Gnome 2.8 RC1 Released
FlipmodePlaya writes "Linux Today reports the first release candidate for Gnome 2.8 has been released. A look at the new stuff can be found here. Notably, the possible inclusion of Evolution, and some networking goodies. My opinion: the GUI changes look too much like Windows/Internet Explorer for my tastes; I guess it's not just KDE."
GNOME 2.8 Release Candidate 1 Announced :00 UTC (1 Talkback[s]) (1740 reads)
2 /NEWS
/ NEWS
2 /NEWS
Sep 1, 2004, 18
(Other stories by Jeff Waugh)
Release Candidate 1 marks the start of our Hard Code Freeze, on the way towards the final GNOME 2.8 release in a couple of weeks. The final lap! Let's just hope we're not dragged off the track at the last minute by a strangely dressed Irishman. Even though it almost sounds like fun... At last, without further ado, THINK ABOUT YOUR BREATHING!
platform: http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/platform/2.7/2.7.9
tar.gz: 45M total
tar.bz2: 31M total
desktop: http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/desktop/2.7/2.7.92
tar.gz: 146M total
tar.bz2: 103M total
bindings: http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/bindings/2.7/2.7.9
tar.gz: 13M total
tar.bz2: 8.1M total
Notes about the new MIME system
As of GNOME 2.7.4, the old MIME system was replaced with a new shared specification found on freedesktop.org. There are a couple comments to go along with this:
* In order the to see any applications available, they must be registered with the MIME system. This can be done by getting the latest verion of desktop-file-utils and running:
update-desktop-database $PREFIX/applications
jhbuild in CVS has been modified to build this, and we expect applications to do this on install automatically in the future.
* The new user interface is modeled after the proposal at:
http://www.gnome.org/~jrb/files/mime/
The old File Types capplet has been removed in favor of a nautilus-only interface.
WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!
This release is a snapshot of development code. Although it is buildable and usable, it is primarily intended for testing and hacking purposes. Like the Linux kernel, GNOME uses odd minor version numbers to indicate development status. Please check the 2.7 start page for more information:
http://www.gnome.org/start/2.7/
Happy testing!
* The GNOME Release Team
Anyone grab the screenies?
I'll probably get blasted for this, but like it or leave it, MS is known for making an interface that's usable to the masses. Want Linux on the desktop? That's the way to do it.
Personally (as a long time KDE user) I don't find windows all that much like KDE. I sat down at an XP box the other day to try and accomplish some simple editing in a word document with embedded visio and felt lost. Perhaps Gnome is becoming more KDE like?
BTW: open office has trouble saving (via crashes) documents with a large number of embedded visio drawings. :(
.dn
No more Micro$oft bashing from me. Its like bashing at the special olympics.
since it even got its own story, why not use it?
try here.
Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:http://davyd. angrygoats.net/gnome-2-8/
There ya go!
Server down :/
I looked at all the screenshots, and nothing on there jumped out and bit me and yelled "Windows! IE!" I have no idea what FlipmodePlaya is complaining about.
It looks to me like it's just the GNOME 2.x that I know and love, with subtle, very incremental bits of polish. FlipmodePlaya, perhaps you could be a bit more specific?
P.S. I'm really looking forward to some of the new features, specifically Volume Manager and the new MIME handlers. GNOME 2.8's MIME features won't just be easier to use than previous GNOME versions--they will actually be easier to use than Windows's application association system.
steveha
lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
Honestly I'm getting a bit tired of this march towards boring copied GUIs that only half-work. I mean, KDE is becoming almost unusable with all the crap in the menu and little parts and whatnot. I mean, I suppose it's nice for new users but I really don't like it.
That's why I went with the little mouse.
No disrespect to the GNOME and KDE hackers, but it's good to have choices. The big desktops are becoming more difficult and time consuming to customize "just right*.
Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
My opinion: the GUI changes look too much like Windows/Internet Explorer for my tastes; I guess it's not just KDE."
You know it wouldn't kill the slashdot editors to EDIT submissions instead of just dumping them as is into the main site. Especially when one is as unprofessional as this. Flaming does NOT belong on the front page of slashdot. This is absolutely rediculous. First "four of parts", and now this bull? Why, Slashdot, do you feel like you can ask me for money when you pull crap like this?
