This is not a drill, folks: elementary OS 7 ‘Horus’ is now available to download.
It may only been a year since elementary OS 6.1, but it feels like we’ve been waiting for ever — and thankfully it’s been worth the wait! elementary OS 7 release rides atop a refreshed Ubuntu 22.04 LTS software stack, and utilises a new(er) Linux kernel (v5.15) to ensure distro works as best it can, everywhere it can.
In this post I whizz you through through elementary OS 7’s key changes, offer a few thoughts based on first-hand experience (I got to try the release a few days early) and, most importantly of all, point you at the official download link so you can grab a copy and test it out for yourself.
Let’s go!
Contents
elementary OS 7 “Horus”
Install & Setup Experience
I find elementary OS’s installer to be the best offered by any desktop Linux distribution I’ve tried. Big claim, I know: but it’s just so quick, straight-forward, and smart. In OS 7 it’s smarter as it automatically switches to a left-handed mouse layout if the user is clicking away with the right mouse button – a small but thoughtful touch.
The distro also displays a focused set of “onboarding” slides the first time a user logs in to help new users configure their system. A couple of new options have been added to this welcome wizard, including a new “Sunset to Sunrise” option for dark mode, and a toggle to turn on automatic updates.
Files
One of my biggest bug-bears with elementary OS is that it uses single-click to open folders instead of double-click, as is standard in Ubuntu (and most OSes). In earlier versions of the distro you couldn’t change this behaviour easily.
But in elementary OS 7, you can.
Just right-click in an empty part of a Files window to enable/disable the “Select folders with single click” option added to the context menu. Fast, efficient, welcome.
Now, how about letting us open the application launcher with a tap of the super
key? 😉
AppCenter
AppCenter is elementary’s point-of-call for application installation and update management, and plays an important part in the elementary experience. For this release, devs gave worked to improve App Center in a number of different areas.
First up, the software hub is faster than before and better at keeping you informed when it’s performing background tasks. It also adapts gracefully when being resized and tiled, and lets you use two-finger swipe gestures to navigate back through pages.
Presentation wise, app info pages in AppCenter make better use of screenshots, and can display captions to call attention to specific features in this. Additionally, app listings use the accent colour specified in the AppStream data (meaning Flathub apps look nice too).
But my favourite AppCenter changes: a new menu option to manually run a software update check; support for installing OS updates offline; and no more scary warning dialog when installing apps from Flathub as “side loading” from alternative app stores is not something elementary devs discourage.
Keep in mind that cannot search/find/install apps from the Ubuntu repos (i.e. software like VLC, GIMP, Blender, Lollypop, etc) using AppCenter, but full command-line access via apt
is available.
New Music App
A brand new version of Music, elementary’s core app for playing audio files, is included — but brace yourself: Elementary devs rebuilt Music from the ground up to provide a new “on demand” experience that reminds of apps like Amberol.
This mean a library view, filters, playlists, tag editing etc are all gone. Music now has a simple two pane layout: drag and drop files on the left hand side, and control playback on the right. In an era where streaming music is dominant this pivot makes some sense.
However, I reckon this change will be jarring to those who were quite happy with how things were.
Code
Code is elementary’s default text editor (and a good one it is too). Devs will be pleased to hear the app now tiles gracefully, even on smaller screens. It also gains a full-height project sidebar, light/dark mode options, and moves options for Find on Page and Find in Project from the toolbar to the app menu.
Small, but welcome improvements.
Settings
Settings aren’t the most glamorous part of a Linux distro but they are important. Elementary’s bespoke user experience does mean that, compared to other desktop environments and distributions, it has a more refined, focused set of options that users can toy with.
In elementary OS 7, there are a smattering of new settings, including power profiles (performance, balanced, and battery-friendly power saver); support for triggering a terminal command in hot corners; and a redesigned keyboard shortcuts overview that makes it easier to disable or reset key combos based on your needs.
Security buffs include a new setting to prevent USB devices from connecting when the device is locked, while the network indicator is now able to display support for WPA3 networks.
Other changes
- Web app support in Web browser
- Redesigned app icons
- Improved Feedback app
- Change display brightness by scrolling on power indicator
- Option to open/close multitasking view using the
super
key
And that’s kind of it; you can read the official release announcement for additional details about this release, including the rationale behind some of the changes it makes.
Download elementary OS 7
You can Download elementary OS 7 from the elementary project website. The download is accessed through a ‘pay what you want’ mechanism (if you don’t want to pay anything you need to enter ‘0’ as a custom amount, but I urge you to pop back and put donate if you do end up liking what you find).
For now, you can’t upgrade to elementary 7.0 from 6.x directly so a fresh install is necessary. Refer to the upgrade guide on the elementary GitHub for more details on how to do this whilst preserving your user files.
Don’t want to upgrade right away? You don’t have to; elementary OS 6.1 is supported for the duration of Ubuntu 20.04 LTS support cycle, meaning you get critical security updates until 2027.