Event JSON
{
"id": "6e9a2dadbfe053db3582d9debc72918c8eb8d68d2278d18dcb1e83a51064a413",
"pubkey": "9d16a5e84f5a41281ac0f59ee2e2cf09bcf09dae03e217813901c6e4e9a65088",
"created_at": 1732128003,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"t",
"news"
],
[
"t",
"random"
],
[
"t",
"ubuntu24_10"
],
[
"t",
"wallpapers"
],
[
"emoji",
"sys_more_orange",
"https://s3.mashiro.top/mstdn/custom_emojis/images/000/011/788/original/7ef7a484af2e7939.png"
],
[
"emoji",
"sys_omgubuntu",
"https://s3.mashiro.top/mstdn/custom_emojis/images/000/011/786/original/d0451437f379cb90.png"
],
[
"imeta",
"url https://i0.wp.com/www.omgubuntu.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/bullfinch-oriole.jpg?resize=406,232\u0026ssl=1"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://hello.2heng.xin/users/omgubuntu/statuses/113516740828946663",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "Ubuntu? That’s a Bullfinch, Not an Oriole\n\nSomething a little lighthearted (unless you’re pedantic about ornithology, in which case don’t be so chirpy) it seems a Bullfinch found its way into Ubuntu 24.10 ‘Oracular Oriole’. Perhaps someone left a window open. If you’ve upgraded to Ubuntu 24.10 you may have noticed that a large number of the supplementary (i.e., non-default) backgrounds feature orioles. Or, as it turns out, what the creator thinks is an oriole. According to a bug recently filed on Launchpad, home of Ubuntu development, one of the wallpapers shipping in Oracular Oriole that is named as being of an oriole, isn’t: When I choose :sys_more_orange:\n#News #Random #Ubuntu24_10 #Wallpapers \n\n:sys_omgubuntu: https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/11/ubuntu-bullfinch-oriole-wallpaper-bug\n\nhttps://i0.wp.com/www.omgubuntu.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/bullfinch-oriole.jpg?resize=406,232\u0026ssl=1",
"sig": "87699d9c0471125ef889b6ae2e84f3723523410f80b5b48868c0aed417409fae812b57e0fd79b216af48bd3675fe056f0a6784f542bde39239d918a870cda09c"
}