Feature Preview of Gnome 2.8
Leonardo writes "The GNOME foundation should release the new version of this desktop environment on the 15th of September. While we waiting for version 2.8, Foot Notes has a link that explains what's new in this release. Improvements include both core parts (like VFS and Nautilus) and UI modules, like a new applet manager, an improved gconf editor and a new theme. In addition there are some proposed modules like new system tools and a new VNC server. Take a look at Davyd Madeley' site (mirror) if you want to view some sweet screenshots."
Woah, that's cutting edge baby!
fp
The GNOME project and all its core features should be independent of what OS is running underneath, relying on a minimum of required components like suitable graphics, sound, pointer and keyboard services.
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Gnome is still ugly as all hell and still sucks. its still unusable!!!
Gnome is teh fag0rz.
ok ok why am i getting these 503 errors randomly in firefox? how do i make them stop? is it /.'s fault or firefox?
Why do they keep bolting more and more stuff on ? Isn't it big enough already ?
...but how many of them are actually usable ? Mose (like Gnome - and I'm not just picking on Gnome here) are buggy, increasing bloated, slow and memory hungry. ...not that many. And yes, I don't doubt someone will come up with a couple of examples that ARE quite good, but they are the exceptions.
I really wish projects would deal with getting stuff actually working and working well (bug-free and fast) before they start adding even more functionality.
There must be a million and one OS projects out there...
Gnome (like the linux Kernal and loads of other stuff) is getting way t0o bloated to be useful - instead of adding more stuff, they should be slimming it down to core functionaly and the other stuff should be seperate projects.
OK, rant over
It does make sense. Providing a uniform interface through which common configuration tasks can be performed is an excellent idea. If gnome can configure network devices, and you know how to use it's configurator, then you also know that wherever you go, if gnome is installed, you can setup the network. This is superior to having every individual distribution provide it's own custom interface, at least from the perspective of consistency (which is a valuable quality in UIs).
Even though different distros may have different internal solutions to configuration, I see no good reason why a consistent front end can't (or shouldn't) be provided. Furthermore, I'd rather have many hands working together to achieve the best interface once, rather than divering talent toward reinventing a boring wheel to mediocre effect.
Here is something for all you sickos out there (hey, I heard that!)
extreme porn
Enjoy,
-The Pr0n Master
The inclusion of system tasks in the UI graphic selection seems to be a good way to allow the Linux newbies to more easily understand and control their non-Win computers. Once they get acclimated to the commands, they may venture into the faster cmd-line that 'experts' like to use.
This may even help faster corporate adoption, with the remote control software and other networking tools.
Check out the screenshots - they have a shortcut to Adequacy.org's most infamous article "Is Your Son a Computer Hacker?"
I sure hope that they decided to can "spatial" aka "lots of desktop clutter" Nautilus.
It was a utility I used in my Mac back in 1995.
But here's what would have to change for me to use it:
.gnome or something
1. Jettison the whole gconf/registry thing in favor of a tree of plain text config files in
2. Resurrect the old GNOME control center
3. Give me a default window manager with the ability to select focus-follows-mouse mouse
4. Construct a usable menu editor somewhere so that I can customize my menus
5. Choose: either a) reincorporate gecko into Nautilus for Web browsing or b) go lightweight and jettison Nautilus for the old gmc
6. Create a base distribution of official GNOME applications from a lot of the GTK stuff out there, based on which authors agree to follow a rigidly follow a GNOME style guide and use the GNOME API rather than just GTK, so that there is more desktop consistency
7. Add compatibility with KDE themes to GTK, since they seem superior (ability to change colors, not just widget styles, etc.)
8. Give me an "advanced mode" to turn on all kinds of extra GUI configuration bells and whistles like keybindings, autoraise, MIME types, etc.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
Anybody who still hasn't settled on a wm, take this advice: try xfce. It's fast, it's customizable, it's simple, but it still feels like a desktop environment, not just a window manager like fluxbox. It's the middle ground between the two huge desktop envirnments and the dozens of ultra-lightweight window managers.
It's gnome without the bloat.
Tim ODonnell
is the best upcoming feature of 2.8 IMO. I will finally be able to just plug in my various USB drives into the computer and have them mount (and unmount!) automatically.
For me personally, this means that my non-ubergeek wife (who isn't aware of the root password or the commands mount -a and umount -f), and will be able to download pictures off of the camera without asking me to unmount the camera or to fix the multiple mount points that cropped up since she plugged in the camera multiple times.
Thank you Gnome hackers!
Or is there something else that is not as spartan as metacity but also not eye candy as E, and at the same time blessed (standard confirming) by the gnome community?
Gnome's been really impressive with their rapid turn around schedule recently. With their 2.8 release already, I wonder what kind of goodies they'll have to add before they can rationalize a bump to 3.x.
:-)
I'm looking forward to their plans to further integrate OpenOffice.org (though I can't think of anything off hand that they could improve) and once the Mozilla project changes to Firefox as the official browser component, hopefully Gnome will switch to it. (I liked Galeon for a while before I heard about Firebird, but now I much prefer the latter.)
