Angry Birds is a puzzle video game developed by Rovio Mobile. Inspired primarily by a sketch of stylized wingless birds, the game was first released for Apple's iOS in December 2009, Now Angry Birds can be played in Android, Windows, and Google Chrome.

Running Angry Birds on Ubuntu
There is a good news (is not a new news) that ubuntu user now can play the most rocketed game that is not `Angry Birds`, moments ago chrome provide Angry birds to list of Chrome Game that ready to install and the other good news is it can be played offline.
Angry Birds Screenshot

Finally GIMP 2.7.3 (unstable) has been released and ready to test, the most visible changes in this release are full single-window mode just like Photoshop which run on Windows, other enhancements contained on GIMP 2.7.3 are  :

  • Support Layer Groups
  • Program administration
  • Enhancements in order to ‘on canvas’ textual content modifying
  • Addition of a ‘Lock Content’ switch in order to Levels,Channels and Path dialogs.
  • ‘Rule of fifths’ crop guide overlay.
Install GIMP 2.7.3 in Ubuntu via PPA
To Install Ubuntu 9.10 as well as Ubuntu 11.04 via PPA, you can include this ’ppa:matthaeus123/mrw-gimp-svn’ to your Repository. This particular PPA isn't officially provide by GIMP. So, you should be thought about unstable.

To install GIMP 2.7.3 open a terminal window (press Ctrl+Alt+T) and copy+paste the following line: 
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:matthaeus123/mrw-gimp-svn
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install gimp
If you have GIMP Installed in your ubuntu before, just add the PPA and upgrade GIMP using the Ubuntu Software Center or the Update Manager.

Download GIMP 2.7.3 via FTP

You can also download GIMP 2.7.3 directly via GIMP FTP bellow :

  • Download GIMP 2.7.3, here.
  • Download GIMP 2.7.3 release notes, here

Celebrating 20 Years of Linux presence (1991 - 2011), Obviously Linux has running so far. a picture above give illustration of  a journey of Linux (kernel) since 1991 till now, a part of image above tells us that Ubuntu now dominate a Linux user for 34% by July 2011 followed by Redhat/Fedora for 28%. Check the following interesting facts :

(this article is re-post from previous article that writen by dholbach in  this article)
 
Last week we hit Feature Freeze. This is the big date that all developer dread the most. Now features and new upstream versions have to have landed, everything else will be a matter the release team has to decide upon. We are rushing towards release with UI Freeze and Beta Freeze coming up next week. Exciting times!
For this report I got an update from the Ubuntu Server team, written by Dave Walker.

What’s cooking in Ubuntu server land?
The Ubuntu Server Team has already had quite a busy cycle. Last cycle, openstack components were initially introduced. This cycle has seen them receive much more attention, and packaging of extra components that didn’t exist last cycle.
In addition, using Ubuntu Server to orchestrate deployments is something that has evolved this cycle. One of the most interesting parts is the use of cobbler for deployment.
Ensemble, which is now part of the server team has entered the archive this cycle. Originally, ensemble worked purely against the ec2 API to assist with cloud deployments. This cycle, support for provisioning bare-metal hardware using cobblers API has been achieved.
There are always areas where interested people can contribute to the server flavour. The development tasks that people can take on varies from bitesize trivial tasks, to larger undertaking depending on available time commitment and experience. The type of desired task also tends to vary depending on the stage of the development cycle.
The Ubuntu server team tracks these bugs for release. Please note, that anything unassigned or assigned to ‘Ubuntu Server Team’ is generally up for grabs.
Another crucial part of being part of the Ubuntu Server Team, is triaging incoming bugs. We generally follow this process. We also welcome testing of the development cd image, and server archive components. This is vital to help catch critical issues before release.
Ensemble is always interested in having formula contributions, which is another interesting way that people with experience in deploying workloads are welcomed to contribute.
All contributions to Ubuntu Server are appreciated, if you want to get more involved please join#ubuntu-server on freenode IRC and say hello, or more formally follow:https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ServerTeam/Membership
Thanks a lot Dave for the update! I’d like to add that if you’re interested in the Cloud and what’s happening there, make sure you visit http://cloud.ubuntu.com/! Also if you got excited about Ensemble and what it can do for you, have a look at existing formulas and requested formulas. Just join #ubuntu-ensemble if you need some help or want to meet the people behind this fantastic project.
If you’re interested in any other aspect of Ubuntu Oneiric, I’d refer you to the oneiric-changes mailing list and the big picture specification status overview instead. So what’s happening with the Ubuntu Desktop?

Finaly Blender 2.59 released, This is mostly a bug fix release with 140 fixes since 2.58a. Additions include improved keymap editing, 3D mouse support, some new addons and Node UI improvements. What's cool stuff inside ?, find in here
3D Mouse support "NDOF"
Blender is now built with support for 3D Connexion devices, for more natural control during view navigation and fly mode.

Custom Keymaps
User edited keymaps now no longer override the builtin keymaps entirely, but rather save only the difference and reapply those changes. This means they can stay better in sync when the builtin keymaps change.

Ivy Generator (Addon)
This tools adds the ability to "grow" curves over an existing mesh with the option of adding leaves and adjusting many parameters for the final result.
Grease Scatter (Addon)
Grease scatter was used for sintel to place objects around the ally, using grease pencil lines as a guide as to where to scatter objects
.

And Many More
Find out what coll stuff else, visit Blender 2.59 Complate changelog, here.

Finally Mozilla Firefox team has Officially release Firefox 6 Final trough this announcement and has been putted in mozillateam PPA, for those ubuntu user who have not tried yet, can Install/Upgrade to Firefox 6 through this way.
Mozilla Firefox 6 Final
Upgrade / Install Firefox 6 via PPA
Follow this step to upgrade/install Mozilla Firefox 6 Final to ubuntu :
  • sudo add-apt-repository ppa:mozillateam/firefox-stable
  • sudo apt-get update
  • sudo apt-get dist-upgrade

Although Firefox 6 not yet release 'officialy' by Mozilla Firefox Team, Finaly Firefox 6  Final has been available in Mozilla Firefox FTP since 08/11/2011 and ready for download, you can test and install it in Linux / Ubuntu, download Firefox 6 through this link :
  • Download Firefox 6 for Linux/Ubuntu 32bit (tar.bz2) : here 
  • Download Firefox 6 for Linux/Ubuntu 64bit (tar.bz2) : here 
  • Download Firefox 6 for Mac : here
  • Download Firefox 6 for windows 32bit : here 
For other version and operating system you can Mozilla Firefox official FTP page on following links :

Finally there is any certainty that mozilla thunderbird will become Ubuntu 11.10 Oneric Ocelot default mail application replacing Evolution, this news also written by Mike Conley (Mozilla Thunderbird Staf) on his blog here.

Thunderbird will be the default e-mail client in Ubuntu Oneiric
..
Well, kinda, yeah.  But the thing is, those first alphas were just to get a sense of how Thunderbird would work as the default client, and to gather feedback.  At a moments notice, Canonical could have backed it out and switched it back to Evolution.
..
But they’ve given their thumbs up, and they’re fully on board.