


Install PPA Ubuntu should be relatively standard procedure, no matter what package you may choose. It can be found in the menu Applications> Internet. In this first update the cached list of packages stored in Synaptic, then install the browser Chromium. Now, having fully established by PPA and the imported file GPG, you can run a standard terminal and type: sudo apt-get update After downloading the key is imported into the list of keys Synaptic, that is, the next time you install or upgrade Chromium is confirmed that the packages came from the correct source. Sudo apt-key adv - recv-keys - keyserver 4E5E17B5Īt the same time with the key server Ubuntu downloaded key, identified by symbols, standing at the end. Start a terminal and type the following command Chromium is installed and so, but we still recommend you do this to get rid of the error message, which will occur at the end of each update (and, of course, for the security, too). Now we have a line APT, and you can import the key GPG, to confirm the download. Finally, add the following two separate lines APT: deb jaunty mainĭo not hurry to embed Jaunty Jackalope rather than Intrepid, since in this example, the older version of Ubuntu 9.04 is not supported. Then open the tab Third Party Software and press Add. To be able to install and then update Chromium, go to System> Administration> Software Sources. Rather than paint the other benefits of adding these directories as a source of applications, we just take so put the popular open Chromium browser from Google. Also, check update themselves with GPG-signed, and we cannot doubt the authenticity of what you are installing. The advantage of using PPA as compared with the simple downloading the package from the project site is that you can update it via Synaptic, just as if it was loaded from the main repositories. It is well known that this service using Google and the community Wine. That’s where the freshest and the coolest programs grouped into packages Debian, which can be downloaded. Personal Package Archives (PPA) in Ubuntu – it catalogs APT, which are provided by third parties on Launchpad (platform-party developers Ubuntu).
