GNOME Shell theme and apply changes on top. Thought they were already doing that? Not quite. **Yaru is a GTK, icon, sound and GNOME Shell theme. This article is on changes to the latter**. Currently, Ubuntu’s ‘Shell’ theme is structurally custom, i.e., the Yaru team maintains its own separate stylesheet. While this is based on the upstream stylesheet, and ‘syncs’ every 6 months, the Yaru team has manually patch, fit and adapt it each time. This can introduce minor visual inconsistencies as some bits of the updated upstream stylesheet are adapted for, but others bits aren’t — e.g., when Yaru was using different radii for calendar/notification applet than for desktop notifications. Hence the new approach, outlined in a pull request on the Yaru GitHub, is simpler: use symlinks to point directly at the default style files. This way, Yaru’s GNOME Shell styling goes from “custom theme that’s based on upstream” to “actual upstream, with Ubuntu overrides”. Ubuntu’s overrides will continue to offer specify its own typography (use the Ubuntu font and specific font sizes & weights); tweak panel and dock sizing (upstream is larger by default); and use an interface accent colour (Ubuntu orange by default). But other elements, like corner radius on panel applets, notifications and pop-overs or the shape, contrast and spacing of buttons in modal dialogs, etc will adopt their upstream settings. ### Why the change? Although it may sound like a game of musical chairs (the same thing, done a different way) it’s not without reason: to reduce the maintenance burden and veer closed to upstream’s design intentions. Ubuntu’s Yaru theme is developed by a community team, albeit with technical guidance from Canonical’s Marco Trevisan and input from the Canonical design team). This effort is to reduce their effort in maintaining the Shell-side component of the theme. Ubuntu desktop will look more ‘upstream’ in 26.04 But more importantly, it does mean that Ubuntu is presenting GNOME Shell _better_ : the way the people who design, build and undertake user-testing of GNOME Shell intend it to be. Adjusting radii, button spacing and fonts may sound inconsequential, but it adds up. If you’re testing Ubuntu 26.04 in the coming months, be sure to keep an eye out for the shape, spacing, and roundness of GNOME Shell UI elements, modal dialogs, pop-overs, buttons, and notifications to change, in keeping with upstream. Ubuntu-ification of GNOME Shell isn’t going away, it’s just becoming more considered using targeted overrides on the default stylesheet.

Ubuntu 26.04 Will Look More Like Vanilla GNOME Ubuntu’s default desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but before you panic unduly, I should stress that it wil...

#News #adwaita #GNOME #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

Origin | Interest | Match

0 0 0 0
Preview
**Ubuntu’s desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but lest you panic unduly, it’ll still look like Ubuntu.** The Yaru theme team — try saying that several times in a row — has embarked on a refactor of its GNOME Shell theme aimed at the next long-term support release, Ubuntu 26.04 LTS. Instead of maintaining a separate, customised stylesheet for GNOME Shell it will use the default GNOME Shell theme and apply changes on top. Thought they were already doing that? Not quite. **Yaru is a GTK, icon, sound and GNOME Shell theme. This article is on changes to the latter**. Currently, Ubuntu’s ‘Shell’ theme is structurally custom, i.e., the Yaru team maintains its own separate stylesheet. While this is based on the upstream stylesheet, and ‘syncs’ every 6 months, the Yaru team has manually patch, fit and adapt it each time. This can introduce minor visual inconsistencies as some bits of the updated upstream stylesheet are adapted for, but others bits aren’t — e.g., when Yaru was using different radii for calendar/notification applet than for desktop notifications. Hence the new approach, outlined in a pull request on the Yaru GitHub, is simpler: use symlinks to point directly at the default style files. This way, Yaru’s GNOME Shell styling goes from “custom theme that’s based on upstream” to “actual upstream, with Ubuntu overrides”. Ubuntu’s overrides will continue to offer specify its own typography (use the Ubuntu font and specific font sizes & weights); tweak panel and dock sizing (upstream is larger by default); and use an interface accent colour (Ubuntu orange by default). But other elements, like corner radius on panel applets, notifications and pop-overs or the shape, contrast and spacing of buttons in modal dialogs, etc will adopt their upstream settings. ### Why the change? Although it may sound like a game of musical chairs (the same thing, done a different way) it’s not without reason: to reduce the maintenance burden and veer closed to upstream’s design intentions. Ubuntu’s Yaru theme is developed by a community team, albeit with technical guidance from Canonical’s Marco Trevisan and input from the Canonical design team). This effort is to reduce their effort in maintaining the Shell-side component of the theme. Ubuntu desktop will look more ‘upstream’ in 26.04 But more importantly, it does mean that Ubuntu is presenting GNOME Shell _better_ : the way the people who design, build and undertake user-testing of GNOME Shell intend it to be. Adjusting radii, button spacing and fonts may sound inconsequential, but it adds up. If you’re testing Ubuntu 26.04 in the coming months, be sure to keep an eye out for the shape, spacing, and roundness of GNOME Shell UI elements, modal dialogs, pop-overs, buttons, and notifications to change, in keeping with upstream. Ubuntu-ification of GNOME Shell isn’t going away, it’s just becoming more considered using targeted overrides on the default stylesheet.

