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Red Hat Explains Stance on KDE/Gnome Desktop Changes

An anonymous reader writes "A lot of people are angry over the changes RedHat has done to KDE and Gnome in their latest beta, code-named Null. They have basically "nullified" all the default themes and settings with which each desktop attempts to posture for more users. Instead, there is now a beautiful unified look. To explain RedHat's stance, Owen Taylor writes this piece here. I hope that RedHat successfully forces both Gnome and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop. This would be the greatest gift to the Linux world."

520 comments

  1. Hmmm... by cuvavu · · Score: 2, Funny

    Begun the flame-war has!

    1. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      (peterpi, posting anonymously) shit, I just noticed I didn't check the "Post Anonymously" box.

      No doubt I'll be modded and loose my initial post score +1 thingy wotsit.

    2. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Articles like this should have a red/yellow/orange "Read more" link on the front page.

  2. I'm with RedHat on this one by davidj · · Score: 1

    How is Red Hat's configuration any _less_ obnoxious than KDE/Gnome/Ximian's ?

    1. Re:I'm with RedHat on this one by rosewood · · Score: 3, Informative

      I started using Ximian the day it came out, and I enjoyed it. Then, I realized it ate a lot of my menus that RedHat or I had installed and didnt play very nice in letting me re-add them. Sadly, Ximian really locks down the menus to just a few programs, which can be a real pain in the ass when you still know of only 1 way to do things.

    2. Re:I'm with RedHat on this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They also add in a specific "favourites" menu aside from the RedCarpet-controlled ones, in which you can do any menu customization that you please for a given account, so it's kind of a moot point. On the other hand, the only thing I didn't like about Ximian (perhaps it's also a Gnome problem in general) is that there's no -easy- way to add a shortcut icon to your desktop. The option just isn't available when right-clicking.

    3. Re:I'm with RedHat on this one by N3WBI3 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      This configuration is a great idea, I see a great deal of pissing and moaning about the fact Redhat has applied their own theme to KDE/Gnome, get over it its a theme.

      If you dont like it change the theme yourself, or dont install it with the distro go out get the source and compile it yourself.

      I love linux on the desktop (I use fvwm), but when I tried to set it up for a friend she went nuts becuase it was too much of a change for her. Linux has come far enough that there is no excuse for this, I spent about a day and a half tweeking it (Gnome) for her and now she loves it.

      --
    4. Re:I'm with RedHat on this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The menu should not be a problem in Gnome 2 (even in ximians gnome 2).

    5. Re:I'm with RedHat on this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think your friend's story demonstrates why everything shouldn't look the same. But FVWM!? I'd rather use twm

    6. Re:I'm with RedHat on this one by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1
      No what my firends story shows is the need for joe average to have a desktopsolution which is similar. In her words "well this is nice but what if I sit down at someone elses linux computer".

      Even if I got her to learn the default Gnome, and to like it what if she sat down at a computer with just KDE? I think often Linux users overestimate and underrate the need for a desktop to be close enough to another that it is usable with little to no learning curve (keep in mind most of us are not geeks/do not work with computers).

      As for FVWM I use it because I find it has just the right ratio of ease of tuning (I use 1.24) with functionality.

      --
  3. Unified look? Pros and Cons by Lolaine · · Score: 1

    An unified look is good for first time users ... one look, 2 desktops ....

    But since they work in a very different way ... is this good? I mean, KDE control center != Gnome Control Center, Customization is different, Nautilus and Konqueror are a lot different ...

    --
    ------- The last Sig. got fired.
  4. Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting idea, but it reminds me of XP's desert.

    1. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I can recognise Windows by the fact that it is bland and ugly. I can recognise a GNU/Linux or FreeBSD desktop no matter what window manager is being used; I'd used just about all of 'em. Let Red Hat do what it wants with its distro; if you don't like what they do, then switch to Gentoo or FreeBSD. Red Hat is not Burger King, and "Have it your way" isn't one of Red Hat's slogans. So if you want Linux made your way, make it yourself.

    2. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not a great analogy. If linux is going to be run on a desktop, pick a desktop that meets the needs of the company. I wouldn't leave that up to the user.

    3. Re:Unified Desktop by AccUser · · Score: 1

      Er... you mean fvwm?

      --

      Any fool can talk, but it takes a wise man to listen.

    4. Re:Unified Desktop by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 1

      I agree whole heartedly with one astrisk. I do believe that Linux needs a unified, interoperable desktop solution but I think that the single look and feel should be left up to the individual distro. Redhat has the right idea. Being the leader in Linux distros, I think that it's brave (and required) of them to make a move like this to try and steer desktop Linux in a direction that is more concerned with usability and user experience than Gnome vs. KDE idealogical holy wars. Bravo to Redhat for putting the user first.

      Chris

    5. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 4, Insightful
      So essentially you say that we all should run one desktop dictated by a single distributor.

      No, this is not what we need. Just like we don't need a "unified" CPU-maker and a "unified" PC-vendor we don't need a "unified" Linux distribution.

      If we would need that, we would all run Macs now.

      DOS/Windows is so entrenched because:

      • People are used to it
      • OEMs have to take great risks by installing anything that is not Windows.
      • All the software is there

      RedHat having their great "unified" desktop won't make Photoshop run on it, it won't void the contracts OEM have with Microsoft and it won't make people forget about Windows.

      However, both KDE and GNOME are usable enough and similar enough so that a Widnows user will have no problem using it (especially if you choose the Windows-config on your first login in KDE.) so that is already solved.

      What we still need is:

      • a WINE that works reliably
      • OEMs preinstalling Linux

      I'm putting big hope in Codeweavers to produce a usable Wine that is easy to install and works with most office-software. - On all distributions, not only on RedHat.

      and not distributors playing monopoly-unification games and reducing inter-distribution interoperability.

    6. Re:Unified Desktop by Animgif · · Score: 5, Interesting

      No, I don't think that we should all use the same distro from the same distributor. What I do think is that if Linux is going to succeed in the consumer market, then there must be a noticable face for the consumer to identify with. This is what Windows has done. Most users couldn't tell you the difference in the versions of Windows, other than the newer on is prettier.

      In contrast to what you say above, I do think that a unified face will allow more software to be ported to Linux. As companies see that the market is maturing, they will be more likely to take the jump to a linux version because there is less risk to there bottom line. You have a chicken and egg fiasco, which will come first, products or customers? I definately feel that this more identifiable "version" of RedHat Linux will go far is helping the cause. Consumers will now be able to focus on making linux work for them, instead of making Linux work.

      --
      ------ This has been provided as a public service! ------
    7. Re:Unified Desktop by 4of12 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I couldn't agree with RedHat's statement any more. I definately feel that a unified look and feel is something that Linux has always needed.

      Yes, I think so, too.

      For far too long I've watched two extremely talented and desktop teams produce excellent software and haven't seen as much cooperation and collaboration as I would like. Being open source projects, both teams have the advantage of being able to more easily "steal" good ideas from the other team. I think that's great.

      I'm really glad not only that Red Hat, whose market size in Linux matters, is taking the initiative to draw the two desktops closer together, but also that the two desktops are open source and that Red Hat even has the ability to do this kind of unification.

      That is, while they don't perhaps realize or care much about it, I, for one, am happy that both Gnome and KDE are unifiable.

      That's a great thing.

      I wouldn't even care to speculate how much needless user pain there has been between proprietary desktops (win32 and Mac) that absolutely positively would never be merged simply because they're closed source and used as marketing weapons.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    8. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 5, Interesting
      No, I don't think that we should all use the same distro from the same distributor. What I do think is that if Linux is going to succeed in the consumer market, then there must be a noticable face for the consumer to identify with. This is what Windows has done. Most users couldn't tell you the difference in the versions of Windows, other than the newer on is prettier.

      Oh, not another one explaining the success of Microsoft. Face it: Microsoft is successful because IBM gave them the OS-monopoly in 1981. Everybody would have been successful with that, even Microsoft which never really did anything other than following the market. Microsoft has delayed the wide adoption of a GUI (every other major platform had a GUI long before 1990, but Windows 3.1 was the first usable GUI for DOS and came in 1993), they delayed the wide adoption of the Internet (In the early 90's Bill Gates himlelf said that "Internet will never be popular" and "The Internet? We are not interested in it") and PDAs (Go! invented the first PDA, Microsoft killed them with a lot of FUD and PenWindows which came out 2 years afterwards - which was dropped after Go! went bankrupt. Great, eh? PenWindows only use was to kill a company, advancing technology was not really important for MS)

      So please stop telling me Microsoft's great secret of success. In real life, Microsoft is one of the most chaotic and incompetent companies.

      Microsoft's only interest is maintaining the status-quo. The only reason we have Windows now is because everybody else already had a GUI for years and Microsoft had to follow.

      In all new markets like Webservers for example, Linux is doing great - better than Windows. In all old markets where people have tons of programs and documents to lose, Linux doing not so good.

      We need backwards-compatibility or WINE. Everything else is already there.

      In contrast to what you say above, I do think that a unified face will allow more software to be ported to Linux. As companies see that the market is maturing, they will be more likely to take the jump to a linux version because there is less risk to there bottom line. You have a chicken and egg fiasco, which will come first, products or customers?

      Customers.

      I definately feel that this more identifiable "version" of RedHat Linux will go far is helping the cause. Consumers will now be able to focus on making linux work for them, instead of making Linux work.

      Nonsense.

      Currently Joe installs Linux and either stays with it because he likes it better or drops it because doesn't run.

      How will that change? RedHat's GUI will be as new as stock-KDE for Joe (only uglier), so why should Joe be more likely to keep using it?

      RedHat won't enable Linux on the masses' desktops. Codeweavers will.

    9. Re:Unified Desktop by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      No actually it will be RedHat. They run their business based on good business decisions rather than touchy feely open source community feelings.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    10. Re:Unified Desktop by siskbc · · Score: 1

      While I don't have any problem with a single distro doing this, I don't think there is any point in ALL the distros making their products look identical. I can see the point in establishing a baseline of installed packages and maybe even a consistent pattern of install directories, (although environment variables should fix even that), but why SHOULD look and feel be the same across linux platforms? The attraction of linux is the variety, the diversity, not the homogeneity.

      You can always recognize Windows by the look of it, as it should be for Linux.
      Many in the linux community try so hard to beat Windows that they are trying to make linux essentially *become* windows. We need to watch out for this - otherwise, all we have is another crappy OS.

      At most, I might go along with a "Dummy config" that looks as much like windows as possible to get the crossover users - but when you get down to it, that's called KDE.

      --

      -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    11. Re:Unified Desktop by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      Personally I'm to the point now where I'm so sick of Microsoft hegemony that I don't care if RedHat engages in similar predatory practices as long as MS goes down. I'll support RedHat even if they were a monopoly, because at least the technology inside is good and it's not MS snake oil.

    12. Re:Unified Desktop by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

      Yep, my windows box is always identifiable by the blue screen it frequently displays.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    13. Re:Unified Desktop by krogoth · · Score: 2

      That doesn't make any sense at all. All red hat did is make the two desktops look more similar - they didn't make X configure itself. How can consumers "focus on making linux work for them, instead of making Linux work." just because KDE and GNOME look similar?

      --

      They that quote Benjamin Franklin on liberty and safety deserve neither.
    14. Re:Unified Desktop by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I'm glad to hear that KDE and GNOME are unifiable. But will it be the least upper bound or the greatest lower bound of the two?

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    15. Re:Unified Desktop by neowintermute · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I wouldn't count on that if I were you.

      Consider this:

      1. internet explorer in crossover office runs well enough to use all day. internet explorer in the public GPL tree crashes after about 15 seconds of use.

      2. quicken doesn't install with the public GPL tree of wine. quicken under crossover office runs well enough to use for a long time.

      I know these things because I've tested them myself. I'm comparing crossover office 1.2 to wine 20020804.

      if you're looking to codeweavers to provide the community with a reliable wine while still trying to make a profit, you're not going to be happy.

    16. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "DOS/Windows is so entrenched because:"

      There is very little consumer 3rd party software out there for anything else...

    17. Re:Unified Desktop by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      These changes really don't affect anyone other than newbies.

      Think about this: Anyone with any experience using RedHat linux is probably going to pick and choose what they want on their desktop anyway in terms of themes. (I use Enlightnemtnet because it looks so damn cool.) When I used to use RedHat, I found over time that I was installing less and less of it each time. I eventually got to the point where I could compile just about anything I needed in terms of apps, custom kernel, X, window managers, etc... If you want choice in any distro, it's already there. Just don't go with the defaults, use the custom installation.

      Chew on this for a bit: How many REAL experienced Linux users actually go with the defaults? Probably none. So.. if you are a user who understands and wants choice, you are likely a user who has experience. Only the newbies don't fully understand the concept of choice... look at where they are coming from (Windows). For them, this is likely to matter very little because they aren't ready for it yet, so the defaults are very likely good. It gives them a chance to try the OS out and have a basic user experience that is similar between KDE and GNOME. If this extended to other distros, it would be great. As they gain experience, they CAN begin to make choices. And, in the event that the only experience they want is a glorified typewriter, then RedHat (and potentially other distros) will be able to offer this to them as well.

      There is no reason that this has to be a problem for anyone. RedHat could make it even better by just asking you at installation "Do you want the unified Desktop themes, or do you want to pick your own"? A simple change that I think would benefit newbies and satisfy power users.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    18. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were going to make a concerted push to start putting linux desktops in the buisness world (such as RH is doing and needs to do), how else do you insure that the end users, most of whome have never even looked at Linux befor, are able to use the system when they go to another workstation?

      As I see it, HR had only 4 options to make Linux on the desktop work for the masses (you know, those people who we all get calls from when their windows computer needs to be plugged back in, or when their newest game just fried the systems registry, or because they otherwise do not know how to do any more with the computer than their job requiers them to know).

      RH's option are:

      1. Do what they did, make Gnome and KDE look the same
      2. Stop shipping Gnome and only ship KDE
      3. Stop shipping KDE and only ship Gnome
      4. Take the best of both and intergrate them into a single desktop.

      Each of these has many downsides, the most obvious for each are:

      1. Is a somewhat immature responce, and it will take years for it to grow to real maturity.
      2. Stop shipping Gnome and only ship KDE will piss off all Gnome zelots and start another Linux holey war.
      3. Stop shipping KDE and only ship Gnome will piss off all KDE zelots and start another Linux holey war.
      4. If RH were to take the best of both and intergrate them into a single desktop it would consume vast amounts or their resources, and likely result in many legal battles, and at least at firs an immature and unstable product. This will also piss off all Gnome and KDE zelots and start another Linux holey war, one that would really hurt RH.

      Given these choices, what buisness desition would you make?

    19. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 4, Insightful
      No, I don't think that we should all use the same distro from the same distributor. What I do think is that if Linux is going to succeed in the consumer market, then there must be a noticable face for the consumer to identify with. This is what Windows has done. Most users couldn't tell you the difference in the versions of Windows, other than the newer on is prettier.

      And I say again, that's nonsense.

      BeOS had a nice desktop. Where is it? It's gone because it doesn't has any apps.

      Windows succeeded because it was backwards-compatible. The PC was plagued by IRQ and DMA conflicts and still took away marketshare from Macs and Amiga.

      Linux needs to become backwards-compatible to Windows and needs to run Win32 applications.

      That's what is holding it back.

      In all areas where the apps are available, Linux is doing fine

      Examples? Webservers - Windows gets marginalized there. Professional 3D-animation: Just after the tools were ported, many movie studios moved right to Linux. Embedded systems: Except for PDA's which are ruled by Palm and WinCE (and now guess why? RIGHT! Because of the APPS!!!) Linux has become the standard.

      Software will be ported to Linux when the users are there. C++ and Delphi apps will be ported to KDE and C-apps will be ported to GNOME. Period. All apps work on all desktops, no problem in sight. End of story.

      People want applications.

      Nobody will give a shit wether an application runs on Qt, GTK or Wine. It doesn't matter as long as the functionality is there.

    20. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      Answer this:

      Why should a "unified" desktop better than some default desktop?

      Both are new to the user. HOW DOES THE NEWBIE BENEFIT?

      Just look at KDE 3.l and Keramik and tell me RedHat should not install that as a default.

      If you think that newbies should not choose, just install KDE and include GNOME on the CDs for those who really want it - or do a recommendation.

      Actually I don't really mind distributors optimizing things, but in this case it's not an optimization, it's a "kill all innovation" approach. RedHat didn't try to make their default desktop better, they tried to align their default desktop to another desktop.

      RedHat newbies will never see Keramik, they will never see new cool features.

      All they will see is a bastardized desktop that just won't feel right and will be behind both KDE and GNOME.

      And for you "standardize"-fans: Now we have 2 major desktops (KDE, GNOME), how is going from 2 desktops to 3 desktops (KDE, GNOME, Redhat) a step towards standardization? Imagine every distributor would do that?

    21. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2, Troll
      I would have done what every commercial Linux distribution except RedHat does:

      Install KDE by default but include Gnome in the distribution for those who want it.

      What's wrong with that?

      The reason RedHat pushes Gnome is just politics and stubbornness.

      But it's OK, it's their distribution, so why not install Gnome by default and include KDE in the distribution?

      Would still be better than such a half-assed desktop mixture.

      PS: You can't "take the best of both and integrate them into a single desktop" because KDE is written in C++/Qt and Gnome in C/GTK. Those don't mix. If they would mix, such a merger would have happened a long time ago.

    22. Re:Unified Desktop by [amorphis] · · Score: 2

      Personally I'm to the point now where I'm so sick of Microsoft hegemony that I don't care if RedHat engages in similar predatory practices as long as MS goes down. I'll support RedHat even if they were a monopoly, because at least the technology inside is good and it's not MS snake oil.

      Roll your statement back 20 years:

      Personally I'm to the point now where I'm so sick of IBM hegemony that I don't care if Microsoft engages in similar predatory practices as long as IBM goes down. I'll support Microsoft even if they were a monopoly, because at least the technology inside is good and it's not IBM snake oil.

    23. Re:Unified Desktop by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      stop being so freaking idealistic. The real world can't handle diversity. It's a matter of the lesser of two evils, in every part of life - for president, for which corporation you work for, and for software. If you have to have a monopoly -- and we do now that computers are a commodity -- wouldn't you rather have one that had some substance underneath all the flash??

    24. Re:Unified Desktop by metacosm · · Score: 2

      WINE and Windows Compatibility are a way to win the battle and loose the war, it is a short-sighted "Fix it now" solution that will cause more harm that good. All it will do is ensure that developers never develop for linux.

      WINE is a nice way to play catch-up forever. Think about it from a a developer point of view. If I know that my app will be developed for the massive market that is windows -- and get the linux market for free (since they are playing catch-up and compatibility) what possible motivation would I have for creating a native linux product. I would have ZERO motivation.

      This is what killed OS/2 -- they had a windows compatibility mode that was so good -- no one developed for OS/2, what possible motivation would there be to? Program to windows -- sell on windows and OS/2.

      Beyond all that -- the unified desktop (QT+GTK) will enhance the user experience. Widgets should look and act the same, you shouldn't have to train your eye to a new widget set for each application you use. You shouldn't select an application because it fits "with your desktop" -- you should select it because it is the best application -- the article makes the point very clearly and I whole-heartedly agree.

    25. Re:Unified Desktop by fwr · · Score: 2

      Well, as someone who IS using the RedHat beta I find the lack of difference in the look and feel of the two desktops confusing. That may seem like an oxymoron, but it's not. I'm used to having KDE and GNOME look and feel differently, and now it just about looks the same whether I choose KDE or GNOME from the login screen. That lack of difference is now confusing, making me feel like they took something away...

    26. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft is successful because IBM gave them the OS-monopoly in 1981.

      I guess that explains the success of the USCD P-System...

    27. Re:Unified Desktop by Chasuk · · Score: 2

      So please stop telling me Microsoft's great secret of success.

      Microsoft's success is inarguable. Their "secret" may be arguable, but that shouldn't be the issue here. At issue is a unified desktop - the noticable face for the consumer to identify with - that the previous respondent vetted.

      You write:

      The only reason we have Windows now is because everybody else already had a GUI for years and Microsoft had to follow.

      Whether this is true or not is largely irrelevant; the Microsoft GUI is the only GUI that 90% of of current (consumer-Joe-and-Jane-public) computer users have ever known.

      When the first respondent wrote:

      Most users [can't] tell you the difference in the versions of Windows, he was entirely accurate. I've worked tech support for years, and the vast majority of our customers have no idea which version of Windows they are using. They frequently tell me they are using Windows '97, being unable to distinguish between the OS and a suite of applications.

      The point of this? If Linux is ever to succeed on the Desktop, with über-geeks AND consumer-Joe-and-Jane-public, a unified desktop is essential.

      As Linux exists now, customer support for Joe-and-Jane-public would be a nightmare.

      Me: "Do you use KDE or Gnome, Ma'am?"

      Them: "Hmm?"

      You also write:

      RedHat won't enable Linux on the masses' desktops. Codeweavers will.

      Bullshit. Most users - the non-MS haters, non-zealots - will see no reason to switch to another OS in the first place, and being able to run the same apps won't sway them. They will respond, logically: "If I'm going to be using the same programs, why not be using the same OS?"

      I see Wine as a hindrance to Linux, not as a help. I also find it puzzling. To me, it is a bit like going to a Chinese restaurant and ordering a cheeseburger.

    28. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      WINE and Windows Compatibility are a way to win the battle and loose the war, it is a short-sighted "Fix it now" solution that will cause more harm that good. All it will do is ensure that developers never develop for linux.

      Wrong, Wine makes developing for Linux easier and faster. IBM has shown that you can make good and stable Wine-based apps (hpbuilder).

      WINE is a nice way to play catch-up forever.

      Also wrong. All Win-soft is Win98-compatible which is a fixed target for 4 years now. - And will be around for quite some time, too.

      This is what killed OS/2 -- they had a windows compatibility mode that was so good -- no one developed for OS/2, what possible motivation would there be to? Program to windows -- sell on windows and OS/2.

      Yeah, I saw that coming. But it's complete nonsense. OS/2 was killed because it was from IBM.

      From an OEM point of view:

      OS/2 = IBM = computer-maker = competitor = not a good idea.
      Windows = Microsoft = software-company = no competitor = OK

      Add in that OS/2 was too expensive, had really shitty marketing and wasn't really pushed by IBM itself (they sold DOS/Windows PCs at all times!) - but even the best price, the best marketing and IBM only selling OS/2 PC wouldn't have made OS/2 successful. OEMs would have been stupid to adopt it.

      Wine is a great way to attract users. If Wine becomes so good that Wine-apps run on Linux just like on Windows - well what's the problem?

      But we both know that developing for Win32 is a pain. Wine is a way to attract users. Once Linux gets a significant marketshare on the desktop (over 10%) developers will happily make native Linux-versions. Just like developers stopped made Win32-apps when Win95 was released. Also a native app will have better KDE-integration (and that's where RedHat's initiative fails - where it counts it doesn't work, it just puts a skin over it) than a Wine-version. Of course Linux-users have to be relevant, which is currently not the case on the desktop.

      We have to get the users *FIRST*. Whining about no native apps available won't change a thing. If Wine is a way to get users (and it is, IMO) it is the way to go.

      And another thing: Linux has a strong development community which puts out many great Linux-only apps. Wine won't change that. - If Linux manages to become the OS with the most apps (Qt, GTK, Win32 AND Motif) it will become the most popular OS.

      Beyond all that -- the unified desktop (QT+GTK) will enhance the user experience. Widgets should look and act the same, you shouldn't have to train your eye to a new widget set for each application you use. You shouldn't select an application because it fits "with your desktop" -- you should select it because it is the best application -- the article makes the point very clearly and I whole-heartedly agree.

      Well, where it counts, RedHat's approach fails. (Does Gnome's Palm-software get synch my notes with knotes? I don't think so. Does Gnome's PIM software know about my KDE-adressbook? Does Gnome's Windowmanager restore KDE-windows on relogin? on the correct desktop? I don't think so. Will Gnome apps use KDE's really fine printmanager? I don't think so.) RedHat made it *look* like it's integrated, but in reality it isn't.

      *IF* you think we need a really unified desktop you will have to choose.

    29. Re:Unified Desktop by Ed+Avis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There are good political reasons to choose GNOME. (I don't know why when people say 'politics' it is assumed to be a synonym for 'bad'.) Namely, proprietary software vendors can produce GNOME versions of their apps without any trouble; but you have to pay Troll Tech if you want to produce proprietary software for KDE.

      Free software zealots won't care one way or the other - indeed they might even prefer the GPL'd Qt rather than Lesser-GPL'd GNOME libraries - but businesses are perhaps more likely to choose GNOME if they decide which desktop to develop for.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    30. Re:Unified Desktop by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      What I am saying is... A newbie NEEDS to see the EXACT same thing on each distro. Otherwise they will get confused, especially if they need support. As someone pointed out earlier; each of these interfaces provides very different environments that are extremely confusing to the average user. On Windows, all newbies see the same thing. Yes, there are minimal changes betweeen revisions of Windows, but in general From Windows 95-2K, there were not many adjustments that joe user had to make. Even with XP, the average user knows what the Start button is supposed to do. But put that same user in front of KDE with it's "K" menu or GNOME with the Footprint, and they won't have a clue. Keep in mind, most "joe users" are extremely technology challenged.

      A theme that is tuned to the basic needs of the average user does nothing but make Linux even better. And it still need not affect people who use Linux at a much more advanced level. Just don't install that theme if you don't want it! That's all RedHat did, is make a theme and ADD some functionality that wasn't previously there. Only improvments from where I am standing.

      > Why should a "unified" desktop better than
      > some default desktop? Both are new to the
      > user. HOW DOES THE NEWBIE BENEFIT?

      The newbie benefits because (if this were in all distros) the newbie would never have to deal with the oddities of one user environment over another when dealing with support or working with someone who is more knowledgable. They wouldn't be able to tell the difference between KDE or GNOME. Remember, "joe user" is never going to use all the features that you and I may use.

      Here's an example. I set up GNOME for my wife. GNOME has a pager and allows multiple desktops, but she does not multitask, so the pager does her no good. As it is, she rarely even runs more than one program at a time. I left it out of her customized desktop. This is the average user, like it or not. Having all the great features and themes that KDE or GNOME have, is not going to help them out in any way. It will very likely confuse and frustrate them. This is alleviated with a set of default themes that create a comonality among the differing environments.

      > Just look at KDE 3.l and Keramik and tell me
      > RedHat should not install that as a default.

      It doesn't matter wht it looks like... While it may look great, it's not going to be any better than something like a basic W.I.M.P. The average user doesn't care about the extra features. Sure the eye candy can and does appeal to average users, but if the default theme is as pretty and useful as it needs to be, why should it matter that they are given a default? This is all most users do anyway (in no particular order):

      -Browse the web
      -Check E-mail
      -Maybe use multimedia
      -Type a paper
      -Create a Spreadsheet
      -Manage an address book
      -Dial up/Connect to an ISP
      -Minimize
      -Maximize
      -Close
      -Shutdown
      -Per haps log out (in a shared computer situation)
      -Maybe us an instant messaging program
      -Set a background wallpaper
      -Very unlikely, but possibly choose a screen saver.
      -In rare instances, balance their budget.

      That's about it... There may be a few other things they can do, but your average user doesn't even know or care about those things. Changing their window widgets or themes in the window manager is a very unlikely activity for a newbie. Or applying "skins" or "chromes" to their mp3 and web browsers is also extremely unlikely. I challenge you to present me with anything else that an average user will definitely do on a system that they are unfamiliar with.

      And once again, you miss my point... this is NOT for you. This is for the person who has never run Linux before. This is for the person who can't set their microwave or VCR clock because it's too difficult. These are not stupid people, they are people who simply don't care. They just want to turn the machine on and get to work.

      I think the more sensible approach is a set of themes that are common across all window managers/user environments. This could be a pack of themes that are attuned to the needs of a low grade user. And if RedHat is listening... this would be something that you DO install during a default installation, but can be de-selected during all installations if the admin chooses. If you want to elevate yourself among the masses, then you can call it the "Dummy Pack" for all I care, but either way, it has to be unifrom across all distros and it has to be a default that can be over-ridden by those who "know better".

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    31. Re:Unified Desktop by abe+ferlman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      RedHat having their great "unified" desktop won't make Photoshop run on it,

      Think about that for a minute. Part of the reason that software vendors are loath to enter the linux desktop market is because there is so little standardization and they don't want to have to support 50 different ways of launching a program. Standardization makes it easier to guarantee that the software you'd like to distribute will work. The LSB is moving towards making that possible at the developer level, but having the biggest commercial distro standardize on a desktop will help to make the user interface less of a moving target.

      --
      microsoftword.mp3 - it doesn't care that they're not words...
    32. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      The point of this? If Linux is ever to succeed on the Desktop, with über-geeks AND consumer-Joe-and-Jane-public, a unified desktop is essential.

      First you say it is a problem that users can't distinguish Windows-versions then you say it's essential to make KDE and GTK indistinguisable? That doesn't make any sense.

      Me: "Do you use KDE or Gnome, Ma'am?"

      Aha, and "Do you use KDE, Gnome, RedHat's desktop, SuSE's desktop or Mandrake's desktop, Ma'am" would be better?

      *IF* we really need a unified desktop we have to choose from KDE and Gnome. Period.

      If RedHat would install KDE by default, we would have that unified desktop RIGHT NOW, because they are the only ones still holding out with GNOME. (The default is what counts)

      Creating a bastardized mixture of both will not solve this problem (if it really is a problem which I honestly doubt.)

      Bullshit. Most users - the non-MS haters, non-zealots - will see no reason to switch to another OS in the first place,

      Oh, Microsoft is doing their best to provide reasons: New licensing scheme, DRM, Palladium, spyware, requesting rights to control everything...

      Of course KDE offers so much, Windows can't do (more desktops, session manager, good MMB integration, etc.) but those are only discouvered after using it for some time.

      and being able to run the same apps won't sway them. They will respond, logically: "If I'm going to be using the same programs, why not be using the same OS?"

      By that theory, we would all still use DOS.

      Correct is: "Great that I can use better and more stable Linux-apps on a better desktop, but I still have to use this one important Win32-app or I can't switch."

      Or (more realistically for the average Joe): "Great that I can still listen to pirated music, but I still have to use these (also pirated) Win32 games"

      It's ridiculos to think that anybody will use Wine to use all their Win32apps on Linux. Wine is and will be used for those programs that don't have an equivalent in Linux and only for those, not for all.

    33. Re:Unified Desktop by DraKKon · · Score: 0

      (I know I'm gong to get modded down, so let the modfest begin..)

      How about Linux desktops stop trying to look like another OS? Both KDE and gnome have thier version of the "start button", gnome with the mac menu bar, there's NO reason to bitch about a "unified" desktop when everyone is trying to emulate a different os.

      BTW, a common desktop style isn't a bad thing.. and as for your 'unified processor' processor bullsizzy, AMD and Intel have common shit.. as both have chips that run x86 right? Yeah.. un-huh.

      Granted, i LOVE the fact that I can modify my menues look/feel/sytle hell, even the position. It's all about configuration, the 'other' os's don't have that. RedHat isn't stopping you from changing YOUR system, they are just making sure the everything runs together seemlessly. Themes match, it looks good to your eyes. It's a freaking PAIN to get KDE and gnome to look the same.. unless the theme author that whose theme you use is cool enought to make a theme for KDE, gnome, gkrellm and whatever can be themed..

      Shit, I still use Enlightenment 0.16.5 because I like the theme that I use.. (Dark One or something like that) That and I'm so damned use to using Enlightenment that when I try other WM's (sawfish.. IceWM..) I've ALWAYS gone back.. (I used WindowMaker before Enlightenment.. but I still like E more..) Nautilas is bad enough.. CPU hog.. since gmc isn't supported anymore... (so I run a 400mhz machine... it's got 512megs of ram! :) )

      I still think that X should be redone.. as Windows is a crapload faster in rendering windows then X is.. but that's a different story..

      Also, keyboard short cuts for menues like windows has would be fucking AWESOME! Ever try to scale an image in gimp from the keyboard?

      I've never used Suse, or Debian (tried to install potato from ISO's and it didn't work..) got started on Slack.. moved to RedHat.. and that's all I've ever used since.. I for one am glad they they are taking a risk(?) to make hte 2 desktops look as one.. My (red)hat's off to them!

      --
      "It's not like your minds are as open as the source you love..." - Me to the majority of Slashdot.
    34. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      There are good political reasons to choose GNOME. (I don't know why when people say 'politics' it is assumed to be a synonym for 'bad'.) Namely, proprietary software vendors can produce GNOME versions of their apps without any trouble; but you have to pay Troll Tech if you want to produce proprietary software for KDE.

      IIRC, Trolltech's license is about 1500$ - 3500$ per developer. That shouldn't be a roadblock for a commercial vendor. Microsoft's tools are also not free and people are obviously using them.

      Free software zealots won't care one way or the other - indeed they might even prefer the GPL'd Qt rather than Lesser-GPL'd GNOME libraries - but businesses are perhaps more likely to choose GNOME if they decide which desktop to develop for.

      Wrong, businesses will choose Qt if they use C++ and GTK if they still use C.

      And if they want to do multiplatform, they will choose Qt or Kylix (both KDE-based).

    35. Re:Unified Desktop by magnwa · · Score: 1

      Windows XP offers multiple desktops.

      Windows XP has session management

      It also has remote access. It has many things that you say it doesn't have. Please don't spread FUD to try to win this silly little war you think you're fighting.

      The fact is, A unified desktop is necessary for the masses. You hang out with Linux users and think that therefore all computer users think like you. The fact is, the majority of computer users find Linux users asanine jerks who need to get out more. We're NOT the majority here.

      Magnwa

    36. Re:Unified Desktop by magnwa · · Score: 1

      Oh.. also..

      Why would someone want to run an emulation of a shaky OS? (Yes, Wine is an emulation in practice.. no matter what it's called).

      If it crashes under Linux/Wine but not under Windows.. how would this win Linux people?

      Linux's first goal is to get some advocates who aren't worse FUD spreaders than Microsoft. We scare users away, okay? We don't attract people, we SCARE THEM FAR AWAY.

      Magnwa

    37. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      What I am saying is... A newbie NEEDS to see the EXACT same thing on each distro.

      Currently all distributions install KDE by default except one which installs GNOME.

      In 2 months, all distributions will install KDE by default except one which will install a bastardized mixture of KDE and GNOME.

      And you say that's great. What was your point again?

      The newbie benefits because (if this were in all distros)

      It is not in all distros. KDE is the default on all distros except one. If we really need standardization who should change?

      Also, I don't think anybody can expect all distros to put a redhat-logo in the bottom-left corner.

      And once again, you miss my point... this is NOT for you. This is for the person who has never run Linux before. This is for the person who can't set their microwave or VCR clock because it's too difficult. These are not stupid people, they are people who simply don't care. They just want to turn the machine on and get to work.

      Your point is completely irrelevant.

      Hell, KDE even offers a settings-manager which is launched at first log-in. Just choose "Windows" and *ALL* your settings will be set like Windows. It will look like Windows, it will feel like Windows. So the newbie thinks "I know Windows, so this is probably the best" clicks on it, clicks "next" twice and that's it.

      This is out-of-the-box KDE functionality.

      If RedHat thinks it's so damn important to keep Gnome, they could just write a similar application for Gnome and everything would be fine.

      Sorry, but creating a mixture won't solve *this* problem (which has nothing to do with uniformity) at all.

      And if RedHat is listening... this would be something that you DO install during a default installation, but can be de-selected during all installations if the admin chooses. If you want to elevate yourself among the masses, then you can call it the "Dummy Pack" for all I care, but either way, it has to be unifrom across all distros and it has to be a default that can be over-ridden by those who "know better".

      So you say that we need uniformity and think that RedHat is doing the right thing by being the ONLY ONE doing everything different.

      Sorry, I don't understand your point.

    38. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is with you and these rants? Red Hat is ONE distro. Don't like it? You have a zillion to choose from, and we can be pretty much certain that Debian and Slack will be around for many years, as will (hopefully) SuSE and Mandrake.

      I *do* grok where your concerns are coming from, but if it's not going to affect you then what's the problem? THIS IS ALL FREE. RH are targeting corporate desktops, and they need to make them simpler for support purposes.

      NOBODY is stopping you from downloading BlackBox or IceWM or FooWM on your home machine. Nobody's going to demand that RH's hybrid (well, sane themeing) become the standard forever.

      Nice work, RH. I'm impressed. If I don't like it, I'll just go back to IceWM.

    39. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      Windows XP offers multiple desktops.

      Yes, but only 4. And only since XP.