Evolution should not be part of Gnome - it should be added by the people who build the distro's.
If you start adding applications to Gnome, where do you stop? Are they going to add OpenOffice or AbiWord/Gnumeric to the next version of Gnome? After all, a word processor is pretty basic.
The Gnome people should focus on making it easy for distro builders and end-users to add (well integrated) apps. Don't build the apps into the desktop.
I don't think that microsoft have done a good job of making computers easy to use at all, for a complete beginner it's completely confusing, when my father first tried to use a windows box he didn't know at all what to do with it to get the stuff he wanted done. Since using Gnome he hasn't asked me a single question and has found it incredibly easy to use. Keep it simple stupid.
Ressemblance to Windows / IE goes a long way toward new users migration for Microsoft, keep that in mind.
Eureka Science News - automatically updated
I use linux and 'doze both daily, but spend ~70% of my time hacking code on linux. The WM doesn't matter that much to me, because it just needs to be a good way between 4 desktops full worth of bash shells and vi windows.. but both gnome and kde feel weak when it comes to the 'everyday' stuff I usually do on windows
-
the real BUT, though, is this thought - Would it help the (big) open source groups to start being more feature focused?
Look at many dot releases from M$ or Apple.. 90% is NEWNEWNEW and a little is 'does xyz better, zyx works now'
The geek stuff needs to be available, sure, but "higher level" messages might go far to boost adoption.
My thinking is, Average Joe just dipping a toe into 'non-conformist' ways, and sees a big new announcement.. he looks in and sees a ton of stuff he doesn't understand, and a long list of bugs fixed that makes him think 'ugh, this still has too many problems.'
If he looks in and sees mostly "Now imports Word 2006 docs with perfect formatting!
$.02
Windows looks too much like OSX!
Linux: Free if your time is worthless.
Yeah, I think more people should use the free caching from the NY University, Coral
Treehugger? Treehugger... Treehugger!
The screenshot link in the original post has been Slashdotted. Here's a mirror:
http://tuggy.home.sapo.pt/gnome/
(Here's hoping this doesn't get Slashdotted too quickly!)
I'm not going to make the mistake of getting in trouble for getting /.ed again. The maxclients on that server has been set down quite low, I've added a redirect to offload to offload to GNOME's webserver.
;)
If someone could update the story URL, that would be great
I can see Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux all in that UI. I don't know why the poster chose to mention Windows only except to troll.
GNOME 2.4 used to be slower than KDE 3.1... atleast on my configuration... but GNOME 2.8 seems to have improved hell-a-lot in terms of speed.. looks like am back to GNOME again..
It is also very interesting to see how Gnome is developing Human Interface Guidelines. I wish programmers would stick to them.
fifteen jugglers, five believers
Just because it is ugly doesn't mean it looks like Windows. What specifically was that comment based on?
Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
Why do they have to make it look so windows-y? First, thanks for the screenies (mods, help him out, here).
Why do they cram all the buttons to the top right corner? Why not spread them out? Ah! Frustrating.
They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
To do otherwise would be stupid
How much do I have to pay to get a shareware application inserted like Evilution?
Maybe MS could get some kind of Word or DRM preloader installed in Gnome, and they can sell accesories for it.
My opinion: the GUI changes look too much like Windows/Internet Explorer for my tastes; I guess it's not just KDE.
Since when does "looking too much like Product X" automatically make something bad? Are you really that much of a zealot that you concern yourself more with how much it "looks like Windows/IE" than with how USEFUL GNOME IS AS A PRODUCT IN ITS OWN RIGHT?
Good grief, man!!! I'd hate to break it to you, but I hate Microsoft just as much as anyone here, if not MORE so... They *ARE* an evil company, no two ways about it. HOWEVER, having said that: it IS possible for even the most evil of people/corporations to have a good idea once in a while. (Need I point out that Hitler, for all his evil, was the one who started work on things like the Autobahn and the Volkswagen.)
If I were to take your argument to an extreme, I would have to say: Ogg Vorbis is no good--after all, the concepts behind it sound too much like MP3 or AAC.
