Instead of forcing everyone onto one ship, the captain did something unprecedented. He said: "Fine. You want a different helm? Take the engine. Take the apt repositories. Take the kernel. Build your own vessel. Just keep the name Ubuntu in your hull so people know you came from here."
And then came Unity . A radical new interface—a dock on the left, a Dash lens, a global menu. It was beautiful. It was innovative. It was also hated by half the crew. They called it a tablet interface on a desktop. They called it arrogance. ubuntu flavours
Xubuntu’s story is one of rescue . It runs on the 10-year-old laptop your aunt threw away. It resurrects netbooks. It is the flavor of “just enough.” While GNOME eats 1.2GB of RAM, Xubuntu sips 400MB and asks, “Is there work to be done?” If Xubuntu is a monk, Lubuntu is a desert hermit. It started with LXDE and now runs LXQt. Its goal is not “lightweight.” Its goal is emaciated . It will run on a Raspberry Pi. It will run on a Pentium III. It will run on a toaster with a screen. Instead of forcing everyone onto one ship, the
In the beginning, there was the Odyssey . A great, sleek, purple-and-orange vessel named GNOME . It was the flagship of the Ubuntu fleet, funded by a visionary (Mark Shuttleworth) who dreamed of a Linux so polished, so human, that your grandmother could sail it to the stars. Take the engine
But sailors began to whisper.
That is unheard of. Apple would never. Microsoft only pretends. Google gives you a theme store.
Its story is localization as love . The open-source world is often Western-centric. Kylin says: “No. Software should speak your language, understand your holidays, and fit your hands.” So why does this story matter? Because every other OS gives you one house. Apple gives you a beautiful, locked cottage. Microsoft gives you a sprawling, ad-riddled mansion. ChromeOS gives you a browser in a shed.
Extra interactivity on desktop The visual above is just an image, but on a large screen you see the full interactive and get the option to hover over each of the fights and character paths to see extra information about the fight; who was fighting whom, what was special about the fight and in what other battles did these characters fight.
Check it out behind your laptop / desktop as well for an even more detailed look into all fights that happened in Dragon Ball Z.
The fight info was taken from the Dragon Ball Wikia pages for each saga. For relevance, a few fights were taken out of the above visual; the Garlic Jr. and Other World Tournament filler sagas were completely removed. Also the ±5 fights that happened in the anime only and didn't feature any of the Z fighters, happened in a nightmare or flashback were taken out.
Created by Nadieh Bremer | Visual Cinnamon
Data from the very extensive Dragon Ball Wikia | Read about the design process in this blog