      Windows XP has session management

      No it has not. If you have 10 IE-windows on your desktop and you reboot, you start with an empty desktop.

      In KDE, all KDE-programs are restored just like they were before you left.

    40. Re:Unified Desktop by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I dunno, the propaganda for GTK-- seems to say that it is a better fit for C++ than Qt, since Qt is old and crusty and 1993-era C++ rather than nice and clean and STL, standard-library-based. So I don't think the KDE / GNOME choice is as simple as C++ / C.

      The Qt licensing costs aren't a big amount but I think the point is there's only a single supplier. This is generally considered a Bad Thing, even if in the short term the fees they are currently charging (to get people 'hooked') are affordable.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    41. Re:Unified Desktop by Badanov · · Score: 1

      You can restore programs in Gnome just the way they were when you logged off.

      --
      Dawn of the Dead
    42. Re:Unified Desktop by rapidweather · · Score: 1

      Windows users often use various screensavers, desktop backgrounds, mouse pointers, etc. to customize their setup. We linux users just have more choices, but the Redhat unified look and feel will be needed in mainstream desktop distros for the average Joe Sixpack. These folks don't fool with computers just to be fooling around with them, they want to do something else, like "Send an Email" or "Scan,edit and print an old photograph". Also, they want to "look something up on the Internet". For them, a unified look and feel might be good, to get RHL out there in competition with Windows.
      btw, I'm using Grey Cat Linux 3.0 to make this post, temporarily unavailable for download, so I feel like I'm one of a very few that are GCL 3.0 users.
      Right now, one has to have a little patience with GCL 3.0, it has it's good days, and it's bad days...

    43. Re:Unified Desktop by AchilleTalon · · Score: 1
      It may seems too simple, however, it you do not recognized it, it's Linux!

      So, why did you say you need a unified desktop?

      ;-)

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    44. Re:Unified Desktop by Nailer · · Score: 2

      Currently Joe installs Linux and either stays with it because he likes it better or drops it because doesn't run.

      How will that change?


      I thought that would be obvious. One of the reasons he might not like it is because his apps never look quite the same - QT, GTK2, GTK1, XMMS and Mozilla on every Linux desktop but Red Hat Nulls don't look consistent. This is annoying and unnecessary.

    45. Re:Unified Desktop by TurdFurgeson · · Score: 0

      "Oh, Microsoft is doing their best to provide reasons: New licensing scheme, DRM, Palladium, spyware, requesting rights to control everything"

      maybe your way of thinking is a bit off center. see -> companies and people who have jobs that they work at to make money need to sell things for money inorder to keep thier jobs.. i agree you live a nice pipe dream but damn. it's not the best way but it is the way the world works right now. you have the choice to go with the flow or go away...

    46. Re:Unified Desktop by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      So unifying on one user environment and taking away choice with regards to environments is a good thing? I think THAT is a serious mistake. My personal preferences lie with GNOME. Yes, I have used KDE 3 for quite some time at work, but I eventually found it not to my liking, so I dumped it and switched to GNOME 2. So don't accuse me of not having tried it.

      KDE IS a great user environment for beginners, and I have seen the first time configuration screen... but I still say that we don't need to standardize on one user environment. That IS limiting in a far greater way than creating a default theme that is common across environments. The flexibility to appear exactly the same is there in both GNOME and KDE, so why not use it? We need to standardize on a default theme that allows easy transitioning from one environment to another.

      As far as RedHat being different is concerned, what does it matter for crying out loud!?? Strictly speaking from an Amuhrican point of view, THEY have the majority of the US Linux market like it or not. What distro of Linux do you think newbies are going to buy in the US? They certainly aren't going to get Debian, SuSe or use Linux From Scratch. They are going to buy RedHat every time. When SuSE actually makes a dent in the US, maybe things will be different. But I still think that it would be best if every Linux distro had a common theme across multiple user environments. An unbranded theme that was specifically geared to low-end users. Why is this such a difficult concept for such intelligent people to understand? Maybe you've forgotten what it was like to be a newbie? This attitude does nothing to further the cause of Linux on the desktop.

      Your point is that you would like to see people limited to the more popular environment: KDE. Sure, it's nice, but it's hardly the end all and be all of environments. KDE isn't flexible enough, and GNOME needs to mature just a little more. I think we need to have multiple environments, window managers, etc... that's what makes Linux great. But, we need to have a way to draw it all together so that people who are just starting can have a common experience. At the same time, we don't need to limit a distro's choice of environment either. And that is exactly what you are proposing. Who cares if it's the environment that most distros use? It's still a limitation in choice for the user. A theme is less of a limitation and has NO impact on advanced users.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    47. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      So unifying on one user environment and taking away choice with regards to environments is a good thing? I think THAT is a serious mistake.

      True, but nothing prevents them from including GNOME. But IF you think that standardization is important they should switch to KDE as the default. IMO, they should use KDE as a default, but not because of standardization...

      As far as RedHat being different is concerned, what does it matter for crying out loud!??

      Funny, it was *YOU* who said that everybody should have the same thing on every distro, not me.

      IMO, standardization is overrated, but that's me.

      What distro of Linux do you think newbies are going to buy in the US? They certainly aren't going to get Debian, SuSe or use Linux From Scratch. They are going to buy RedHat every time. When SuSE actually makes a dent in the US, maybe things will be different.

      Wow, you change your mind pretty fast. First you insist on cross-distribution conformity, now you say that RedHat is the only thing that matters.

      There is also Mandrake, BTW, which is not doing bad in the US either.

      Of course RedHat scare away so many users that there are fewer desktop Linux-users in the US than in Germany, despite being 3 times larger...

      Just check out newsgroups, you will see about 5 - 15% of Linux users in German newsgroups, but only 0-3% in US-newsgroups. (non-technical, OS-neutral of course.) I can send you a perl-script that analyzes with what people posted their messages if you want.

      But you seem to be fine with that, it seems.

      KDE isn't flexible enough,

      Do you have an example of KDE "unflexibility" or are you just trolling?

      At the same time, we don't need to limit a distro's choice of environment either. And that is exactly what you are proposing.

      Wrong. I was talking about defaults. Of course Gnome should be included for those who want it.

      Who cares if it's the environment that most distros use?

      You seem to.

      A theme is less of a limitation and has NO impact on advanced users.

      As I already pointed out, that's false. A theme just makes it "look" integrated, but the real cool features all don't work (and you don't know why some apps work while others don't because of your idiotic theme, which makes it even worse.)

      As I said, this standardization is overrated, however it's not completely pointless either. For example you might want to use the addressbook or the printing dialouge or want to dock to the menubar. These are things that really matter and those will not work better because of themes.

    48. Re:Unified Desktop by IkeTo · · Score: 1

      > Windows succeeded because it was
      > backwards-compatible. The PC was plagued by
      > IRQ and DMA conflicts and still took away
      > marketshare from Macs and Amiga.

      > Linux needs to become
      > backwards-compatible to Windows and
      > needs to run Win32 applications.

      OS/2 tried that, and you know its fate. You can't win market by your own merits. You have to play by the demerit of the your competitor. I don't really consider Windows to be a competitor of Linux (or vice versa), but let's consider it is. Then you don't just need Linux to be good, you need Windows to be bad, bad enough that people want to switch.

      MS has made a seriously wrong move by not making their software as free as their customers want. But as shown by statistics, this is not enough to drive people over to other solutions. And, Linux is not a good enough contender at that time, anyway. Now the goal should be to make Linux attractive as an alternative, when License 6 really get people annoyed. When this happens, people should have already decided to leave MS, so no problem if MS-Word can't run. But of course another app must be there to fill its gap, and it should be able to read MS-Word created files.

    49. Re:Unified Desktop by lexus99 · · Score: 1
      "Oh, not another one explaining the success of Microsoft. Face it: Microsoft is successful because IBM gave them the OS-monopoly in 1981."

      Not so. IBM actually was a latecomer to the home computer market, following successes such as the Commodore 64, Vic 20 and slew of others."

      What Microsoft had was MARKETING. Yes, marketing is where it is all at. It really doesn't matter if you have a great product or not. It's all in how you market it.

      M$ has proved that with marketing, not only can you sell shit sandwitches, people will actually think they like them!

      If Redhat, or any other Linux company wants to succeed, they have to hire the best marketing director that money can buy. Period!

    50. Re:Unified Desktop by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      I don't know exactly how this whole conflict erupted between us as we seem to be on the same side but have a difference of opinion about environments. But I will respond to what you said above:

      Fine, you like KDE. Why do you think it should be the exclusive default environment? I don't see the reasoning. I am not saying that KDE shouldn't be there, but I am saying that the environment doesn't matter a hill of beans since the user is going to choose based on the apps. I choose GNOME because it has the apps I like. KDE does not. I used KDE 1.0, 2.0 and 3.0. None of them were satisfactory to ME. So I choose GNOME. I think if you looked at it reasonably, you would see that there are always going to be people who prefer to use one environment or the other. Why not give both environments some common ground by way of a theme or a set of themes?

      Answer this: why is standardization overrated? It's the only thing that allows something to gain mass acceptance. Look at cars. They are all pretty much the same in terms of the basic "user interface". You can soup up a car and make it look cool or give it some eninge modifications to get extra performance, but any joe off the street will be able to drive even the most modified car. This is becasue ALL cars have a "default theme", so to speak. If someone said, I have a better idea of how to steer the car without using a steering wheel: a steering knob. Do you think that car would ever gain acceptance? Never. That is what KDE and GNOME are like without a common theme. To the end user, KDE and GNOME may as well be totally different operating systems. Keep in mind that to the average user an OS has nothing to do with a kernel, security, performanc, etc... it has to do with where all the nice looking clickety click stuff is. So standardization is the key to gaining mass acceptance.

      We could make one distro that is geared towards mass acceptance, but that doesn't really give users a true choice. Giving them multiple distros with the appearance of sameness (because they don't know any better) is a much more equitable approach. After all, that is what free software is about: free choice. There should be no competition with a winner at the end, there should be constant cooperation between all projects to make the whole thing seamless. Everyone benefits then.

      > Wow, you change your mind pretty fast. First
      > you insist on cross-distribution conformity,
      > now you say that RedHat is the only thing that
      > matters.

      No. I've been completely logical and consistent throughout... I believe tht all distros should have the freedom to package whatever they want in their systems regardless of popularity. But, I also believe that the default dekstop that a user is presented with should be identical across all distros. KDE and GNOME or even Enlightenment, and OpenStep can be made to look and work exactly like each other with default themes. The only differences are going to be the apps. If you have QT and GNOME on the system, you can run both environment's apps. They will funciton identically in either environment. I've seen it, I've done it. There are a few K apps that I will use on ocassion in GNOME. So including this defaulot theme does not do any "damage" to either GNOME or KDE. I have no preference for RedHat, but I do conceed that they are the dominant distro in the US. I haven't touched Mandrake since version 7, so I cannot speak for or against it. I was not impressed with version 7 however. Either way... yes there should be uniformity if you are going to considerr the whole of a distro an OS. No, I did not say that RedHat is the only thing that matters. I said that it's the only thing that sells to the masses in the US. Mass acceptance is the goal...

      I don't need a perl script to tell me how much smaller the Linux user base is in the US. I see it at work, I've seen it in the streets (the blank stares at my Got Root shirt and my LINUX license plate). But that has nothing to do with RedHat and everything to do with Linux user's attitudes. Unless a lot of them adjust their attitudes to be more friendly and open to dumb questions and "stupid" ideas, Linux will always remain a minor player. ONe poster on here pointed out that the only reason he doesn't use LInux and went the way of MS is because he dislikes the experience he had with the users. *I* try to be open to what users want and expect out of their computers. No idea or request is too "stupid". At the base of most requests is either misunderstanding from the user or a misunderstanding on the part of the "Linux guru". There don't appear to be many gurus that are willing to put their egos aside and listen. RedHat has no bearing on that... If anything they've done more to get Linux exposure in the US than any other company. I'd love to see Linux grow here in the US, but it won't happen until the gurus and developers realize that it's the user that matters, not the code.

      KDE was inflexible for me when it comes to themes. There are many themes for KDE, but they are all same-ish. There is no wild divergence from the generaic Windows/Macintosh/CDE paradigm, and there ought to be. This flexibility is useful for more advanced users sinc it can make the interface much more efficient. I couldn't find any themes that place the window widgets in unusual locations or have more than just the basic "Close" "Minimize" "Maximize" "Stick" and "Menu" buttons. Enlightenment has done a much better job at this than any other window manager. Sure, the KDE themes apply to the apps and the window management, but there wasn't enough variety for ME. KMail is a pretty boring app, it allows you to send and read mail and keep an address book... where are the groupware fatures? I think that Evolution has done a lot more for mail client/groupware than KMail. The applets... boring. Where is the Flame applet in the default set of applets? The Tea minder is OK, but the clocks are boring again... The AfterStep clock is much better: nice themes and a cleaner look. Of course this is ALL subjective. But the point is that the KDE interface really just reminded me of a pale imitation of Windows/Mac/CDE. Whereas GNOME seems much more original and a lot more flexible. Again... just my opnions though.

      >> Who cares if it's the environment that most
      >> distros use?
      >
      > You seem to.

      No, I didn't say that. The choice of which environment is installed by default should be the vendor's choice when a newbie is installing it. But, why make one envirnment seem so different from the other when it can all look the same? All it requires is a simple question: Are you new to Linux? If they answer yes, then BAM! install the low-grade user's default theme pack. Then it doesn't matter if GNOME or KDE are the distro's default choice, it's going to look the same to joe user and all the functionality will be present.

      >> A theme is less of a limitation and has NO
      >> impact on advanced users.
      >
      > As I already pointed out, that's false. A theme
      > just makes it "look" integrated, but the real
      > cool features all don't work (and you don't
      > know why some apps work while others don't
      > because of your idiotic theme, which makes it
      > even worse.)

      I have no idea what you are talking about here. I've NEVER seen this happen. If I install KDE and GNOME and go with GNOME as my default environment, I can run everything for both environments with no probelms. There might be a quirk or two, and to be real honest here, it doesn't have to be that way. GNOME/KDE cooperation would solve that problem real fast. That's what I was saying earlier about how competition needs to go away since it is only a destructive force. Cooperation would make the entire system seamless and provide benefits to everyone.

      Anyway... I will agree to disagree. Neither you nor I is going to convince the other that either of us is right. I think a unified theme that is optional, unbranded and ery basic would be very helpful in getting Linux on more desktops. You feel that KDE is the best environment for all users and should be the default. We just disagree.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    51. Re:Unified Desktop by nathanh · · Score: 2
      Oh, not another one explaining the success of Microsoft. Face it: Microsoft is successful because ...

      Oh, not another one explaining the success of Microsoft.

    52. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      Fine, you like KDE. Why do you think it should be the exclusive default environment?

      Well, I didn't. I said that *IF* standardization is so damn important, you would have to standardize on an exclusive default environment.

      A theme will only make it look integrated but will fail where it will count.

      Answer this: why is standardization overrated? It's the only thing that allows something to gain mass acceptance. Look at cars. They are all pretty much the same in terms of the basic "user interface". You can soup up a car and make it look cool or give it some eninge modifications to get extra performance, but any joe off the street will be able to drive even the most modified car. This is becasue ALL cars have a "default theme", so to speak.

      A good example: All cockpits look very different (= **NO** "default" theme at all. not even near it) but the controls work similarily (like everybody has windows, menus, a mouse, etc.).

      So you provided an example that the average Joe does not freak out because some colors or looks are different. My point all the way.

      Your "steering knob" example is not appropriate. All common DEs work through the same principles.

      Regarding KDE: Yes, many themes support putting the buttons wherever you want, but some don't. On everything else you say it's "boring", whatever that means.

      I don't really care much about being "cool", I care about getting work done. KDE's printing manager lets me send a pdf as e-mail out of *every* KDE app. This is why I switched over to KWord for bills. Konqueror's "fish:" KIOslave lets me connect to *ANY* ssh-scp computer without any need to configure anything. (What a relief, before that you had to set up NFS, SMB or something like that - unnecessary for non-permanent connections. This is the first graphical ssh/scp client I am aware of).

      All it requires is a simple question: Are you new to Linux? If they answer yes, then BAM! install the low-grade user's default theme pack.

      Well, as I already pointed out, a settings-manager already exists in KDE and the "Windows-like"-settings will probably be fine for newbies coming from Windows.

      So what you request *EXISTS RIGHT NOW* and is used in SuSE, Mandrake, Caldera and all other distros that install KDE by default. But you seem to be in denial about that fact.

      You said that something like this is needed for mass-acceptance and you are right: Everywhere RedHat scares away new users, Linux is virtually non-existant on the desktop while everywhere a KDE-centric distribution is in the default installs, it is spreading. What a coicidence, eh?

      Stop denying the facts.

      Do you know the saying "A technology has not been invented until Microsoft incorporates it"? - We are discussing really long now and you beg for a solution that does not exist for you because RedHat does not incorporate it but everybody else is using for quite some time now.

      GNOME/KDE cooperation would solve that problem real fast. That's what I was saying earlier about how competition needs to go away since it is only a destructive force.

      Let's get some facts straight: GNOME was a reaction on KDE, if there were no KDE, there would neither be a GNOME. GNOME's only reason to exist is to kill KDE.

      Also if you look at GNOME, they seem to be eager to jump on every Microsoft-technology (MONO, a registry-like settings system(!)) but are not willing to use KDE-technology at all. It's not easy to work with people whose only goal is to kill you. But to be fair, it was getting better lately.

      Also, because of the nature of the two projects (C vs. C++) sharing code is hard or even impossible.

      You feel that KDE is the best environment for all users and should be the default.

      Wrong, I think (and I can support that with usage statistics) that KDE is the best environment for most (not all) users and should be the default.

    53. Re:Unified Desktop by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      Wrong, Micrsoft had hundreds of Asian companies providing cheap parts for razor-thin margins.

      The PC was the only open hardware platform at that time.

    54. Re:Unified Desktop by Jason+O'Neil · · Score: 1

      You also need games. Any house that has somebody under the age of 18 (Most anyway) will by Windows because it runs all the mainstream games their friends play. Yes wine could solve this, but it would be good if the developers released linux versions of games. It would be ideal to not have wine at all, we have office applications, browsers and all those things, made in linux that don't need an emulator. The only big thing missing is mainstream games. We have equivelants of everything else.

    55. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The _*WHOLE*_ point of Linux is that you don't have to go through that rigamarole to support it. Even if Joe calls up after getting his first computer, and maybe he's a little paranoid so tech support can't ssh or vnc in and fix the problem personally.

      So you say: "Okay, click on the little picture of a computer"

      Joe: "With the mouse"

      You: "Yes, with the left button"

      Joe: "Oh, I used the right. How about the middle one?"

      You: "No, just the left one"

      Joe: "Gotcha. Okay, there's this rectangle that looks like I can type in it."

      You: "Exactly. Now _*TYPE*_ exactly what I tell you...."

      following which, Joe composes a marvellous shell script which fixes his internet connection, configures his email, downlaods and installs the correct printer drivers, upgrades his desktop, patches a remote exploit in his webserver, and subscribes him to the linux-newbies mailing list. The only snag is explaining him the difference between the 'ampersand' and 'at' symbols.

    56. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      windows media doesn't look like other apps. And people like that. This was to compete with winamp. One of the main reasons that Mozilla survived long enough to be usable is that it promised dfferent themes. One of the reason's Netscape Communicator bombed was because of its ugly icons, though.

    57. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Redhat does not write software.

      This isn't a disparagement of Redhat, but it is their marketing tactic. Earlier someone pointed out that one of the reasons that Windows beat OS/2 out was because OEMs didn't want to install a competitor's product on their systems. Rehat has positioned themselves as a *distributor* of applications. If they were to officially jump into application (or OS) development, this would endanger their market position as a neutral vendor of applications.

      So, while they do "sponsor" Linux, Gnome, or whatever developers, they don't develop apps themselves. Of course, taking responsibility for the applications is the real reason they don't.

    58. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're saying that making two icons that run a script is too hard to standardize?

      #!/bin/sh
      # usage: wm_config
      # launch app for a specifig windowmanager

      # this program is licensed under the GNU GPL v.2
      # in the hope that more apps can target multiple user interfaces

      if [ ! $WINDOWMANAGER_ENV_VAR ]
      then
      # run script to set it /usr/local/appname/bin/figure_out_windowmanager
      f i
      else
      # launch program with these flags
      WM_CONFIG = $WINDOWMANAGER_ENV_VAR /usr/local/appname/bin/start set-wm=$WM_CONFIG
      fi

      # if you get here, the joker is probably using TWM or something wrong"
      echo "unable to launch app"

      It's not that there is a lack of standards, its that appwriters don't know how to use them. Actually, I can't think of any reason that this wrapper script would be used, unless there was something like the windows systray that the app wanted to utilize.

    59. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My previous post was perhaps not clear enough. There is one standard way to launch a program: set its execution bit, and invoke the file.

      How an icon is created (manually or via a script) on the desktop, or added to the "start" menu is trivial. If you're worried about the buttons (or keyboard shortcuts) not being identical for every app, that's a problem. But it will never be solved. Why do so many apps on windows behave *similarly* (not the same) -- because most of them are made by Microsoft. If all apps were made by Ximian, or KDE, or Redhat, then yes, you could expect consistency. Just not as many apps

    60. Re:Unified Desktop by lexus99 · · Score: 1
      I beg to differ. You're forgetting that IBM and M$ both held the monolopy on the PC originally. It wasn't until Compaq reversed engineered the BIOS that common parts became available, and that was quite a bit later. By this time, M$ had already a strong foothold on the market, especially the business market.

      So, I stand by my statement.

    61. Re:Unified Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orig: "A will not be successful without F"
      You: "Don't tell me why B (which has F) was successful!"

      The original claims only that it is a necessary condition for A to become successful that it have F; think: would MS, even with the huge "assist" (ok, turnover) from IBM, have gotten where they did without having a standard GUI?

  5. screens pls! by nempo · · Score: 1

    Can we get some screenshots of these desktops so that we may actually see how they look.

    --
    --- No, english is not my mother tongue.
    1. Re:screens pls! by frenchtouch · · Score: 5, Informative

      You can find some right here: Red Hat 'Null' Beta screens.

    2. Re:screens pls! by Speare · · Score: 2

      More screenshots from my desk:

      I've done customization of terminal window settings and wallpapers, but the rest of the stuff you see is all Red Hat Linux (null) Bluecurve on GNOME2.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    3. Re:screens pls! by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

      OH MY GAD! A desktop that I can acutally use. A desktop where I do not have to be a LINUX guru to figure out how to change the font or keyboard settings.

      OK, I am being sarcastic, but I think the point is that LINUX looks COOOOOOLLLLLL!!!

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    4. Re:screens pls! by static55 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      i am underwhelmed. it looks about as good as the kde 3.0 default theme.. kde 3.1's keramik will blow this away.. i wonder what's up with redhat's blind hatred of kde, anyway? oh well.. nice to finally see some screen shots of it..

    5. Re:screens pls! by Karn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Excuse me, but what's with your blind hatred of Redhat? Is it because they have a positive income that you hate them now?

      If they wanted to get rid of KDE, they'd get rid of KDE.

      Idiot.

      --


      Why do I keep typing pythong?
    6. Re:screens pls! by swordboy · · Score: 2

      *That* worked great. Thanks for posting that at the top of a slashdot thread.

      --

      Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    7. Re:screens pls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why, gracious goodness! They look just like Windows XP.

      So the MS look has finally come to RedHat.

      How sad .....

    8. Re:screens pls! by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, but what's with your blind hatred of Static55? Is it because he makes a valid point in his post that you hate him now?

      If he wanted to blindly bash Redhat, he would have blindly bashed Redhat(rather than make a valid crititicism).

      Fucktard.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    9. Re:screens pls! by inc_x · · Score: 0, Troll
      Actually they very hard tried to get rid of KDE a few years ago but that move wasn't a very successfull business strategy because Mandrake started to offer RedHat+KDE which caused a rather dramatic drop in RedHat's market share.

      So RedHat removed its "We can't ship KDE because it is illegal" rant from their webpage and included KDE from that point on.

    10. Re:screens pls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks. That looks pretty sweet.

    11. Re:screens pls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speare, what is that application that gives you graphical readouts of CPU usage, memory, etc? sorry for my ignorance, but it looks pretty sweet...

    12. Re:screens pls! by Speare · · Score: 2

      If the AC is still reading, I'm using gkrellm in those shots. A newer one made especially for gnome2/gtk2 is in the works, I hear, but the Null beta contains the gtk1 version.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    13. Re:screens pls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's a Fucktard?

    14. Re:screens pls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thanks man.

    15. Re:screens pls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://opensource.thai.net/~mrchoke/image/rh/

  6. Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by ishpeck · · Score: 4, Informative

    I, for one, like the different options we have in terms of desktop environments. I don't want either KDE or GNOME to go away.

    I think the different desktop environments are important the way it's important to have variation in the gene pool.

    We can only attain perfection through variety.

    --

    "If I were to ask you a hypothetical question, what would you like it to be about?"

    1. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by kylus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I, for one, like the different options we have in terms of desktop environments. I don't want either KDE or GNOME to go away. I think the different desktop environments are important the way it's important to have variation in the gene pool. We can only attain perfection through variety.

      You like the variety. I like the variety, likely most of the Linux users on /. here love the variety. But honestly Joe Windows, who's never touched Linux before in his life, will be scared to death of the variety and totally confused and terrified of trying to set things up or be left wondering which desktop is the 'right' one to use. I don't think Red Hat did this for the Linux veterans; I think it was done to advance Linux as a desktop solution and make it less daunting for new users to make a switch. The variety will always be there for the people that know how to find it and set it up, but this could be a good start towards introducing Linux to more people.

      --
      --Kylus
      Idiot-proof something, and Life will build a better Idiot.
    2. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 2

      Your options are unaffected. Neither one of them is going away. The desktop environments remain different. The article basically explains that all of the modifications are largely cosmetic and now the only difference between desktops will be things like speed and stability NOT themes, menus, and config options.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    3. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously don't understand your own metaphor. We can only attain perfection through variety.
      Those various pieces in your variety have to combine to create the perfection.

      In this respect I agree with you, the desktop developers should get together and figure out how to combine their efforts in to one product that would be good enough to make Windows users switch over to Linux.

    4. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by bobaferret · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm tired of variety! Some days, I come to work, and I just want the damn thing to work. I'd like the perfect background, and themes. All the menu options would be well thought out, and in the right spot etc. I realize that this will never happen, but I get really tired of having everything non-standard and haveing to recreate my desktop whenever a new version comes out. There is sooo much choise out there that it takes forever to become educated in enough different areas to trully be able to function most effectivly. Just let the community reach some sort of consensus on what is the best in an area an include in a distro. I used to follow hardware (workded for a white box computer store) every day. But it just got old. I just want the phreak'n thing to work,have a little eyecandy, and some best of breed apps so that I can get on with my job. Where I have 10 zillion other dicisions to make regarding HW/SW etc.

      -jj-

    5. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Fuzzle · · Score: 0

      I know from doing support at college for the last 4 years, that if each computer had a different GUI, any help you try to give your standard Tri-Delta Sorority girl would be IMPOSSIBLE.
      "Now click on the Red Hat"
      "There isn't one"
      "Try the gecko"
      "Nope"
      "hmm...Ok, right click on the desktop, when an arcane menu comes up...navigate to..."
      etc...etc...

      A standard desktop makes support easier. That's why they are doing it. You can make your own themes. Go ahead.

    6. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by N3WBI3 · · Score: 2, Funny

      The more time spent with Sorority girls the better.. you can make a video Sorority Girl PC's gone wiled

      --
    7. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution crawls toward imperfection.

      It ends with extinction.

      --

      "We have always been here."

    8. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Not necessarily true. At our CS lab the environment set to be used by default is KDE. Most people in the labs, who are using Linux for the first time, assume KDE -is- Linux. They don't wonder which desktop is the right one to use because they've got one by default that's functional, and similar enough to Windows that they can perform some of the same operations and expect the same behaviour. They're not afraid of the variety because they don't know it's -there- to begin with.

      The point I'm trying to make is that there's nothing at all wrong with trying to consolidate those options that are out there a bit more than they are. I use GNOME, personally, but I like KDE..what I -don't- like is two of my applications, one written for KDE3, one for Gnome 1.4, looking and behaving much differently save for a few options and widgets. If they want to remove some of that confusion, why shouldn't it be welcomed? I can understand how people might be upset if Redhat, say, released their own modified versions of GNOME and KDE that performed far differently from the standard releases, in order to obtain their goals, but according to the article the changes are supposed to be cosmetic at best.

      Aside from that, of course, there's always the option of using another distribution..that's what confuses me the most about this whole flamewar that's started. Even people who are running other distributions quite happily are complaining about Redhat's choices as if it affected them in some way, when they really haven't lost any of the choices their chosen distribution gives them. It's just an opportunity to take cheap shots at (god forbid) a successful Linux vendor.

    9. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by dextr0us · · Score: 1

      when was the last time you even ran redhat if you're more than a novice user?

      --
      "Martha Stewart can lick my Scrotum......do i have a scrotum?" -- Sharon Osbourne
    10. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by puppetluva · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I may be in the minority here, but. . . here goes.

      I don't want Joe Windows on Linux and I don't want Linux development coopted by the desire to make it "easy enough for someone's mom to use". I don't want to use the same computer my mother uses because we use them for very different things. She, like most people, want a glorified typewriter. She, like most people's mothers, calls people she knows (like me) to fix her computer or teach her to use various functions(I'm what makes the computer "easy to use").

      Maybe there should be a seperate "Glorified Typewriter" edition of Linux, so the rest of us don't have to be bothered.

      Here's what it needs: A web browser, open office, an off switch, bookmarks to calendaring and webmail.

    11. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by foobar104 · · Score: 2, Flamebait

      Oh, whatever. The "diversity is good" defense is often invoked to explain why there are fifty different window managers for Linux. It's a crock. Having both KDE and Gnome means that half the desktop developers out there are wasting their time. Rather than having one desktop that sucks hardly at all, we have two that each suck somewhat.

      "Perfection through variety" is only meaningful in the aggregate. That is to say, not at all.

    12. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by jag164 · · Score: 1

      I don't want Joe Windows on Linux and I don't want Linux development...

      Kind of a self-centered attitude considering you resemble the kind of person is has not given a cent of time/money/sweat back to the community that feeds you.

      Oh, why is the world such a me-oriented place? Makes me sad.

    13. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by pod · · Score: 1
      Maybe there should be a seperate "Glorified Typewriter" edition of Linux, so the rest of us don't have to be bothered.

      Maybe you sould stop using a glorified window manager and stick to fvwm, so the rest of us don't have to guess whether an option is in the Gnome or KDE menus. I'm sure fvwm is more 1337 and you'll feel much more full of yourself after you manage to get the scroll wheel working there.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    14. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by swillden · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Rather than having one desktop that sucks hardly at all, we have two that each suck somewhat.

      I don't say that you're wrong, but it's certainly not clear that you're right.

      Your statement assumes that (a) there are a fixed number of developers interested in working on Linux desktops, and they're split between KDE and GNOME; and (b) that there is no beneficial competition between the two groups.

      It appears to me that most GNOME developers are C programmers and that most KDE developers are C++ programmers. Yes other language bindings exist for both environments, but most of the work is done in those two. In my experience as a programmer working with other programmers, most of us have a pretty clear preference for one style of development. I, for example, prefer the ability to abstract myself further and further from the machine that C++ gives me (balanced against performance, of course). Others find all of the layers of abstraction confusing and distracting and prefer to work in the much simpler C environment.

      Given that programmers have a preferred style and environment, it seems clear that many would feel more comfortable working on one desktop or the other. Thus, I don't think it's likely at all that if, say, KDE disappeared, all the KDE developers would hop over to that grungy mess called GNOME, or vice versa, with appropriate disparaging adjectives.

      As for (b), well, that's hard to say. My only comment would be to point out that the world has discovered that competition is good for the consumer. It's not clear if the same benefit arises when the two projects are competing for the pleasure of having more users rather than the pleasure of having more users' dollars, but it certainly seems possible.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    15. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by cesarcardoso · · Score: 1

      > I, for one, like the different options we have in terms of desktop environments. I don't want either KDE or GNOME to go away.

      Me too, and RedHat too. They haven't done a GNOME-only distro; they aren't those Lindows out there.
      They ONLY are providing a COMMON LOOK to GNOME and KDE. It's different.

      --
      Cesar Cardoso can be found at cesar at zyakannazio dot eti dot br (or at least I believe so)
    16. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by cetan · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mod points for you. Great post.

      --
      In Soviet Russia...michael would be rotting in Siberia!
    17. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're so upset by it, write something youself.

      Put up or shut up.

      Your attitude is pathetic and your reasoning is laughable.

    18. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Eccles · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We can only attain perfection through variety. Indeed, I think each distro should rename all the various shell commands. cp could become copy, dup, xerox, canon (I think they outsell xerox copiers now), mimeograph, clone, etc. depending on your distro. Seriously, differences are useful for exploring what is the best of several alternatives, but often the differences are not useful, they just differ because making things identical would require a fair bit of work. It would be better to get things all using the same system, and then optimizing and extending that system.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    19. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by bockman · · Score: 2
      I like variety, too.

      But I also would like that, when I decide to switch from cool DextopX software to hyper-cool DesktopY software, DesktopY recognizes my old DesktopX settings (menu, background, MIME-types, icons ...).

      For that to happen, the various desktops should standardise on common infrastructures, at least for the shared functions.Done that, I don't care if each desktop has its own look-and-feel.

      FreeDesktop.Org is helping going this way, but it looks like it is a long way.

      --
      Ciao

      ----

      FB

    20. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one am a novice Linux user, and I started on RedHat. I like RedHats distro. What they are doing makes sence, they are trying to get more of the novice users and apparently the people that need a set standard for their workstations. What is the big deal about that, if you can change the theme later to how you want it?

    21. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by SJS · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Good example.

      Alas, this says more for just sticking with MicroSoft Windows interface.

      I went thru this last year with a demo of a software tool. The salesmen called me up and said he'd walk me thru the demo if I had the time; so I did.

      Problem # 1:
      Me: I click on the download link and nothing happens.
      Them: Shift-click.
      Me: Still nothing. Half-sec (alt-U) Ah! It's a javascript redirect. I don't do Javascript.
      Them: You can turn it on in I.E. by...
      Me: One, I'm not using IE; Two, I'm not going to enable Javascript just because your web developer feels a need to replace perfectly good hrefs with something that does exactly the same thing if you have scripting enabled, and nothing otherwise.
      Them: Um, lemme talk to a tech...

      A couple of days later the salesman emails me, and gives me a "direct" URL to the Solaris version of the software. I d/l it, read the README, follow the instructions, and install it.

      Problem #2:
      Them: Now, double-click on the installation icon.
      Me: One, there isn't any such thing, and two, it's installed.
      Them: There's no icon?
      Me: No, this is a Unix machine, and I'm not using a window manager that shows disk icons, and I refuse to use a file manager.
      Them: But it's installed?
      Me: Yes.
      Them: How?
      Me: I read the instructions in the README.
      Them: Oh.

      And then we tried to actually do the demonstration...

      Problem # 3:
      Them: So click on the "Start" button...
      Me: I don't have a start button.
      Them: Um, you don't?
      Me: Nope. You'll notice that I downloaded the Unix version. How about I just type in the name of the program from an xterm?
      Them: Um, will that work?
      Me: Apparently so, as it's now running.

      Now, one of the "features" of this product was that it was supposed to be able to find "dangerous coding habits" and syntax errors, and it came with a bunch of code to demonstrate these bad habits.

      Problem # 4:
      Me: Okay, example 3 compiles and runs. Now what?
      Them: Now bring up Notepad...
      Me: No notepad.
      Them: ...um, I mean wordpad...
      Me: No wordpad either. Remember, this is a UNIX machine.
      Them: You just go to the Start menu...
      Me: No start menu either.
      Them: Well, how are you going to edit (path)?
      Me: Thank you....I am now editing (path). What now?
      Them: Select (foo) and hit control-X, then type (bar).
      Me: You mean replace (foo) with (bar)?
      Them: Ummmm, yeah.
      Me: Done.
      Them: Good. Now go to the File menu and select "save."
      Me: No File menu. But it's saved.
      Them: Now click on (button).
      Me: Done. Nothing happens.
      Them: ...and you'll see a dialog that says, um, what did you say?
      Me: Nothing happens.
      Them: Try again.
      Me: Okay...done. Nothing happens.
      Them: Did anything show up in your system tray?
      Me: What's a system tray?