However, being an Emacs user, I constantly find myself struggling between whether to do learn to do things in a more Emacsish way or Gnomish way. I know Gnome allows you to enable a few Emacs keybindings, but it's hardly the same experience for me. With Evolution's online calender thing, I'm tempted to switch from Gnus, but I just don't know yet.
Maybe an Emacs Bonobo component or something would suffice so when working on the email text buffer it's an actual Emacs buffer that I can use all of my keybindings and scripts in.
Oh well, good job Gnome team.
Has gnome 2.6 been brought into stable yet?
I'll never see any of this new stuff until a year later. Or if I'm brave enough to pull it out of unstable.
I'm looking the screenshots! So beautiful! And always the GNOME-style I call it: simple! I've been a hardcore gnome user, well, a hardcore enlightenment user too! before e17 comes out, I'm sticking to GNOME B-) Keep going you BIG FOOT (Feet?)!
Mozilla is just as fast as FireFox on my hardware. However, I use mail, address book, and calendar so what you consider bloat I consider features I need. That said, it's very easy to compile Mozilla without these additions, well, on Linux at least.
But what about performance? Any enhancements on that side? Compared to Windows, Gnome is still noticeably slower. I run both Linux/Gnome and Win2K-Pro on my dual-boot machine, simply because there is so much software that doesn't run on Linux (and it's hard to tell whether it ever will).
Does it still have the goofy "foot" icon in the taskbar? I know this sounds trivial, but I swear it's the reason I chose KDE years ago (Although the "K" wasn't very attractive either in times past).
I don't think I'm trollin, I honestly want to know if that icon can be user-defined.
Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
When will they rename Gnome 2.8 to Gnome 8?
If Sun can do it....
I don't know if i'm the only one with this problem, but using the connect to server dialog to connect to a samba share is VERY slow to bring up a view of files, and copying is even worse. I have also noticed that if I used smbmount while gnome is running I sometimes get an oops.
I'm confused as to why VNC has been integrated. Most Linux users (and windows too...?), I would have thought, would be happier with X11.
I hope you can choose not to install the VNC server... it's of utterly no use to me, and seems to smack of copying XP's built in remote desktop functionality.
There are several good VNC client/server packages out there for Linux, if you really want to use it.
Moderation Total: -1 Troll, +3 Goat
GConf Editor now with searchability!!!
Finally! Yes!
Seriously, I still think gconf editor shouldn't be the weapon of choice when it comes to advanced options but now at least it is searchable. As I'm not using gnome as my main desktop I allways spend what seems like hours hunting through gconf to find out if an option I need or would like is actually available and if so where to f***** enable it.
Some of the other stuff looks good too and I'm really looking forward to the next release.
I'm sorry, the correct answer is, "Waimea".
Why do they keep concentrating on fixing bugs all the time? Isn't it stable enough already ?
...but how many of them actually have enough features ?
I really wish projects would deal with getting a core set of proper features to match OS X and Windows before they spend all their time making the code work perfectly on everything.
There must be a million and one OS projects out there...
blah blah blah whine bitch moan blah blah blah
Fix gnome-terminal. Any terminal that uses more cpu to display the text from compiling software than is needed for the actual compile is just broken. Miguel complained (and stopped using gnome-terminal) about this more than 2 years ago! This is one of the few reasons that I have stuck with KDE.
(Yes, I know I can run konsole within gnome, but aside from the inconsistent themes, it sucks up a lot of memory to load both the gnome and kde libs at the same time.)
Dan
I know this has been discussed before. Unfortunately, I can't seem to find it. My current install of Nautilus alwas opens every folder in a new window.
I hate that.
I can't find the setting to turn this off! Can anybody help me out?
Thanks,
Bryan
One key point that Gnome has, btw I use Gnome as my one and only WM, are the standards. I think there should be more of this and similiar things in Open Source community. The GNOME Human Interface Guidelines is a great way to let the developers know what's a good way to code the apps so that when you make them those apps don't look off from the rest of the desktop. I believe that if every project at one point had a version that standardized it, we would get much better software at the end of it. I know many people are all about freedom to do whatever the hell they want, and they should have that freedom, but if there are few standards set then the interoperability of Open Source software would be much easier to implement and it would be much easier on a user to use and on a developer to code and write new features for.
...as some posters seem to claim. It actually can be made to look quite nice and really is no bigger than it needs to be to perform the tasks for which it was designed. The only real problem I have with it is the way it identifies some applications in its menus with generic terms such as "web browser" and "editor" instead of the actual name of the program.
Why does it do this? If all applications were identified this way a user could end up not knowing which item to click to launch the correct program. If the idea is to make it easy for new users, wouldn't a submenu system make more sense...such as Net-Browsers and entries for available choices?
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
It still doesn't look nice...
I agree, system tools in itself should be in a different product, and now we see that they are proposing to do the entire system more like windows with only one option for mail client, etc, etc...
Luckily this is all only proposed addons, so hopefully the majority see the problem and say no.
BTW, KConfigEditor which is a KDE application has support for GConf and makes a better job of editting GConf entries than gconf-editor. IIRC, it was also the first to support actual searching of entries in GConf. Even though I use GNOME I started using KConfigEditor. Especially that it has the idea of "backup and propagation scripts", which allow me to edit one master configuration and send the propagation scripts to my users to have those propagated. Pretty cool stuff.
