Sabily (Arabic: سبيلي, IPA:[sæˈbiːliː], My Way) is a discontinued Linux distribution based on Ubuntu, designed by and with the intent to be used by followers of Islam.[3]
Originally named Ubuntu Muslim Edition (presented as UbuntuME), development for Sabily was active from 2007 to 2011.
Sabily was designed for Muslim users to have out-of-the-box Arabic language support and Islamic software and tools installed, including a prayer times tool, a Qur'an study tool, Hijri calendar, etc.
The Unity shell is based on GNOME 3 on Sabily 11.10, Unity 2D for graphic cards without 3D capabilities. The Unity shell became available on the Sabily 11.04 Badr DVD. Ubuntu Classic Desktop was the default desktop in Sabily (11.04), but Unity in Ubuntu 11.04. The full version of Sabily comes with out-of-the-box educational software, and codecs for most commonly used media formats.[3][4]
Release History
Sabily followed the release schedule of Ubuntu. After Ubuntu 9.04, its name was changed from UbuntuME, to Sabily.
UbuntuME 7.04 released 12 October 2007
UbuntuME 7.10 released 2 December 2007
UbuntuME 8.04 released 17 May 2008
UbuntuME 8.04.1 released 22 July 2008
Sabily 9.04 Taibah released 12 May 2009
Sabily 9.10 Gaza released 27 December 2009
Sabily 10.04 Manarat released 28 June 2010
Sabily 11.04 Badr released 5 May 2011
Sabily 11.10 Uhud released 19 December 2011
Versions available
There are currently[as of?] three versions of Sabily, but there is no official host at the moment.
Small version (967.96 MB), contains the main Sabily packages, including artwork and Islamic applications and Arabic support.
Full version (1.55 GB), contains the same as the Small version plus multimedia, educational and miscellaneous packages.[5]
The Ultimate version is useful mainly when not connected to the Internet, yet all Sabily versions provide online Qur'an recitations.
Sabily is available as a Live DVD, which can be booted on the host computer without installation. The Wisabi installer can install Sabily to the hard disk within Microsoft Windows, without involving risky formatting or partitioning.
language-pack-ar: translations for language Arabic
language-pack-gnome-ar: GNOME translations for language Arabic
mozilla-Firefox-locale-ar: Mozilla Firefox Arabic language/region package
aspell-ar: Arabic dictionary for aspell
acon: Text console arabization
bicon: Console that supports bidirectional text display
Arab eyes qamoos: Arabic-English dictionary
fonts-hosny-amiri: Arabic Naskh style typographically oriented font (Amiri is a classical Arabic typeface in Naskh style for typesetting books and other running text)[7][8]
Minbar indicates the time when Muslims should pray. It runs in background as a tray icon and plays the athan (call to prayer) at prayer times. Minbar works with the main calculation methods, such as Muslim League (default), Shafii, and Hanafi.[9] Muslims observe salat five times a day, and Minbar helps to remind the user of daily prayer times.[10]
Monajat is an application for Linux and Windows that displays Azkar messages. It runs in the background as a tray icon and displays hadiths. The application is an application provided by the Sabily community.[11]
Zakat Calc is an application for Linux. Zakat, or almsgiving, is one of the Five Pillars of Islam, is the giving of 2.5% of one's possessions (surplus wealth) to charity, generally to the poor and needy. Zakat Calc helps Muslims to calculate zakat types: gold, silver, stones, jewels, savings in bank, property, loans, business, firms, animals (2.5%) and agriculture (10%). It was created using the Gambas programming language and it runs on Linux.
Gnome Nanny (parental control) is an easy way to control how long users or children can be on the computer and what they can and cannot access browsing the web.[12]