      It turns out that *any* source file that I touched with a Unix editor would kill their product. But that's beside the point -- a "consistent interface" means Microsoft Windows.

      --
      Pick One: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~stremler/sigs/sigs.html (Note - disable Javascript first!)
    22. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by SJS · · Score: 1

      Let Joe Windows switch to a Mac. OS X has all the GUI eye candy that Joe Windows could want.

      After all, OS X is a UNIX. Which is sort of the point, after all.

      --
      Pick One: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~stremler/sigs/sigs.html (Note - disable Javascript first!)
    23. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Metrol · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Maybe there should be a seperate "Glorified Typewriter" edition of Linux, so the rest of us don't have to be bothered.

      As I'm reading through the various posts on this topic I can't help but wonder why more folks such as yourself aren't using FreeBSD or perhaps Gentoo Linux. I've been using FreeBSD as my primary desktop OS for over a year now with KDE. No OS branding to be found anywhere. Every part of it is directly (aside from minor patches) from the KDE source. The same being true for Gnome if that's your preference.

      Having tried previous version of Suse, Mandrake, and a much older version of RedHat (6.1) I've come to the personal conclusion that I can't deal with all the OS branding. Upgrading apps is FAR harder, and updating the actual desktop environment seems to break all kinds of vendor specific configure tools. Well, unless you go and purchase a new CD.

      I'm presently upgrading a friend's laptop to KDE 3.0.3 also running on FreeBSD. No funky vendor specific apps to break, it's about as pure a version of KDE as you can get. It's compiling from source now, and I have no doubts that when it completes everything will be up and running as well as it was under 3.0.1.

      The upgrade process...

      Delete all of KDE
      pkg_delete -rf qt*

      Install it from source
      portinstall kde3

      And that's it! As I understand it, Gentoo has a very similar type of package management.

      The point is, there are plenty of solutions for those not wanting any vendor mucking around with their desktop experience. For the "blinking 12:00 on the VCR" crowd RedHat is trying to tweak things in for them. It's a different market, and one probably closer to where Microsoft's core market sits these days.

      --
      The line must be drawn here. This far. No further.
    24. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I just want the phreak'n thing to work,have a little eyecandy, and some best of breed apps so that I can get on with my job.


      What's that? You say you want Mac OS X? Oh, sorry, my bad. Obviously Linux is the better choice for you.
    25. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by alue · · Score: 1

      Actually, variety is exactly what you're getting when Red Hat does some work to create a unified desktop that didn't exist before. Now we have GNOME, KDE, and Red Hat's own creation.

      If you don't like Red Hat's desktop, try out another one.

    26. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by KewlPC · · Score: 1

      It is an unfounded myth that developers have to develop for both.

      - I use KDE
      - I run GNOME apps every day

      How do I do this? Simple: I have the GNOME libraries and GTK+ installed, along with KDE. This means that I can use GnoRPM instead of Kpackage, The GIMP, etc. I use KDevelop or Kate + an Xterm window for programming, and Konqueror for web browsing.

      And I never write programs specifically for either desktop. I use GTK+ or FLTK for all my GUI programming needs (yes, that means my programs could theoretically run on Windows; I haven't tried it, though).

      As to why RedHat seems to blindly hate KDE, I think it is because it doesn't have "GNU" anywhere in the title ;)

    27. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the different desktop environments are important the way it's important to have variation in the gene pool.

      Okay.

      And Red Hat has just given us all one more variation. Do you really think this is a problem?

    28. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Joe only sees the default.

    29. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by ActiveSX · · Score: 1

      I realize that this will never happen, but I get really tired of having everything non-standard and haveing to recreate my desktop whenever a new version comes out.

      It has happened. It's called Mac OS X. ;)

    30. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Negroes Invent Flying Toilet

      NAIROBI (Reuters) - Martha Njoki jumped when she heard a thud on the corrugated iron roof of her shack. Seconds later, she was confronted with a familiar sight.

      `I heard a bang on the roof, and when I went outside to look, I saw it was a plastic bag full of human waste,' she said, gesturing toward her dwelling in the slums of Nairobi. `You might just be relaxing in your house, then you hear a noise on your roof and someone has thrown a bag of sewage up there,' said Njoki, 27, wrinkling her nose with disgust.

      There are only five toilets for the more than 2,000 people living in the slum known as Ghetto - a fetid labyrinth of claustrophobic dirt lanes and streams of stinking effluent.

      For most people here, the flying toilets are the only way of answering nature's call: you simply use a plastic bag, then fling it as far out of sight as possible.

      Walk into Ghetto, or any one of scores of slum settlements housing two million people in the Kenyan capital, and the scale of the task for one African city alone seems staggering. At almost every turn, a sickly sweet stench of urine wafts from between the huts. Barefoot children play by trenches frothing with scum. The edges are strewn with telltale bags.

      `First thing in the morning, the flying toilets are rampant,' said Njoki, as a gaggle of other women in a courtyard nodded in agreement. `Sometimes you are walking down the path and you see human waste, people have just thrown it there.'

      Consider that Njoki and her neighbors are just a handful of 2.4 billion people worldwide who lack access to decent sanitation, and the scale seems even more mind-boggling.

      In Njoki's neighborhood, the only sign of hope comes not from the government - who consider much of the slums a virtual no-go zone - but from residents determined to help themselves. On the edge of the sea of rusting iron roofs stands the only public toilet around. Four women got together to build the facility three years ago - paying off their investment with the two shillings ($0.02) a time paid by 50 or so visitors each day. On Sundays, when the toilet attendants say many residents decide to treat themselves, the number of users rises to 100."

    31. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by nathanh · · Score: 2
      Having both KDE and Gnome means that half the desktop developers out there are wasting their time.

      NOBODY is wasting their time if they enjoy what they're doing.

    32. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by evbergen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The problem is that some programmers tend to forget that to design is all about making choices. As that is a difficult activity, people tend to just 'make it a config option' and forget about the issue.

      But people, configurability is good, but *putting the burden of 90% of UI design on the shoulders of the poor user* is not.

      Indeed, because everybody effectively creates his own destkop environment because so little attention has been given to the *actual, practical, day-to-day, real-world* usability of the defaults, no effective feedback is provided to UI developers. The few advances in the field that are made are way too fragmented. This is a terrible waste.

      We should strive to be able to build a *good, beautiful* UI. Not to demo the latest alpha blending feature, if it's ugly and confusing as hell. We should lean from Fitt's law, from people like Jeff Raskin, from Windows and MacOS 9, from OS X and X Windows and from people's gripes about all of those.

      And, let's learn from Unix. We should build this UI using /Unix/ technology (that is pipes, sockets, processes, read, write, select, ioctl, mmap), and not with Corba, our COM-like thingy of the day or other funky fat binary interfaces, and not with multithreaded dlls that do not want to choose whether they are a process or a library. Let's not reinvent the OS in a very crappy and un-unixy way merely because we're building a GUI, for chrissakes. I really don't think the requirements of GUIs are so unique that that's needed. A module interface that allows each and every method in each and every every object to call each and every method in each and every other object in the system does not give any modularity, sorry. Think again. That's old-fashioned linking, worse, effectively going back to the days of single address space OSes by linking every application to every other, and that doesn't get you anywhere if you want to make standard, stable, secure component interfaces.

      You don't want to have 'more' to have a funky ad-hoc RPC interface so that it can be called by 'ls', or do you? We may need to extend the pipe concept if it's to limited for GUI app-to-app interfaces, but let's do that then, without resorting to plain, unrestricted RPC all the way. Please.

      Let's keep it simple, and let's make it beautiful.

      --
      All generalizations are false, including this one. (Mark Twain)
    33. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by axxackall · · Score: 1
      Yeah, I had same troubles when I've tried to subscribe to internet using either Mac OS or Linux box. AOL, Simpatico, some other local ISPs in North America - they all bind their customer support "knowledge" to "Start" button and similar "concepts" rather than just to explain what to do in terms of simple routing tables or commands like nslookup.

      The other type of situations happened when I've tried to get a support for either Linux or Solaris commercial software fromsome partner companies. Same thing just instead of binding to "Start menu" they bind to specific versions of commands, libraries.

      So, I decided that the problem is not with OS or desktop but rather with customer support management - they don't think when they create support instructions and they don't want their people to think when they read the document. Such practice worked well in an environment of one single OS with one single GUI. And with good installation script hiding all details not only form customers - but also from a customer support. When the situation requires to see such details - traditional customer support fails.

      At some point I thought that they might need some special "customer geek support" experts - actually regular engineers who can speak on normal language with engineering terms rather than on keenky language without engineering terms. But then I discovered then they actually have it. They call it second line of the customer support.

      Now, when I call to some customer support I just ask for that second line and usually it works well.

      --

      Less is more !
    34. Re:Why do we need "one unified" desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that happened

  7. Grumbling is pointless - we should applaud Redhat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You can't have your cake and eat it, unfortunately. If your wish is to see Linux achieve large scale desktop penetration, you need to acknowledge that the mainstream user wants one consistent interface, look and feel, etc. If they are a "power user", they'll hunt down the options you think they should have anyway, and customize quite happily. Don't worry about it!

  8. No, a beautiful gift for Linux by PhysicsGenius · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    would be choice. Which they've "nullified" by quashing the innovations that each project has made over the last year. I'm noting to say which manager I prefer[1] but let me just say that Linux is all about choice. RedHat, in removing that choice, has proved themselves once again to the Microsoft of the Linux world. If I wanted to subsume my options under whatever some corporate entity wanted I'd use XP or MacOS.

    [1] Because every time I say that "KDE rules and Gnome is the ugliest piece of crap I've ever seen" a flameware erupts.

    1. Re:No, a beautiful gift for Linux by Ty · · Score: 1

      Typical slashdot idiot. Did you even read the article?

      RedHat is not removing any options. They are more or less just creating similar themes for both KDE and GNOME.

    2. Re:No, a beautiful gift for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course the dumbass didn't read the article!

    3. Re:No, a beautiful gift for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They haven't taken away any choice, they simply aren't *forcing* it on newbies who aren't ready for it. People who don't like the new look and feel aren't forced to keep it.

      Most people who *do want* such a choice already know how to set up a box the way they like it.

      This is a slight inconvenience to a few, and a good thing for newbies.

    4. Re:No, a beautiful gift for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What!? The choice is still there. All they're doing is trying to make a unified desktop to get the attention of new users who might be overwhelmed w/ all the variety out there. I fail to see how they've removed the choice. They didn't remove one desktop in favor of the other, like you've made it seem. If you don't like how it looks, you can change that. You're just whining because now you actually have to change it yourself, as opposed to having it set as default.

    5. Re:No, a beautiful gift for Linux by utoddl · · Score: 1
      RedHat, in removing that choice, has proved themselves once again to the Microsoft of the Linux world.

      You wish there were a Microsoft of the Linux world. Linux is going to wander off into world domination without a market leader to take it there. That'll be awsome.

  9. Unified desktop? Not for as long as we have E17! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We will never have unified desktop for as long as we have The Enlightenment . E17 will rock this fucking planet seriously!

  10. Unified Desktop by Animgif · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I couldn't agree with RedHat's statement any more. I definately feel that a unified look and feel is something that Linux has always needed. People need to be able to look at a system and recognize it. You can always recognize Windows by the look of it, as it should be for Linux. Users need this to use Linux. If you want people to use Linux for their desktop they must first feel comfortable with it...

    --
    ------ This has been provided as a public service! ------
  11. How dare they ? by MosesJones · · Score: 5, Funny

    A standard desktop ? Then how will all the prima-donna point out how their desktop is so much better because of this or that bell and whistle.

    What a horrible idea, leveling the playing field and have a standard theme that concentrates on usability and then a pure battle of abilities to determine who underpins it. If there can be no differentation in terms of buttons and icons then how would people judge if not by "see-through windows" v "tear-off tabs" and other such pointless arguments and wars.

    Terrible concept, concetrate a team on a decent standard theme, and then have competition for the best engine behind it....

    Umm wait, isn't this in effect the same as the Video card market where standards have led to the engines (the cards) being bought and swapped purely on the grounds of ability, sure each has "special" instructions, but for 99% of applications no one cares.

    Oh and isn't it the same as the PC market, one instruction set, AMD v Intel.

    Oh I see, thats what they want, what a great idea now I understand.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    1. Re:How dare they ? by justsomebody · · Score: 2

      Maybe by concentrating more power into one solution. As much as I like variety I must admit that having one desktop would be better.

      I don't say any of desktop solutions should go away, they should collaborate by using same low level ingredients. (vfs, sound, applets, clipboard). I would like to select a theme in nautilus and have the same mime types in konqueror (or select in konqueror and have nautilus supporting y selection).

      By leveling the low level part of desktop there would be much wider options to write professional looking applications that would not depend on desktop you use. (example: burn a cd and watch your user set icons all across the software, no matter what desktop)

      --
      Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
  12. Here are some screenshots by dg123 · · Score: 1, Informative

    ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/distributions/cont rib/texstar/screenshots/

  13. This is a Good Thing by restive · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a positive thing, for the reasons RedHat is stating; namely that many users don't want to make a decision between "this one" or "that one". How many times have people whined on /. that Linux will never make it to the desktop because there are too many tweaks things the users need to learn.

    This is RedHat's way of making Linux more appealing to the end user. Good for them.

    If you don't like it, do what I do and run Slackware (or other distro of choice), but bravo for the RedHat folks. This is a positive step.

    1. Re:This is a Good Thing by Mr_Silver · · Score: 5, Insightful
      This is RedHat's way of making Linux more appealing to the end user. Good for them

      Indeed, because if the desktop is more appealing then more people will use it and if more people use it then companies will start to consider it a viable market for software (applications and drivers) and when there is greater support for Linux then more people will move to it because it has the applications they want and so on and so on ...

      Microsoft are already doing Linux a favour with their licence changes, but that doesn't mean that we should expect people that are brave enough to change to come to the Linux side (at the moment, I'd say they're more likely to go to Apple, as they have consistency and ease of use down to a tee)

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    2. Re:This is a Good Thing by KjetilK · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I agree! Free software is about freedom, also for commercial vendors. They are free, just like J. Random Hacker to tweak it to suit their needs, and the needs of their customers.

      I'm a KDE user myself, and I think the KDE folks will also come to the conclusion that RH isn't doing anything nasty when they think more about it.

      However, I do not agree that Linux needs a Single Unified Desktop. On the contrary, the competition now is good. It allows more room to experiment, it allows for different developers to have different priorities.

      And it allows vendors to choose the best parts from each project to provide a unified desktop in their product. Or, leave the choice to their customers if customers want choice.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    3. Re:This is a Good Thing by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 2

      However, I do not agree that Linux needs a Single Unified Desktop. On the contrary, the competition now is good. It allows more room to experiment, it allows for different developers to have different priorities.

      I'm not certain if by this you mean Red Hat's move is creating a "Single Unified Desktop" in that it is changing the backend side of KDE and GNOME to be similar, so I'll respond as if that is what you mean. Instead of creating a "Single Unified Desktop" I would say that Red Hat is giving the appearance of a unified desktop. It's largely a semantic nitpick, but it would seem that a few people on /. today seem to think that Red Hat is rewriting KDE to behave like GNOME or vice versa.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    4. Re:This is a Good Thing by krogoth · · Score: 2

      If they really want a standard, why not just say "KDE is our main desktop" (RH would probably chose GNOME of course)? If it's missing anything, they can always modify it (and hopefully contribute their changes to the project). Now, not only do Red Hat customers have two main desktops to chose from, their choice is almost entirely irrelevant! Please explain to me how this helps anyone.

      --

      They that quote Benjamin Franklin on liberty and safety deserve neither.
    5. Re:This is a Good Thing by KjetilK · · Score: 1

      Hehe, I should have slapped a [tm] on that, so everyone would see that it was written with a ;-)

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    6. Re:This is a Good Thing by under_score · · Score: 2

      FWIW, I don't use linux on my desktop for the following reason: KDE vs. Gnome.

      Also, FWIW, I'm perfectly capable in every respect of using linux effectively (I'm a software engineer, I run FreeBSD and linux servers, I use lots of Open software).

      So there's a real data point.

      I don't want to accidentally choose the wrong desktop/application API because I rely completely on my personal workstation. I spend 12 hours/day in front of a computer programming, using email, writing, budgeting etc., and I want as close to zero risk in terms of my app choices as possible. KDE vs. Gnome is still a very risky choice for me to make.

      I have recently moved off of MS Office since OpenOffice.org matured to 1.0. I recently moved away from JBuilder since Eclipse matured to 2.0. I am attempting to move away from other proprietary solutions. Unfortunately, my OS/Desktop is still Windows. That will change as soon as there is no choice left about a linux desktop _and_ the desktop is mature.

    7. Re:This is a Good Thing by fader · · Score: 2

      I don't want to accidentally choose the wrong desktop/application API

      You do realize that no matter which desktop you're running, apps from the other will run flawlessly, right? Or were you just trolling?

      --
      - fader
    8. Re:This is a Good Thing by cesarcardoso · · Score: 1

      > However, I do not agree that Linux needs a Single Unified Desktop.

      Linux needs Consistents Desktops.

      Don't matter if you use GNOME or KDE or XFCE or anything - things should be compatible and consistent. Say, ALT-F1 to open the menu, ALT-F2 to open a run dialog and so on.

      Don't matter what theme you like, this theme should be easily ported to other environments so you can feel `at home' if you want/need to change.

      --
      Cesar Cardoso can be found at cesar at zyakannazio dot eti dot br (or at least I believe so)
  14. Re:Insane by caluml · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If RH don't like this then why don't they just drop the one(s) they don't want people to use?

    Then we'd get the "Redhat is Microsoft" arguments, and people saying that they're reducing choice, stiffling competition, etc, etc.

    Why is MS or AOL powerful? Because they are simple, and have lots of users. We need to get more people using Linux.

  15. screenshot? by crazney · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Anyone know a URL to screenshots of this new 'beutiful' desktop?

    Thanks

    --
    stuff
  16. What is confusing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is confusing is that the Linux community attacks MS for not giving anyone a choice, but then claims that reducing choice is the greatest gift to the Linux community. What gives? Simple: The reality of the situation is that it's harder to support mutliple software configurations that it is one standard one. This is what MS learned a long time ago. I guess this lays out the real issue: no one wants MS gone because they are evil. They want MS gone so they can BE MS.

    1. Re:What is confusing by meatspray · · Score: 1

      You could certainly take this as a first step towards that direction, but i'd suggest you have a little linux faith that the community would not allow things to progress in that direction for too long.

      Just as it's easy to see that which m$ has done poorly, it takes a bit of reflection to realise that which they've done right.

      I'm certain it's no coincidence that the mainstay of the workflow for win95-98-nt4wks-nt4srv-win2kpro and win2ksvr are nearly indentical, nor is it strange that winxp adds functionality while still maintaining many old ways to get to stuff.

      Any winblow$ user can easy pass knowledge of how to use programs along to any other user without having even the slightest knowledge of how the os really works.

      In M$ junk, apps mostly behave the same, Cutting and pasting works cleanly across all applications (including text and binary data), the toolbars on most apps mirror each other, it's very easy to navigate most base apps because most base apps work alike.

      Yes there needs to be unification in the linux desktop and application base, and as long as there they maintain an easy way to break that unification or modify it as any user sees fit, linux sill still holds a superior edge to windows dull and slow progressing feature list.

      I don't think they're out to become MS i think they're out to become something bigger and better, and honestly, I'm all for it, I seriously doubt they could do as good of a job of being jerks as M$ does anyway.

      bleh too early for comtemplation, must have caffiene!!!!!!

    2. Re:What is confusing by randomErr · · Score: 2

      Only one distro is reducing the # of choices, not the whole community. Beside DOS still has a ton of desktop's in production.

      Head over to FreeDOS.org and see for yourself.

      I love tweaking MS because we all know every product is still just a DOS shell, even NT. If you don't believe me, click Start then Run. Then type the word 'command' in the Open box and see what comes up.
      >C:\WINDOWS\

      --
      You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
    3. Re:What is confusing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      • I love tweaking MS because we all know every product is still just a DOS shell, even NT. If you don't believe me, click Start then Run. Then type the word 'command' in the Open box and see what comes up.

      Actually what you are seeing there is a DOS virtual machine running on top of NT. The underlying architecture of NT is *not* DOS.
    4. Re:What is confusing by randomErr · · Score: 2

      Umm, no. NT is DOS based with a GUI on top. Most services still load in DOS. The only thing about NT is that command interpter forces the GUI to autmagically load.

      Check out ReactOS if you don't believe me.

      --
      You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
    5. Re:What is confusing by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      No, what you describe is win95, win98 or winMe; but not NT, win2k or winXP. NT/2K/XP has a different kernel, does not load DOS at all in any way shape or form. The GUI is part of the kernel and there is no way to get a full-screen text only command-line interface a la DOS under NT.

  17. It's About Time by syntap · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think Red Har has recognized that look and feel unification is a prerequisite to corporate entry. I understand the usual ./ user's opinion that desktop uniqueness is cool, but when you're a corporate help desk manager with a limited budget you don't need 2500 desktops looking different. It makes training more difficult too. The similarity of desktops is how MS can easily have people upgrade from Win98 to NT to 2000 to XP... the desktops are the same and retraining cost is minimal. Good for Red Hat!

    1. Re:It's About Time by Software · · Score: 2
      similarity of desktops is how MS can easily have people upgrade from Win98 to NT to 2000 to XP
      I agree with most of your post, but the part above is incorrect. XP, by default, has a very different desktop than the other Windows variants, though it can be configured to run with the "Classic" interface which is quite similar. The 2000 interface is also different than the NT / 9x interface, though not radically so. How does this apply to what RedHat has done? I'm not really sure. Perhaps the best way to put it is that Microsoft has evolved and improved the desktop, which is a good thing if you're hooked on their software. Let's hope RedHat and others do the same to KDE and Gnome.
    2. Re:It's About Time by syntap · · Score: 1

      Right on XP's new interface, but it's real easy for a shop deploying XP to put the old interface back so users never see the horrible new interface.

    3. Re:It's About Time by spitzak · · Score: 2
      I got it, it's ok for MicroSoft to have 2 different interfaces because the IT department can force one.

      However, it is not ok for Linux to have 2 different interfaces, even though the IT department can force one.

      All makes sense to me. No wonder Linux sucks and Windows rules.

    4. Re:It's About Time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is simply not true. In any corporate roll-out the IT department is much further ahead choosing one desktop - KDE, Gnome, Windowmaker, TWM, whatever - and locking it down for all users. In fact your method is in direct oppostion to your goal. Redhat's mod makes KDE and Gnome only look the same while underneath still operating differently. Superficially hiding the differences is far more confusing than picking one standard and locking it down. I can't imagine supporting or training new users faced with two identical desktops operating that don't work the same.

  18. Re:Insane by RobertNotBob · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Your choice is still there (unlike M$). Change whatever you want. If you are worried about this, then you probably know how to change it AND, you are not the kind of person who is going to write to their tech-support people with a UI question.

    If you have to support a product, standard look-and-feel is a good thing for you. If you allow advanced users to change whatever they want, good for us.

    Where is the problem?

    --
    ___ I don't respond to Anonymous Cowards, and I Never Mod them UP.
  19. Re:Greatest Gift? by Proudrooster · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I agree, competition is what makes things better! Without competition, stagnation sets in, ala Micro$oft. Killing off either KDE or GNOME would be bad, very bad.

    Go KDE!

    Go Gnome!

    Maybe Redhat should just make the standardization optional, however I know they are now trying to push into the desktop market which is a giant leap for Linux. Maybe, just maybe, their "Redhat-ized" version should like like Windoze XP.

    "The Windoze related mispellings were intentional."

  20. Re:Insane by kylus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, basically their reaction to users having a choice is to try and negate that choice by making the options as similar as possible. How very MicroSoft!

    I think you're missing the point here. The idea is to unify a desktop solution so that people who are familiar with MS (read: most of the world) are not terrified of trying to configure a Linux box. I don't see this as MS-like. I see this as a step in advancing Linux as a desktop solution.

    The whole point of having KDE/GNOME/WindoMaker/Et al is to allow people to pick the one that suits them.

    Very true. If the experts who are used to Linux want it, they should still be available 'untouched' for them to install and configure. But let's face a fact here: RedHat is becoming the easiet of the distros to install and configure; making the setup and configuration less daunting for newcomers is a step in the right direction.

    If RH don't like this then why don't they just drop the one(s) they don't want people to use?

    Don't you think that this is more MS-like than trying to unify their desktop components? To just drop packages they don't like would be a true method of negating choice. THAT would be a step in the wrong direction.

    --
    --Kylus
    Idiot-proof something, and Life will build a better Idiot.
  21. Re:Unified desktop? Not for as long as we have E17 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Let's see... heavy, difficult to configure, absolutely fucking weird themes, no support from most applications.

    No thanks.

  22. say what now? by bigmaddog · · Score: 1

    "I hope that RedHat successfully forces both Gnome and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop. This would be the greatest gift to the Linux world."

    Yeah, sure. We hate M$ for being too controling and inhibiting choice with their single dominant product, but a single unified Linux product would be a good thing. Some people apparently fail to realize that the incompatibilities that many rant about and that Red Hat would try to smooth out are a direct consequence of variety. Sure, standards are nice, but nobody pays these people to do any of this, or be compatible with any other product - they do what they like, and if you don't like it then you go to a different bunch of people. It's called choice.

    The same thing applies to Red Hat themselves. If you don't like the fact that they're limiting variety of desktop environments then you go with a different distro, or set up your own desktop environment, or do whatever the hell you want to. There are lots of choices, after all, which makes this whole thing moot.

    --

    Even as you read this, your pants are strangling your loins! Aaa!

    1. Re:say what now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has nothing to do with choice. This is entirely about defaults.

      Everything is still configurable, hackable, and redistributable.

  23. This is good by GigsVT · · Score: 1

    We're doing something wrong if a user is choosing between logging into GNOME or KDE because: There is an application available in one and not in the other.

    I've seen and heard people say things like, "well I switched to KDE because I liked the applications better". The way things are now, people don't know that it doesn't matter what desktop they run, this Gnome/KDE silliness has given them the idea that they need to run the whole desktop just to get the apps for that desktop.

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  24. There is nothing stopping the user by bovinewasteproduct · · Score: 2

    There is NOTHING stopping the user from installing either one of these packages from source. Sure, you loose some of the laziness factor, but..

    Sure, if Red Hat said "Installing anything but our software voids your support", you might have a case. But in this case?? No...

    BWP

  25. Gnome, KDE always have been compatable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gnome and KDE have *always* been compatable with one another. Not seamlessly integrated, of course, but there has been an appalling amount of disinformation from the start, that KDE and Gnome are somehow mutually exclusive.

  26. Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Telex4 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    What RedHat have done is really pretty insignificant. They've create a new artwork set that is applied by default to both KDE and GNOME so they look similar by default, and they've modified some codee here and there so they behave in a more similar fashion. In effect, they have made the first step towards making the two major desktop environments more compatable.

    Note: they have not taken away any user choices. You can still completely change your KDE/GNOME appearance, perhaps even back to the KDE/GNOME defaults. The only things that might bug users are the changes they've made to the code, but we don't yet know what they are, or how significant they are, so we'll have to wait and see.

    I for one would welcome it. I'd change my themes straight away, because I've spent far too much boredom-time making my KDE3 desktop look exactly how I want it. But I also had to spend quite a while getting GNOME and GTK+ apps to look right so they almost blend in with my KDE3 apps and desktop.

    The final goal here is of course compatability in themes. I.e. you download and install a KDE theme, and you can then make your GTK apps look identical, either with the same theme, or a mirror package. It's something even RMS has proposed, and something that will make life a lot more pleasant for those aesthetic pedants like myself, without taking away any of the choice we have in desktops and looks. Hopefully RedHat will find a constructive way of using these code modifications to help the KDE & GNOME projects achieve this "integration".

    1. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Arandir · · Score: 2

      What RedHat have done is really pretty insignificant. They've create a new artwork set that is applied by default to both KDE and GNOME

      This is not what Redhat has done. If that's all it was then no one would be bitching about it. All they would need to do this would be menuconfig, some artwork, new KDE widget and kwin themes, and changes to various .desktop files. But that is not what Redhat has done. A unified desktop may be their goal, but they are attempting to achieve it by gnomifying KDE. And they are gnomifying KDE is distinctly uncourteous ways.

      Here's an example of Redhat's lack of courtesy: They disabled the KDE About Box. Now users cannot easily know what license an application is under, nor who the author is. Frankly, this borders on a GPL violation, but no matter, the discourtesy is by far the greater sin.

      Another example is Redhat's failure to submit changes to the code base to the code base authors. This is an egregious sin. It doesn't violate any licenses, but it is very rude. If a code change is an bug fix, then community citizenship says that you should submit the fix to the author. If it is not a bug fix, then you have in essence forked the code, and community citizenship says that you should alter the name of the package so that the user knows they aren't running the original version.

      Note that is wasn't until after the KDE developers complained that Redhat decided to make the bug dialog redirect bug reports to Redhat instead of KDE.

      Finally, in a brazen display of disrespect, they put their head GNOME guy in charge of "fixing" KDE.

      Okay, I can see you still don't get what the problem is. Let me offer you an analogy. LinuxMall wants a Unified Linux, instead of all these disparate distributions. That way they don't have to worry about customer confusion, and can offer a single meta-distribution. Step one is to remove the Redhat logos from Redhat. Step two is to make linuxconf look like YaST. Step four is to rewrite RPM without naming it or submitting the changes to Redhat. Oh, by the way, they hired Debian to be in charge of the retrofit.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    2. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Ed+Avis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Surely it's best to change the bug-reporter to send bugs to RedHat and not KDE, since RH are distributing a modified version. There would be many more complaints if the KDE team started getting deluged by bugs which were actually caused by RH's changes... better to have Red Hat, as the 'vendor', take the effort to work out which are problems with their distribution and which bugs in KDE.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    3. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 1

      "Here's an example of Redhat's lack of courtesy: They disabled the KDE About Box. Now users cannot easily know what license an application is under, nor who the author is. Frankly, this borders on a GPL violation, but no matter, the discourtesy is by far the greater sin.

      Actually, this is far from a GPL violation. You are not obligated in any way to preserve authorship credit in GPL'ed software. Infact, according to the GPL, you dont even need to release the source publically -- Only upon request, and even then, you can even charge a small fee for doing so. What you've described here would be a violation of the BSD license, but not in GPL terms. What you're talking about are largely cosmetic changes -- something that RedHat is perfectly entitled to do.

      I'll give you a good example. Back in May of '98, RedHat started carrying Propaganda tiles. They opted to rename them, feeling that some of the filenames might raise a few eyebrows upon release. They asked my permission to do so, however -- Which I of course granted.. However, they didn't need to ask me in the first place. Hell, they didn't even have to give me credit. They would be perfectly within their rights to do both without my concent.

      Cheers,

      --
      Bowie J. Poag

    4. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by ivan256 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Frankly, this borders on a GPL violation

      Bullshit. You're in violation or you're not. This is clearly NOT violation. About boxes are stupid anyway.

      Another example is Redhat's failure to submit changes to the code base to the code base authors. This is an egregious sin. It doesn't violate any licenses, but it is very rude.

      Bullshit again. I work commercially with lots of GPLed software every day. We make changes, and we don't submit the changes back... until we're done! When we have a beta product, and beta quality modifications we keep them internal. When we're sure the changes represent the quality we like, only then do the changes go back. Have patience. They haven't released the product yet.

      If they decide to fork, then that's fine too.

      in a brazen display of disrespect, they put their head GNOME guy in charge of "fixing" KDE

      Hmm, put their most experienced GUI guy in charge of packinging up and "redhatizing" a GUI. What a horrible decision. (Not)

      If you don't want people customizing and redistributing your software, then don't make it customizable or redistributable. If you don't want people changing your software to, say, look like gnome, then license it apropriately. Either you believe in free software or you don't. It's very simple.

      Let me offer you an analogy. LinuxMall wants a Unified Linux, instead of all these disparate distributions. That way they don't have to worry about customer confusion, and can offer a single meta-distribution. Step one is to remove the Redhat logos from Redhat. Step two is to make linuxconf look like YaST. Step four is to rewrite RPM without naming it or submitting the changes to Redhat. Oh, by the way, they hired Debian to be in charge of the retrofit.

      How many distros out there started by taking redhat and changing the logos? Mandrake, Turbo, LinuxPPC, YellowDog, Caldera... Plenty of others I'm sure. They may have deviated significantly now, but they all started in the same place. You don't hear redhat bitching.

      BTW, if you plan to accuse me of being a RedHat or Gnome fanboy, you may care to peruse my previous posts first. I use Debian, and I have other issues with redhat (like when they take GPLd software and change the title and copyright notice before releasing it, or when they ship documentation for said program with the new name even though the documentation isn't under an open license, all without giving any credit to the owner anywhere much less in an about box). I also think that "desktop environments" are a waste of cycles, memory, and pixels. They all suck.

    5. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Actually, this is far from a GPL violation. You are not obligated in any way to preserve authorship credit in GPL'ed software.

      GPL Chapter 1, Verse 2: "keep intact all the notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty".

      GPL Chapter 2c, Verse 1: "you must cause it ... to print or display an announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a notice that there is no warranty"

      These clauses might not necessarily apply to the alteration of the About Box, which is why I said "borders on" a GPL violation. It's definitely against the spirit of the GPL though.

      What you've described here would be a violation of the BSD license

      Some parts of KDE are under the BSD license. The two main parts that I am aware of (kicker and kwin) don't normally display an About Box. But Cervisia does, and Cervisia is under the QPL! And the QPL says "Modifications must not alter or remove any copyright notices in the Software."

      Changing the underlying KAboutDialog, which is under the LGPL, is not a problem in and of itself. But changing that dialog in such a way that it blocks calls to display an application's licensing terms is extremely problematic.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    6. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Arandir · · Score: 2

      Bullshit. You're in violation or you're not. This is clearly NOT violation. About boxes are stupid anyway.

      Clause 2c of the GPL might apply in this situation. I am not saying it does, because I am not a lawyer, but the way I read it, it's damn close.

      And about boxes are not stupid. They are a GUI application's primary means of informing the user of authorship, copyright and licensing terms. To deliberately block an application's call to display copyright and license information is extremely problematic.

      If they decide to fork, then that's fine too.

      Of course it is. But there are commonly accepted ways of creating a fork. But only if they don't dump the responsibility of supporting the fork back on the original developer. That was what Redhat was doing until KDE raised a stink about it.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    7. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Telex4 · · Score: 2

      It strikes me that you would have the KDE Project produce proprietary software, to allow you the kind of control you want over it, if it didn't mean the death of the KDE Project.

      One of the points of Free Software is that it allows people to do exactly what RedHat have done. Changing the look and feel of KDE to make it more similar to GNOME is their right, until the various licenses KDE uses. You may not like it, but so what? There's no discourteousness here, just you and other KDE people wanting KDE to look exactly as you'd have it, everywhere. Blimey, go to kde-look and whine at everyone who has gone to great lengths to make their set-up look like GNOME, Windows, MacOS, Solaris, etc. I repeat: "Gnomifying" KDE is their right. Leave them to it, or change your licenses.

      The about dialogue boxes are, perhaps, a little silly. I can see it making things a little less confusing for the newbie, but then on the other hand I can't see them being that confusing in the first place. But if this is the main problem, lobby RedHat over it, and don't attack the whole idea.

      So they haven't submitted code changes yet. Maybe they're not ready to? Maybe they're still in betaor alpha stages! What's that? You say this whole project is part of a still-in-beta distro? Oh, well there you go then. I'm sure that they will return the modified code *when they are done*. They have to upon request, but RedHat have usually been good to the community, so I don't see why they won't now. As I said on my original post, let's hope they find a good way of doing this, to help both the KDE and GNOME projects.

      And please.... "they put john in charge of chess club when he's always preferred backgammon". You are so childish if you think it is disrespectful to put a GNOME guy in charge of making KDE more "gnomeish". If LinuxMall wanted to do that, then they can, and if they suceed, and beat the competition, then they've done a lot of good, both for themselves and the Free software community. I bet you didn't whine when Gentoo took FreeBSD's "portage" system, merged it with Debian's "apt", and extended them both to make their own portage system.

      And for the record, I use KDE, I dislike the look and feel of GNOME, and also the default look of KDE ;-) If I had theskill to screw around with the source to change certain things, I would too.