All that work, and it still looks like crap.
In reality font smoothing on all new KDE and Gnome programs (and also many other programs using other toolkits) is controlled by the file ~/.fonts.conf. (they use Xft and Freetype2 and Fontconfig to draw the fonts, these are all shared just like KDE and Gnome all use X11).
.fonts.conf file from Gnome and fiddled with it until KDE does not mangle it (it now adds a block to the end every time I log in, I just checked and there are about 100 copies of 8 lines of XML, perhaps I should truncate it...).
The problem is in fact these "desktop environments". Both try to write the fonts.conf but neither correctly reads the settings stored by the other program, and I think Gnome just reads it's own data and ignores the fonts. I discovered this annoyance when I found that Gnome control panels could get much nicer font smoothing than KDE, and if you ran KDE control panel it would gradually mangle them.
Finally I figured this out and saved the
This is not user-friendly in any way whatsoever. Internally I believe the implementation is correct, but we need a "set up the fonts" program that does ONLY the job of setting up the fonts with a GUI, and that any program can call. "Desktops" are the wrong answer.
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Off-topic.
If you use Internet Explorer, strangely, the 503 errors don't appear. What's going on, Malda? This is another one of those funny things Slashdot critics will be using against Slashdot from now on.
I really like the Gnome desktop. I find the spatial nautilus very useful, but there are two things that I really don't like about the Gnome desktop. First is Metacity, the window manager. I can't stand it that I cannot middle click or right click on the maximize button and have it maximize the window vertically or horizontally. That is on of the most useful features that i've seen for quite a few window managers running under Linux and *BSD, and I see no reason for Metacity not to have it. (btw, if someone knows how to set that up, let me know! I'd love to change it...) My second beef is with gnome-terminal. It's WAY slow. I find myself installing rxvt just to have a fast terminal, even though it's not as pretty... or tabbed, which I miss when I have to use rxvt.
Other that that, Gnome is great, and I look forward to updating it on my Linux/BSD box.
*slight crashing sound*
To the GNOME developers:
I am not yet halfway down the page but let me be the first to say, ignore the cliched bashing, let your fans defend your work, so you can focus on the work at hand: coding for the release. Responding to criticism shouldn't be your specialty or your concern right now.
All I have to say to the critics, serious hardware with serious muscle is here. Time to use it, or at least make the CPU sweat even a little. You'll know if you're better off with the other WMs/Desktops the second you start whining.
More power to the GNOME dev team!
KDE is better.
You can set keyboard shortcuts for vertical and horizontal maximize in Gnome 2.6 but no, as far as I can tell you can't do that with the mouse. The other problem I have is that you can't set the "raise window" action to only happen when you click on the top bar of a window and not when you click in the window. These two things seem like simple things that most other window managers have.
No excuses, just make KDE and Gnome go away and make OSX look bad.
I'm Rick James with mod points biatch!
Where's the effing font management? How does my wife install TTF fonts without the command line or editing text conf files?
Software Wars
When will Slashdot update their Gnome logo?
They're still stick on the 1.x Gnome logo which is.... the 1.x Gnome logo.
Gnome seem geared much more toward features than stability. Not that it's not stable as it is right now, but there are many tiny annoying bugs (ie: clicking a window's title to get focus and you end up dragging it without even holding the mouse button). It's a big project and, as such, it is pretty much usable, but...
... many choices are available and, at least, in true spirit of OSS philosophy, you have all the freedom in the world to do something about it.
There are a few things in Gnomes features I agrre and disagree with. All in all, what they try to accomplish is venerable, but I often think (like the initial poster) that some of the features should be defined at a level below the WM. For instance, seing the MS Windowish-like MIME association settings, it's very useful... in Gnome only. MIME could and should be defined system wide (it needs some thinking... like if you are in terminal or GUI,...). Same goes for the GConf that, even if it is a solution to bring under one common paradigm for defining software settings, it's only good in Gnome. There should be one made for the WHOLE system, not just the FWM.
But, like another poster said, it's a free project. The volunteers are free to give it the orientation they desire. If you're not happy with it, patch the code, fork the project, choose another WM,
. For instance, seing the MS Windowish-like MIME association settings, it's very useful... in Gnome only. MIME could and should be defined system wide (it needs some thinking... like if you are in terminal or GUI,...). Same goes for the GConf that, even if it is a solution to bring under one common paradigm for defining software settings, it's only good in Gnome. There should be one made for the WHOLE system, not just the FWM.
Try reading the article before bitching - the new MIME systerm *is* systemwide, not just for Gnome. It's based off freedesktop.org standards.
As for Gconf, it's not a standard right now - but it's a dependency for Gnome, not the other way around. There's nothing stopping anyone else from using it...
It's amazing how similar to Windows this looks. Even some of the menu entries are stolen verbatim. It would be nice if some of the non-Windows UI clone WM's were getting more attention.
Unfortunately, Linux is more about "not using Windows" than it is about using new and interesting software to most people.