Unity (user interface)

Unity is a graphical shell for the GNOME desktop environment originally developed by Canonical Ltd. for its Ubuntu operating system. It debuted in 2010 in the netbook edition of Ubuntu 10.10. Since 2017, its development was taken over by the Unity7 Maintainers (Unity7) and UBports (Lomiri, formerly known as Unity8).

Unity
Original author(s)Canonical Ltd.
Developer(s)Unity7, UnityX: Unity7 Maintainers
Lomiri (Unity8): UBports
Initial release9 June 2010 (2010-06-09)
Stable release
7.6  / 30 June 2022
Repository
Written inUnity 2D: C++, JavaScript, QML
2.0–7.4: C, C++, Python, Vala
8: C++ and QML
UnityX: Fish
Operating systemUbuntu Desktop, Ubuntu TV, Ubuntu Touch
TypeGraphical shell
LicenseGPL v3, LGPL v3
Websiteunityd.org 

Unity7 is the default desktop environment in Ubuntu Unity, an official flavor of Ubuntu since 2022. Ubuntu Unity and Unity7 Maintainers have started working on the successor of Unity7, UnityX.

It was part of the Ayatana project, an initiative with the stated intention of improving the user experience within Ubuntu. It was initially designed to make more efficient use of space given the limited screen size of netbooks, including, for example, a vertical application switcher called the launcher, and a space-saving horizontal multipurpose top menu bar. Unlike GNOME, KDE Plasma, Xfce, or LXDE, Unity is not a collection of applications. It is designed to use existing programs.

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