    8. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by ivan256 · · Score: 2

      From the GPL section 2c: "when started running for such interactive use"

      If they had a splash screen that displayed the authors and copyright, then they would be in violation. About boxes are not covered. The about box is certainly not the only way to determine the license, and it you care enough about what the license is, you would be able to find it. (I hope this doesn't make people start including splash screens, because unless the splash screen is there to inform the user that the program is taking time to load in the background, splash screens are evil.)

      They are a GUI application's primary means of informing the user of authorship

      Authorship is irrelevent, and like I said, the license and copyright are still available to those who are interested enough to look for them.

      That was what Redhat was doing until KDE raised a stink about it.

      If they made it impossible to find the original maintainer by removing the about box, then how were they pushing support back on said maintainer for the modified release? It seems to me like there were some people who were really digging for a reson to be upset with redhat about this without coming out and saying "we're pissed because gnome 5ux0r5, and you made us look like them."

      Is there any way that redhat could blur the lines between Gnome and KDE witout starting a flame war? If you ask me, they should hve just picked one of the two and not shipped the other one.

    9. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Arandir · · Score: 1

      One of the points of Free Software is that it allows people to do exactly what RedHat have done.

      I arguing that Redhat's actions are discourteous, not that they are illegal. There are millions of things I wish people wouldn't do with my code, but I won't prohibit them by force of law in my license.

      There is custom in the Free Software community to submit bug fixes back to the original developer or maintainer. There is a custom in the Free Software community to alter the name of a package when it has been forked. There is a custom in the Free Software community to provide proper attribution of authorship. Redhat has not followed the community custom.

      you and other KDE people wanting KDE to look exactly as you'd have it

      Neither am I arguing against their retheming of KDE. In fact, there has been no KDE developer that has argued this. That's not the problem. They can write themes all day long and there will not be a problem. That's not the problem!

      The about dialogue boxes are, perhaps, a little silly.

      The about boxes are not silly, because they are the primary means for a KDE application to notify a user of their legal rights with regards to the software. What good is Free Software if the user doesn't know it's Free?

      You are so childish if you think it is disrespectful to put a GNOME guy in charge of making KDE more "gnomeish".

      The guy in charge is the guy who called KDE "crapland".

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    10. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Arandir · · Score: 2

      Authorship is irrelevent, and like I said, the license and copyright are still available to those who are interested enough to look for them.

      Authorship is very relevant to the author. Just ask any author.

      Without the about box, a user of a KDE application has only two means of determining authorship and licensing. Drop down to the command line with the --author and --license switches, or downloading the source just to look at the COPYING file. Both are somewhat viable options, but not even close to the convenience of the about box.

      But that all begs the question. Why even get rid of the about box to begin with? Does it violate some obscure UI design guideline? I can see no possible reason to disable the dialog. As the old saying goes, if about boxes offend you, you don't have to display them.

      If they made it impossible to find the original maintainer by removing the about box, then how were they pushing support back on said maintainer for the modified release?

      Because they didn't (originally) modify the bug report dialog. And aboutbox type information isn't in there anyway.

      Is there any way that redhat could blur the lines between Gnome and KDE witout starting a flame war?

      Yes. Create a common look and feel. On the KDE side this would have involved new widget and kwin themes, and changes to certain .desktop files and startup scripts. Removing the aboutbox would not have been necessary. Renaming crucial services would not have been necessary. And sending bug reports straight to KDE would have been hunky dory.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    11. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by Telex4 · · Score: 2
      Well for the record, a lot of people have moaned about the retheming of KDE in the style of GNOME, so for many that is a problem.

      And you didn't address the point that I, and many others, have risen which is that it is often custom to finish off code modifications before reintegrating them with the main codebase. In fact, in the article from which this thread began, the RedHat guy pointed out that they have created a new branch of the KDE cvs base fr the packages they are modifying.

      The about boxes are not silly, because they are the primary means for a KDE application to notify a user of their legal rights with regards to the software. What good is Free Software if the user doesn't know it's Free?

      Not exactly. There is still an "about" window for each application, and that still shows the license for that particular application. There is also still an "about KDE" about box somewhere that gives license information for KDE as a whole. So users will still know their legal rights with regards to the software.


      So to summarise:

      • RedHat are giving back source modifications
      • RedHat are doing this in the customary way
      • RedHat are giving credit to the KDE project in their documentation, and in KDE itself (though perhaps a little less than is default in KDE)
      • RedHat are still displaying licenses in software
      • you have presented no valid case against them other than you personally believe them to be discourteous
      The guy in charge is the guy who called KDE "crapland".

      And?

    12. Re:Hopefully this won't be necessary soon by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Authorship is very relevant to the author. Just ask any author.

      "Hey, me, do you care if anybody knows that you wrote a particular program?"

      "Nope, only that people can find out who owns the copyright to negotiate new terms and most users don't do that."

      Seriously, though, authorship is usually irrelevant because most authors don't hold the copyright. It's the copyright holder that is relevant; and even then, only when the user wants to do something that is not allowed by the license. If all you want to do is use software within the license, then why does the user need to know who wrote the program, and why does the author care if the user knows?

  27. Red Hat Did Good by LordYUK · · Score: 1

    well, if I read the article correctly, all they said was that they made them look/act as closely as possible out of the box... it doesnt sound like they took anything away from either, just set the preconfigured options so that they'd look the same to someone like me, who doesnt currently use linux but might one day want to install it. Its the same with Windows, they set the preconfigs the same, and if you dont like them, you change them. But conformity is nice, out of the box. (in other words, if I watch Bob install red hat, and then I go home and install red hat, its nice to know what its supposed to look like when it boots, rather than getting something thats completely different, albeit perhaps not wrong)

    --
    This is my sig. Its pathetic.
  28. Pictures of their desktop by Mr_Silver · · Score: 3, Interesting
    You can find pictures here

    I have to say, it does look very nice and I (being in the "lets have one desktop and do it right for the sake of consistency and adoption" camp) will definately be installing it when it is released.

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    1. Re:Pictures of their desktop by Kourino · · Score: 1

      Ooh.

      That's reasonably pretty for an all-grey theme. <rant>Although they might do good to have the rpm description of Gaim match the SF project page description, especially since it's not really an AIM clone anymore. :) And bare panels are ugly IMO.</rant> But on the whole, not bad. Of course, I'd just go install something like BlueHeart anyway ;) but that's not too shabby for a default look-and-feel.

    2. Re:Pictures of their desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Although they might do good to have the rpm description of Gaim match the SF project page description, especially since it's not really an AIM clone anymore."

      Yes, but the whole point of doing the unified desktop is to appeal to new users. It is certainly arguable that the best way to describe gaim in one sentence is as an "AIM clone". This tells them two things: 1) it works with Windows AIM clients 2) it's not an official AOL AIM client.

  29. Re:Insane by rppp01 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    -sigh-

    Look, RedHat is right on this one. Finally, after years of frustration, someone might just drag linux kicking and screaming into the desktop market.

    I swear, linux does not want to be mainstream. Sure, everyone talks about how they want their favorite OS to be taken seriously on the desktop, but no one wants to take the steps necessary to do it. I like choice, don't get me wrong. But most users do not give a shit about choice. They want AOL and MS Word. They want the start button. Fine, give them the start button, give them an MS Word clone. Let the world view linux with this perspective: a solid OS that 'just works' with a standard interface and standard applications that work as well as those on Windows. And for those who want to do more, we have other "versions" of the OS that allow other desktops, applications and such.

    To sit here and rip them for 'taking away choice' is just ignorant and, well, stupid. Please, people. I like WindowMaker, but I also know what we need to make linux work outside of the server room and the geek's bedroom. Don't forget, programs like 'switchdesk' exist for a reason. Those who want to use it, and those who can use it, are not prohibited from it.

    Bravo RedHat. Lead linux into battle for the server and desktop. Let everyone else follow. I need to get back to my kernel compile, now. :)

    --
    They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
  30. I don't like it by Norny · · Score: 1

    I can't disagree more with a unified desktop. It might make it easier to for Redhat to manage a distribution or something, but the whole reason Gnome was created was people didn't like KDE. KDE users use KDE cause they don't like Gnome.

    I loaded up Null last week, ran Gnome, and was not very impressed with the changes. I think I'll stick with Slackware or Mandrake. They don't change the interface.

    1. Re:I don't like it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you're saying is that nobody really likes either KDE or Gnome and everyone just goes with the desktop that they hate the least?

    2. Re:I don't like it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll stick to Suse in a same way of thinking, they respect the work of both desktops environements, .. respect.. you know ?

    3. Re:I don't like it by randomErr · · Score: 2

      Don't like it, don't use it.

      --
      You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
    4. Re:I don't like it by __aahlyu4518 · · Score: 2

      but the whole reason Gnome was created was people didn't like KDE. KDE users use KDE cause they don't like Gnome.

      So you don't like redhat... so you run something else... problem solved. You gave the answer yourself !

    5. Re:I don't like it by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 2

      I know this will make people scream.

      If the desktop environments were less concerned with getting the greatest share of users in Linux and more concerned with:

      A) Standards
      B) Interoperability

      the Linux GUI market would be a better place.

      What the hell happened to standards? Everything else has a damn standard, why not the interface?! I'm not saying the standard should outline The Interface, but it should make it easy for users to switch from one to another. Yes, there are different environments which different GUIs are better and worse for. But that doesn't mean that they can' be similar enough to not have a "transition period" for those who aren't familiar.

      Maybe we should be building a common interface with functional subsets that could be switched easily - same feeling but different format for various uses. Gaming, Graphics, Business, Children, etc. Of course, this would require a few things:

      1) People willing to work together and not just argue.
      2) Developers who are willing to sacrifice some control for better function.
      3) A Damn Miracle.

      --
      Well, I'm done.

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    6. Re:I don't like it by The+Faywood+Assassin · · Score: 1

      Respect has nothing to do with it.

      Its called "open source". Remember? The freedom to change whatever you want about the software they provide. God, does that mean Mandrake doesn't respect RedHat since their distro was initially based on RedHat's? Heaven forbid RedHat be allowed to try and do the same thing.

      Perhaps the GPL should come witha disclaimer that states "taking advantage of the rights and freedoms granted by this license will be interpreted as disrespect to the source code's originator".

      The only thing the desktop groups can do here is demand that RedHat stop calling their new creation Gnome or KDE.

      Beny
      --

      "I'm a humble person really,

      I'm actually much greater than I think I am"

    7. Re:I don't like it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I really hope you don't VOTE that way! ;) The reason I use the desktop I use isn't because I "don't like" the other one. They are both quite good, in fact. The reason I use the one I use is because I like it better.

      Any way, this whole thing is a non-issue because RedHat are not "removing" or "disabling" anything really... They're basically setting up a default theme. That is all. If you don't like it, you are still "free to choose" to customize your desktop a different way.

    8. Re:I don't like it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      the whole reason Gnome was created was people didn't like KDE.

      Minor nitpick. The reason GNOME was created was because KDE (QT libs specifically) was not Free.

  31. I'm not certain what the fuss is about... by Hugh+Kir · · Score: 1

    From Redhat's standpoint, this move makes sense, because they want to provide their users with a simple, ready-to-use system, and the less decisions a user has to make in order to get that, the better. On the other hand, if you prefer to use Gnome or KDE settings instead of the Redhat ones, there's nothing stopping anyone from changing those settings, or even grabbing Gnome or KDE and installing from scratch (I do that often myself, particularly because I enjoy playing with the unstable branches of things). Given that the other obvious option for Redhat would've been to pick one desktop or the other and run with it, I'd argue that this is not a particularly bad outcome. At least the user still does have a choice, even if both desktops look similar by default.

  32. Greatest gift to the linux world???? by Rahga · · Score: 2

    I started out making this a long and winded post, but instead, deleted it and will just say this:

    In my opinion, competing desktops will breed innovation and evolution. We need one unified desktop like I need a hole in the head. A few years ago, if all car makers joined forces to make one type of car, we'd all be driving a Yugo. If there was no Macintosh, we'd all be stuch with Windows 2.0 in the office.

    I loathe people who want to treat everything as if it were a zero sum game. :)

    1. Re:Greatest gift to the linux world???? by (void*) · · Score: 3, Insightful
      RedHat needs to sell to corporate customers, who want a uniformity of look. RedHat is exercising it's freedom, granted by the Free Software licenses to make a product it's cusomters want. If you don't want it, don't be a RedHat customer. Tweak your own desktop, or use some other distribution.


      If you look like Microsoft and Apple, they tie the user experience to the choice of OS. That Linux allows us to choose, is exactly what makes Free Software good. If you don't agree with RedHat, at least learn to respect that their decisions. They have been contributing code, and good software so far. At least LET them exercise their freedom to please their customers.

    2. Re:Greatest gift to the linux world???? by OS24Ever · · Score: 2

      No, we'd be stuck with the Macinotsh 128k with MacWord.

      Mac came first in your analogy.

      And we'd be driving Ford Pinto's

      --

      As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

    3. Re:Greatest gift to the linux world???? by mosschops · · Score: 1

      In my opinion, competing desktops will breed innovation and evolution. We need one unified desktop like I need a hole in the head.

      Competition is good, but standardisation is also equally important.

      We still have competition in the form of Linux desktop vs Windows vs MacOS, etc - that will keep the desktop environment moving forwards.

      This is just about standardising the default look of what we've already got, to make it easy for new users to swallow. There's nothing stopping you from configuring your desktop however you want - you can still do that!

    4. Re:Greatest gift to the linux world???? by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

      Are the competing desktops competing or just copying each other? Innovation breeds from when somebody decides to do things differently. LINUS did that with LINUX in that he created an OS developed by the masses, with some new OS concepts. Ok not that many but a few. What is truly different between GNOME and KDE other than a few API's and themes? Not much. They are all clones of each other.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    5. Re:Greatest gift to the linux world???? by entrigant · · Score: 1

      Umm... he wasn't commenting on Red Hat.. he was commenting on what was said by Hemos in the news post.

    6. Re:Greatest gift to the linux world???? by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem with your logic is that much of the innovation is a backlash against/breaking with the standard.

      Apple incorporated a number of additional features over time that were tweaks. The Menubar clock, the Apple-delete command, the Launcher, Spring-loaded folders, Internet Settings, Stickies, PPP support - All of these were available as add-ons before Apple incorporated them. They were made because people wanted something the standard didn't offer.

      Microsoft responded by adding many of these same features to their OS.

      On a side-bit, Apple did this mostly by purchasing the software from the makers, Microsoft wrote their own versions and prevented competitors from being used (e.g. The Windows XP Personal Firewall).

      Without a standard against which to work, innovation is much slower. The people at PARC with made the first GUI did so roughly (brute force rendering, etc) and apple took their standard and crafted something else. Microsoft followed in Suit. And Linux GUIs are based heavily on Windows (Call it what you want, it's a Start Button).

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    7. Re:Greatest gift to the linux world???? by Dr.+Weasel · · Score: 1

      Hemos said nothing. It was all in italics. The post was written entirely by the person who submitted the article.

    8. Re:Greatest gift to the linux world???? by mookie+t+mookle · · Score: 1

      Microsoft wrote their own versions and prevented competitors from being used (e.g. The Windows XP Personal Firewall)

      not to make a point of disagreeing, but Microsoft have on many occasions pointed out that their firewall software is a very basic system so to provide some functionality for users but not to prevent dedicated firewall companies from having a product.

      In fact I wouldn't be surprised if the firewall was created by one of those companies- after all the in built defragmenter is just a very stripped down version of Diskeeper!

      Windows does not 'prevent you' from using better versions of these tools- in fact when you install Diskeeper it replaces the built in app in the management console

      --
      "...and on the seventh day we wrapped." JMS 4:22 May 5, 1997
  33. A single desktop is trivial atm. by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 1

    What linux or any other open source program really needs are open sourced drivers so that a standard install procedure will recognize ALL (known) hardware found and with open sourced drivers available for download of non-standard hardware. (And that excludes cheap crap like nvidia pulls which taints the linux kernel.)

    Unfortunatly, such an objective is out of the hands of the open source developers/zealots and within the capabilities of multinationals who are too shortsighted to open source their drivers and/or hardware specs. Besides, the desktops currently available still lie overtop a CLI and if you ever want Linux to have success as a Desktop OS, you need to get rid of the CLI first. Make a clear difference between desktop and other distros. Eliminate the damned CLI from the desktop ones, bind the kernel to a GUI instead. Desktop users do not want the GUI as basis, they want the GUI.

    .
  34. Does anybody realy care about two desktops? by Jondor · · Score: 2

    Those who don't care, don't care. Pick a default desktop and make it as good as possible. Newbies use what you give them until they get a reason to disagree.

    Those who care, do so for a reason and are not going to appreciate this unification stuff..

    --
    Nobody expects the spanish inquisition!
  35. Have your cake and eat it too? by d3xt3r · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Everyone from Gnome and KDE who are complaining about Red Hat's excellent decision to unify the desktops for end user experiece really just wants to have their cake and eat it too.

    The real reason everyone likes to have multiple desktop environments is for choice. The choice to develop applications with the toolkit of your choice. This is great because, as everyone loves to say around here, "this is what makes Linux great, choice and freedom."

    But as with all choices to diverge, rather than unify, someone suffers. Up unitl now that has been the end user -- the person all this software was written for in the first place, or is it? KDE and Gnome are great, but they offer two different window kits, two different looks and feels, and two different user experiences. This is bad for the end user. If I am KDE die hard and want to use a Gnome application, I can, the only problem is that it's going to look and feel like a Gnome app on my KDE desktop. And if I was a Gnome user the above situation would be reversed, you get the idea.

    The point here is that Red Hat has done a great service to the KDE and Gnome teams. They have taken two incompatible, entirely different desktops, and unified them for the benefit of the end user.

    Let's not forget that Linux is about freedom not only for the developer, but for the end user. Well written applications are designed with the user in mind. If the KDE and Gnome teams want to contribute to the Linux/*nix community in a truly free and open maner, they will see this move for what it is: a change to allow developers to continue to innovate in the way they see fit, using the right tools for the job at hand, all while improving user experience. That's what it's all about. Right?

    1. Re:Have your cake and eat it too? by entrigant · · Score: 1

      First you appear to promote choice, and then you seem to degrade it. What is your actual stance? A lot of people have this weird idea that removing all choice from linux and creating a single conforming system where everything is exactly the same is a good thing. If anything like that happened I'd pack my bags and move to windows land not out of spite, but because windows will have suddenly become better. I get a single unified eXPerience (excuse the pun =) with no choice in windows too, but I get it with a lot more apps and extra hardware support.

      This reminds me of a time I was at an ice cream shop and some woman ordered a banana split. With that you have your choice of a myraid of toppings... 5-6 iirc. The girl behind the counter kept asking which of this and which of that the woman wanted and the woman actually got MAD and started YELLING at the poor girl telling her "JUST MAKE ME A $%@$^% BANANA SPLIT!" This kind of person should use windows and shouldn't touch linux with a 10 foot pole. I on the other hand will piss of the girl behind the counter 'cause I take an hour carefully contemplating which toppings I want... anybody like me would be much happier running linux on their PC than windows.

      I simply don't know what else to say to make people realise that this kind of split is a GOOD THING. I prefer KDE 'cause it has certain advantage over Gnome that I prefer. Other people will say the same about Gnome. Don't like one use the other. Wait... no lets create a single unified desktop... don't like it? Well too f***ing bad... use Windows. I personally wish there were 5 different high quality desktops to choose from.

      People really need to stop this "linux should takeover the world" crap and just focus on making linux excel at what it is there for... to be an alternative, not a clone. If some people don't want to use it because it gives too much personal freedom and choice then hey... their loss. Why should we care? For everyone like that there's someone else who will say "wow! look at all the different stuff I can have!"

      Anyways I'm done trying to explain myself now... either ya get it or ya don't. Hopefully you do...

    2. Re:Have your cake and eat it too? by Arandir · · Score: 1

      I personally wish there were 5 different high quality desktops to choose from.

      Amen! People who don't want to make choices should assign that responsibility to Bill Gates.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
  36. #the only look you need _ by DrSkwid · · Score: 3, Funny

    a few others

    $bash>
    ;
    c:\>

    nothing else necessary

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    1. Re:#the only look you need _ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You use bash? Lamer.
      3l337 /-/@XoR5 use sh.

    2. Re:#the only look you need _ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. They use ash.

    3. Re:#the only look you need _ by pamri · · Score: 1

      I knew of one distribution(pcquest's) that added a few 'aliases' in a script to bring a dos feel to the command prompt. The distro, incidentally was redhat.I am not so sure about the prompt though.

    4. Re:#the only look you need _ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      You've never had sex before have you?

    5. Re:#the only look you need _ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. They use zsh.

  37. Re:Grumbling is pointless - we should applaud Redh by tomhudson · · Score: 1
    Oh, come on. a la Windows? MicroShaft changes their UI every release, and confuses the hell out of everyone.

    Linux is already on more desktops than the Mac, without a consistent UI. It's not the interface, it's what you can do with the system. The interface is only that, an "interface" to the system.</flame>

    Yeesh!. Ok, now for the real stuff... nobody really gives a shit about the user interface if it's working properly. When it doesn't, then there's a problem. User interfaces should be transparent to the end user.

    That being said, I think Redhat should have respected the creative differences that the two parties have added to their UIs.

  38. Taylor presents his case well but issues remain by hillct · · Score: 2

    The arguments are presented in an articulare, well reasoned way. They are reasonably persuasive from a business perspective, both for Redhat and for promoters of Linux Desktop adoption, however I'd expect to see a rebutal from each of the KDE and Gnome projects vary soon; each of which will probably say the same thing, that they agree that their two projects should colaborate more to bring the look and feel into alignment, however it is not Redhat's place to undertake this.

    If Redhat is to take this on, then other distributions of Linux will suffer due to their newfound 'inconsistency', and while this may be a reasonable approach for Redhat, it is something to be avoided from the perspective of the Redhat and Gnome projects since their software is provided with virtually all Linux distributions so in order to gain the greatest market penetration they should be acting in support of all distributions. I'm certain these rebutals will be ariving soon and I look forward to reading them.

    --CTH

    --

    --Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
    1. Re:Taylor presents his case well but issues remain by pjl5602 · · Score: 1
      however it is not Redhat's place to undertake this.

      It is RedHat's place to undertake this. What is the Gnome camp's motivation to make their desktop look like KDE and vice versa? People who install Gnome from tarballs are going to expect Gnome. Likewise for KDE. Meanwhile, RedHat is in the business of making things easy for users. They want to be able to present "best of breed" software to their users be it AbiWord, OpenOffice, KWord, Evolution, KMail, etc... They only way that they can do this is if they make Mozilla, OpenOffice, Xmms, Gnome and KDE look and act the same.

      If Redhat is to take this on, then other distributions of Linux will suffer due to their newfound 'inconsistency'

      Oh please... Last I checked, all of RedHat's work on the desktop is GPL'd. Nothing will stop them from doing the same thing and basing their efforts on RedHat's if they so desire.

      and while this may be a reasonable approach for Redhat, it is something to be avoided from the perspective of the Redhat and Gnome projects since their software is provided with virtually all Linux distributions so in order to gain the greatest market penetration they should be acting in support of all distributions.

      Since when was RedHat responsible for the well being and actions of Suse, Mandrake, Gentoo, Debian, etc.? Being the leading distribution does not make them the shepherd for all the smaller distributions in the market.

    2. Re:Taylor presents his case well but issues remain by Jerry · · Score: 1
      If Redhat is to take this on, then other distributions of Linux will suffer due to their newfound 'inconsistency', and while this may be a reasonable approach for Redhat, it is something to be avoided from the perspective of the Redhat {sic -KDE?] and Gnome projects since their software is provided with virtually all Linux distributions so in order to gain the greatest market penetration they should be acting in support of all distributions. I'm certain these rebutals will be ariving soon and I look forward to reading them.


      IF RedHat were the leading Linux distro what you say may be true. But, Mandrake has been leading RH in downloads and installations for a long time now, so RH doesn't represent the biggest installed base.


      Also, KDE holds the lion's share of the Linux desktop market. The last percentage I recall reading was over 80%. While there are many more apps written for KDE than for GNOME, distros like Mandrake make both dekstops runnable so those who likes GNOME can still run a lot of KDE apps, and visa-versa.


      In my opinion RH is doing this to standarize the dekstop in an attempt to appeal to the corporate market, so that their IT departments only have to support 'one' desktop. The same effect is being achieved by corporations who have already adopted LInux, have standardized on KDE and have policies about which other apps/themes/screensavers can appear on the KDE desktop.
      JLK

      --

      Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  39. Me Too :) by Outland+Traveller · · Score: 1

    Redhat's unified desktop is a step forward. Since both desktop environments are customizable, users can still make them look and act any way they want. The choice is still there.

    Now, the desktop environments will compete more on technical prowness than their default look, which is where the competition should be IMHO.

    I hope that this decision helps unifiy the two desktop environmnents down the road.

  40. Re:Insane by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 3

    Exactly. RedHat isn't taking away your ability to choose. If you want something to be different, change it. In the meantime, All the people who need standards to survive int he computer world can enjoy a little more of Linux than they could before.

    Here's a bad computer-car analogy. If the Microsoft car has a steering wheel, and the Linux car has a numeric keypad (which undoubtably can do more), most people couldn't drive the Linux car.

    RedHat is trying to push the Desktop Linux by making different GUIs work the same. This is known as "standards."

    The real issue here is while there was a display manager that became the standard, these should have been something on interface design long ago.

    We live in a world of standards, and yet the one thing that needs the most standardization is the one thing people push to have the least.

    Free the GUI!

    --
    That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
  41. Choice and Red Hat by Kourino · · Score: 5, Insightful

    11 comments, and most of them are people grumbling about how Red Hat is squeezing choice out of the hands of the user. But really, is this true? What RH has done (from what I hear, I don't chase bleeding-edge distros, usually) is just change the way things look. They've provided a different default appearance. How is this worse from the default appearances provided by the GNOME and KDE teams? (RH's arguments for why it's better are in the article, you should read it :3 )

    It's not like Red Hat is releasing modified versions of GNOME and KDE that don't let you customize the appearance; then, only then, would the complaints about choice be founded. The people who really care about the difference between GNOME and KDE probably do so on reasons deeper than 'the default theme looks cool'. (Personally, I don't really like either of the default appearances that much ^^; ) So, when nagora asks "If RH doesn't like this, why don't they drop the one they don't want people to use?" the answer is: they don't care what you use, but they want the defaults to look reasonably similar, because they know that people who really don't *want* their default theme either know how to change it or probably have settings that they'll import anyway.

    Remember who Red Hat's intended market share is: the corporate environment. A lot of people I've talked to recently agree that RH's biggest 'ins' are (or should be) for office workstations. Lots of places implement a baseline standard that they want to look the same, but that people can customize if they want to (as long as they don't spend hours tweaking it). This is the mentality that RH seems to target. Yes, this isn't for everyone, but that's the point ... there are plenty of good distributions out there, and many more choices out there if you really really don't like it. But no-one said you have to use Red Hat. (Although I could understand concerns about RH-isms creeping into LSB, but nobody's brought that up.)

    Remember, RH == vendor for corporate enviroments. Corporate environments like standard desktops, so this move makes sense in Red Hat's perspective.

    1. Re:Choice and Red Hat by Epeeist · · Score: 3, Interesting

      > It's not like Red Hat is releasing modified versions of GNOME and KDE that don't let you customize the appearance;

      I can't speak for GNOME. However, they have modified the code for KDE. This seems to be the main reason that the KDE developers are upset. They are not sure whether they will be responding to bugs in the vanilla version, or the one that RH modified.

    2. Re:Choice and Red Hat by (void*) · · Score: 3, Insightful
      So basically, these guys have no idea about the implications of Open Source? That anyone can release modified versions of code, even if they don't like it?


      It's not like they are morally obliged to fix any and every problem with their code.

    3. Re:Choice and Red Hat by Kourino · · Score: 1

      Well, what was the change? I honestly don't know ^^; (My complaint with this article is that it gives no background, just the RH announcement, so those of us who don't follow the Big Two in Linux desktop development are kind of left clueless ... )

    4. Re:Choice and Red Hat by prockcore · · Score: 2

      "However, they have modified the code for KDE. This seems to be the main reason that the KDE developers are upset."

      Well KDE can either change to a proprietary license, or go to hell.. I really don't care which.

    5. Re:Choice and Red Hat by Arandir · · Score: 2

      Well KDE can either change to a proprietary license, or go to hell.

      The KDE developers aren't concerned that Redhat is modifying their source code. Instead they are concerned that Redhat is not exercising common courtesy when they do so. There is a big difference.

      The two primary concerns in my mind are Redhat's removal of the KDE About Box, and their forking of the code base without renaming it. The former means that no user can know who wrote an application or what license it is under unless they look at the source code. The latter means that bug reports from Redhat users are valueless.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    6. Re:Choice and Red Hat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, people are pissed about changing code because:

      1). RedHat has already introduced new bugs into it's version of KDE (renaming service types). That can cause compatability problems with third party KDE apps.

      2). Users will see problems with third party apps and file bug reports. These aren't bugs in code created by the developer, but bugs created by RedHat.

      Ultimatly, as most of the KDE developers code/fix bugs on a competely volunteer basis, cases like number 2 can become such a support hassle that it's simply not worth it anymore.

      So, the developer rejects any bugs coming from RedHat versions => 8.0. Users complain that KDE developers don't listen to them. KDE gets bad rep.

      It has nothing to do with KDE being open sourced. Get it?

      What I want is for RedHat to COMPLETELY the KDE bug reporter interface with their own, and for bugs.kde.org to put in large warning signs to not report if you are using RDE.

    7. Re:Choice and Red Hat by dvdeug · · Score: 2

      The two primary concerns in my mind are [...] their forking of the code base without renaming it. [...] The latter means that bug reports from Redhat users are valueless.

      Since when hasn't this been true? Every distribution provides custom patches to software. Debian patches every printing program to use libpaper, even if the author would prefer to use LC_PAPER. And yes, this makes certain bug reports from Debian users worthless. That's why Debian tries to funnel all bugreports through its bug tracking system. Red Hat does the exact same thing; changing things to make it work better, and trying to handle bugreports locally.

      Should GCC complain because Apple and NetBSD and Debian all apply different patches to the compiler to get to work right for them? Should they tell Apple to break their driver ABI because GCC core doesn't want to include the ugly hack in CVS, or tell them they can't call it GCC because of that small patch? This is just part of free software.

    8. Re:Choice and Red Hat by Arandir · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's why Debian tries to funnel all bugreports through its bug tracking system.

      But with Redhat, they did not change the bug report dialog to forward bugs to Redhat until AFTER some KDE developers complained. It's okay to fork the code, just don't expect the original developer to support your changes.

      Should GCC complain because Apple and NetBSD and Debian all apply different patches to the compiler to get to work right for them?

      Debian and NetBSD send their patches on to to GCC developers. I suspect that Apple does as well, but if they don't then it's up to Apple to support their version. Redhat did NOT send their patches to KDE, but until KDE called them on it, expected KDE to support the Redhat version.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    9. Re:Choice and Red Hat by prockcore · · Score: 2

      "The two primary concerns in my mind are Redhat's removal of the KDE About Box, and their forking of the code base without renaming it. The former means that no user can know who wrote an application or what license it is under unless they look at the source code."

      That's not true at all, in fact it's FUD spread by the KDE devs. The "About KDE" box has been removed.. the About box hasn't. The About box lists the Authors and the License, the About KDE just pointed to a bunch of "hooray for KDE" crap, which was *exactly* the same in each app.

      The authors names and license are still in RedHat (null).

      As far as the "forking" is concerned, I hardly think that adding a theme, and removing About KDE (the only changes there are, mind you) qualifies as a "fork".

  42. Re:Insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If YOU don't like it, why don't YOU just run a different distro than RedHat? I don't really understand why people that have a choice want to gripe about how wrong it is that someone prefers less choice in a certain situation.

    No one has encroached on my freedom and option to go and get any window manager I want for Linux and install it. I guess I don't see your problem...

  43. Re:Insane by ip_vjl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The whole point of having KDE/GNOME/WindoMaker/Et al is to allow people to pick the one that suits them.


    The whole point of having different linux distos is to allow people to pick the one that suits them.

    Don't like what RH is doing? Pick a different distro. Don't like what any of them are doing ... roll your own.

  44. This will drive many people insane... by kris · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The idea is: What looks the same behaves the same.

    Which is not the case with current Gnome and KDE. And probably never will be.

    I have different desktop themes and backgrounds at work and at home for a reason. My mind and my fingers automatically switch passwords and procedures, because without conscious effort I recognize the different environment and switch to different trained behaviour. Also, the few Gnome programs I am using look decidedly different than the KDE stuff I am using, and this helps a lot. Looking different, I do not expect the Gnome stuff to operate like the KDE grouping around it, and automatically treat it differently.

    Kristian

    1. Re:This will drive many people insane... by GauteL · · Score: 2

      I've heard this argument quite a lot of times, and I just have to ask:

      How do they behave differently?

      Lots of GTK+ apps behave differently, but they still share the same widget look. For instance Balsa and Evolution both work differently, but they share the same widget-look.
      What Red Hat has done is to unify the widget look for Qt and GTK+, so the most really relevant issues are how do Qt-widgets behave versus GTK+ widgets?

      I do not really know of any differences. Does the drop-downs behave different? Does the scrollbars behave really different? GUIs have become rather unified in behaviour over the year. If Qt and GTK+ widgets still behave differently, then they really need to be unified. Perhaps the unified look will be a big drive factor to make this happen?

      BTW. I know KDE and GNOME behaves differently, I'm talking at the widget level here.

    2. Re:This will drive many people insane... by mustangdavis · · Score: 1
      Which is not the case with current Gnome and KDE. And probably never will be.


      You are right ... and this is some what unfortunate. Although I like the ability to choose and I have an intense dislike for MicroShaft, as long as people are confused about the desktop situation with Linux (and while Linux doesn't have a standard for desktops), it will not become widely accepted and overtake M$ as the OS of choice. The one thing that M$ has done right is (attempt) to place standards on its software and OS. The problem with Linux, from a business point of view, is the lack of standards.

      Don't get me wrong, I LOVE Linux and hate M$, but if the Linux people can't get organized and get some sort of standards together for thier desktop, then they are going to have a hard time selling it to business. The business people don't want to hear that some stuff will run on KDE and not Gnome, but their desktop of chice is Gnome ... so the software is worthless to them.

      Organization and standards is what would make Linux more main stream ... but it would also make it more M$-ish .... I guess the question really is:

      Is the Linux community willing to sacrifice some of its "freedom" in an attempt to get Linux more widely accepted? It doesn't look like it ... but it looks like RedHat is going to try ....

      It is going to be interesting to see if this gets global acceptance from the Linux community or if RedHat just comes another step closer to joing "the dark side" ...

    3. Re:This will drive many people insane... by BashfulPlatypus · · Score: 1

      Remember, much of the windows feel that started with win95 came right from the apple desktop. Microsoft saw that apple had and easy to use desktop that made sense to the user, so they esentially stole it. While I don't like windows much either, it isn't all bad. One of it's good points is the desktop. A windows user can sit down at any windows box and know exactly how to control things with the desktop. They can configure it in the exact same way on every system. With linux, people want customization, but that custom desktop can lead to confusion. Sure, some people will want they're special desktop. Most users just want a functional desktop that in similar from system to system and works. RH is just trying to make the linux desktop as easy to use as the windows desktop. And if you don't like it, you can always change it to you liking.

  45. Two points missed-- by Speare · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are two points Owen didn't strike home with a sledgehammer, so I'll say them:

    First, those users who already know they PREFER the "old look" of KDE or GNOME can configure their new Red Hat Linux 8.0/Null++ to regain that old look. The Red Hat "Bluecurve" work is almost entirely artwork and menu organization, both of which can be re-themed or re-edited by any user who wants to. This change is to remove a bewildering either-or choice that paralyzes many newcomers.

    Second, Owen didn't mention that a huge area that BOTH desktops need to strive to improve is accessibility. It's vitally important for Linux to make inroads into the highly regulated Government sector. GNOME2 is laying groundwork for major gains in accessibility, thanks to partnering research by folks at Sun and other places. KDE needs to work hard on being accessible too. Features like Sticky Keys are just a start. Supporting limited-vision users and other areas is a must. Both desktops should do what they can, so that the best approaches can be adopted as standards.

    --
    [ .sig file not found ]
    1. Re:Two points missed-- by grahamm · · Score: 1

      Are limited (or no) vision users not better catered for by text mode and a braille terminal? At least one other distribution (SuSE) checks for braille terminals during installation.