Ubuntu 26.04’s Desktop Will Look More Like Vanilla GNOME Shell Ubuntu’s default desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but before you panic unduly, I should ...

#News #adwaita #GNOME #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

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Ubuntu 26.04 Will Look More Like Vanilla GNOME Shell Ubuntu’s default desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but before you panic unduly, I should stress that ...

#News #adwaita #Eye #Candy #GNOME #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

Origin | Interest | Match

0 0 0 0
Preview
**Ubuntu’s desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but lest you panic unduly, it’ll still look like Ubuntu.** The Yaru theme team — try saying that several times in a row — has embarked on a refactor of its GNOME Shell theme aimed at the next long-term support release, Ubuntu 26.04 LTS. Instead of maintaining a separate, customised stylesheet for GNOME Shell it will use the default GNOME Shell theme and apply changes on top. Thought they were already doing that? Not quite. **Yaru is a GTK, icon, sound and GNOME Shell theme. This article is on changes to the latter**. Currently, Ubuntu’s ‘Shell’ theme is structurally custom, i.e., the Yaru team maintains its own separate stylesheet. While this is based on the upstream stylesheet, and ‘syncs’ every 6 months, the Yaru team has manually patch, fit and adapt it each time. This can introduce minor visual inconsistencies as some bits of the updated upstream stylesheet are adapted for, but others bits aren’t — e.g., when Yaru was using different radii for calendar/notification applet than for desktop notifications. Hence the new approach, outlined in a pull request on the Yaru GitHub, is simpler: use symlinks to point directly at the default style files. This way, Yaru’s GNOME Shell styling goes from “custom theme that’s based on upstream” to “actual upstream, with Ubuntu overrides”. Ubuntu’s overrides will continue to offer specify its own typography (use the Ubuntu font and specific font sizes & weights); tweak panel and dock sizing (upstream is larger by default); and use an interface accent colour (Ubuntu orange by default). But other elements, like corner radius on panel applets, notifications and pop-overs or the shape, contrast and spacing of buttons in modal dialogs, etc will adopt their upstream settings. ### Why the change? Although it may sound like a game of musical chairs (the same thing, done a different way) it’s not without reason: to reduce the maintenance burden and veer closed to upstream’s design intentions. Ubuntu’s Yaru theme is developed by a community team, albeit with technical guidance from Canonical’s Marco Trevisan and input from the Canonical design team). This effort is to reduce their effort in maintaining the Shell-side component of the theme. Ubuntu desktop will look more ‘upstream’ in 26.04 But more importantly, it does mean that Ubuntu is presenting GNOME Shell _better_ : the way the people who design, build and undertake user-testing of GNOME Shell intend it to be. Adjusting radii, button spacing and fonts may sound inconsequential, but it adds up. If you’re testing Ubuntu 26.04 in the coming months, be sure to keep an eye out for the shape, spacing, and roundness of GNOME Shell UI elements, modal dialogs, pop-overs, buttons, and notifications to change, in keeping with upstream. Ubuntu-ification of GNOME Shell isn’t going away, it’s just becoming more considered using targeted overrides on the default stylesheet.

In 26.04, Ubuntu Will Look More Like Vanilla GNOME Ubuntu’s desktop is about to look more like upstream GNOME than it has in years — but lest you panic unduly, it’ll still look like Ubuntu. T...

#News #adwaita #GNOME #Ubuntu #26.04 #LTS #yaru

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New Icons, Theme Tweaks Land in Ubuntu 25.10 Yaru, the default theme in Ubuntu, has received an update ahead of October's Ubuntu 25.10 release. It adds new app icons, and improve theme consistency. You're reading New Icons, Theme Tweaks Land in Ubuntu 25.10, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

New Icons, Theme Tweaks Land in Ubuntu 25.10 Yaru, Ubuntu's default theme, has received a refresh ahead of October's 25.10 release. The artwork drop adds new app icons, and improves theme c...

#News #Eye #Candy #Ubuntu #25.10 #yaru

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Ubuntu 25.10 Yaru Theme Adds New App Icons Ubuntu 25.10 is now in user-interface freeze, with the final gasps of theme polishing squeaking in ahead of the planned beta release later this month. As ...

