Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 2 March 2010

Only 25 Paper Cuts left for Lucid!


That’s right, we’ve fixed 75 paper cuts for Lucid already! We only need to fix 25 more to reach 100, but with many important freezes occurring over the next couple weeks we need to prioritize and focus.

  • UI freeze comes this Thursday, March 4. This means that paper cuts involving user-facing changes (e.g. labels, menus, buttons) need to land by Thursday.
  • We have more time left to fix paper cuts that affect more general behavior and are not associated with concrete interface changes.

Here’s a list of fifty or so remaining paper cuts that are good to work on subject to the conditions above.

Related posts


Miguel Divo
13 February 2026

From inspiration to impact: design students from Regent’s University London explore open design for their dissertation projects

Design Article

Last year, we had the opportunity to speak at Regent’s UX Conference (Regent’s University London’s conference to showcase UX work by staff, students, and alumni), where we engaged with students to make them aware of open design and their ability to contribute design skills to open source projects. The talk sparked great discussion, and we ...


Canonical
5 February 2026

SpacemiT announces the availability of  Ubuntu on K3/K1 series RISC-V AI computing platforms

Canonical announcements Article

SpacemiT (Hangzhou) Technology Co., Ltd. today announced a  collaboration with Canonical to make  Ubuntu available on SpacemiT’s new K3 SoC and the existing K1 series RISC-V computing platforms. This collaboration marks a deep integration between open-source operating systems and open RISC-V silicon, bringing powerful, flexible, and relia ...


Mohamed Wadie Nsiri
4 February 2026

AI meets SQL Server 2025 on Ubuntu

Ubuntu Article

Partnership between Microsoft and Canonical Since 2016, when Microsoft announced its intention to make Linux a first class citizen in its ecosystem, Canonical and Microsoft have been working hand in hand to make that vision a reality. Ubuntu was among the first distributions to support the preview of SQL Server on Linux. Ubuntu was the ...