    2. Re:Two points missed-- by SubtleNuance · · Score: 2

      This change is to remove a bewildering either-or choice that paralyzes many newcomers

      this is a very excellent point, new users will arrive with a Gnome / KDE that look very similar... now, they might like some wm or other, or maybe GTK theme or somesuch that looks sexy, or simple or whatever TO THEM, but they arrive at all the (still existing) GNU/Linux Desktop GUI opportunities all the same..

      when new users are forced to make the choice that seems somewhat arbitrary (at that point (the beginner, newbie)) that it seems confusing.. more capable users will discover Bonobo and DCOP (and other real fundemental KDE/Gnome differences) in due time.. but why force the issue..? and why make a few icons an issue..? dont like something, well, they can change it.

      Further, think of some of the more cluefull (l)users you know with-regards-to their W2K or WXP systems... some of them will take what MS shipped, decide its ugly and change it, with themes, screenies, desktop-backgrounds (whatever) while others will use the standard look-feel.

      less cluefull users will encounter a desktop that is farmiliar -- and because they are LESS CAPABLE and DONT UNDERSTAND their 'puter all that much, this IS A GOOD THING - they will not be needlessly alarmed.
      While other users, who want to trick out their desktop will still do so...

      Another way to think of it is this: a new user chooses "KDE" as the default at installation; will they ever arrive at the Gnome opportunities if they lock themselves and their discovery into the KDE world and vice-versa? What RH is doing is making the 'starting' point as similar as possible - this actually expands the users options in future.

    3. Re:Two points missed-- by zerocool^ · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      What linux needs is a device manager.

      I want to install a wireless network card and connect to a W-lan. How?
      Windows: Insert card, insert drivers CD, click install file, Click yes, reboot.

      Linux: Find driver. Check kernel for driver support. Insert module into kernel. Recompile kernel. Burn Incense. Reboot. Hope new kernel works. Edit config files. Reload xinetd. Hope you're magically online.

      When linux handles drivers like this, it will be used by government.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    4. Re:Two points missed-- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Redhat already does this! When you pop in a new card, it is detected and a configuration screen pops up.

    5. Re:Two points missed-- by Speare · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Braille is useful to the few people who have learned it. I know some blind computer users who use braille.

      Braille is NOT useful to the huge numbers of people who have not learned it. This includes those with limited vision, those who have limited sense of touch also, and those who became sight-impaired late enough in life that learning Braille is not a viable option.

      I wrote a nice utility for Windows called Dragnifier. It's donate-ware. It is a taskbar applet that can be attached to any hotkey, and will show a magnifying glass that moves with the mouse. It magnifies whatever is below the lens as the user drags the mouse. Quick, convenient, natural to the user. Easier than a lot of other magnification options out there, from the letters I get. I wrote it because I like to see pixels when doing detailed artwork. I was flooded with positive response from the limited-sight communities. There's a lot of senior users out there who don't see very well.

      I'd love to make Dragnifier for X Windows and Gtk2. As I learn more of the X API, I'm sure I'll develop it.

      Audible monitors (text-to-speech) need to be integrated into the standard application toolkits in such a way as to have almost zero burden on application authors.

      Tactile and audible mice are still being developed and experiments show there are some cool things to be done with them.

      Lack of eyesight doesn't equate to lack of visualization. To limit the blind solely to Braille and Speech is to isolate them from the rest of the society which advances into new visualization methods every year. Think creatively about "visualizing" existing applications in new ways.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    6. Re:Two points missed-- by Speare · · Score: 2

      Not really. Plug and Play is disruptive and undermines solid IT best practices in large pools of centrally-managed desktop boxes. The users shouldn't need to install new devices unless the user's specific task is to install new devices. Let the IT folks install devices in a consistent and managed way. Don't let the users screw up their desktop by adding their not-work-related devices without help or oversight by the IT folks.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    7. Re:Two points missed-- by PhoenixFlare · · Score: 1

      I beg to differ...

      New hard drive added?

      Detected and mounted automagically with no config editing or kernel recompilation. All I had to do was rename the mount point to better suit my personal tastes.

      New USB trackball mouse?

      I plug it in, it works. Fin.

      Old video card removed/New one added?

      Again, worked perfectly, including 3d acceleration enabled, with no config editing or kernel stuff....It was even a completely different vendor than my old one.

      Ethernet network connection?

      After obtaining an IP address and other things required by my school....I clicked a few buttons in Mandrake's wizard, and i'm online with no trouble. Same with hooking up to a cable modem via a router when at my girlfriend's...Zero hassle beyond a few flicks of my finger.

      Just because you think manual configuration is still the only way to do things....That doesn't make it so.

    8. Re:Two points missed-- by PhoenixFlare · · Score: 1

      So you think things should be intentionally difficult to install?

      Maybe i'm wrong here, but that really doesn't sound like the best way to attract new users...And ideally i'd think you should be able to maintain good practices by something other than brute force/intentionally breaking the software.

    9. Re:Two points missed-- by Speare · · Score: 2

      No, I agree that plug and play is and should be an important part of getting new users to adopt Linux at home. The kudzu facility is a start on that approach.

      But it won't breed adoption into governmental use, which was your claim. Government users and managers should follow IT best practices, or else they're wasting taxpayer dollars. Every time Senator Frobnitz' speechwriter adds an iPod to a Linux box, it (1) risks that the computer doesn't function because that combination is unproven, and (2) risks that various laws are being broken because that combination hasn't been authorized.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    10. Re:Two points missed-- by Rick_T · · Score: 2

      > I wrote a nice utility for Windows called
      > Dragnifier. It's donate-ware. It is a taskbar
      > applet that can be attached to any hotkey, and
      > will show a magnifying glass that moves with the
      > mouse. It magnifies whatever is below the lens as
      > the user drags the mouse.

      Sounds a lot like xmag, actually. As far as I can tell from your description, the only difference is that you need to click on what you want xmag to magnify.

      A brief hack of xmag might do exactly what you want...

      --
      -- Rick
    11. Re:Two points missed-- by Suppafly · · Score: 2

      Sounds a lot like the magnifier that is built into windows as well..

    12. Re:Two points missed-- by Arandir · · Score: 2

      This change is to remove a bewildering either-or choice that paralyzes many newcomers.

      If this choice is bewildering, then perhaps those newcomers would be happier with Windows or OSX.

      I mean that seriously. First of all, it isn't an "either-or" choice, it's an "one, the other, or both, or neither" choice. Second, if Redhat wants to remove this "either-or" choice, then they had better start retheming Windowmaker, Blackbox as well. And dump Galeon in favor of Mozilla, or vice versa. And dump Star/OpenOffice in favor of Gnumeric/Abiword/etal, or vice versa.

      If a user is going to get confused by seeing a GNOME application running on top of a KDE desktop, then they will also get confused seeing GNU Emacs running on top of GNOME. Maybe Redhat should start retheming GNU Emacs, changing its keybindings, and reworking its menu.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    13. Re:Two points missed-- by AlgUSF · · Score: 1

      Or you just get a pre-rolled distro, which basically has all of the available drivers already available as kernel modules. Only time I go searching for drivers is when I get a kernel from kernel.org. When I built my parent's PC all of the hardware was automatically detected.... (Wasn't the case back in the day eg. 1998, 1999)

      --


      I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
    14. Re:Two points missed-- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Did it enlarge pixels or also resize vector text?

      (yes, I've been looking for a magnify glass that understood vectors for quite a while)

    15. Re:Two points missed-- by Derek+S · · Score: 1

      One thing Windows is much better at is supporting drivers that were released after the operating system and therefore could not be bundled. System detects new device, user inserts CD, and a few minutes later everything works. I boot back to '98 occassionally to play games, and despite four years of hardware upgrades I haven't had any need to do a full OS upgrade.

      Ideally, Linus ought to lock down the kernel module binary interfaces for the duration of a stable kernel's lifecycle. That would make it easy to ship binary driver CDs along with new hardware. As an alternative (both options could coexist), someone could define a universal method for packaging driver sources (something like SRPM, but distro-agnostic) and have the OS automatically build and install new modules.

  46. The reason for the bad feelings is... by 10Ghz · · Score: 2

    That Red Hat pours alot of money in to GNOME, while they give hardly any support to KDE (in fact, they seem to refer KDE as "Crapland" (according to the Red Hat bug-report where they talked about renaming apps and removing the "About" box)). And now they seem to be turning KDE in to GNOME-clone. It's understandable that KDE-developers and users are less than enthusiastic about it.

    FWIW: I'm a KDE-user but I support competition between the desktops. In fact, I'm going to give GNOME2 a shot in the near-future.

    --
    Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    1. Re:The reason for the bad feelings is... by Wdomburg · · Score: 2

      > That Red Hat pours alot of money in to GNOME,
      > while they give hardly any support to KDE (in
      > act, they seem to refer KDE as "Crapland"
      > (according to the Red Hat bug-report where they
      > talked about renaming apps and removing the
      > "About" box)).

      It was a leaked piece of internal mail, not a public bug report. A single employee expressing an opinion in a single piece of mail != Red Hat. How hard is that to understand?

      Matt

    2. Re:The reason for the bad feelings is... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      A single employee expressing an opinion in a single piece of mail != Red Hat.

      It was my understanding that that single employee was the guy Redhat chose to lead the KDE rework. If that's the attitude by the guy in charge, I don't expect much from Redhat's fork of KDE.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    3. Re:The reason for the bad feelings is... by Wdomburg · · Score: 2

      >It was my understanding that that single employee
      >was the guy Redhat chose to lead the KDE rework.
      >If that's the attitude by the guy in charge, I
      >don't expect much from Redhat's fork of KDE.

      Do you have an evidence to back this up? All of the references I've seen state "a developer" and nothing more. Well, putting aside conjecture and conspiricy theories.

      Matt

    4. Re:The reason for the bad feelings is... by Arandir · · Score: 2

      A LinuxAndMain article has some references.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    5. Re:The reason for the bad feelings is... by Wdomburg · · Score: 2

      > A LinuxAndMain article [linuxandmain.com] has
      > some references.

      The article states nothing beyond "said to have been written by a Red Hat employee".

      So, again, where's the indication that this was "the guy Redhat chose to lead the KDE rework"?

      Matt

  47. Um, the Box has a GUI? by torpor · · Score: 1
    So, why are we making these changes? First off, the desktop is one piece of a larger Red Hat Linux product. Other components range from our configuration tools, to the applications we include, to our website, to the box that Red Hat Linux comes in. We believe that all of these components should look and behave consistently.


    Umm... yeah right.

    So, where's my little 'x' thingy for clicking when I wanna close that box and put it on the shelf (where it will collect dust for a year).

    Do I go through a login prompt to get to the cardboard insert?

    Sorry, I thought it was funny.
    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  48. Unified Linux is bad (Suse, Caldera, ...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But RedHat "I hope that RedHat successfully forces both Gnome and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop."
    Is good.
    Please, Why?

  49. This makes it RedHat by ceswiedler · · Score: 2

    They're trying to make an OS called RedHat 8 which happens to be based on the Linux kernel and other free tools. I think it's a great decision on their part. It's very similar to what Apple did with OS X.

    No one has a reason to complain; despite anyone's accusations, RedHat is still an open-source operating system. I personally wouldn't have a problem if they stopped giving away the OS for free via FTP. There's certainly no requirement that they do so. They are a company which has a product which they are trying to make money from. If you feel that RedHat is simply making money from other people's work, by packaging together free applications: go get those applications on your own, and make your own distro (or choose a completely free, volunteer distro like Debian). RedHat does an enormous amount of work assembling and testing those applications, and customizing them into a unified OS. They deserve to be paid for that work.

    1. Re:This makes it RedHat by Junta · · Score: 2

      That is a ridiculous statement. They basically made iconsets and themes and some shortcuts different than the defaults. They did a few more feature enhancement patches than they have done in the past, but it is all trivial.

      OSX has at its core a BSD kernel and a development platform centered around gcc, but most of the system is proprietary and closed source.

      RedHat is still Linux with glibc, the GNU utilities, XFree86, and other stuff with slight modifications. The changes in RedHat 8 do nothing to hurt compatibility with other distributions. In fact, moving to the more acceptable gcc 3.2 helps cross-distribution situation. The system behaves essentially identical to everything else under the hood.

      OSX, on the other hand uses Quartz, for example. Completely closed, with a lot of features that are different from X. applications written for Quartz aren't really helpful for other non-OSX systems by any stretch of the imagination...

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  50. Re:Insane by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Frankly this is a win - win situation. Red Hat now has a more well-rounded desktop with a more unified feel that they can sell to corporate customers. Furthermore, has anything really changed? Red Hat's KDE desktop was a piece of crap, and their Gnome wasn't much better. I've never met a Red Hat user who didn't tear out one or the other and replace it with either the latest build of their favorite desktop or something entirely different. Hell, the first thing I do when I install a new Red Hat box is install Ximian. You have the same choices you had before, today.

    --
    "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
  51. How about this option? by cluge · · Score: 2

    RH should include a default KDE and default Gnome desktop for those that want it (those of us that want it can handle the custimization). Call this an advanced set up feature for those that require it. I'm quite used to many of the KDE feature set personally, and use gnome apps in my desktop. If I cannot easily or reasonably setup a default KDE env, then I will go elsewhere for my distribution. I will also make that recomendation to others.

    Consider this RH, I've been using your product since before 4.2, I've been paying for it since 6.2 (I felt you deserved my bucks) If I can't easily install my favorite WM during the install process, you will loose this customer.

    cluge

    PS: Yes, you have managed to cripple some of the neater features of both desktops or at least hide them, and you have also turned out an ugly compromise.

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
  52. Closing another feature gap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is purely about closing another feautre gap...

    Those who want to change their interface will still be able to. Out of the box RedHat will simply be offering a solution that is easier for the common desktop user to get around in.

    Get over it!

  53. Good and Bad by Epeeist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A unified look and feel is fine, as is a common mechanism to change it regardless of the underlying desktop system.

    Where I think Red Hat have made mistakes (by incompetence, rather than malignly) is by modifying code rather than commissioning the GNOME and KDE teams to do it on their behalf. What they have generated are Red Hat GNOME and KDE desktops. In doing this they have antagonised developers and made both their own and the vanilla desktops more difficult to support.

    They have also made maintenance more difficult, KDE 3.1 is due out shortly. This means that all the changes the RH put in place will have to be repeated. If they had engaged the developers in the first place this would have been much less likely to happen.

    While there are mujahadin on both the KDE and GNOME desktops, the developers seem to have a relationship of friendly rivalry. By taking the lead on this RH could have facilitated better interworking between the two systems.

    1. Re:Good and Bad by jspaleta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Where I think Red Hat have made mistakes (by incompetence, rather than malignly) is by modifying code rather than commissioning the GNOME and KDE teams to do it on their behalf. What they have generated are Red Hat GNOME and KDE desktops. In doing this they have antagonised developers and made both their own and the vanilla desktops more difficult to support.

      And what happens if the developers decide to ignore the code change requests Redhat wants? All Redhat can do in this case is make the changes and submit the patches....and wait for the developers to incorporate the changes if they so desire.

      The hacking of the Gnome and KDE codebases is no different than the hacking Redhat does to apply patches to the kernel tree for instance. How many kernel patches that get applied to commercial distro kernels? How long would Redhat have to wait to see a stock kernel with ALL the patches they apply to be bless by linus? Do the kernel developers get mad when Redhat patches a stock kernel on their own?

      For whatever reason whether it be long standing grudges or just the fact the Redhat has a different vision and motivation than the desktop developers...Redhat decided to make some patches. If Redhat submits those patches to the developers on the main branch..Redhat has done all you can really ask of them to do. We don't expect every person who comes up with a kernel patch to talk it over with Linus before they create the patch, do we?

      Sometimes the lines of communication break down and you have to do things yousekf to get what you want. Sometimes its a simple matter of manhours and the people you'd rather work on it don't have the time. Sometimes is a decision to make experimental changes that others disagree with....
      many reasons as to why patches for code get made.

      The underling issue here is about control, who has control of the codebase. The people complaining about the changes Redhat has made, and the politics of the situation around those changes, miss the whole point about the GPL. People don't have to play nice in OSS to innovate. What matters in the end is whether or not Redhat has created a better KDE with their changes. If they haven't..then they wasted some valuable manhours in development time...but if Redhat's changes catch on in the userbase then it doesn't matter how the changes were made now does it? If the original project want to pick up the patches they can...and it would be a shame to see any contributions that provide new features that users like stay out of the main project because of some politics...and in the end that situation only hurts the main project...and not Redhat becuase Redhat will be seen as the innovator.

      -jef

  54. How about we just abandon Gnome instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only thing Gnome has going for it is a few good apps that were started before QT went GPL.

    KDE beats Gnome in almost every conceivable way.

    1. Re:How about we just abandon Gnome instead? by redtuxxx · · Score: 0

      Nice to see a really informed troll

      As I am obviously an ignoramus who hasn't seen the light as yet, exactly in which ways is KDE3.0.3 better than gnome2.0.2?

    2. Re:How about we just abandon Gnome instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the fact that gnome uses an evil toolkit called gtk+. It's LGPL instead of GPL like Qt.

      The GPL protects your freedoms. The LGPL encourages propreitary development.

  55. Unified is not necessarily a good thing... by gothic_wolf · · Score: 1

    I like the diversity that Linux provides. I LIKE the choice. And I hope commercialization doesn't ruin that.

  56. Re:Insane by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 2

    Let me also add, that historically I am a GNOME user, but I regularly use KDE3 for:

    1) To learn it.
    2) Asteroids :)
    3) Because its there.

    There are great many things I like about both desktops and I will probably use both for the rest of my life. This move by Red Hat could make my life much easier.

    I know I'm not alone either.

    --
    "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
  57. how is this eliminating choice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    before this unified desktop, there were x options, including GNOME and KDE. now that that RedHat is going to offer a desktop with both GNOME and KDE configured to look and act the same, the are (x+1) options, including GNOME, KDE, and RedHat unified. How could anyone possibly argue that this reduces the choice to the user? If the user doesnt want the unified RedHat desktop, he can select a different distribution, or buy RedHat and change the desktop environment.

    Put another way - say I open a fast food store that sells taco-burgers (mmmmmmm, taco-burgers). Would I have reduce the customer choice by offering something that Taco Bell and Burger King both offer individually? Of course not. I would be increasing the number of choices that people had when they went to stuff themselves with mass produced food engineered to appeal to the least common denominator of tastes through the use of fat and chemicals. Sorry, different rant there.

  58. Re:Insane by emolitor · · Score: 1

    Be clear when your critical about something like this and state wheterh or not you have used the setup yet? Its not like they rewrote kde and gnome to do the exact same thing. The default config is now just very similar. But fire up your favorite config tool and change whatever you like. Or if your upgrading you'll be happy that it basically preserves your old settings.

    Arguing that they limit choice by customizing their configurations sounds very Microsoftish. "You cant remove IE or customize windows as these are all standard components." To met at least theirs a very similar vein executing here.

    And honestly the power of Linux is in choice. Redhat is mostly targeted towards new users or corporate standard IT departments. (At least in my opinion thats what they target.) If you dont like what Redhats doing then use Debian, Suse, or roll your own Linux. But if your going to be critical of something at least try the setup so you have a knowledged criticism and not an ignorant one.

    BTW: I'm not saying your ignorant as you may have tried the setup and not liked it. But I'd say the vast majority of Slashdots Hyper-Critical comments are quite Ignorant of the facts.

  59. Re:Insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the long run I think that this will hurt Linux more than help it. Short term you can claim to have a more unified approach to the desktop which may seem an easier introduction to the Linux as a desktop Operating System.

    Long term however you are continuing to imply that there is only one desktop for Linux. The whole idea about linux is that there is a choice and that there are certain desktops that are better suited for certain tasks.

    Heavy GUI's are inappropriate for Retail Terminals and would be better suited for something lightweight like fvwm2, windowmaker, et al. Meanwhile, the Heavy GUI's (or desktop environments) might do well for certain types of desktop use. But if you mask the concept that there are different window managers for different working environments, people will be tunnelled into only one notion of a desktop and we (The Open Source Community) will loose the idea that there are choices.

    It is bad enough that many PHB's thing that RedHat==Linux, but to further that dis-information into a desktop environment is problematic for Linux, the other distributions, and for anyone who attempts to introduce a Linux workstation that != RedHat.

    The idea here may sound good, but it fails to allow the two different Desktop Environments (and other WM's) to compete on their own seperate merits and allow a parallel evolutionary development to occur. Eventually we will probably never have One Unified Desktop. I don't believe that we must have One.

  60. Re:Insane by slainfu · · Score: 0
    Exactly right. This had to happen at some point.


    If it's choice you're worrying about, you can always be assured that there will always be plenty of options available in Linux. New projects are appearing all the time.


    Infact, from the viewpoint of the dev community, this is a gift from the gods. Think about it.

    --

    slainfu
    "I can't be a terrorist if you're sucking my bum."
  61. Hmmm by hattig · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I thought the real issue was that RedHat had basically removed the KDE software options from the menus. So you didn't get the choice to run KMail, it was always Evolution, and so on.

    The issue wasn't about changing the look of the desktops. The issue was making KDE just another interface for loading Gnome applications.

    RedHat has always been pro-Gnome. Why don't they just ship Gnome only and leave KDE out of the default installation - that would create a single unified desktop.

  62. Frustrated with Gnome? by silverhalide · · Score: 1
    Play GNOME darts! http://www.vierkanteogen.nl/games/bouterdart/index .html?f=1.3

    Gotta run, I hear the karma police pullin up...

  63. Blue Screens by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 2

    Maybe it's my connection, but it seems that the screenshots were slashdotted.

    --
    That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
  64. redhat desktop by lazlow · · Score: 1

    The truth be told I use KDE, but I also use the tools that null defaults to (Evolution, Mozilla, Openoffice etc). I, for one, like what they have done. I do not believe that KDE or Gnome produce tools that are ready for prime time and that my productivity should not be stifled by the PURITY of a desktop.

    If you do not want people screwing with your it should not be open source.

  65. what I would REALLY like to see... by a7244270 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Is KDE and Gnome BOTH being completely abandoned.

    I mean, they both just plain suck. They look like windows, but with a few slightly different features here and there.

    Not to mention they both rely on XWindows, which just plain needs to die.

    Its obsolete, its shit, its missing waaaaaaay to many features, it needs to go away. Sure it was great 20 years ago, but for god's sake, haven't we carried that albatross around our necks for long enough ?

    I say toss them both and put the osX interface on, and go from there.

  66. Story is bogus by 0x0d0a · · Score: 5, Informative

    The anonymous submitter wrote "RedHat successfully forces both GNOME and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop."

    Where did he manage to get this idea caught in his head? Merging the desktops? RH is just trying to make the two interoperate as best they can in their own release from a UI standpoint.

    If RH don't like this then why don't they just drop the one(s) they don't want people to use?

    You still *can* pick KDE/GNOME/whatever. RH chose a *theme* that makes them look alike. A *theme*! God, where did everyone lose sight of that? Ximian chooses a different theme than the GNOME default as well...are *they* evil, sadistic bastards too?

    I still can't figure out why this is news. It wasn't back when the story was first posted, and nobody cared except for about four people on the KDE forums (mostly the ever-vocal Mosfet).

    My guess is that publicizing this is a UnitedLinux initiative to make RH look bad, since I can't figure out a single other person who has anything else to gain by blowing this as out of proportion as it's gotten. Who *cares* about RH's default theme? Change your theme! Use WindowMaker if you want! This has no impact whatsoever on you!

    1. Re:Story is bogus by mccalli · · Score: 2
      The anonymous submitter wrote "RedHat successfully forces both GNOME and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop."

      He wrote no such thing.

      He wrote: "I hope RedHat successfully forces both GNOME and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop."

      Quoting out of context is often used an excuse, but that's not to say it doesn't actually happen.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    2. Re:Story is bogus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The look and feel changes aren't important; SuSE, Mandrake, and Connectiva do similar things and nobody minds. But by pretending the cosmetic issues are the issue, you are helping RH get away with damaging KDE.

      Thanks to RH (and intentionally IMHO given the people at RH who made the decisions), newbies are being tricked into thinking that KDE is slow because when they go to read mail, evolution and all the GNOME libraries have to be loaded. When they go to the web, Mozilla and all the mozilla bloat will have to be loaded.

    3. Re:Story is bogus by pjrc · · Score: 2
      In a nutshell, the "other side" of the issue is that unpaid developers deserve their work to be recognizable as theirs, and not to be superficially altered to appear as if it were written by other well-known developers.

      To quote a particularly one-sided phrase:

      Who *cares* about RH's default theme?

      I personally don't (as long as it's reasonably good), but I think it's pretty obvious that some people do care very deeply, and it isn't too hard to guess who they are.

      It's almost certainly advocates on one desktop... generally users who've made an emotional investment in the progress of their desktop of choice (eg, "my dad can beat up your dad")

      This group or people might also include real developers, who've worked long unpaid hours conjuring their code from raw ideas. Far above ordinary users, unpaid developers deserve some recognition for their work. It's grossly unfair (and against the license) to take a developers name off the product, whereever it reasonably appears. Many reasonable people feel it's also unfair to dramatically change the appearance of a developers work, particularly in a manner which makes it appear in a style commonly associated with other well-known developers.

      Redhat likens the issue to advertising on race cars, which is an effective analogy at belittling the developer's reasonable expectation that their unpaid work will be recognizable as their (as opposed to being superficially changed to appear as if it had been written by someone else).

      The core issue is between recognition for unpaid developers and ease of use for end users.

      This slashdot discussion is filled with comments from end users and non-developer open-source advocates, who apparantly can't see the other side of this issue. I hope some of those people see this comment or others like it, because the "other side" of this issue is important.

      I am a developer (mostly firmware, though I've contributed in small ways to some "normal" free software projects). I can speak from experience about some of these issues.

      It's easy to get burned out or disillusioned as a developer writing free software. A little rejection goes a long way. The thought process goes something like "well fine, if they don't appreciate my efforts, I'll go do something else". Most of the developers are unpaid, and while getting famous (even if only among the geek community) isn't a major goal... loosing some recognition you once had can be a major disappointment.

      All you linux advocates, please consider this trade-off. Sure, better ease-of-use and gui integration will help end users and the adoption of these desktops into the mainstream market......

      .... but at what cost? Some temporary flame wars among vocal users are no big deal, but if real developers become disillusioned, it could really hurt the long-term future. A lot of developers have poured a good part of their lives into this software. They deserve respect and recognition. Look and feel of their software is a part of that. How to balance integration for end users against developers legitimate expectation to be recognized for their work is a difficult question.

      I hope Redhat and other distros make wise decisions. I also hope other slashdot readers will see this comment amoung the flood of "end user intergration is the most important factor" and reconsider what effect this branding might have on developers. It's easy to forget (as many posts here have) that all this great software is written by real people, mostly unpaid, who have real emotions and likely will have opinions about their software being comsetically altered to appear like programs associated with different developers.

    4. Re:Story is bogus by cesarcardoso · · Score: 1

      > RH chose a *theme* that makes them look alike. A *theme*!

      Isn't the theme KDE developers are bitching. It's about some patches RH made to KDE *and* QT - some badly needed, like QT using XFree's anti-aliasing ability (QT's AA looks like crap).

      I really hope KDE and RedHat get a warmer relationship and RH roll back their patches. Everybody will win.

      --
      Cesar Cardoso can be found at cesar at zyakannazio dot eti dot br (or at least I believe so)
  67. Sounds like debian.. by dcstimm · · Score: 1

    Debian modified the way WindowMaker looks, they gave it a debian background and the menus are changed.

    I hate how debian does this. I wish they would have never modified it. And they developers over at Windowmaker got mad just like KDE got mad that Redhat changed the look of KDE.

    I think there should be a theme option in redhat that will allow Users to go back to the orginal KDE look and feel.

    Since Gnome2 is the default desktop on redhat, things should look like it. Sorry KDE, but gtk2 is so nice.

    Redhat uses anaconda (gtk2 based installer), mozilla gtk2, gaim gtk2, gimp gtk2, xchat gtk2, and many others. So it would make sense for them to use gnome2 as the default.

    Also qt apps run slower if they are not running within KDE, kdeinit and dcop daemons need to be running for apps to launch quickly.

    but i like how they made kde look.

    kwin in my opinion works so much better than metacity.

    In metacity(gnome2 default wm) you cant move or resize an app if its maximized. It gets really annoying if you "shade" an app and you cant move the shaded window around. REALLY annoying. (this isnt a bug its a feature)

    but as long as the themes at kde-look.org work with kde in redhat, people shouldnt care if redhat modifies the look.

    1. Re:Sounds like debian.. by redtuxxx · · Score: 0
      but i like how they made kde look. kwin in my opinion works so much better than metacity. In metacity(gnome2 default wm) you cant move or resize an app if its maximized. It gets really annoying if you "shade" an app and you cant move the shaded window around. REALLY annoying. (this isnt a bug its a feature)

      just curious as to what you mean, no problems withmoving between workspaces, and moving within the same workspace is nonsensical when maximised surely - if I max a windows I want it to take up all the available space

    2. Re:Sounds like debian.. by dcstimm · · Score: 1

      maximize a window in metacity then shade it by double clicking on the top bar, then try moving the shaded window around. you cant, this is very annoying. I dont use the minimize bar on the gnome panel so this feature is very important to me. I also run dual monitors and if a window opens on the wrong monitor I have to drag to to the main monitor, and if it launched maximized I have to unmaximize and then move it. Really annoying.

    3. Re:Sounds like debian.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can revert it back to the kdestandard look if you desire just change the theme in control center

  68. Re:It's worse than I thought! by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Um, actually that would exactly be the open source process. If you don't like it you change it to something you do and redistribute the code. That is exactly what its all about.

    --
    "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
  69. common sources for graphics and icons by iplayfast · · Score: 2

    I think that having comon sources for graphics and icons is a great idea. This seems to be the thrust of what Red Hat is doing. I don't know how often I've tried to find an Icon that is hidden inside of .directories for either kde or gnome.

    I'm even thinking of switching back to redhat ;)

    (currently a gentoo/mandrake dual boot user)

  70. Gnome & KDE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not to rain on the parade, but who cares. Redhat is reserving it's right to create a certain type of image though it's distribution and I do not feel Redhat has to care WHAT the gnome or kde movements want.

    I'm not at all behind gnome or kde, I've used both and would say for my own purposes both have drawbacks. Gnome seems to be far less developed in many ways that keep me from using it at this point.. like the inability to type é á ó ú or even ö very easily (gnome's internationalization support requires some witchery unbeknownst to me) whereas kde is doing those things very easy. Gnome "applications" also seem very poorly integrated with the the rest of the environment and tend to look very ugly (sounds silly, but looking good is generally as important as working good to joe user). Heck, I can't even figure out some consistent way to get gnome apps to pick fonts and the ones that should (that are "gnome office") abiword and gnumeric require more black arts. Kword and KSpread "just do it" and you don't worry -- your installed fonts show up.

    Gnome has going for it that it feels lean and mean, something I defintely like. But, I can wait a little longer for a more full featured environment that feels a little more polished. (I have yet to whack kde, but I have certainly whacked gnome a few times.)

    When we're talking of gnome vs. kde, I still get the impression we're comparing a 4th grade gnome to a 9th grade kde.

    As far as this "look and feel" stuff, most of the old themes are downloadable anyway... Net effect: ya don't like it ya get the other ones and it feels just like home.

    - Me

  71. Cliche of the day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Do one thing well"

    thats why

  72. Oh the horror! by transient · · Score: 1

    Someone is taking an open source project, modifying it to suit their needs, and redistributing it? God forbid!

    --

    --

    irb(main):001:0>
  73. Confused by linwoes · · Score: 1

    Ok now I am confused. If RH is looking for a common look and fell why don't they choose EITHER KDE or GNOME and not give the user the default choice to change it? Now I remember, they wanted to do that with GNOME and it failed. Now they are trying to make them look them look the same because "neither is going away" and they know that to remove one wholesale will lose the developers who use RH. I guess you can't have your cake and eat it too. Developers want one thing (and they known how to make it do that), desktop users appearantly dont know what they want. That is what I feel RH is saying. Finally, changing the About boxes is just plain rude.

  74. Re:Insane by rseuhs · · Score: 1
    They already tried to ignore KDE, but they lost much marketshare (and essentially made Mandrake a main-stream distribution, which would have never happened without RedHat dropping the ball on KDE.

    Of course this "nullification" is essentially the same thing and will make sure that:

    • Linux will have a hard time on the desktop for the next years where RedHat is dominant (In Germany, where SuSE is the biggest distribution, Linux desktop-marketshare is already at over 5%, while it's nonexistant ( smaller than 0.5%) in the US. The reason is RedHat.) The big problem is that newbies equate Linux with RedHat and won't try a good desktop-distribution after they saw RedHat.
    • RedHat will piss off KDE users (again). The problem is again that new users (who never heard of KDE or GNOME) still try RedHat first.
    • After a few months/years RedHat will realize their mistake (again) and will include a real KDE (again) which of course will be not the default and only available on special request (again) and the whole cycle starts from the beginning until the next iteration.

    It will be interesting to watch how long RedHat is able to play their silly games with KDE.

  75. FINALLY! I've Been Waiting For This For Years. by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 2, Insightful



    As unremarkable as it appears on the surface, this may very well be the most significant milestone in Linux's history -- the first step towards a unified desktop appearance.

    Whether you like or not, the rest of the world doesn't want "freedom of choice" when it comes to their desktop appearance. They want freedom from choice. They want familliarity. They want sensibile designs. They want a look and feel that will still apply from one machine to the next. They do NOT want pointless bells and whistles like having sideways titlebars and 18 different ways to unminimize a window. They just want to sit down, do their work and move on.

    We are not the average user.

    All a user should ever need to be concerned with is just that -- getting the job done. In no way whatsoever should they even know about (or even CARE about) the fact that their apps may be provided by two completely different toolkits. Thats our concern, not theirs.

    A lack of continuity in the appearance of the Linux desktop has been one if not THE largest stumbling block in Linux' acceptance on the desktop. It all starts there. Say you're a company trying to offer Linux support for their products --- You cant show snapshots of a Linux desktop in the manual, because they all friggin look different! You cant even explain it in text, because "Go here and do this" can often mean two holly and distinctly different things, depending on if youre using KDE, or GNOME, or God knows what.

    Windows has a distinct face to it. So does the Mac. So does AIX. So did the Amiga. So did the Atari ST. So does even friggin Solaris! But Linux? No. The Linux desktop, up until now, is a schitzophrenic mess of different personalities dictates by the whims of individual users.

    You guys have no idea how important this evolutionary step was. And I, for one, cannot applaud RedHat enough for having the balls and the smarts to take it.

    Cheers,

    --
    Bowie J. Poag

    1. Re:FINALLY! I've Been Waiting For This For Years. by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Whether you like or not, the rest of the world doesn't want "freedom of choice" when it comes to their desktop appearance. They want freedom from choice.

      So explain why there are hundreds of Propaganda wallpapers instead of just one. If users truly want "freedom from choice", why did you offer them so many?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    2. Re:FINALLY! I've Been Waiting For This For Years. by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 0



      A valid question! And, here's your answer:

      Wallpaper differs from window decoration in one very important way: A change of wallpaper does not interfere with functionality. Moving the buttons around in a window, however, does interfere with functionality. The addition of a wallpaper doesn't change how a user interacts with their machine. The problem with having multiple window styles is that you effectively create multiple methods of accessing the same stuff. While its neat and cool for many of us, the rest of the world considers this a hinderance, not an advantage. The appearance and usability of the desktop is 99% of the ballgame when it comes to PCs. If the face you present to the world isn't a coherent one, it doesn't matter how great the programs are, or how neat the idea of open source is. It simply wont catch on. We are human beings with eyes, and thats how we judge things, like it or not. By appearances.

      Anyway, as i'm sure you'd agree.....Mechanically, changing wallpapers affects nothing, but, changing window layouts affects everything. Some things should remain unalterable. The basic layout and appearance of a window is one of those things.

      Cheers,

      Its just there to

      --
      Bowie J. Poag

    3. Re:FINALLY! I've Been Waiting For This For Years. by Arandir · · Score: 2

      Mechanically, changing wallpapers affects nothing, but, changing window layouts affects everything. Some things should remain unalterable. The basic layout and appearance of a window is one of those things.

      So why must Redhat be at the forefront of this UI revolution? After all, no other operating system enforces this, even for their own software. Look at Quicktime under OSX. Look at Windows Media Player under Windows. Heck, just look at MSOffice!

      I hear a lot of people claiming that users won't use Linux (BSD, Solaris, etc) until there is a single look and feel for every application. Yet these same users appear to be quite happy running Word alongside MediaPlayer or WinAmp alongside Quicktime or RealPlayer.