#News #Ubuntu #25.10 #yaru

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**Ubuntu 25.10 is now in user-interface freeze, with the final gasps of theme polishing squeaking in ahead of the planned beta release later this month.** As a refresher, Ubuntu’s default theme is Yaru, which is a modified version of the GTK4/libadwaita stylesheet used by apps and GNOME Shell. It also includes a custom icon set (increasingly informed by its Adwaita counterpart) and a sound theme. Yaru is maintained by the Ubuntu community, with input and pointers from Canonical’s engineering and design teams. Yaru-ified symbolic icons have been added for the new login accessibility menu GNOME 49 adds to the login screen. Earlier versions of Yaru had some of the icons included, but upstream changes needed to be factored in, and a few icons needed some tweaks. With the next Ubuntu release bringing a new version of the GNOME desktop as well as a couple of new default apps, the Yaru theme set has been updated to ensure all of the changes are accounted for. No gaps, missing icons or quirks. With _Loupe_ and _Ptyxis_ now the default image viewer and terminal apps respectively, Yaru icons have been added for them: new full-colour icons for the Yaru theme in Ubuntu 25.10 Loupe uses a similar icon to the previous image viewer (to keep things consistent for upgraders), albeit now colourful. Similarly, Ptyxis reuses the previous GNOME Terminal icons, albeit coloured purple to both differentiate it and give a nod to its use of colour. New mimetype (icons for files) have bee added for `.toml` and `.csv` files, while mimetype icon for YAML has been fixed to work with more types of yaml project files. Earlier this year I reported on an effort aimed at improving the trash icons for the Ubuntu Dock. That effort didn’t end up in the bin; newer, more bin-like trash icons ship in the Yaru theme update for Ubuntu 25.10, which is great. A few existing icons have been revised, including that of GNOME Software (for those who install it). There are**new icons for _System Monitor_ , Firmware Updater and GNOME Builder **(for those who install the latter). In addition to Yaru-ified icons for the new accessibility menu on the login screen are a glut of and and additional of simple outline glyphs, including revised symbolics for protected wi-fi networks, disabled airplane mode, and Bluetooth ‘acquiring’ status. When laptops are plugged into a power source and charging, there are new icons to denote this: New symbolic charging icons in line with upstream GNOME Other changes include improved spinner cursor icons, a slightly rounder password input box on the login screen, and worked padding and border radius on on prompt dialogs. This update to the Yaru theme is rolling out to Ubuntu 2510 daily builds and monthly snapshots now, and will be on show, out-of-the-box in the Ubuntu 25.10 beta later this month, ahead of the final, stable release in early October.

New Icons, Theme Tweaks Land in Ubuntu 25.10 Yaru, the default theme in Ubuntu, has received an update ahead of October's Ubuntu 25.10 release. It adds new app icons, and improve theme consiste...

#News #Eye #Candy #Ubuntu #25.10 #yaru

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New Icons, Theme Tweaks Land in Ubuntu 25.10 Yaru, the default theme in Ubuntu, has received an update ahead of October's Ubuntu 25.10 release. It adds new app icons, and improve theme consistency. You're reading New Icons, Theme Tweaks Land in Ubuntu 25.10, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

New Icons, Theme Tweaks Land in Ubuntu 25.10 Yaru, Ubuntu's default theme, has received a refresh ahead of October's 25.10 release. The artwork drop adds new app icons, and improves theme c...

#News #Eye #Candy #Ubuntu #25.10 #yaru

Origin | Interest | Match

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Ubuntu Yaru Theme Update Adds New App Icons Yaru, the default theme in Ubuntu, has received an update ahead of October's Ubuntu 25.10 release. It adds new app icons, and improve theme consisten...

