Did you know?

Canonical

on 21 September 2010

This article was last updated 6 years ago.


While browsing Ubuntu Software Center, have you ever wondered:

  • how it displays screenshots?
  • who uploads the screenshots?
  • why some of the screenshots are totally outdated?

Ubuntu Software Center pulls these screenshots from screenshots.debian.net. Anyone can upload screenshots to this site.

Keeping up with software that changes in almost every release is not an easy task. Often new screenshots are not uploaded, hence the outdated screenshots.

Want to help fix this?

Fire up your favorite application, and take a screenshot of it in action. (Screenshots must be in PNG format.) If necessary, crop the image  to display only the program. Then upload it. (No login or e-mail address is required, no strings attached!)

Once uploaded, wait for the wonderful Debian admins to review your screenshots and publish it for the whole world to enjoy.

What about fonts?

There are over 200 font packages available, but hardly any of them have screenshots. You can do the same as above for each font package, too.

Or you could even write a script that generates a screenshot for every font package. Anyone up for the challenge?

Ubuntu

An enterprise Linux for everyone

Ubuntu powers millions of PCs and laptops around the world.

Ubuntu brings security, usability and stability together, offering you a platform for innovation, combined with the freedom that transparent, open source code offers.

Explore Ubuntu Desktop ›

Ubuntu

Bring Ubuntu to your organization

Ubuntu Desktop combines enterprise-grade support, security and functionality with the best of open source.

Seamlessly integrate Ubuntu machines with your existing infrastructure and tools.

Explore Ubuntu Desktop for organizations ›

Newsletter signup

Get the latest Ubuntu news and updates in your inbox.

By submitting this form, I confirm that I have read and agree to Canonical's Privacy Policy.

Related posts

How we ran a sprint to refresh our design website, Part 2

Part 2 of our series on how our team created content for our design website. Get insights, tools, and lessons to help you run your own design sprint.

A journey of a thousand smiles: Questing Quokka

Embarking on a quest can be serious business – whether you’re going off on a family holiday or traveling the hills of Britain in search of the holy grail, our...

In pursuit of quality: UX for documentation authors

Canonical’s Platform Engineering team has been hard at work crafting documentation in Rockcraft and Charmcraft around native support for web app frameworks...