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Thanksgiving Comes Early To Gnome Project

Ryan McDougall writes "Have you ever downloaded a new app, got that tingly feeling, and wanted to express your thanks to the developer that made it happen? Have you flamed a developer over some small issue, but would never consider using another app -- and you want them to know that? Is Gnome your favorite DE, and want to express your appreciation? There is a touching 'thanks-fest' going on at http://gnomedesktop.org/article.php?sid=1099&mode= &order=0&thold=1 . If you answered yes above, please stop by and leave your regards."

6 of 21 comments (clear)

  1. Giving up the love to those guys by ObviousGuy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Run DMC:

    Money is the key to end all your woes
    Your ups, your downs, your highs and your lows
    Won't you tell me the last time that love bought you clothes?
    It's like that, and that's the way it is

    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
  2. Other projects too by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's good that people are giving their thanks to the smart people that have given them so much good stuff on the GNOME project -- but remember also the folks on other projects. Drop the guy that maintains your favorite program a quick thank you note, or consider doing so the next time you come across the next "oh, that's so *cool*" feature that someone's written in a program that you're using -- it really means a lot to them, goes a long way to encourage them to write more, and just keeps the good will flowing. It's just a moment for you, but it's the grease that keeps Open Source running smoothly.

  3. Right On! by zoikes · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Positive feedback is such an important - yet far too often overlooked - motivator. This is the one greatest lesson I've taken from my boss; in the midst of the most stressful silly-season, he never forgets to provide (well-deserved only) praise.

    Reviewing /. postings provides ample evidence of how much easier it is to criticize than to praise...

    This should be an example to all of us who use Open Source software -- share your appreciation as far and wide and often as possible.

  4. not for GNOME 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I'll gladly thank them for GNOME 2 when it has the functionality of GNOME 1.4. In it's current state, I find it completely unusable for my purposes and the development team has taken a page from MS - if you don't fit their style of usability, either conform and give up your power user status to act like a luser wannabe or don't use it. I, for one, miss what GNOME used to be before the egos of the developers became over-inflated. Just because a "usability expert" says my way is wrong for n00bs doesn't mean you should completely rip the functionality out.

    I'll keep using GNOME 1.4/Enlightenment until someone replaces the functionality both provide.

    1. Re:not for GNOME 2 by mufasio · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I consider myself somewhat of a power user and while I too miss some of the functionality that is missing from GNOME 1.4 I find GNOME 2 vastly superior to 1.4 not just in eyecandy but b/c it just works and I'm not as tempted to tweak every little setting and instead I tend to get more actual work done as a result. Prior to GNOME 2 I only used 1.4 on brief occasions, I mostly used just a window manager like fluxbox and pekwm(http://pekwm.org - great lesser known wm btw), but I find myself using GNOME 2 all the time now or a combination of pekwm and a GNOME panel or two. Kudos to the GNOME guys for making a great DE that is both visually pleasing and just works!!

    2. Re:not for GNOME 2 by King+of+the+World · · Score: 2, Informative

      The move to Unicode is needed for internationalisation, and it's one area where Linux is far behind Windows and OSX. For example, try having a login where your full name is in maori or some arabic language. Like the html + browser arguments that rage about whose fault it is when pages don't render correctly, you can't say that it's the web browser at fault or that it's the HTML at fault - it's just that they don't like each other. Unicode isn't soley at fault, and software should be able to handle it. A text editor defaulting to utf-8 is reasonable though.