      But the best example is the internet. Every webpage has a different interface from the next. Yet last I heard the web was the hottest thing since Grandma started baking those special brownies...

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
  76. Kudos for job that seemed to be impossible. by Petrus · · Score: 1

    Kudos if tehy managed to make them work alike.

    I really need to mix applications, most KDE but some Gnome. I am really fvwm person and I long got past the anger fot not being really supported on the latest distribution. I would stand XFCE, but kde just has its components integrated too much to the windows manager, which does not even have background popup menus ( if you do not run that silly kicker real estate thief). Gnome is simply unusable.

    Anytime I tried themes with white font, all listboxes were unreadable, because there was (as of year ago) no way to change listbox bacground from white to something more decent. Too many application gave you white background (e.g. nautillus install) that make all white text unreadable.

    Also, they also repeatedly forget giving all commands keybord shortcuts, thereby taking away productive environment for user that do not have time to play with mouse.

    Overall, command line scripting standards are broken. Most KDE and all Gnome application ignore command line options such as -bg -fg -fn -geometry. Most applications do not save windows into .Xinitrc any longer and the great, true and tried Unix GUI standards are broken beyond repair.

    Modal boxes are getting increasingly prevealent, blocking parent application even from select/copy (to clipboard) operation.

    Fingers are no longer sufficient to count application, that canont be run twice on the same account, even if you take your shoes off.

    Folks, Linux desktop monkies Windows and is copies all Windows mistakes, and has become to be even worse (on desktop) than Windows. If there were not the command line back-end and old legacy applications, I would long switched for something more proffesional - perhaps Solaris?

    Now, get this: What are Developers concerned most with is quarels over default theme!

    Petrus.

  77. You ain't got no alibi, you ugly! by toupsie · · Score: 1
    While I applaud RedHat for looking towards standards for their Desktop, but do they have to make it so damn ugly? If Apple can make UNIX beautiful, why can't the Open Source crowd do the same for KDE/GNOME? It looks like someone needs to come up with a better GUI base than XFree86 -- widgets just look too widgety.

    Freedom shouldn't be an eyesore...

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  78. Re:Unified desktop? Not for as long as we have E17 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad the Hurd will be completed before E17 is.

  79. I like options by SquireCD · · Score: 0

    I'm with RedHat on what they've done. I don't think it was a bad move or gesture to KDE or GNOME. But that greatest gift one desktop thing is rediculous. My favorite thing about linux is options.

    Compatability good. One desktop, bad.

  80. Given up on RH by geoff+lane · · Score: 1

    Recently I tried to upgrade my laptop to RH7.2 (from 5.?) I don't use Gnome or KDE so tried to do a custom install omitting all those components (essentially all I wanted was the kernel and related utilities upgraded as I have limited disk space.)

    It was impossible, no matter what I did, the installation program ALWAYS included gnome and a lot of dependencies that brought the install size to 250M larger than the hard drive.

    So RH has "enhanced" it's way off my laptop as soon as I find a suitable replacement distribution.

  81. Umm How can Redhat Reduce Choice? by cranos · · Score: 1

    Have they bought out Suse, Mandrake or Debian? Have they convinced Linus to take the kernel closed source?

    No they haven't. RedHats target market is the corporate user, some one who needs as much stability in their computing life as possible. Combining features from both Desktops is a good thing for them.

    And for gods sake people its open source, that means you can do whatever you like with the source so long as you adhere to the GPL.

    Im sure RedHat weren't too happy when Mandrake forked off but there was nothing they could do about it was there.

  82. Choices by bankman · · Score: 1

    Many people here are talking about choices and how RedHat is removing choices on the desktop. Well, think about it this way: RedHat also has the freedom of choice and that includes choosing to unify the look and administration of the desktop systems that come with their distro. Users are still free to choose another distro or install the default desktop environments as provided by the different projects.

    Freedom of choice applies to all in the system.

    --
    I feel so sig.
  83. Re:Insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >No one has encroached on my freedom and option to go and get any
    >window manager I want for Linux and install it. I guess I don't see
    >your problem...
    >
    >
    The problem for the KDE crowd is that RedHat will never ditch Gnome for KDE now. This is what all their anti-RedHat whining has always been about and always will be about.

  84. This is what Linux needs! by e8johan · · Score: 1

    Don't flame me for saying this, but if Linux is ever going to become a mainstream desktop OS this is very needed. An average office user does not care about Gnome/KDE differences (even though I as a programmer prefer KDE). We geeks must realize that enterprice isn't interested in themeabilities, cool features, etc. but _stability_ and _productivity_.
    What RH is doing is not removing all the features, just streamlining. As anyone interested in the extras can reactivate them quite easily, this kind of standardization must be a _good_ thing for the community.

  85. Mandrake too by InodoroPereyra · · Score: 2
    Texstar was nice to put some screenshots of the upcoming Mandrake Linux 9.0. Now take a look at the menus in GNOME and KDE. For instance, see the "mandrake10.jpg" and "mandrake02.jpg" Mandrake is also providing a similar menu structure for both desktops.

    And this is good . This is actually what a distribution is supposed to do . Put software together, configure, etc., save the user the hundreds of hours it would take her or him get the damn thing working and looking good. Make it easy to the user to get work done with the damn thing.

    Linux is getting better and better. Thank you KDE, thank you GNOME, thank you GNU, kernel folks, RedHat, Mandrake, Debian and so on ...

  86. How dare they! by jarran · · Score: 0, Redundant
    That's outrageous. How dare they take someone else's code and modify it?!

    Oh wait.. isn't that what's open source is all about?

  87. Re:This is a Good Thing, but remember ... by egghat · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... that Redhat was the major force behind Gnome, which came into existence *after* KDE (because qt wasn't completly free and open). They were the single most important distro to support Gnome instead of KDE, which has been chosen by almost all other distro makers as a default. Remember when Mandrake entered the market and basically was a Redhat with KDE? Mandrake's success told Redhat a big lesson.

    So it's kind of hmmm strange, that nowadays Redhat tries to nullify the difference between KDE and Gnome.

    But let me state it again: I think, we don't need two desktops. So every move to make those beast more similar is welcomed.

    Bye egghat.

    --
    -- "As a human being I claim the right to be widely inconsistent", John Peel
  88. Re:Insane by FuzzzyLogik · · Score: 1

    You still have a choice of using another Distribution, there's no one saying "You must use redhat." RedHat is making this for Corporate use, where a unified desktop is probably a good thing. Not for home users who want a specific look. There's nothing that says you can't change the theme of kde or gnome once you get Redhat installed either (i didn't read the article i'm just pointing out the obvious with why redhat is doing it and why its a good thing for THEM, not necessarily for YOU). Seriously, i like the look, it needs some work but the GNOME version is very smooth, i honestly think GNOME looks better than KDE now, but its still lacking the configurability of KDE. I'm seriously thinking of trying the next version of Redhat to come out and i haven't used RH since 5.0.

    Logik

  89. Thanks. by digitect · · Score: 3, Insightful
    (A re-post of my gnomedesktop.org comments.)

    I appreciate Red Hat's concern that the community understand and approve what they are doing in this effort. However I think the community has been far too cynical in its reaction.

    Being a for-profit company I have long been surprised that Red Hat hasn't done this type of thing more often. There's no requirement that everyone be in agreement with one group's efforts--this is Open Source! Our montra is that if you don't like something, you are always free to do it your own way.

    These are the type of freedoms that take away your reasons to complain. Were we in any proprietary system, we would be at the mercy of the implementor. But as it stands here, our only limitation is time and money. These are precisely the same resources Red Hat is trying to steward just to stay in business. (Let alone, turn a profit!) So it appears we are all on the same footing.

    I wish individuals would stop complaining about someone else deciding to exercise their freedom. Life is hard, you can't always get what you want. Be happy that your rights aren't taken away. Sure we might not all like Red Hat's decisions in integrating GNOME and KDE. I'd be certain that not all on Red Hat's own desktop team are 100% happy about some of the individual decisions either.

    Just be thankful that Red Hat has even bothered to inform us of what they are doing. Obviously they are interesting in maintaining community support, but everyone should take note that this is our privilege, not our right. Certainly, Red Hat has a lot to gain by working with the community as opposed to against it or in some dark shroud of secrecy. But there is no requirement that they do this.

    In all, this is a great start on something both sides have long pondered. Frankly, both GNOME and KDE have been slow to make this type of move, although discussed much for a long while. Thank you Red Hat for once again taking the lead on a tough task, and thanks Owen for so kindly explaining how Red Hat is has decided to implement its business strategy.

    --
    There is no need to use a SlashDot sig for SEO...
  90. Squish the fruit slowpoke Ed boy. by Graymalkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That "Linux is about choice" argument is getting a little stale boys. Choice is having options available to you. The ability to use both KDE and GNOME apps on the same system is condusive to having choice. However if you're stuck with two incompatible systems how productive are you REALLY going to be when you use those systems to do more than tinker on them? Red Hat moving in this direction is forward thinking and in my opinion intelligent. Consistancy is important not just for novice computer users but experienced ones as well. Most experienced users of any type of computer commit certain actions to reflexive muscle memory, when two different programs act similarly that is one less set of motions to memorize or confuse when you're in a hurry.

    There's also the important fact that GNOME and KDE are open source. I can fork both projects right now and do what I want with them. Anyone can which is the nature of the GPL. Whining because someone took your code and extended it makes the concept of open source seem a bit retarded doesn't it. People want source code for everything and it all ought to be open and free but as soon as someone changes something all hell and whining breaks loose. Red hat could have tried to contribute their changes back into both respective code trees but why should they wait? Should everyone stick with inferior kernel VM systems until they are officially included in the release tree? Come on.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  91. KDE vs. GNOME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one would love to see a single desktop, combining the speed and good looks of GNOME with the functionality of KDE: at the moment I have both on my computer and am unwilling to get rid of either one because there are some things that both of them can't do. However, I'm afraid that some things would get lost in the translation. How do I know that the developers have my interests in mind? They might wind up with something as ugly and slow as KDE *and* as functionally bankrupt as GNOME.

  92. this is a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why are people whining about this? Sure they ship similar but they are not taking your choice away. You can still change the themes to what you want, as well as install later versions yourself...people get a grip.

  93. Sounds like they're trying to give KDE a fair shot by WebMasterJoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I get the distinct impression that the Red Hat team is trying hard to not push their biases onto their users. It's fairly clear the Red Hat's developers are more adept with Gtk+/Gnome than Qt/KDE, and there's nothing wrong with that - if they were better at Qt, we'd still be having this discussion.

    When you realize you have a bias towards one group, you have two options - defend your bias and try to convince others, or work extra-hard to give the other team a fair chance. I think Red Hat is trying to give KDE a fair chance because the whole idea of Linux is to give users the right to choose.

    Maybe I was just sucked in to Red Hat's PR speech, but I really have to agree with their philosophy of providing a nearly identical UI on both WM's. It prevents novices from choosing one over the other just because of configuration differences such as single- vs. double-clicking icons. It annoys me to no end when a user tells me he/she didn't like product A because of a default setting that happened to be set differently in product B. In doing this, Red Hat may have made KDE "act like" Gnome, but I believe that it is inadvertant, just because the Red Hat team has gotten used to settings more typical to Gnome.

    Having said all that, though, think about this: If you know the difference, you can change it. If some guy who knows nothing about Linux doesn't know the difference, will he care?

    --
    I really hate signatures, but go to my website.
  94. The Real Power of Open Source by tarsi210 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You people!

    The real power of Open Source is NOT:
    • A variety of applications
    • Multiple configurations
    • Configurable kernels
    • Source code available
    • Community of users
    The real power of Open Source is that, despite whatever the default configuration of a system might be, you can customize it any way you want!

    I really don't care if the standard Linux desktop starts to look and act like Windows in default configurations. In fact, I encourage it. It's the only way Linux will go corporate, companies will start making software for it, and support for things like hardware and drivers will finally become what they need to be.

    As long as it retains the ability to be as configurable and adjustable as it is right now, I'm a happy man. So what if your kernel comes configured generically for every piece of hardware in the world? If you have the know-how, configure it yourself. Recompile the software, the applications, the windowing system...write your own drivers, apps, utilities. Colorize your bash prompt. Interface with the toaster.

    Remember: With Linux there is Choice. Microsoft never even bothered to give you one. Keep that philosophy in mind and we'll be all good.
    1. Re:The Real Power of Open Source by siegesama · · Score: 1

      Speaking of configurability choices in the new redhat, I just upgraded from rh7.3 and Gnome to Gnome2 on (null)... and where have all my configuration options gone? It reset EVERYTHING to the defaults.

      Why am I no longer allowed to use wire-frames for moving/resizing? What happened to my 4x2 grid of viewports? What happened to my themes? Where did all the cool applets go? Why is the redhat icon so ugly? What the hell happened to gnome-terminal to make it suddenly look so bad?

      Maybe it's just because it's a beta, but this upgrade set me back to the very beginning, and I still haven't been able to replicate all the options I used under 7.3, visually.

      This upgrade took configuration options away in the name of "simplification."

      --
      what the hell is a 'junk character', anyway?
  95. Redhat and "Choice" by hogger · · Score: 1

    If you think Null limits your choices, then you're wrong. You still have the choice to choose Mandrake, Slackware, or any of the many other Linux alternatives. If you "choose" Redhat, then you get a unified look, if you choose one of the other distros, you get their look.

    Null seems to be a good choice for corporations wishing to establish some sort of common denominator regarding the desktops that the PC support group will encounter. It also seems to be a good choice for new Linux users that just want to surf, email, word process, and move on.

  96. Re:Insane by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 2

    Have you seen what they've done? They just changed the default look of the desktop, which in my opinion still looks very much like KDE! Nothing has really changed, its still KDE and its still GNOME, the only difference is that Red Hat made their KDE default desktop look the same as their Gnome desktop, which in my opinion looks more like KDE than anything else.

    --
    "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
  97. Re:Insane by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

    Have you also forgotten the fact that in Germany computer users tend to be more rabid? And that people in Germany tend to do things for the principle, which may or may not be practical (BTW I should know I am German). Add that to the fact that many in Germany consider Microsoft as monopoly and you have a principle, which attracts users. Also do realize that 5% is about the same number of people who vote for the Greens, Communists and FDP (Liberals). And none of these parties are mainstream.

    I do not think it is a silly game. What is silly is to start an application from KDE in GNOME or Vice-Versa and have an entirely different look.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  98. Re:Insane by denisbergeron · · Score: 1
    > If the Microsoft car has a steering wheel, and the Linux car has a numeric keypad (which undoubtably can do more), most people couldn't drive the Linux car.


    I read in an local newspaper today that the new Mercedes will drop the steering wheel (and all pedals) for an joystick-like unified control in an "drive by wire" push. I don't know if people will stop buying Mercedes because they don't use the standard interface. I thing It's will be a "must to have" for all yuppy style !

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une Signature !
  99. making it look the same means more les probs? by Vodak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If Redhat needed to make the two desktops look and act alike because of support why not just start work on one official Redhat desktop environment? I mean simply making the two look similar is fine and dandy but there are still different probs between the two completely different desktops.

    1. Re:making it look the same means more les probs? by pben · · Score: 1

      Good point what are they going to do if I use iceWM or blackbox. The fix is only skin deep they just need to tell thier customer that they only support Gnome, if you prefer KDE or whatever you are on your own. In the end that is what they will tell the iceWM useres, right?

  100. now all we need is a real replacement for X. by smcavoy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I use Linux at home as my primary desktop (20 days average uptime before I feel the need to play a game that works in windows only), and at work for my desktop and 40+ servers. I like X's networking capabilities but the fact is it's old and bloated.
    We need something new/better. Hiding X from Joe user is pretty tough. Having something like direct FB as the backend would make it easier to use for end users, and probably clear up a load of performance issues as well...

  101. If at first you don't suck seed, suck some more... by amper · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ...until you *do* suck seed...

    If anybody, RedHat included, is going to take a stab at unifying the look and feel of the mythical "Linux Desktop", they're going to need to put in a hell of a lot more effort than this.

    While the screen shots I have seen so far of the Null desktop themes are a great improvement over previous attempts at a consistent UI for Linux, it would appear that this is Not Ready For Prime Time.

    For Ghu's sake, people, pick up a friggin' copy of Macintosh Human Interface Guidelines! All the research has already been done! How much longer is it going to take for you to realize this?

    I mean, really, throw me a bone here, people...

    The number one thing holding Linux back from more widespread usage is the clunky UI implementations that are available. The people who are working on this stuff are smart enough that they should know when to bring in experts. I know nobody wants to turn over the care and feeding of their baby to someone else, but don't you think it's time that some *real* graphic designers/industrial designers got involved?

    I'm sure at least some of you coders out there must know a decent designer or two, or even a bonafide HCI expert. If we could somehow lure a few good ones into working under a Free Software license to produce some artwork for this effort, we'd be going in the right direction.

    Well, ranting aside, at least Null seems to have produced a decent font for the menus. IMO, this was one of the biggest problems.

  102. corporate desktop by vsp · · Score: 1

    In my opinion, this is clearly targeted to the corporate desktop market RH wants to get into, and in this case the license of their artwork/changes package becomes very important:
    If the corporate employees become accustomed with RH desktop's look and feel, and if other linux distros will not be allowed to use RH's package, RH will effectively have a grip on this market, allowing them to start "embracing and extending" with proprietary protocols/software.
    I don't think this will happen, but the community has to probably be cautious anyway...

  103. Re:Insane by rosewood · · Score: 2

    I think Redhat should have done this a long time ago for now I don't see how MS could blow the desktop market unless our friend Pal is as bad as some people think it will be.

    Linux needed to be ready for prime time before the roll out of win2k to have gained real market share.

    Look at AMD. When Intel hit its lumps, AMD was ready to capitalize. When MS has hit their LUMPS and lumps and lumps, Linux has not been exactly poised to capitalize.

    This seems to be the step in the right direction, I just think that a simple check box on install could take care of anyone's questions about this.

    By default, the redhat theme, unles on install you say otherwise!

  104. Re:Insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The whole point of having KDE/GNOME/WindoMaker/Et al is to allow people to pick the one that suits them.

    hello, i am offended that you did not mention my two favourite window managers, twm and fvwm2, please correct this mistake immediately.

  105. Re:Insane by nagora · · Score: 1
    The idea is to unify a desktop solution so that people who are familiar with MS (read: most of the world) are not terrified of trying to configure a Linux box.

    In other words, because people are used to brain-dead fucked-up systems we should do the same to Linux so that they're comfortable.

    Screw that. I want choice; if I didn't then I would still be using Windows.

    TWW

    --
    "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  106. Oh, the horror! by TrentC · · Score: 2

    Where I think Red Hat have made mistakes [...] is by modifying code rather than commissioning the GNOME and KDE teams to do it on their behalf.

    My God, you're right! How dare Red Hat take Free/open-source code and use it the way the licenses mean for it to be used?

    If KDE developers are going to whine about Red Hat modifying code that the KDE developers damn well gave them the right to modify, then they're definitely in the wrong business.

    Forking code is prefectly natural in the open-source world. There are a few forks of the Linux kernel (probably more in various in-house projects around the world), you have GNU emacs and XEmacs, etc., etc. Generally, this is a good thing, as new ideas get tested out without needing the "blessing" of the official code tree maintainer. (As I recall, the original USB support started off as a forked project without Linus' blessing, until something usable was available.)

    All Red Hat has done is forked the KDE and GNOME desktops to create a unified look for both of them. Yes, Red Hat will have to redo all of their changes when KDE 3.1 and GNOME 2.0.2 come out. That's their perogative, and I'm pretty sure they realized what they were doing when they made the decision.

    It boils down to three options:
    1) Learn to use Red Hat's desktop environment
    2) Replace Red Hat's with another; it probably wouldn't take long for some enterprising people to create a set of RPMs from the "official" KDE/GNOME releases
    3) Start using a different distribution; maybe rolling your own is the best answer if you want things exactly your way?

    Jay (=

  107. The only people that actually give a damn are ? by bushboy · · Score: 2

    So correct me if I'm wrong here - a small amount of people got all bitchy about this and they are more than likely in some way attached to either the Gnome or KDE projects ?

    Redhat are attempting to unify Linux and make it something your marketing department could use - anything wrong with that ?

    If you don't like it, don't use Redhat.

    Personally, I like what Redhat have done - it means I don't have to spend a ton of time fiddling around with all sorts of useless widgets and can get work done right away.

    Not all of us want animated buttons, x-term backgrounds, slide-out menus etc.

    --
    A slashdotting - you get the stick first and then the carrot !
  108. Re:Insane by rosewood · · Score: 2

    To blame Red Hat for the current US Linux Desktop share is totally illogical. There have to be more contributing factors, such as US BASED MICROSOFT on why the desktop share is where its at...

  109. It's more than look and feel by henben · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A unified "look and feel" is one thing (probably a good thing), but I hope they will address the deeper interoperability problems between KDE and Gnome apps, and config problems in both. In particular, I'd like cut and paste between apps to work 100% reliably. I'd like Quanta not to use an illegible font (A.D. Mono) just because it's alphabetically first and something has monged the config files. In fact, why do distros ship with illegible fonts in the first place? I'd like a single "Control Centre" rather than a KDE Control Centre, a GNOME Control Centre and a $DISTRO Control Center (which from the article is something they're trying to do). I could live without apps looking exactly the same way as long as they play together nicely.

  110. My thoughts in this by makoffee · · Score: 0

    They both have their strong points. But that fact of the matter is that the friendly competition be the two is what pushes them to be better.

    I was a gnome man for quite a long time. I really liked the applets and the design your own interface feel, and the icons are quite nice to look at as well. But I don't like the sluggish performance and overall buggie-ness of gnome.
    When KDE came out with version 3 I was finaly happy with the speed and stability, but kde, has something missing about it. Maybe it's just the GUI style but they have tried to look so bland that it really isn't any fun to use and gives the Xnix desktop no identity of it's own.

    I think if you just try to fallow windows that you'll just get lost in it's shadow. The linux desktop needs to bring something new that both mac and windows don't have. That's the only chance it has. It's so easy to compare the OS to windows now, and all it does is show it's shortcomings.

    --
    -makoffee
  111. Your kidding right? by kanotspell · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "I hope that RedHat successfully forces both Gnome and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop. This would be the greatest gift to the Linux world." I fail to see how this is such a gift, the desktops are different but not *that* different, just enough to give some nice variety. Since when does the linux world want to limit choice. Perhaps all the distros should merge to one unified, down the middle, bland, not-specifically-good-at-anything version. Oh wait that already didn't work. Come on Hemos, choice and variety are what it's all about. I really hope that comment was just a troll.

  112. RedHat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RedHat the center of all evil.

    RedHat & Sun & Ximian are directing the way of GNOME and made GNOME 2 ugly as shit. somehow there are rants over rants, flames over flames, personal insults over personal insults about GNOME 2. personally i haven't seen so much bashing and agressive response that came with GNOME 2. the users seem to be really pissed off. you can read a lot of that stuff on www.osnews.com or on one of gnome's mailinglist.

  113. Re:Insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't get it.

    You're bitching about having a choice, but your choice hasn't been taken away!

    Are you really that dumb?

    You still have 2 options:
    * Don't install their KDE or Gnome. Grab the sources.
    * Change the themes so they look how you want. (Yes, that capability is still there.)

  114. "Desktop" is not what you think it is by ajs · · Score: 2

    If you look at what Red Hat has done, it's very clever, and really is aimed at adressing what you just said.

    What are the top things that "desktop" users the world-round will want to do?

    1. Web Browsing
    2. Document editing
    3. Email

    There are some other things such as calendars, contact management and spreadsheets that are hugely popular, but I think the above three items cover what 99% of the computer-using population does 90% of the time (if we're not counting games).

    Those three things (and the things that I've mentioned as "alsos") are all done using the same applications under Red Hat regardless of which desktop system you use.

    This has annoyed KDE folks because Red Hat chose the Gnome-friendly apps for this purpose, but to be fair, there wasn't really any choice. Evolution is far-and-away the best groupware suite for Linux/BSD. Mozilla too is hard to beat on anything but speed, and in terms of end-users speed loses to wider compatability with complex Web sites.

    Personally, I thank Red Hat for making this hard decision. It's time that the free software desktop world grew up and started to work together instead of trying to play "my feature is bigger than your feature".

  115. Good step for Redhat by The_DoubleU · · Score: 2

    I think this is a good idea from Redhat. If you don't like it change it. But by making a "standard" desktop Redhat can deliver much better support to new users. I'm working at a helpdesk. And you you can't tell peopel to start application X, you have to guide them step by step. Start, programms, application X. By making a standard desktop Redhat will improve their support for new users and these new users will keep using linux.

    --
    What power has law where only money rules.
  116. Re:Insane by BashfulPlatypus · · Score: 1

    I'd have to say I think this is a really great idea on RH's part. I'm a fairly new linux user and I don't feel any particular attachment to either KDE or Gnome. Anything that get's closer to a unified desktop makes sense to me. No offense to KDE/Gnome diehards, but I could care less about the tiny little things people say makes one 1000 times better than the other. I just need a desktop that's simple to use and works. Making Gnome and KDE act in a similar fashion removes the need for me to pick which one might suit me ever so slightly better even though it's missing features of the other. And don't even get into installing both. Having KDE and Gnome installed at the same time is as usefull as a linux/win dual boot, not at all.

  117. OT Re:Have your cake and eat it too? by jdcook · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Entering Off-Topic Pet Peeve Mode:

    It's "eat your cake and have it too." Having it and then eating it is no trick at all.

    --
    Q:How many libertarians does it take to stop a Panzer division? A:None. Obviously market forces will take care of it.
    1. Re:OT Re:Have your cake and eat it too? by Suppafly · · Score: 2

      It's "eat your cake and have it too." Having it and then eating it is no trick at all.

      That may be logically correct, but the phrase that people use is "have your cake and eat it too"

    2. Re:OT Re:Have your cake and eat it too? by spudnic · · Score: 2

      Maybe you can have your cake THEN it it, but you can't have your cake AND eat it. Once you've eaten it, you no longer have it.

      --
      load "linux",8,1
    3. Re:OT Re:Have your cake and eat it too? by KNicolson · · Score: 2
      I don't know how you managed to get a "Flamebait" on that message, but anyway, I googled for it and got this explanation:

      http://www.quinion.com/words/qa/qa-hav2.htm

    4. Re:OT Re:Have your cake and eat it too? by jdcook · · Score: 2

      Thanks. That link was interesting.

      --
      Q:How many libertarians does it take to stop a Panzer division? A:None. Obviously market forces will take care of it.
  118. crackhead! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope that RedHat successfully forces both Gnome and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop. This would be the greatest gift to the Linux world."

    What's KDE/Gnome have to do with Linux??? Lay off the crack man!

  119. Re:Insane by rseuhs · · Score: 2
    I do not think it is a silly game. What is silly is to start an application from KDE in GNOME or Vice-Versa and have an entirely different look.

    I'm so sick of that nonsense.

    When you start ICQ in Windows, you have an entirely different look - whoowhoo!

    WMP in Windows - different look! OMG!

    Winamp in Windows - different again! THE HORROR!

    Quicktime in Windows - again different! THE CONFUSION! (and also in MacOS, BTW)

    Just start any game - all are differnt! ONLY A COMPUTER FREAK COULD USE THAT!

    If anything of your "everything has to be the same" were true, there would be nobody using ICQ or Winamp and only a tiny fraction of elite computer users would be able to play games.

    ... which quite obviously is not the case. On the contrary, specialized apps seem to do quite well compared to their "standardized" counterparts.

  120. Ready for aunt Tilllie by sl956 · · Score: 2

    I installed Null 7.3.94 beta three weeks ago. For the first time ever, I thought :
    Maybe the time has come for my old mum or my non-geek friends to switch to linux!
    The major reasons were :
    • flawless hardware detection and config (including the wheel of the mouse)
    • out-of-the-box anti-aliasing (it IS important for newcomers)
    • and above all the Gnome/KDE integration with a smooth clean unified theme
    Don't forget it's only a default setup. If you're enough of a geek to not like it (I am), you should be able to change it in less than 5 mn.

    On a side note, that version is not stable enough to be really usable yet (two X-windows crashes in the last three days). You should wait the real 7.4 to give it to aunt Tillie.
  121. hey stop that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i thought one person is able to post only 10 times per day. seems like the same idiot is posting over and over how much he likes what redhat did.
    personally i don't like it and i can't stand it. the bullshit about choice. choice is when you get the single apps and install the stuff 'YOU' need not what the distro thinks 'YOU MAY' need.
    times has been changing dudes. it's not that easy anymore to split parts out of gnome and use the stuff you simply want.
    personally i do care a shitload for my apps and we probably all do otherwise there wouldn't be so much hate and bashing between the kde and gnome people.
    the bashing, ranting and insulting does mean one thing 'people want consistency, they want all apps support either kde libs or gnome libs' they don't like the mixture of both.
    sure there is the one or the other that may like that idea but personally it upsets me.
    think of this now. gnome has it's HIG where they re-ordered the buttons e.g. [OK] - [CANCEL] in a dialog became [CANCEL] - [OK]. gnome did it the MAC way, where kde did it the 'correct' windows way.
    now think about this, you have 2 systems mixed on one system and now you are forced to press one time 'OK' on the left side in the dialog and the 2nd time you need to press [OK] on the right side in the dialog.
    i personally go mad about that. not to mention that i terribly hate that pile of shit.
    i also don't see why redhat needs to break KDE that way. it is almost a perfect system that fully emulates a look and feel of Windows for me. (or macos or however you want to have it look). it supports a webborser, emailer, multimedia etc. everything native support under kde
    there was really no need to fuck KDE up that way. and to say the truth, i personally like windows, we all do like windows, we only hate the company behind it. but think about all the hardware it supports etc. not bad for such a big company, there is nothing wrong with a FREE or better OPENSOURCE version of windows as long as it works the same easy way.

    1. Re:hey stop that by redtuxxx · · Score: 0

      Wow - It's troll time again

      1. It may amaze you but more than one person probably does like what RH is doing

      2. think of this now. gnome has it's HIG where they re-ordered the buttons e.g. [OK] - [CANCEL] in a dialog became [CANCEL] - [OK]. gnome did it the MAC way, where kde did it the 'correct' windows way.

      Personally when you are talking about UI, I think more peoplew would call MAC correct

      3. IMNHO - I fail to see the perfection of KDE

  122. Blinders by Jobe_br · · Score: 2

    It stuns me to see how many naive and narrow-minded people post to slashdot. Ferkrisakes. Guess people don't truly understand what RedHat is ... a business. They're trying to increase their user base (the *paying* user base) - to do that, they listen to their *paying* customers and do some research into what would make other people switch to RedHat. Simultaneously, they'll try to cut their own costs so as to increase profit margins - something that shareholders typically enjoy.

    Does this mean that Linux enthusiasts can no longer customize their install of RedHat? No ... it simply means that GNOME and KDE will look like REDHAT out of the box, not like GNOME or KDE. Don't get the panties in a wad about it - its not that big a deal.

    I imagine that RedHat sees a good deal of competition from Apple at the moment ... Apple already has the desktop market (for those not afraid to switch from Windows) and is gunning for the server market - which RedHat has a pretty decent handle on, so far. With these changes, RedHat is gunning to win over some of the folks out there that just want to get some work done, and not have the interface stand in your way.

    Its a good thing, just think about it and please, for the love of Slashdot, stop bellyaching!

  123. Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by al3x · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am (was?) a more die-hard Linux user than most on Slashdot. I still love Linux on the server. But the split between GNOME and KDE, and therein between GNOME 1.x and 2.x, prompted me to drop Linux as a desktop platform in favor of Mac OS X. Without focusing on the platform I switched to, let me explain.

    When actually trying to get work done, and not simply tinker around, having essentially three different widget sets and standards is a nightmare. I wasn't even using GNOME or KDE as a desktop; I used fluxbox. But some of my GNOME apps looked one way, the 2.x ones looked another, and the KDE apps yet another. Then comes trying to remember the keyboard shortcut conventions: do I shut this down with ctl-Q, ctl-x, alt-q, alt-x? On top of all this, there's the bloat of carrying around libraries for all three widget sets, and all their dependencies (and I still had a pretty stripped down install; I was running Gentoo).

    Day-to-day, this made for a truly unpleasant, unproductive, and frustrating desktop experience, without even getting into issues of stability. Many will toot the horn of diversity and choice, but in this the GNOME/KDE split is simply a massive hassle for new and experienced users alike. I'm the secretary for my college's Linux User Group, and explaining the differences between all the desktop environments confuses new users into a catatonic state, leaving them so confused they don't know where to go for what.

    I won't say that Linux can never succeed on the desktop. It just needs a shitload of work, and and the demolition of this KDE/GNOME barrier.

    1. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by PigleT · · Score: 2

      Why do you complain about applications you've chosen to install?

      The last thing I'd want is some silly argument "oh dear, the GUI sucks, therefore linux sucks" - because putting all your eggs in one visual basket is just what M$loth and Apple have done, and now they feel they have to protect "the Aqua look", and suchlike stuff.
      Bunch of crap. Variety wins, every time, and if you don't like how the application works, don't install it!
      Gnome has its look, KDE has its look and feel. If you only want one thing, only install one.

      "I won't say that Linux can never succeed on the desktop. It just needs a shitload of work,"

      No, it needs the luser-base to either wisen-up and learn to use something for what it's worth *before* complaining, or to piss off and use Windoze where they belong.

      I've been running GNU/Linux on my desktop for the last 4.bit years, I don't need someone telling me I'm doing the impossible - they should get to grips with emacs with Gnus, vim, vi on a bunch of other OSs, galeon, Konqueror, multi-gnome-terminal, zsh, and a whole host of other toys I use interchangeably on an hourly basis, then refrain from criticizing my chosen way of working.

      --
      ~Tim
      --
      .|` Clouds cross the black moonlight,
      Rushing on down to the circle of the turn
    2. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there is one serious problem with your reply:

      "if you don't like it, don't install it"

      this doesn't work anymore. look i like KDE over GNOME now unfortunately the gnome morons cluttered the complete xfree cvs repositry with their gnome shit. now tell me how i substitute this ?

    3. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by AnyoneEB · · Score: 1

      There's no good reason to require you to have windows looking at acting in four different ways on the same desktop! Redhat was trying to fix that. What you need is a window manager that can accept KDE and Gnome apps and make them look the same... wait that's what Redhat did. I'm sure that there will be a Gnome theme for Redhat's window manager very soon, so you can make it look like KDE or Gnome instead of both at the same time.

      --
      Centralization breaks the internet.
    4. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by pjrc · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I am (was?) a more die-hard Linux user than most on Slashdot.

      Ok, die-hard linux user....

      But the split between GNOME and KDE, and therein between GNOME 1.x and 2.x, prompted me to drop Linux as a desktop platform

      Not!

      This inflamatory message (yes, mod me down, yadda, yadda) is let you know that your seld description is far from "die-hard linux user". Sorry, you're just not. It matters not that you're a secretary of your local LUG.

      Among the many things that come to mind associated with a "die-hard linux user" are:

      • Often installs "bleeding edge" unstable software, if only to know what's coming next and submit timely bug reports to developers
      • Recompiles software and/or kernels for optimum performance
      • Tends to be an developer on at least some project in at least some capacity, perhap minor tweaks or helps with writing or correcting documentation
      • Extensive use of command-line... primarily uses gui to manage multiple shells
      • Writes perl or shell scripts to automate most tasks
      • Values privacy and/or security (disables cross-site cookies, uses ad-blocking proxy, monitors unexpected outgoing traffic with firewall, etc)
      • Values philosophy of free/open-source software (perhaps in general, or perhaps strongly aligned with the GPL or BSD approach)

      Not all of these apply to all die-hard linux users, but there is a general trend here.

      Above all that, anyone who could reasonably be considered a "die-hard linux user" appreciates that the linux desktops and particularly their applications are still in their formative stages. Whereas a consumer-oriented individual looks upon bugs and deficiencies and decides to switch to a mature and polished commercial project, the "die-hard linux user" appreciates the tremendous project and even in the absence of activly contributing (even in small ways like timely bug reports on the unstable bleeding edge), at least feels a sense of "being there" as it happens.

      So the point of this little rant, is that "Lack of Unification" didn't kill your linux desktop. You killed your linux desktop when you deleted it. That's your choice to make... my only gripe involves you calling yourself a "die-hard linux user". It didn't all look the same, nice and pretty, and parts of it didn't work similarly to other parts, so you dropped it and went to the highly polished, but commercial closed-source MacOS-X desktop. How "die-hard" is that??

