Joey Sneddon is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of OMG! Ubuntu. Since 2009, he has reported on Ubuntu and the wider open-source ecosystem, documenting every major Ubuntu release since 9.04 to the present. With over 16 years of hands-on experience in Linux desktops, distros and apps, Joey's insights and reporting have been cited by leading technology outlets including Ars Technica, The Verge, Engadget and Forbes.
Ubuntu Touch for Phones will be in a usable enough state for daily use by the end of the month, the Director of Ubuntu Engineering has said.
ZonColor is a super-theme-pack of 16 GTK3 themes, 21 icon theme variants, and a bunch of matching wallpapers - all designed to be mixed and matched.
The Humble Double Fine Bundle launched last night, offering a glut of games from indie developers Double Fine Productions - including some that are new to Linux.
We've all had time when we've been bored out of our minds waiting for something. Instead of putting that time to good use, use it to play some boredom-sapping mini-games.
A new icon, faster load-up times, and fixes for a recent spate of playback problems - yes, it's a new release of Spotify for Linux Preview.
Dear readers. It's that time of the month again. The day in which I write a post on what app sold the most on Ubuntu during April, resulting in a small band of you getting upset that the number 1 app hasn't changed.
The release date of Ubuntu 13.10, along with its major development milestones, are now up on the Ubuntu Wiki.
This article will show you how to add Google's new Keep to Unity's launcher so that it runs free of Chrome and shows its own application icon.
"Revolutionary Email client" Inky, though not well known, is on its way to the Linux desktop.
It might not have been mature enough to ship in Ubuntu 13.04, but work on enhancing the "Smart Scopes Service" continues apace.
A public beta of Lightworks, the professional-grade video editor from Editshare, is now officially available for download.
While the world was busying download Ubuntu 13.04 last week time ran out on a crowd-funding campaign for Linux e-mail app Geary. But why did it fail where so many other, less useful, projects succeed?