#News #Eye #Candy #Ubuntu #25.10 #yaru

Origin | Interest | Match

0 1 0 0
Preview
**Ubuntu 25.10 is now in user-interface freeze, with the final gasps of theme polishing squeaking in ahead of the planned beta release later this month.** As a refresher, Ubuntu’s default theme is Yaru, which is a modified version of the GTK4/libadwaita stylesheet used by apps and GNOME Shell. It also includes a custom icon set (increasingly informed by its Adwaita counterpart) and a sound theme. Yaru is maintained by the Ubuntu community, with input and pointers from Canonical’s engineering and design teams. Yaru-ified symbolic icons have been added for the new login accessibility menu GNOME 49 adds to the login screen. Earlier versions of Yaru had some of the icons included, but upstream changes needed to be factored in, and a few icons needed some tweaks. With the next Ubuntu release bringing a new version of the GNOME desktop as well as a couple of new default apps, the Yaru theme set has been updated to ensure all of the changes are accounted for. No gaps, missing icons or quirks. With _Loupe_ and _Ptyxis_ now the default image viewer and terminal apps respectively, Yaru icons have been added for them: new full-colour icons for the Yaru theme in Ubuntu 25.10 Loupe uses a similar icon to the previous image viewer (to keep things consistent for upgraders), albeit now colourful. Similarly, Ptyxis reuses the previous GNOME Terminal icons, albeit coloured purple to both differentiate it and give a nod to its use of colour. New mimetype (icons for files) have bee added for `.toml` and `.csv` files, while mimetype icon for YAML has been fixed to work with more types of yaml project files. Earlier this year I reported on an effort aimed at improving the trash icons for the Ubuntu Dock. That effort didn’t end up in the bin; newer, more bin-like trash icons ship in the Yaru theme update for Ubuntu 25.10, which is great. A few existing icons have been revised, including that of GNOME Software (for those who install it). There are**new icons for _System Monitor_ , Firmware Updater and GNOME Builder **(for those who install the latter). In addition to Yaru-ified icons for the new accessibility menu on the login screen are a glut of and and additional of simple outline glyphs, including revised symbolics for protected wi-fi networks, disabled airplane mode, and Bluetooth ‘acquiring’ status. When laptops are plugged into a power source and charging, there are new icons to denote this: New symbolic charging icons in line with upstream GNOME Other changes include improved spinner cursor icons, a slightly rounder password input box on the login screen, and worked padding and border radius on on prompt dialogs. This update to the Yaru theme is rolling out to Ubuntu 2510 daily builds and monthly snapshots now, and will be on show, out-of-the-box in the Ubuntu 25.10 beta later this month, ahead of the final, stable release in early October.

Ubuntu 25.10 Yaru Theme Adds New App Icons Ubuntu 25.10 is now in user-interface freeze, with the final gasps of theme polishing squeaking in ahead of the planned beta release later this month. As ...

#News #Ubuntu #25.10 #yaru

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It has been a while since I have been to https://extensions.libreoffice.org/en/extensions/

I just installed #WritingTool that is a big help. I also just installed the #Yaru icon theme, and whew is it looking sharp!

Another extension for #LibreOffice that is […]

[Original post on mastodon.social]

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Ubuntu 25.10 Fixes Something You Didn’t Know Needed Fixing Another bug to file under 'once you see it, you can't unseen it' has been fixed in Ubuntu, this one concerning the curved corners on the desktop dock. You're reading Ubuntu 25.10 Fixes Something You Didn’t Know Needed Fixing, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Ubuntu 25.10 Fixes Something You Didn’t Know Needed Fixing Another bug to file under 'once you see it, you can't unseen it' has been fixed in Ubuntu, this one concerning the curved co...

#News #tofro #Bug #Fixes #Ubuntu #25.10 #ubuntu #dock #yaru

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This Rubbish Icon Might Get a Makeover in Ubuntu 25.10 Ubuntu's trash icon may get a makeover in 25.10. Yaru icon theme designers are working on a new look to improve desktop consistency. You&#...<br/><br/><a rel="tag" class="mention hashtag" href="https […]

[Original post on omgubuntu.co.uk]

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This Rubbish Icon Might Get a Makeover in Ubuntu 25.10 Ubuntu's trash icon may get a makeover in 25.10. Yaru icon theme designers are working on a new look to improve desktop consistency. You&#...<br/><br/><a rel="tag" class="mention hashtag" href="https […]

[Original post on omgubuntu.co.uk]

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This Rubbish Icon Might Get a Makeover in Ubuntu 25.10 Ubuntu's trash icon may get a makeover in 25.10. Yaru icon theme designers are working on a new look to improve desktop consistency. You&#...<br/><br/><a rel="tag" class="mention hashtag" href="https […]

[Original post on omgubuntu.co.uk]

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Fix Coming for Window Button Bug in Ubuntu 25.04 If you installed Ubuntu 25.04 (or upgraded from ...

www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/04/ubuntu-25-04-win...

#News #Bug #Fixes #Ubuntu #25.04 #yaru

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Fix Coming for Window Button Bug in Ubuntu 25.04 If you installed Ubuntu 25.04 (or upgraded from ...

www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/04/ubuntu-25-04-win...

#News #Bug #Fixes #Ubuntu #25.04 #yaru

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#Yaru – Giáo viên nổi tiếng trên Xiuren vol.8495 Xem chi tiết ở đây

#Yaru – Giáo viên nổi tiếng trên Xiuren vol.8495

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