    5. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by PigleT · · Score: 2

      "There's no good reason to require you to have windows looking at acting in four different ways on the same desktop!"

      There is no requirement to have 4 different windowing systems in place at once.

      "Redhat was trying to fix that."

      No, they were pandering to the likes of you folks who install "workstation" setup and then wonder what you're doing with it. There's nothing that needs fixing at all other than a bunch of windoze-heads with no clue what they're talking about.

      --
      ~Tim
      --
      .|` Clouds cross the black moonlight,
      Rushing on down to the circle of the turn
    6. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      >this doesn't work anymore. look i like KDE over GNOME now
      >unfortunately the gnome morons cluttered the complete xfree cvs
      >
      >
      And how just did the "gnome morons cluttered the complete xfree cvs repositry with their gnome shit." Do you even have a fucking clue as to what the xfree cvs repositry is? Sure as hell doesn't look like it. If RedHat has managed to drive shit like you away from Linux, I'll say they've done the Linux Community a huge favor.

    7. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh you are an expert aren't you ?

      grab the fucking xfree cvs and look at the nice things inside it:

      - gnome-xml (libxml2) coded by gnome people
      - xcoursor coded by keithp who is gnome people
      - xfontconfig coded by keithp who is gnome people
      - xft2 coded by keithp who is gnome people
      - pkgconfig programmed by havoc pennington who is gnome people

      now fuck off you cluttered pile of ass get some investigation or review the shit before replying such gay niggershit to me.

    8. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Redhat was trying to fix that

      So when are they going to make GNU Emacs look and feel like GEdit? When are they going to make the Windowmaker dock look and feel like the GNOME Panel?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    9. Re:Lack of Unification Killed My Linux Desktop by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      >grab the fucking xfree cvs and look at the nice things inside it:
      >- gnome-xml (libxml2) coded by gnome people
      >- xcoursor coded by keithp who is gnome people
      >- xfontconfig coded by keithp who is gnome people
      >- xft2 coded by keithp who is gnome people
      >- pkgconfig programmed by havoc pennington who is gnome people
      >
      And this is cluttering up the complete xfree cvs? Are you one of those lame former Amiga/pro-Berlin asswipes?

  124. Choice by Capt.+Beyond · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Choice is why I moved to using linux. Choice is why I never install gnome desktop. Choice is why I can use KDE, or Window Maker, or Fluxbox whenever I feel the need.

    You can merge Gnome and KDE into one desktop over my dead liquid cooled boxes pump!

    --
    -- "Perceptions create reality. By changing your perceptions you change your reality."
  125. RH is doing the same error again by alonso · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why are RH chosing KDE? Because it's a better desktop! Why are RH omogenizing KDE and GNOME? Because they have done the wrong decision adopting GNOME in first palce. KDE is better, so chose a really KDE distibutiong(Suse or Mandrake).

  126. Re:It's worse than I thought! by egreB · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't that be
    [you@yourRHbox]# rm -rf /
    Unless you have som very strange permissions going on (maybe all filesystems in FAT?), a regular user wouldn't be able to do that..

  127. Convergence blocks innovation by Tune · · Score: 2

    > I hope that RedHat successfully forces both Gnome and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop. This would be the greatest gift to the Linux world.

    Would it? I agree that technically speaking it would be great to have a single API and a single (though configurable) UI combining the best of both worlds. But notice that this is only tempting because GUI developments (on a conceptual level) have been tame an converging for the last couple of years. Wrt. the Gnome, KDE, Windows 98 & XP looks and feels there have been some small changes here and there but hardly any innovative stuff. Many core developers in gnome, kde and M$ team would (or should) admit they have fairly modest ambitions in UI design - merely copying the neat stuff they see others do.

    Now would not "the Linux world" REALLY benefit from more dary designs? I would happily trade some compatibility to gain the divergence necessary to see some more innovative and radically new designs.

    Slick example: OS X.
    Geek example: XCruise-file browser.
    More generally: get some GUI professionals to do GUI design (sorry, no offence intended)

    --
    The most likely way for the world to be destroyed, most experts agree, is by accident. That's where we come in: we're computer professionals, we cause accidents -- Nathaniel Borenstein

  128. Why KDE people might not like this by ChrisWong · · Score: 4, Informative
    My speculation on why, from the perspective of KDE, this sort of thing is upsetting:

    • KDE credits removed from "about" boxes. The article admits that they do not (yet) have a policy to give KDE or Gnome due credit.
    • Code fork. The article mentions code modifications. This means it will be hard to get comparable updates when new versions of KDE appear. Given Red Hat's abysmal record with providing new KDE RPMs, users will be stuck with an obsolete version of KDE.
    • Gnome favoritism. The article admits that Red Hat does a better job with Gnome than KDE, yet will not let KDE be itself.
    • Application hiding. Menus dinkered to favor non-KDE apps.
    1. Re:Why KDE people might not like this by Rich · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The Gnome favourism isn't a problem, that's their decision. The main problem which you've missed is that have modified the names of the service types (so you'll find that if you download a 3rd party app as source it may well break). They've also changes the linker options used to load plugins which will caused weird crashes due to symbol name conflicts (eg. I doubt the Flash plugin works in Konqueror now because it has a name-clash with the OpenGL libraries). Needless to say we're less than happy about this, especially when Owen is claiming he want KDE and Gnome to compete on stability.

      Basically it is obvious that the RedHat guys have made these changes without actually understanding what they were doing. Personally, I will be dropping any bugs reported by RH users as I won't be able to test them properly.

      Rich.

    2. Re:Why KDE people might not like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Given Red Hat's abysmal record with providing new KDE RPMs, users will be stuck with an obsolete version of KDE"

      No. They will continue to use the KDE that RedHat modified, and obviously this is RedHat's intention (and right). How can it be obsolete when it's no longer the same software?

    3. Re:Why KDE people might not like this by GauteL · · Score: 2

      The first two are reasonable. The other two are not. Red Hat is totally entitled to favor whatever desktop-system they want. SuSE and Mandrake favor KDE, Red Hat favor GNOME.

      When it comes to application hiding, Red Hat is totally entitled to offer what choices they think are best to the user. Red Hat thinks Mozilla and openoffice are better than Konqueror and Koffice, and can show the user whatever applications they want to. They could remove Konqueror and Koffice totally if they wanted to, but they haven't done that.

      The fact is that Red Hat has done just about the same things to GNOME as they have done to KDE. Galeon, Abiword and Gnumeric are secondary to Openoffice and Mozilla in Red Hat (null).

      The look and feel of KDE is not turned into GNOME, they have both gotten a new common look. The icons are actually much more KDE-like than GNOME-like.

      Why is it that only KDE-users have complained?

    4. Re:Why KDE people might not like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup. They even dinkered the menu to favor non-Gnome apps. Those steeking bastards.

    5. Re:Why KDE people might not like this by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      >Why is it that only KDE-users have complained?
      >
      >
      Simple. KDE was *NEVER* about promoting Linux or Unix. Have you noticed just how un Unix-like KDE's basic design is when you compare it to Gnome? That's because KDE was about promoting TrollTech first and foremost and then promoting/continuing the "DeskTop War" that a bunch of ex-Amiga users wanted to keep alive. Neither of these groups are really interested in Linux or Unix, they basically see it as a means to their rather silly ends.

    6. Re:Why KDE people might not like this by fault0 · · Score: 2

      > Why is it that only KDE-users have complained?

      I'm sure some GNOME developers/users are less-than-enthusiastic as well. The major reason for mentioning number 3 is that KDE seems to pride itself with good integration, and has been historically more integrated as a desktop environment than something like GNOME.

      I don't agree with what RedHat has done, but I both understand why they've done it and defend their right to do it.

      The number one problem I see with much of the malinformed complaining by _some_ KDE users is that RedHat has it in for KDE. There is a significant portion of RedHat users who use KDE, and RedHat obviously doesn't want to piss them off. You are correct in saying that they did basically the same things to GNOME. I don't see why these complainers don't get this fact.

      More troubling, however, is probably RedHat's renaming of service types to remove the "kde-" part. Not only are some of these changes flat out unnecessary, but can break third party applications.

      Essentially, they are making it hard on themselves, because KDE 3.1 will come out soon, and you know KDE 3.2 is gonna come soon after that ;)

    7. Re:Why KDE people might not like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I would have modded you up but you seem unsure of whether it does crash or break. You say it "may" ... well, fuddy fud fud.

      Does it or doesn't it? Specifics are required here.

    8. Re:Why KDE people might not like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it will.

  129. Why I dislike the decision by uriyan · · Score: 1

    I find the new decision to visually blend Gnome and KDE into a single environment as a continuation of the old RedHat mindset, which is exactly what makes me reconsider my loyalty to the distro, in spite of my appreciation for its powerful feature set and significant contribution to the community. What bothers me is that for the sake of being generic and "one size fits all", RedHat has sacrificed each user's ability to have an installation that fits what he wishes to do - no more and no less.

    For instance, the option to select particular packages at install-time is extremely inconvenient (and tends to crash). The user, of course, can install broad categories, like "Kernel development" and "desktop publishing". But, many pieces of software that I routinely use are outside these categories, and unless I select "everything", they do not get installed. As opposed to that, I do receive several hundred MBs (from 400 in 6.2 to 800 or more in 7.3) of software that I don't need. For instance, I don't need pine, mail, rmail and mh at all. I need just KMail. I don't need dozens of newsreaders. Most workstations these days don't need Sendmail (by the way, I find Postfix a better choice for an MTA), BIND or telnetd. and I definitely don't need 2 desktop environments. Python, Perl and Tcl are all nice languages, but I see no reason why I've got to have all 3 on my particular workstation. For most libraries out there, I don't need compatibility interfaces for earlier versions, and neither do I need their development versions.

    The root of the problem is: I don't have infinite system resources. I might have a lot of memory - but I don't want to waste it with 2 distinct GUI toolkits. I might have a reasonably large disk, but I don't want large parts of it to be covered with stuff I never asked for. I think leaving just enough resources for apps to work reasonably is a silly Microsoft way of doing stuff; I don't know why RedHat has to join the race. Allowing the users not to make choices (by bundling it all) translates into forcing them never to do so.

    Several months ago I've got RedHat 7.3 installed on a 4 GB partition. I didn't ask for Everything - but the install was still around 60% of the available drive space. After this, I chose not to upgrade a 6.2 box to a newer version (in spite of the absence of new RPMs), because I know it'll drain too much resources. In the time since, I've considered several possibilities for replacing RedHat with other distributions (I also considered BSD). I won't abandon RedHat just yet; but frankly, I'm afraid it's simply not going the right way.

  130. We shouldn't be going against each other by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We should be uniting to take down Microsoft.

  131. Re:Insane by Progoth · · Score: 1
    Have you seen what they've done? They just changed the default look of the desktop, which in my opinion still looks very much like KDE!

    exactly. who really cares? I don't understand why people can't grok the concept of a theme.

    I emerged redhat-artwork a week or so ago, and I love the look. it's really quite slick. kde is broken with xinerama so I'm using gnome, and since Bluecurve comes with gdm, nautilus, xmms, gtk2, and gtk1 themes, I have a great unified desktop look (except for mozilla...).

    LUG@GT had an installfest this saturday, and a redhat guy came with free stuff (and redhat 8.0 final). it really was kinda nice, I don't know if I'd match it with mandrake for desktop usage yet, but it was impressive. the install was atrocious (brown!!!???!!), but its fonts were beautiful and professional, and the install was just as easy as it's always been on redhat & mandrake.

    I like how mandrake uses debian's menu system to keep all kde/gnome/*box/etc menus in sync. I never actually sat down and messed with a redhat8 install, so I can't comment on that. hopefully they have some kind of unified menuing system.

    apparently we're not allowed to distribute the 3 cds, sorry:)

  132. Re:Insane by Strog · · Score: 1

    Red Hat becomes more Mandrake-like with menus, defaults, standard tools, etc. and I like it that way.

    I started on Red Hat 5.2 and took a while learning the different wm programs. I got a hold of a Mandrake 6.1 CD and loved running any program I wanted from the desktop of my choice. I was running Gnome and KDE apps on the "wrong" one all the time. I didn't even know some of these apps didn't belong on the current desktop. I went back and forth between Gnome and KDE over the years because all my apps were available on the menu so it didn't matter that much.

    I like that Mandrake had common tools for configuring the system but was annoyed when they changed them every release. They also changed icons regularly but they where still annoying to me. The current releases have been much better and are getting much more consistent. The big complaint that everything had drake in the name seems a little silly.

    Red Hat has a good example for the desktop in Mandrake. Let's hope they avoid the pitfalls Mandrake went through. The end result could be a very nice desktop.

  133. One by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One planet, one look, one desktop.

  134. Re:Insane by Progoth · · Score: 1
    RedHat is making this for Corporate use, where a unified desktop is probably a good thing.

    Um, actually, their new "corporate strategy" includes desktop usage. that's what redhat 8 is about, making linux palatable for home users.

  135. This is the best thing to happen linux ever. by ghinckley68 · · Score: 1

    If linux is going to make it on the desk top it needs to present a single consistant user interface. Those of us that know how to tweek the crap out it can remove the rh RPMs and go intstall what ever on it our selfs. We loose nothing we gain everything. RH is doing the right thing those of you who are bitiching about this forced spoon fed aproach are not the ones paying the bills at RH. The linux community needs a consitant product that every one knows, the lack of this is what almost killed unix in the fisrt place. These comapnies need lots of sales to stay in bussiness and those must come form the end users out there the non geeks, and as a geek myself i find linux frustrating at times. There is little or no descent documentation(yes i know man, howtos tldp... THEY ALL ARE AWFULL). in order for linux to have descant sales you mother has to be able to sit down and get it connected to a dialup conection with out help. Your mother all so needs to be able to down load cute junkware from the internet and have it work. Now imagine trying to have your mother untar, then ./configure make make install somthing only to tell her that it could not link agaisnt symbols in lpng.34.23.so are something like that. How many rpms actually work maby half intalls with out some kinda depencencay problems. Or how about this try to get you mom to un pack a simple game say tar -xzvf lbreakout2-2.3.2.tar.gz only to find its a bunch of files with wierd names and nothing called setup.exe with a little luck she may figure out how to make it compile but probally not. Linux will suffer a slow and agonizeing death at the hands of Bill Gates unless thinks like this dont happen.

    --
    Linux modi 2.6.26-2-parisc
  136. Where can I download? by Lenolium · · Score: 1

    I like the look of that theme, no fake-3d looking buttons, just nice, plain and simple. Somday, we will be able to get rid of everything being grey but until that day I'll be happy using this theme. (sure, it's not a lickable OSX interface, but this one is real quiet and just sticks to business)

  137. Getting "real" KDE by ChrisWong · · Score: 2

    For those who have been playing with the beta: what's involved in transforming KDE-rh back into "pure" KDE with all the defaults? The article mentions some code changes. The menus have been changed. Would I have to manually edit the menus, dialogs, links etc or is there a "gimme plain KDE" option?

    Chris

    1. Re:Getting "real" KDE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd have to rebuild from source.

    2. Re:Getting "real" KDE by davros74 · · Score: 1

      Do what I do. Uninstall every single RPM on your RedHat box pertaining to KDE, goto www.kde.org and download the latest KDE tarballs and compile it from source. The way RedHat has KDE setup, I don't even recognize it as KDE or find it nearly as pleasant to use as a vanilla KDE install.

      RedHat's KDE feels like Gnome, and I prefer KDE's look and feel without RedHat's paws all over it. Not to mention that, but I have had far fewer problems installing 3rd party KDE apps on KDE installed from source, because of the aforementioned code changes RedHat has made which apparently breaks more things than it fixes. Just ask the Kapital developers how much fun it is supporting all the different distros.

  138. Great Idea.. by Suppafly · · Score: 2

    I for one think this is a great idea. No one is forcing you to use redhat, and no one is keeping you from changing the look and feel of your desktop, but at least the initial install of a redhat distro will have a consistant look. Its good to see redhat making a move like this as they are one of the biggest linux distributors today. Mandrake has been doing similar things although instead of making kde and gnome look the same, they have just branded them both with mandrake logos.

  139. Exactly how is this a bad thing? by erat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Reading some of the posts here you'd think that making a graphic desktop look a certain way cripples power users. Unless the Linux power user community has gone completely wuss, power users should still be able to do whatever they damn well please with whatever software they install on their systems.

    If you don't like what Red Hat's doing, swap out their desktop for the one you want. If you don't like the theme, put in another one. Or simply don't use Red Hat. It seems simple to me.

    All of this makes me think back to when Caldera decided to make KDE its default desktop environment to the point of removing pretty much all the WMs they used to ship. Lots of folks cried "You're dumbing down Linux! How dare you force people to use KDE!". How making KDE the default desktop affected peoples' ability to pull up an xterm, I haven't a clue.

    And to the KDE developers who pissed and moaned over Red Hat changing their precious code, try reading the license under which KDE is distributed. Last time I checked, people were allowed to alter GPL'd code in whatever way they wanted and re-distribute their version provided they made their patches available. I don't recall the GPL saying "you can change the code all you want as long as you don't change anything from the way we distributed it". You chose the license, sunshine. If you don't like what Red Hat did, cry me a river but don't expect me to sympathise with you. I'm not a huge fan of Red Hat (truth be told, I don't like their products at all), but what they're doing is something you and the GNOME folks have been allowed WAY too much time to take care of but did not. Both teams dropped the ball (or at least dragged your asses), so don't whine when someone else steps in and does the right thing. If you want it done your way, stop complaining and do it.

    'Nuff said.

  140. Competition Makes Good Products by Etriaph · · Score: 2
    We live in a capitalist society, where competition forces others to improve their standards while you move to improve yours in counterpoint. This is how you get two bodies being sure they don't let the public down by trying to out-do the other guy.

    The trouble with RedHat (in my opinion) doing this is that they're going to end up having a mismatched desktop that will not in any way be representative of either one. I'm perfectly happy using only KDE applications. I think the only GTK apps I use are GIMP and grip. So why, when I upgrade to RH8.0 will I have to have Mozilla as my default browser? What the hell good is that to me? I like Konqueror.

    To comment on what you said about "making a unified desktop for Linux", I would have to say I disagree in two ways. I'm pretty sure RedHat doesn't have brain control over Miguel de Icaza and Matthias Ettrich. If I were either of them I wouldn't let a distro dictate the OSS desktop, considering the other distros and unices these desktops run on.

    I'm also pretty sure that if the Linux desktop did unite the quality would likely drop off in some cases. It's good to think about that. Besides, I'm not really cognizant of GNOME very much. I really don't pay attention to the project or it's apps because I spend most of my time using Qt/KDE applications. RedHat won't be my distro of choice come RH8.0. I'd rather switch to Mandrake.

    --
    "It's here, but no one wants it." - The Sugar Speaker
  141. Greatest Gift To The Linux World by txtger · · Score: 1

    No, it would not be the so-called greatest gift to the Linux world. It'd just suck. What ever happened to choice, my friend? I use Gnome because I think it rocks. Some friends of mine use KDE because they think it rocks. Why don't we all just chill out, use our own thing, and be productive as we would like to be?

    I mean, what good would it really do for everything to be unified, besides maybe ease of use for newbs? Even then, there's not a flame war between Mac and Windows people and others wanting to just make them both work exactly the same. Why do we have to do that in Linux?

    1. Re:Greatest Gift To The Linux World by nlinecomputers · · Score: 1

      So? What is stopping you from still doing that? Everybody is all up in arms about how this is going to kill gnome or KDE. There is nothing requiring you to INSTALL Red Hat's Nullified KDE/Gnome. Unselect the freekin' package and then go download your copy of KDE off of the KDE website. Or Gnome if your a gnome user. Some users might think that the combinded product will rock. Leave it to /. trolls to have a knee jerk reactions. Linux is about choice. You can use Red Hat 8 or NOT. Your not forced to upgrade your not forced to stay with Red Hat. There are OTHER distros. If you don't like what Red Hat is doing then go get Mandrake or roll your own. I for one applaud RH for trying to provide a streamlined distro for the masses. Linux is too varied and too complex for the adverage computer users to adopt and use. The users that are bitching and moaning about this are the ones most able to change and modify there system to one they prefer. This is NOT about removing two options. It's more about providing a THRID option that is streamlined with the entire distro. For many users that would be a desired feature. Forgive my misspellings and grammer....

      --
      Slashdot, home of supporters of free software, free music, and free speech.Except for Moderators that disagree with you.
  142. Re: Simply illustrates the flexibility..... by King_TJ · · Score: 2

    I see this as a complete non-issue. Both environments tout their flexibility in configuration, right? Well, here you have a vendor (RedHat) making full use of that. How often can a GUI perfectly emulate a competing GUI on any platform? Look at all the half-baked attempts to turn Windows GUI into a simulation of someone else's favorite user interface.

    If they managed to make Gnome and KDE work and look identical, I'd say that speaks volumes about the power of both GUIs to allow custom configuration.

    Surely, any Linux "power user" that is primarily concerned with not being "tied down" to a single vendor's idea of "optimal user-interface" is capable of re-configuring KDE or Gnome to suit their tastes?

  143. Re:Insane by moonbender · · Score: 2
    Also do realize that 5% is about the same number of people who vote for the Greens, Communists and FDP (Liberals).
    Eh? Greens and Liberals get 7 to 8% each and the so-called Communists get another 5%. 20% != 5%. Oh and your observations on the rabid German computer users who install Linux out of principle are a bit peculiar, too.
    --
    Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
  144. Choose not to choose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... choose a desktop manager. But why would you want to do a thing like that? I choose not to choose a desktop manager. I choose something else. And the reasons? There are no reasons. Who need reasons when you've got Red Hat?

  145. One Desktop by L1nUx+h4x0r · · Score: 0

    One Desktop to rule them all.
    One Desktop to find . -name glib* -name gt* them.
    One Desktop to gather them together,
    and within XFree ld -Bdynamic -E -r them.

    --
    The GPL makes software more like your mom. Free and open to all.
  146. Engrish posting? Re:RH is doing the same ... by Rick_T · · Score: 2

    > Because they have done the wrong decision
    > adopting GNOME in first palce. KDE is
    > better, so chose a really KDE
    > distibutiong

    What you say !!

    Take off every 'zig'
    You know what you doing
    Move 'zig'
    For great justice

    --
    -- Rick
  147. oh that's why.. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    i use beos skin(+buttons) on my windows machine.. to have that friendly look! no i don't have ever used a real beos machine.

    ok ok, most of my friends can't use it. and they just look at my linux box's desktop and associate that to be linux(and then be little lost if i've switched to gnome/kde from kde/gnome after their last visit).

    but, windows ("power")users do tweak their desktop too, most common folk just don't know that they can do that.

    what's more important than the look(which can be altered again anyways by user) is that the kde/gnome programs would actually run without too much hassle.

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  148. Interesting moderation. by Phil+Wilkins · · Score: 1

    I'm sure that a few years back, that would've been 'Insightfull'. Maybe this signifies some sort of progress...

    1. Re:Interesting moderation. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      progress... in the wrong direction.

    2. Re:Interesting moderation. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      only if you're a total fuckwit

  149. silly blue hat men in green white coats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enlightenment DR 16 has been perfectly design to work with gnome and kde...for 2 years now. Just make Enlightenment the default (temp)...

    1. Re:silly blue hat men in green white coats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dude Enlightenment is dead. Raster is not working on that piece of crap since 2000. Even Then it was a piece of crap crap software. Ever release has been building to nothing. Take a look at the diffence between 15.5 and 16.5...you will see except for some minor detail work that E has not changed for the better. Just leave Enlightenment the way its buried dead and gone

  150. Who is angry? by jeramybsmith · · Score: 1

    Last I knew, nobody really cared about this except for a few rabid KDE people (the people who raised a ruckus about it in the first place). I think their main beef was that the icons on the desktop for web browsing and email were for moz and evolution in KDE instead of kde apps.

    --
    Never overestimate the end user. -jeramy b. smith
  151. If Linux is to gain mainstream acceptance.... by Newer+Guy · · Score: 2

    If Linux is to be accepted by the mainstream user, it must be easy to use. Two completely different looking and acting desktops simply does not accomplish this. Look, I realize that many of you here think this is a bad thing. It isn't. You are looking at this through the tainted eyes of a geek, not John Q. Public's eyes. Right now, Linux is a difficult (almost impossible?) OS for J.Q.P. to use. It's too technical. Windows isn't, and J.Q.P barely can use it! Redhat is trying to make the OS more user friendly. This is a good thing.

    I guess what it comes down to is this: Do you want Linux to become mainstream or not? If so, then you support it's homogenization. If not, then you don't.

    Of course, there's nothing from keeping you from coding your own version of Linux too you know, and please make it as geeky and user-unfriendly as YOU want it to be.

    1. Re:If Linux is to gain mainstream acceptance.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *GASP*

      You mean, like, someone like my grandmother, will be able to say, click on an icon to send e-mail, while I'll be able to hit up a smtp server from a command line?! At the same time?! On the same operating system?!?!

      JESUS H. CHRIST YOU'RE NUTS MAN! That's crazy!

      CRAZY!

      Oh, wait..

  152. Geez...relax people. by zerofoo · · Score: 2

    How many of you actually keep the default settings on your windows boxes? Linux, and open source software in general, is very flexible. If you don't like the defaults, just change them.

    -ted

  153. Isn't this just another choice? by Perdition · · Score: 1

    Like other projects I have seen (Lycoris, Lindows, Xandros), this strikes me as just another choice to make. If this or one of the other choices I have seen makes the Linux home desktop experience viable for the MS target market, great. The wonderful thing is that the hard-core users can STILL just bash away on their desktops at will (or even rule harder from the console). Hardware is getting cheaper, MS is slowly backing down on the whole evil empire thing, and voids will have to be filled. A unified KDE/Gnome set would be a boon to the Mom & Pop desktop environments, and the hackers can still build their own environment. It's open source, let RH paint it orange and make all the function keys bring up pictures of Sam Adams... it's their prerogative.

    --
    Windows XP SP2 told me to install third-party software that prevents viruses and protects stability... I chose Ubuntu
  154. One small request by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

    Its the year 2002. Can we finally stop dicking around with how many different window managers and GUI's we can make and actually start using our powerful computers to do important things now? Please?

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  155. Two different issues by ericman31 · · Score: 2

    There are really two separate issues here, RedHat is addressing one, and everybody is screaming about the other. The issue that RedHat is tackling is ease of use and standards. In order for Linux to succeed in the corporate world, it has to have a set of standards for everything, including the user interface. Especially for corporate desktops. Corporate sys admins really don't have the time or the inclination to custom configure the Linux UI and then roll it out to all the users. What they will want is a UI that follows a reasonable standard. They can then tune/tweak the few things necessary for their environment.

    The issue everyone is howling about is choice in computing. It's still there. If you prefer not to use a distro built for the masses, go get Slackware or one of the other distros that is aimed at the niche, do it yourself, user community. If you don't like RedHat's implementation of KDE or Gnome, but you like the distro otherwise, then install RedHat without KDE and Gnome. Then download them and build them yourself.

    But don't confuse standards with choice. If we don't have standards then Linux will fail ultimately as anything but an edge server and hobbyist desktop. RedHat is trying to create a standard without eliminating choice.

    --
    In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
  156. Is it necessary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think RedHat better stays with either KDE or GNOME as their standard desktop other than "unify" the desktops.
    It is kind of a political reason to "unify" them.

  157. Is it unification at all? by rch2 · · Score: 1

    So now instead of two standard desktops we will have a dozen of unified desktops, each Linux distribution is going to redesign KDE & Gnome? The goal of KDE (or Gnome, I don't use it myself) is about to provide a single familiar desktop across platforms and distributions. If every vendor makes it completely different this doesn't make sense.

  158. change it! by akincisor · · Score: 1

    If you know enough to think that the unified look is a problem, chances are you know enough to change the looks back to the old ones. This is designed for those who don't know anything about linux and are confused by the multitudes of different widget sets.

  159. Openoffice by fymidos · · Score: 1

    Nobody noticed?

    --
    Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
  160. Re:Insane by einhverfr · · Score: 2

    So, basically their reaction to users having a choice is to try and negate that choice by making the options as similar as possible. How very MicroSoft!

    So, as long as we learn the right lessons from Microsoft, what's the big deal? Just so long as we don't learn the wrong ones...

    The whole point of having KDE/GNOME/WindoMaker/Et al is to allow people to pick the one that suits them.

    Right, but most end-users don't want customization. Don't get me wrong, customization is still very important, but it needs, I think, to be done by the OEM, business, or Linux distributor so that their end-users' needs are met.

    If RH don't like this then why don't they just drop the one(s) they don't want people to use?

    I always install both desktops because I use applications from both environments, and that way I have more apps available to me.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  161. you have to love the numbers! by simpl3x · · Score: 1

    can you say, not many reasons to stop building settlements! too bad we blindly support all sorts of "peace" projects.

  162. Fair enough by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    You're right...I should have put the ellipsis. However, there was no ill will on my part -- the quotes are the same from a point of view of what I'm trying to argue. The point is, here is the way I read it:

    "I hope Red Hat successfully forces both GNOME and KDE to become compatible with one another. This would result in the creation of a single desktop."

    There are a couple of problems.

    First is that the user is implying by the use of the word "successfully" that Red Hat is actually trying to "force" KDE/GNOME to do something. I don't see any grounds whatsoever for saying that, and that has a tendancy to piss off people that see RH as becoming too overwhelming in the Linux world.

    Second is the claim that compatibility between GNOME and KDE -- often longed for by developers from both parties -- would result in the "creation of a single desktop". This is bogus, and the only reason for putting this in is to inflame die-hard GNOME or KDE supporters. KDE and GNOME working together doesn't destroy their existence as separate desktops any more than C and Common Lisp being able to interchange data makes them a single language.

    Finally, this whole string of stories has been incredibly aimed at blowing up what Red Hat has done -- choosing a similar *default theme* -- into an attack on Choice, GNOME and/or KDE, WindowMaker, or whatever.

  163. "And" is logical, not temporal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Have your cake and eat it too" is correct since "and" means "logical and" not "and then"/

    So "have your cake and eat it too" and "eat your cake and have it too" mean exactly the same thing.

  164. Gnome is supported by the companies by mrm677 · · Score: 2

    Because developers can create proprietary applications without buying a QT license. GTK is LGPL.

    This really is important. My university is developing applications using GTK even though the students preferred QT. However finding $3000 per developer is not easy in a bureaucratically run institution.

    1. Re:Gnome is supported by the companies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction:

      Gnome is supported by _some_ companies.
      Qt itself probably has much more commercial support (especially on Windows) because there is a company behind it. It's actually a fairly popular toolkit with small shops that make specialized. The company where I'm employed recently started using Qt in MacOSX/Windows applications. We still exclusivly use MFC and ATL/WTL for Windows applications. We've have not made anything for X11 recently, but the last project was in Motif (which also has much more support than you'd think).

      On Linux, I dislike both KDE and GNOME. However, more non-Redhat users and distros seem to prefer KDE. I personally use Ion/pwm/fluxbox. I love the window-tab idea. I don't think I'll try KDE/GNOME again until they get this neat feature.

  165. Redhat is doing the right thing by icanoop · · Score: 1

    They figured out a way to help their customers feel more comfortable with and be more productive with their product. They even reduced the amount of support work they have to do in the process. This is the best thing for Redhat and free software as a whole.

    If some of you think it's a bad thing, then modify the settings and offer it under your own brand name. That's why free software is great. I like what Redhat is doing, but if it does turn out to be bad, then users can use your modified distro instead.

    1. Re:Redhat is doing the right thing by Capt.+Beyond · · Score: 1

      Huh?
      How can removing people's credit in the About dialogs be a good thing?

      --
      -- "Perceptions create reality. By changing your perceptions you change your reality."
    2. Re:Redhat is doing the right thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It does not look professional, this is why they did so. It just doesn't.

    3. Re:Redhat is doing the right thing by icanoop · · Score: 1

      Because that is the beauty of free software. They have the freedom to use it however they want and make it better. Maybe you won't think it's better, but I'm sure my girlfriend who is not a computer nerd will.

      Like I said, if you have a problem with it, take the redhat distro, make it look like the older redhat distros and redistribute it.

      If you don't like the fact that free software is free, try proprietary software.

  166. what bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why should KDE ever want the low quality and badly designed C code of gnome? It would simply pollute a much better design and system. Keep your dumb views to yourself and report news instead.

    And further more, why not do something about the incredibly slow and painful X-windows experience? It's horrible for sure, and dead slow, almost as slow as java.

    And why does Linux have to conquer the desktop? Do you guys own tons of stock in the distro companies or do you just love being the underdogs. Will you switch to something else the minute Linux goes past 20% market share or something? Geez. If you guys want to out-do everyone else, fine, but don't be such horrible fan boys.

    1. Re:what bollocks by fault0 · · Score: 2

      Heh, what does this article have to do with GNOME?

      They modified GNOME almost as much as they modified KDE. They only thing I personally want changed is the ability to go back to a default KDE. Apparently there is a gconf key which you can use to revert some of the changes they made to GNOME. There should be an equivlent way of doing it in KDE.

  167. Convergence is a dead end by nagora · · Score: 3, Insightful
    This sort of thing leads (and is intended to lead) to convergence: all Linux apps/desktops/installs look and act the same. This is the logical end point of the "Aunt Tilly" movement because Aunt Tilly won't understand the concept of "distros". The ordinary user all you "standard desktop" fans keep going on about will come to equate Linux with the system they learnt on (prob RH). Then, in the quest to protect them from ever having to think again, you'll have to make all Linux desktops look and feel like the one most people learn on (ie RH).

    Eventually, as with Windows and MacOS today, overhauling the system will become next to impossible (Apple pulled it off but it was a last gasp effort, like the Mac itself, before the company flatlined). If new ideas in desktop design come along they will be ignored not because they are not good but because they are different.

    That is not a future I'm interested in for Linux and if the cost of avoiding that was that Linux never made it to the big-time on the desktop then that would be a sacrifice I'd be happy to make.

    But, it doesn't even have to mean that. All this crap about KDE/GNOME is missing the truth:

    THE DESKTOP DOES NOT MATTER

    As many people here have said, the ordinary user just wants to get work done. Think about what that means (better yet, go and look at real users working in their offices). The normal user does not use the desktop. They use the Start menu but even that is because they have to. If they really had what they need it would be a screen with maybe six big buttons on it marked "Word Processor","Spread Sheet", "Email", "Web","Print Queue", and one custom button for whatever other app they use in their work (Quick Books, Photoshop, Quark, whatever).

    These buttons would be for restarting the given app if it crashes; in normal use a window for each app would be started up on boot.

    Give them a handy way to switch between them and that's all 90% of Windows users would ever want or need.

    I know this because I've done it. WindowMaker can set this up very easily and it takes about 3 minutes to turn a Windows User into a Linux User like this, for the simple reason that the desktop is not what people use all day, every day. If you have the apps (and OpenOffice has gone a long way on this) they don't give a toss what the desktop is doing.

    KDE and GNOME are not things normal users need! Power users like systems like KDE/Gnome because they are useful for handling large numbers of apps and file locations. Normal office users don't have lots of apps and keep all their files in "My Documents".

    The only thing convergence does is ossify the system and make life harder for power users who want to be able pick and choose their environments to suit their, minority, needs.

    So: package KDE, Gnome, WindowMaker, ICEbox, and as many other desktops with your distro that you can fit onto the CD, make them all options during install, and make the default choice one the simplest with a handfull of icons already set up to start the "usual" apps and leave Linux to celebrate diversity while Windows fades away as new ideas and innovations pass it by because they are "too radical" for users.

    TWW

    --
    "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  168. A real gift to Linux would be ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... a GUI that wasn't based on X.

  169. I've seen the screenshots.. by 1stflight · · Score: 1

    And I can see why the KDE, Gnome teams would be pissed.. though it's a great idea for business, it's a terrible one for the teams that worked so hard to create their products.
    These products are two different apps, from two different mindsets. In the least RedHat should offer people who install their new desktop to choice to have a "Unified" or "Standard" Option... that would be fair.

  170. Holy Crap it looks like XP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Redhat stole XP!

  171. Most dafanataly (or was it definitely?) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..or defiantly?

  172. Yes, I was Joe Windows once... by dnoyeb · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I still get tempted to use KDE because so many people said KDE was better and I consider myself computer savvy so I thought I should use KDE.

    But I couldn't find the RedHat RPM tools on KDE. I didnt see RedHat network. I used KDE but had to switchdesk to GNome to do any administration.

    Next, can we get rid of the 100 word processors and text editors?? Its confusing as hell to have so many damn tools that do the same thing. Is this an OS or a program war???

    1. Re:Yes, I was Joe Windows once... by Johann · · Score: 1

      Let me recommend that you try Mandrake. One reason it has become popular is that they choose to ship KDE back when RHAT would not. So, if you want to run KDE and administration, Mandrake provides you with those tools.

      --
      "You're gonna need a bigger boat." - Chief Brody
    2. Re:Yes, I was Joe Windows once... by sp0rk173 · · Score: 1

      Of course, there's always the option of learning all of the backending that the RedHat frontend does. From my experience in the *nix world, everything done GUI-ily can be done..not...gui-ly... But I've never used Red Hat. So, excuse me for being a slacker.

    3. Re:Yes, I was Joe Windows once... by Metrol · · Score: 2

      From my experience in the *nix world, everything done GUI-ily can be done..not...gui-ly

      That's what I was thinking, coming from FreeBSD, until I got a hard look at the back end of Suse's config files. This is not a slam on Suse!! They have darn good reasons for some of the complexity that goes into their configs as it relates to the quite popular Yast2 app. The thing is, that complexity becomes really clever to figure out when just looking at the end result of the fancier tools. Had similar problems with Mandrake as well. Not really experienced enough with RedHat to say.

      Thing is, where on a non-gui administered system you may have one file that configures a specific function, the gui based apps tend to utilize several files that are intertwined. I'm certain there are pros and cons to this approach that I'm not aware of, but it does make console admin'ing a bit more challenging. At least for me anyway.

      --
      The line must be drawn here. This far. No further.
    4. Re:Yes, I was Joe Windows once... by Badanov · · Score: 1

      I found KDE ponderous to use along with its applications (koquerer as an example). I have always preferred Gnome. When redhat 7.3 came out, I was very impressed by the selection of GUI applications, mainly for ICQ and ABIWord. What I didnt like was the removal of Gnome Midnight commander. That application was so useful for a lot of things that Nautilus isn't. I installed GMC but its implementation is kinda ugly.

      --
      Dawn of the Dead
    5. Re:Yes, I was Joe Windows once... by mabinogi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Here's an experiment....

      go to tucows. www.tucows.com and search for HTML editors for Windows.

      Or ftp clients

      Or pretty much anything...

      Now ask the authors of these programs if we can get rid of the 100 text editors, ftp clients, irc clients, etc....

      It's not a war of any sort, it's called choice, and it exists even in the windows world.

      The difference is that since Linux and Unix Free and Open Source software allow redistribution, that Linux distributions are allowed to bundle anything they consider worthy with their distribution, and this usualy means at least a couple of versions each utility, so as to please the greatest number of people.

      --
      Advanced users are users too!
  173. We also believe that users care most about functio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We also believe that users care most about functionality and integration rather than the underlying technology.

    Doesn't that say it all?

  174. What if it doesn't compile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A single desktop is all well and good, but what if it fails to compile on one's system (due to a bug in it or something it depends on)? One will have to rely on a (comparatively) primitive (albeit faster and "purer") UI (that is, WindowMaker or similar or the console). At least with KDE *and* Gnome, if one doesn't work (or is wholly unacceptable) it is always possible to try the other.

  175. Gtk2 Theme by ghazban · · Score: 2

    Where can I find this gtk2 theme so I can try it out. I'm sure redhat are open enough for it to be downloaded, however I can't figure out which rpm it is in without downloading them all... (I also wouldn't mind some of 'them nifty icons').

    Thanks

  176. Re:Insane by JudgeFurious · · Score: 1

    Yes, he is that dumb. It's as simple as that.

    I didn't see anywhere where they are going to release a distro that you can't modify to your hearts content. Just one where a newcomer to Linux gets something that won't cause vapor lock on first sight.

    It's the single largest liability Linux has in the quest for a larger place in the computing world. The existing user base. Half of them (or more) don't want it there and the rest want it there but expect everyone else to "get up to speed" like they are.

    --
    Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
  177. Third desktop by Jungle+guy · · Score: 1

    I don't see this effort of Red Hat is not going to create a 'unified desktop'. It is going to create a 3rd desktop enviroment for Linux - besides KDE and Gnome, we will also have "Red Hat".

    1. Re:Third desktop by Capt.+Beyond · · Score: 1

      I agree. Red Hat can call it GnoDE, or Knome

      --
      -- "Perceptions create reality. By changing your perceptions you change your reality."
  178. Not just themes... code changes: that's serious. by HishamMuhammad · · Score: 1

    >RedHat is not removing any options. They are
    >more or less just creating similar themes for
    >both KDE and GNOME.

    That is certainly not the case. Mandrake has been shipping desktop environments with their own themes for quite a while; Crystal is Conectiva's own icon set for KDE. If that was all, there would be no major fuss.

    The thing is that Red Hat is doing code changes to the environments, to further reduce their recognizability. I don't know what motivation other than this would drive their decision to remove the "About KDE" box from KDE apps.

    That is a serious thing, because it might even be illegal, since it effectively removes the copyright notice from the program.

  179. Screw KDE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I myself did try "Null" and i like it ...ALLOT! They really did a fabulous job with the fonts. first time you boot up you'll noticed your in ANTI-ALIASING heaven! I was too lazy and I installed the default so it didnt install KDE on my system however i really wish they would get rid of KDE all together. Its just a useless waste of resources.

  180. KDE, Gnome, and the rest are ALL nasty by visionsofmcskill · · Score: 1

    any human being who honestly prefers the interface designs of most linux systems is probably seriously addled Consistency consistency consistency... I personaly am a Mandrake Man myself... and they produce a fairly streamlined package, but even with that nicely made desktop there are at least 4 GUI interfaces to get or control or modify information about my system..... I made my linux desktop look exactly like my Mac OS 9 once.... i installed mandrake on another machine, and am still trying to figure out how the hell i got it too look the way i like on the first machine. THIS IS A PROBLEM PEOPLE. I understand and support the need and ability to create and design your computer to be exactly as you want it to be.... except when consistency is utterly demolished... There are so many competing widget systems, and theme managers, and desktop environments, and windowing elements, that its hard to even say which one is dominant at the moment... I swear i changed to elements, then undid those two elements, and my system still looked completely different. As such i support red hats attempt to get some kind of default, some kind of starting page for the UI. This is the reason MAC OS X is winning so many converts... they offer an environment that can run unix/linux/windows (with VPC or YDL or Mandrake) but all under ONE consistent UI...

    --
    --Idiots, Every single one of YOU, A flaming mass of conglomerated morons, hey wait a second, isnt that how RAID works?
  181. Re:Not just themes... code changes: that's serious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That is a serious thing, because it might even be illegal, since it effectively removes the copyright notice from the program."

    WTF, did I miss something? The "program" is still open-source, no?

  182. A single desktop? by E1v!$ · · Score: 1

    "I hope that RedHat successfully forces both Gnome and KDE to become compatible with one another which would result in the creation of a single desktop. This would be the greatest gift to the Linux world."

    Sounds alot like Microsoft. One of the reasons I LIKE Linux is my free range of choices.

    What the hell has happened to this site?

  183. Windows User Woes by DougJohnson · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that most of the people complaining that Redhat is stealing choices from people are people who know very well how to exercise those choices regardless. They're also probably coincident with people who can't understand why Linux isn't the Desktop Of Choice for any company, let alone users.

    Unfortunately I'm one of those users. I've installed Linux a few times, and have been trying new distrobutions faithfully every few months for the last 5 years, and I have yet to have one meet my needs from the installation.

    What are these needs? Well, they're quite simple. I'd like for my XWindows to work right away, this is actually a new requirement, I have been quite happy to type xstart for a large portion of the time, unfortunately I have only had it work once or twice, usually it's a problem with the hostname. I'd like the functionality provided for me in the applications I need (interestingly this seems to be where Linux actually DOES make the grade). And somewhat importantly... I'd like for my sound to work. I'm aware that I probably "just didn't buy" the right sound card, but it came with my Motherboard (Via chipset). Alsa lists it in its supported chipset (I think it's an AC87) but is apparently completely impossible to get working (insert modules? compile modules? What the heck, why isn't there a .rpm or .deb or something?)
    AND....
    Why do my applications look like they're from 3 different beasts? There are more similarities between Apple and M$ than in a typical qt/X/gtk setup... great, so I have many choices but I can't use any of them because I've got work I have to do.
    So rather than giving me some cryptic documentation written by some software engineer that KNOWs the system, and expects you to KNOW the system to, Redhat has unified the choices, made it so that I can follow one thread of (hopefully) well written documentation, and provided the functionality that I want (In this case)

    Bravo Redhat! Thank you for making my life easier. Maybe in another few releases I can actually start recommending Redhat to my friends.

    And yes, I know at least a little bit about computers, I've written device drivers, Operating Systems, Network stacks, database procedures and more. Generally these are easier to figure out than simply trying to get ANY LINUX distribution working, as they come with, or have rather straightforward requirements and/or API's, leaving the rest up to me.

  184. i'm no poet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This whole spat about Red Hat
    removing the customers choice
    by limiting gnome and kde
    hoovering the programmers choice
    by limiting gnome and kde

    proposes what has always been
    giving the customer real choice
    by choosing simplicity or complexity

    proposes what has never been
    giving the customer more choice
    by choosing something else or canned goods

    choose linux
    choose any distribution you want

    the customer chooses not the developer
    any customer can be a developer

    that is STARnix

  185. Unifying Desktops?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How would it be unifing Linux Desktops? Have we forgot about the other desktops other than Gnome and KDE? One of the post was right, this is target to get new windows users. Not the people already into Linux.

  186. Re:Not just themes... code changes: that's serious by HishamMuhammad · · Score: 1

    That's why I said "might". But the Holy GPL, on Item 1, first paragraph says that thou shalt "keep intact all the notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty;"

    "About KDE" is where the license is displayed, so, yes, it may an issue.

  187. DUH. Nevermind. _ _ by Kourino · · Score: 1

    Apparently two minutes isn't long enough sometimes ... I need to go eat something >.>

    But yeah, I can see how that would be of concern ... and a potential nightmare for support. Then again, vendors have been doing this with the kernel forever, and we can find out exactly what the differences are by looking at the source. RH could take responsibility by having users direct bugs to them, and then send the official-version KDE bugs to the K team. Nevermind that politically, this would probably be a nightmare for RH. ^^;

    So we have here another gcc-2.96. Interesting. Well ... if the changes are really that good, they'll make it into the trees upstream. (Well, maybe not the fontconfig stuff, is that RH-specific?) Anyway, I still think RH is basically within their rights here, but then it should be their responsibility to maintain their version of it, and to try to make it clear that RH should be contacted first for support. Doing this while getting all the credits right could be interesting ... but that's Red Hat's problem.

  188. Perhaps by Kourino · · Score: 1

    It is certainly arguable that the best way to describe gaim in one sentence is as an "AIM clone".

    Well, one of the reasons I like gaim so much is because it works with several IM services and it has features AIM doesn't. (Including the little things, like automatic logging.) If we were to nitpick, maybe "Trillian forerunner" would be more accurate -_^

    But ... I do see your point, and I hadn't looked at it that way. A little addendum saying " ... that also works with Yahoo ... " would be nice, but maybe we just can't see that in the screencap...

  189. I really don't understand... by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    ... what you're whining about. The people who CARE that there are separate desktops and window managers available for Linux will continue to use them.

    Look at StarDock and the other shell replacements for Windows. Those users advanced enough to want more find out about the other options available, and use them.

    --

    +++ATH0
  190. What reduction in choice? by Chas · · Score: 2

    All they did was create a uniform theme for KDE and Gnome.

    So the default install looks, more or less, identical, for both desktops.

    How does this remove your ability to change the theme?

    (Hint: No)

    How does this remove your ability to go in and turn features back on?

    (Hint: No)

    All it means is that, immediately after install, everything has a uniform look.

    B
    O
    O
    H
    O
    O
    !

    Now get over it already.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  191. I can't help myself... by sp0rk173 · · Score: 1

    Corporations push together Democrats and Republicans through fundraising. The status quo dictates not to vote for a third party because you're just "throwing your vote away." Thus, those who are easily swayed by said status quo, and feel that both parties suck do not vote for a third party, while those who don't give a shit vote for the best candidate for them and ignore party lines and hope people see the hipocracy and stop throwing their vote away on the dem's and 'pubs.

    Corporations (red hat, which isn't a corrupt corporation, but is a corp nonetheless) force the two major desktops together hidden under the shroud of "useability." The line between the two is smeared. New users are blind to the true nature of choice in the *nix community, and those that follow Gnome/RedHat/KDE blindly either applaud, or yell and scream. The rest of us use blackbox/fluxbox/aewm/pan9wm/etc, get on with our work, and run both GTK&QT apps when needed in our respective, customized, unique environments without a hitch....

    Ok it started out as a good analogy and ended in pieces, but perhaps you catch my drift nonetheless. Everythings a conspiracy.

    BTW, how many Red Hat devlopers also develop for gnome, and how many also develop for KDE?....I don't know for sure...but it's an interesting question...

    ....everythings a friggin conspiracy...

    *goes back to processing watershed records on FreeBSD w/ openoffice running in fluxbox*

  192. a beautiful unified look? by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 2

    While I do like people having an option to more easily get a unified look throughout the programs, beautiful is the last thing I'd call the theme. In fact I used screenshots of it as an example to an artist I know, to make sure she knew that just because kerimik looks nice, artistic sensibility and Linux developers have been slow to mesh.

    And now the disclaimer. Yes, in any kind of art there's going to be different interpretations. Most seem to like this look, I happen to be one who strongly dosn't.

    --
    Everything will be taken away from you.
  193. I don't get it. by stu42j · · Score: 1

    If you are going to make both desktops look and act the same, then what's the point of having two desktops? Why couldn't RedHat just say Gnome is the default, if you want to run something else, that's unsupported.

  194. Linux desktop? Huh? Wah? by mrobinso · · Score: 0

    Redhat desktop?
    What the hell is that?

    Next thing you know someone will try and pass windows off as a server or some fool thing.

    Dang.

    --
    -- Karma whore? You betcha. --
  195. Stop Complaining About Choice! by tempfile · · Score: 1
    > There's no good reason to require you to have windows looking at acting in four different ways on the same desktop!

    Right. But it isn't required. *YOU* choose to have differently looking applications on your desktop by installing applications that use different toolkits. You can always stick to one toolkit. Then you lose choice. But it's still your choice whether you do it or not, and that's the good thing about Open Source. It's NOT a problem.

    It's all about choice! If you want to have your apps look the same across Gtk and KDE, use RedHat's patches. Choice again.

    There's no problem of interoperability anymore. We finally have standards (and compliance) for the clipboard, window management and drag'n'drop. We will have stable component APIs for a long time. I'm sure that wrapper components will be developed so you can use Bonobo from KDE and KParts from Gnome applications. This gives you even more choice. Stop complaining about it!

    By the way, a window manager that makes KDE and Gnome look the same is technically not feasible. RedHat just developed common themes, and patches that make the look even more similar.

  196. Moderate parent up! by ChrisWong · · Score: 2

    I wish somebody would moderate your post up. This is solid information that nobody else here on /. seems to know. Perhaps the KDE project would consider offering a set of RPMs for Red Hat, particularly for upcoming versions of KDE that users would like to upgrade to anyway. The KDE project should not have to live with stability problems introduced by Red Hat.

  197. You nerds are not the target market for this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Honestly now. "I prefer having a choice." Well whoop-de doo. Install Suse or Slackware. Unification of the desktop will make "RedHat for Dummies" more readable. Redhat for Dummies will sell more Linux. More sales = more developers.

    SO STOP WHINING.

  198. Woo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dislike Gnome, and I despise KDE.

    I like my desktop smooth, sleek and sexy. And that's why I probably won't even use Null, because that, too, is sure to be bloated.

    However, I applaud RedHat's efforts here. You know something? The 'average desktop user' doesn't need 500 freaking e-mail clients. They don't need two dozen text editors. They don't even need four different web browsers.

    Gnome and KDE people always whine about how they're the chosen of Linus; that paradise is upon their right and damnation shall fall on all whom oppose them. Forsooth! Either one is the 'savior' (rofl) of Linux on the desktop!

    Right.

    That's why RedHat has to go to the trouble of unifying a desktop of their own, and choosing software not based on what silly letter is prefixed to the name, but by what software is *better*.

  199. Is the Red Hat artwork covered by the GPL? by Animats · · Score: 2
    Or is it proprietary?

    It's a big issue, because the Red Hat "look" is likely to become standard if it's any good at all.

    As a business move, a unified look makes a lot of sense. It should have happened years ago. Maybe if VA Linux had done it, they'd still be a viable company.

  200. The issue is APIs, not looks by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 2
    Well, having said that, looks are indeed an issue, but clearly something is being done about that (thanks RedHat!). The real problem however is that both desktops provide their own APIs to do essentially the same thing. That's OK.... when those APIs are compatible, though it does use up more memory than strictly necessary.

    But all too often these APIs aren't compatible. Theming APIs are one good example as they are related to the problem that people either bitch about or get used to (depending on how long they use Linux for ;) Both GTK and Qt have different ways of writing pluggable theming engines. What RedHat have done is create several themes that look the same. OK. Good start. What we really need to do though is have a standard for plugin theming engines, so I can use the GTK ThinIce theme in KDE and vice-versa. Then if I run a program in KDE, it adopts the theme I chose for KDE, and if I run it in GNOME, it adopts the theme I chose for gnome.

    That's only one simple example. Sound servers are another pet hate. When I run Konqueror inside of GNOME2, it won't play sounds. Why? Because Konqueror uses aRts, and GNOME uses eSound. In about 6 months gnome is switching to GStreamer, and KDE is looking interested too, which will hopefully provide a unified API for Linux multimedia. The work Havoc Pennington is doing at freedesktop.org is great too.

    We're getting there, but it's a lot of effort. Which brings me on to my final point. There's a reason there are so few unified APIs - it's very, very hard to create code that is easily used by anybody. You often have to manually create bindings to umpteen different languages, and even different "feels" to make all the different programmers happy. Then you have to campaign for adoption. It's a lot of work.

    What's needed is a decent object model. Something as easy as KParts, as powerful as CORBA and as ubiqitous as COM. Something that lets me write an object in any language (including C), and then "export" it to the OS, so that it can be used in any other app. This would not only increase code sharing (so reducing memory usage), but would also lay the groundwork for many more technologies to be standardised. I wish I had time to do this, but it's far from easy.

  201. Looks like I'll be switching. by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

    Well, it looks like I'll be switching away from Redhat pretty soon. I've been running Redhat 7.x and KDE on my desktop for about a year now and think it's great. KDE is a very well intergrated solution. Konqueror, Kmail, etc all interoperate with each other in a sensible, predictible fashion. I have Mozilla installed and I like it, but Konqueror is much more integrated. I like hiting ALT-F2 and typing gg:. Or typing a directory, or a website, or a program, or a samba/windows server, or any or the other protocols that KDE will seamlessly pass on the correct app. I don't want to be sent to a million non-KDE application, fill up all my RAM and have the names of the programs I'm actually running hidden from me.
    I want Mozilla's menu item to say Mozilla, not "Web Browser". Jeezus, if I run Linux I may just care about my operating systems internals. Right now I have about six web browsers installed on my system. I need to know which one I'm getting.
    What Redhat should work on is adding menu items to the GNOME and KDE menus for the applications you actually have installed. Right now most of them get left out. I don't even have a menu item for gimp!

    --
    Life is too short to proofread.
  202. Re:Sounds like they're trying to give KDE a fair s by denisb · · Score: 1

    There are other important issues RedHat need to improve in their KDE support :

    - Updates to packages
    As it is now, everyone installs unofficial KDE packages, due to the complete ignorance of RedHat of new versions. And no I know how they operate, only releasing backported fixes of their version, for example KDE 3.0.0. Problem is they rarely if ever release updated KDE packages !! (I have been running RH7.3 for a while now, and do know what I am talking about.) SuSE on the other hand release new KDE packages all the time, and backport the most important fixes to their released version / OR issue a completely new one when appropriate (KDE 3.0.2 for example).

    - Packaging of more KDE applications.
    Again SuSE impressed me a lot when I installed their distro. An amazing selection of good KDE applications. RedHat consistently provided me with GTK / Gnome apps, but rarely that many KDE apps.

    How are the chances a patched (they did change the sources of a good number of parts of both KDE and Gnome Afaik) packageset of both desktops is going to improve the above mentioned points ?

    Would be nice if Bero commented on this (or anyone else with RH), as I still doubt RHs commitment to anything else than Gnome / GTK..

    --
    life+universe+everything=42
  203. cease and desist, Red Hat! by ccnull · · Score: 1
    You are violating my intellectual property with your so-called "code name"!

    - Christopher Null

    chrisnull.com - read my book, Half Mast - filmcritic.com - New Architect

    1. Re:cease and desist, Red Hat! by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 2

      Maybe you could sue them and all UNIXen for having a /dev/null. If someone can sue all domain owners for using the generic term "easy" maybe you have a shot.

    2. Re:cease and desist, Red Hat! by ccnull · · Score: 1
      Can you recommend a good lawyer?

      chrisnull.com - read my book, Half Mast - filmcritic.com - New Architect

  204. I just don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anybody even tried running Gnome apps on KDE or vice versa well guess what.. it works. Right now on my test box I'm running Red Hat 7.2 with KDE. I'm able to install rpms using GnoRPM. GnoRPM that was created for Gnome wasn't it? Maybe what Linux needs and I use the word Linux because of all the different flavors (FreeBSD, Red Hat, SuSe, Mandrake, Debian, ect.) is not two desktop environments that integrate together but applications that do. For a new user and an existing user having an application that is for Gnome working on KDE is confusing. Why not just redesign the productivity software to run on both? Wait, that's why there's StarOffice.
    But that's just my 2 cents.

    Peace all.

  205. Re:Sounds like they're trying to give KDE a fair s by infiniti99 · · Score: 2

    It's fairly clear the Red Hat's developers are more adept with Gtk+/Gnome than Qt/KDE, and there's nothing wrong with that - if they were better at Qt, we'd still be having this discussion.

    Actually, I wonder... Redhat is the only distribution I can name that has GNOME as a default desktop. Had Redhat chosen KDE as their default, then maybe they would not have even bothered with trying to theme with GNOME. So, no, I think if they were better with Qt then we wouldn't be having this discussion.

    The irony here is that Redhat, being the most popular Linux distribution, could probably end the desktop war by simply switching to KDE as a default.

    Anyway, just thinking out loud. I have nothing against GNOME.

  206. I think... by dpete4552 · · Score: 1

    Windows, and Linux should look, act, and feel the exact same. Choice is so overrated anyways. I mean come on. Creating two sets of configuration tools, two operating systems, and two user interfaces isn't feasible or desirable. I believe that all of operating systems should look and behave consistently. I mean, sharing a similar setup between the two operating systems would also significantly reduces everyone's documentation work.

    They are really doing something wrong if a user likes the way a preference is set in one operating system better than it is set in the other. If they were exectly the same, than problem solved! If they have an opinion on what is the better choice is for a particular setting, it would be irresponsible for us not to configure both operating systems that way. If we don't have an opinion, than the problem goes away! It still doesn't make sense to configure one operating system one way, the other the other way.

    Who came up with this "choice" BS anyways? In fact, I think all cars should look and feel the same, all houses should look at feel the same, all clothes should look at feel the same, etc... What is it with these wacko supporters of "choice" anyways? Why in the world would anyone want to be able to choose something different, it's obvious that one company should make the choice for us and make all products of that type the same as to what they choose. Sheesh.

    --
    http://www.archive.org/details/ThePowerOfNightmares
  207. Enlightenment by rowanxmas · · Score: 1

    I'm not scared until they come out with a unified theme for Enlightenment. After all, what other wm would one use?

  208. a KDE and a GNOME theme called joint-strike by barryvoeten · · Score: 1

    Could it be possible to create a theme for each
    desktop with the settings for a joint-strike theme?

    Guess the whole redhat effort contains more than this, but it might be part of it. Maybe upstream developers will include it?

  209. If you can handle the custimization (sic)... by NaCh0 · · Score: 1

    Why don't you just install normally and customize from there? You already said 1) you can handle it and 2) you intend on customizing. All Red Hat is adding is a new default theme and shared Xft2 code.

    To sum it up, quit being a whiner.

  210. pathetic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I feel that most of you jus want an excuse to argue and flame
    They didn't do anything special and they should have standardized the 'default' theme a long time ago.
    it's quite annoying to flip thrugh kde and gnome apps and them be rendered diffrently.
    there should be a project that should be responsible just for making standard themes that are the same in gnome and kde.

    there really should be more collabration in linux, esp in in the wm development world.
    competion doesn't breed inovation, it's the need for something.
    so don't think that by competing against each other we are going to get some awesome feature

    peace.

  211. OT: Steering with a Joystick?(Was:Insane) by Wire+Head · · Score: 1

    NOTE: Get your mind out of the gutter.

    I've tried using a joystick in numberous driving games. It doesn't work well, you usually crash a lot. I think I'll pass on a joystick controlled car. I hope the owners of them have good insurance, and that they never try to park near me at the store.

    --


    WireHead

    The previous message was created with 100% recycled words.
  212. Story really is bogus by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    These screenshots of null don't lack developers' names.

    The problem is one of themes, not modified about boxes.

    I don't know who started the rumor about altering about boxes -- happened sometime in the last submission about this.

    The problem is that there's been a lot of bullshit going around about this, and it's been trumped up a lot, and I hate to say it, but I honestly think that some of the people at companies that compete with RH might be stooping to somewhat dirty tactics.

    1. Re:Story really is bogus by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      And had I read my own link, I'd have found out.

      The authors names are still intact, but KDE programs only have an "about this program" menu entry, as GNOME programs do, not an "about this program" entry *and* an "about KDE" entry.

  213. KDE coders' concerns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I appreciate and understand the concerns that KDE developers have about this, but it's inevitable. You don't see Linus complaining when RH/SuSE/FooLinux add a myriad of patches to their shipped kernel.

  214. Re:Insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    We need to get more people using Linux.

    Why?

  215. Not addressing the real problem, wasting resources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This seems like a waste of time to me. Applications these days all are starting to look different, consider Mozilla and RealPlayer which both have their own widget sets and look and feel. Making KDE and GNOME look the same just forks the desktops without adding any real value, and creates a maintenance nightmare for Redhad. Really, one desktop is going to have to be trashed. Why? Well, for one simple KDE or GNOME app, a huge number of support libraries and processes need to be mapped into memory. A simple 500K app may be linked to 10MB of support libraries. Having both KDE's and GNOME's libs mapped into memory increases the working set for for the processor, helps to defeat the processor cache, and just bloats out the system. The look and feel of KDE and GNOME are different, but not significantly different, not enough to confuse users. This reeks of a decision made by some Program Manager who thinks he/she will revolutionize the Linux desktop by making it all look the same. If Redhat wants to do somthing besides waste their programming resources in trying to put polish on a semi-anarchistic system, they should instead:

    1) Provide a single desktop enviornment which uses minimal amounts of memory.

    2) Do somthing about Mozilla having a entire widget set for only one application. Since when did a web browser need to impliment code for its own buttons, dialog boxes, tabs. Why do programmers always re-write the same shit?

    3) Get the security model right so desktop users can easily access gadget hardware without compromizing multi-user security. USB MP3 players, cameras, etc... Redhad would get a lot of thanks for writing some sort of daemon with a decent API for accessing these things which was associated with the console, and provided access to these devices without having to become root and chmod the device files in /dev for these. How many times have you just used chmod 666 on a device to access some device, knowing that you just opened a security hole in your system?

    4) (more on #3, really) Gadget access is becomming more important for the desktop. These need to work under Linux, and a company like Redhad would have a lot easier time working with manufactures to write drivers for them than the adverage independent hacker.

    Just because half a gig of memory is cheap doesn't mean you should feel free to use it all. Switching between large chunks of code slows a computer down no matter how much memory you have.

    End Rant, excuse my bad grammar, I'm very drunk. --- Peace...

  216. Its about sane defaults by Nailer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I, for one, like the different options we have in terms of desktop environments. I don't want either KDE or GNOME to go away.

    People are continually misunderstanding this point. You can change the default look and feel and behaviour if you want t, but Red Hat have made the two desktops consistent. Which is a good thing, as users choose their desktop apps based on usefullness, rather than toolkit.

  217. Evolution, not just an idea by Cokelee · · Score: 1

    The world would be a better place if the both projects united. A streamlined UI is a key part of refining and polishing an intuitive interface.
    A truly ideal enviroment exists. It is the programmers objective to FIND it, not create it. If KDE and GNOME were one (dubbed "KNOME" or something) the fittest enviroment would be found quicker.

    Most will never agree, but it's an interesting read.

  218. So we're supposed to hate Redhat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So we're supposed to hate Redhat for modifying open source software? I don't get it.

    Not that I support the poster's notion that everyone having the same icons is a pancea and a freeze on GUI innovation is a good idea.

  219. dot.kde.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It looks like the discussion here on slashdot has been far more intelligent than what they've had on dot.kde.org recently - every time redhat is mentioned there these days virtually all the replies ignore the topic and go on about how bad redhat is (and often that it should be boycotted). /me pinches himself

  220. Four different file-open dialogs in Red Hat 7.2! by paj1234 · · Score: 1

    Looking around in my Red Hat 7.2 box I find four different file-open dialogs. See here:

    http://www.pjls16812.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/rh.gif

    I guess if I looked harder I could find more... Now, I am a very small OEM and repair shop. I pre-install Red Hat 7.2 on my customers' PCs sometimes. It sure is hard trying to explain why the apps look and behave so differently! I'm happy that Red Hat is actually trying to do something positive about it...

  221. The footsteps to become a windoze... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is likely a path with broken stones to hold your
    footsteps in the windoze direction...

  222. And in related news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    vi and emacs people will go hand in hand and go skipping down the street together...

  223. Re:Grumbling is pointless - we should applaud Redh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    although this is -1 reddundant, I just wanted to say, I agree with you 100%...

    What sucks is when you try to hunt down those other options and features, being a power user, and can't.

    Go Linux!

  224. I know how by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know how to make KDE compatible with Gnome. Kill richard stallman and all his contrarian followers who came up with the cockamamy idea of Gnome in the first place!

  225. Legal does not mean SMART. by Moritz+Moeller+-+Her · · Score: 2

    Listen, troll.

    Just because a fork of KDE is legal, it does not mean it is smart to do a fork. Corel did this for their linux version and many changes were just lost , because noone ever ported them to KDE-2.

    Also many of the changes to KDE software are done by Gnome developers working for Redhat. These people call KDE "crapland" in public bug reports.

    At the moment the Redhat KDE changes the name of the KDE services, so that any program compiled for Redhat's KDE might not work with SuSE's KDE, Mandrake's KDE, Debian's KDE or any generic KDE.
    Noone needs this kind of crap.

    --
    Moritz
    1. Re:Legal does not mean SMART. by (void*) · · Score: 2

      Whoa, stand back and think. If RedHat wants to fork, then please let them support the fork. Imagine how simple it is for the KDE developers. Just issue a public notice, saying that RedHat KDE is not KDE, and cannnot be total supported. Then anytime anyone complains, point them to the notice. Problem solved.

  226. RedHat's KDE/GNOME stance by bwanagary · · Score: 1

    Nice article. But we miss a crucial point. The general acceptance of the LINUX OS depends more on the available applications and the ease of use than any other factor. The challenge presented by KDE and GNOME has clearly driven the WindozeXP evolution - you can see the similarities where microsoft has "borrowed" from LINUX. It is only the COMPETITION between these two desktops that has made them both as good as they are. I have been a LINUX user and developer for nine years now and know many of the original players. Red Hat and other LINUX distributions have made a very nice living from the efforts of the Open Source community and elimination of the competition between the Desktops in order to reduce your cost of production of a given distribution is a false economy.
    It will result in less competition, slower advancement of the Desktop for LINUX and ultimately kill the goose that lays the golden egg. Remember that most of the Desktop developers do so from pride and not for money, or to reduce their cost to produce any given release. The generalization will dampen their spirits and in the long run kill their motivation to improve at a rapid pace which will in turn provide RedHat and others with an inferior product.

    I understand your reasoning, which is indeed on track in the short term, but its a short term fix for a long term slip into obsolesence.

    My 2c worth,

  227. What about GNOME/KDE on other platforms? by fwr · · Score: 2

    Another thing to think about is that some people like KDE to look the same on their Linux box as on their Solaris box or other platform. Same goes for GNOME. If RedHat wants to create a third unique desktop using aspects of both GNOME and KDE and meshing them together then that's great, but don't F-up the look and feel of the original desktops...

  228. Progress is a great thing... by internet-redstar · · Score: 1
    Great to see this happening; we'll have to see what comes out of this, and I'm sure other distros like Mandrake will follow with even smoother integration and unified look and feel across their distro (but potentially completely different).

    Finally something worthy of the combination of the words 'united' and 'linux'? As long as there's no per-seat-licensing ;)

  229. Hooray! But include program names in the menus! by dwheeler · · Score: 2

    Actually, I think this is a GOOD thing, as long as other distributions can also pick up the defaults. Currently working with some programs is jarring - and thus painful to users. However, I think just having a generic function description in the menus is a mistake. It's important to modify the menus so that they show not just the function ("Web Browser"), but also the name of the program ("Mozilla"). Yes, it's longer, but it is MORE confusing to users when the programs change or when they update to a different program. When I see "Mozilla Web Browser" and "Galeon Web Browser", I can understand both (a) they do the same basic thing, but (b) will do it somewhat differently. You could swap the order if necessary "Web Browser (Mozilla)" if you'd prefer, as long as it was done consistently throughout the system. This is already a requirement in the GNOME User Interface Guidelines; you can see the whole document at: http://developer.gnome.org/projects/gup/hig/1.0/ And this specific guidance at: http://developer.gnome.org/projects/gup/hig/1.0/de sktop-integration.html#menu-item-names

    --
    - David A. Wheeler (see my Secure Programming HOWTO)
  230. And now!!! Ogg Vorbis name!!! by Nicolay77 · · Score: 0


    Prior to the release of the latest RedHat desktop, they have forked the Ogg Vorbis project to make it more attractive for desktop use.

    Their results were impressive, now people know that it represents music, instead of recipes for cooking eggs. Usability was increased in 80%.

    What's more impressive is that their only change was in the project name, all the rest is the same.

    The new and glorified name is...

    (Hey if I had though a good name I had already done that fork!!!)

    --
    We are Turing O-Machines. The Oracle is out there.
  231. Re:Unified Desktop vermillion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Here is a script I wrote to deal with RedHat's fucking stupid up2date servers. ;p . Now I know its probably "bad bash," and I suck and all that, blah blah blah. But garbage code like this is less unprofessional than RedHat extorting cash from its faithful users by holding people's insecure systems in the balance. "Oh, yes, you can have your security updates if you PAY FOR SERVICE. Have a bad day. FREEBSD or Die.
    [root@redhatholdsyouhostagewithupdatesformoney /root]# cat harass.update.sh
    #!/bin/bash
    var0=0
    while [ "$var0" -lt 5100 ]
    do
    echo .
    echo -n Redhat has fucked me "$var0 " times.
    echo .
    # -n suppresses newline.
    var0=`expr $var0 + 1`
    # var0=$(($var0+1)) also works.
    up2date -u -d
    ls /var/spool/up2date
    sleep 3
    clear
    sleep 1
    done
    echo
    exit 0

    Redhat has fucked me 740 times..

    Error Message:
    Free service limited due to high load, please try again later (server 1000733406)
    Error Class Code: 51
    Error Class Info:
    Due to extremely high traffic, access to Red Hat Network is currently
    limited to subscription customers. Please try again later. If you
    would like to become a subscription customer, go to
    https://rhn.redhat.com/preview/priority_service.p xt for more information.
    Explanation:
    An error has occurred while processing your request. If this problem
    persists please submit a bug report to rhn-help@redhat.com.
    If you choose to submit the bug report, please be sure to include
    details of what you were trying to do when this error occurred and
    details on how to reproduce this problem.


    How come FreeBSD has over 14 mirrors for CVSUP?

    I hate RedHat. FreeBSD or die. (JUNEOS on my M10 router is sweet. Its FreeBSD, it works, and I like it better than IOS)
  232. Re:Insane by deviantphil · · Score: 1

    Very true. If the experts who are used to Linux want it, they should still be available 'untouched' for them to install and configure. But let's face a fact here: RedHat is becoming the easiet of the distros to install and configure; making the setup and configuration less daunting for newcomers is a step in the right direction.

    Yes, RedHat is easy to Install, easy to configure? As long as you don't mind uncommented config files and upgrades that completely hose your customizations... http://www.debian.org