Heh. No wonder Slashdot has so little credibility with some people.
So that you all can avoid those google searches here are the links:
Storage Beagle
Dashboard
The thing about gnome looking like Windows is just because it's using the most familar interface for most people. Most people are familar with Windows, so you make it look like Windows and it'll be easier for them to adjust.
For more advanced Linux/Unix/BSD users you'll just end up customizing it to your own tastes.
My Gnome 2.6 looks and act more like older Mac OSes then any Windows OS. I have the "browse file system" icon were I can get to it easier for moving around system files, but for my home files I prefer the spatial look.
And on top of that I have lots of things that would not be apparent to most people just looking at screenshots of my desktop. Customized key presses, different apps.
KDE is slick at first, but after I get my hands on Gnome it works for me better then any UI designer could do. Because I designed it for ME.
If I designed it so that the majority of people from first timers to 733t hackers could use it I would generally use Windows as a guideline and make it customizable as possible. Just like what Gnome currently does.
Not to sound trollish or anything but am I the only one that thinks the icons and widgets for Gnome and GTK look like ass? I thought it was just Gaim but then I tried Gnome and they all looked like that! When will we get nicer looking things? (Don't say it doesn't matter, this is one of the reasons why I don't use things like GTK#, it looks just as ugly on Windows)
you have to consider that open source is far more trickle-down release centric. i'm sure the amount of new stuff between 1.0 and 2.0 is pretty significant. however, it's all those updates inbetween that lead up to a major change that you normally may not see with big software packages.
open source is much more evoluationary, than revolutionary. just because it doesn't have a wizz bang release cycle doesn't make it any less productive for getting major features done over time.
- tristan
Novell says Evolution 2.0 will be released in 2004Q3. That's 7-9/2004, only 29 days left (in North America). When do you think it will be apt-get'able?
--
make install -not war
EDS is a great move for Linux apps - separating the presentation (GUI) from the data. I'm waiting to see the final EDS, to see how close it comes to split the data from the logic. I'd love to be able to install the Evolution schema on any DB I want, from local MySQL to a datacenter's WAN-replicated Oracle cluster, with my own rules embeddable in the engine as they appear, and a GUI on each of my devices, from desktop to 'phone to airline seatback. Evolution has long favored niche specialization and division of labor - technology recapitulates ontogeny!
--
make install -not war
I suppose this isn't the focus of this post. But since you tossed this in... I'm curious as to what apps you're specifically referring to. I was going to refute your statements until I realized my examples weren't GNOME or KDE specific. For browsing, I use Firefox - on both Windows and Linux. For office apps I use Open Office - on both Linux and Windows (although sometimes I do use MS Office since it's already on my work machine). About the closest to a GNOME or KDE application that fits your list is Evolution. And I really wish there was a Windows port for it.
To each their own, I guess. Now on to the focus...
How many Average Joes hear +0.1 announcements for GNOME, KDE, etc. ? Sure - they hear that ReadHat 8.x is now out with a shoppinglist of features. But they don't hear that GNOME 2.x has improved file dialogs or Open Office 1.1.x now has better filters. Even if their new copy of RedHat is based on these improvements.
I think what you meant to say is that MS is known for making an interface that's almost usable to the masses.
I agree that Windows is more usable than Linux, but next-to-worst can still be pretty bad. And Windows is Bad. And there are several better examples out there. There are even a few Good examples out there.
Assuming the goal is to be good (or even mediocre) and not bad, trying to copy Windows (here I'm talking about how it acts, not how it looks.) is totally the wrong way to go about it.
From the screen shots, the font anti-aliasing still sucks monster monkey balls.
Zealot.
I haven't looked at GNOME since the very early versions. I've always been a waimea/blackbox fan. The look and feel is very impressive--and nothing like MS Windows in my opinion. It looks crisp and business-like. This is attractive enough to get me to try it out. I wonder how long it would take to build on my P3 FreeBSD box...
What I really would love to see in Linux is something like TortoiseCVS. It integrates with the shell on Windows perfectly so you can see all the CVS information while browsing files. Before I found it, I had tried all sorts of GUI's for CVS, but I prefered the command line to them because they added no value. With tortoise it is just so easy to update, commit, or check diffs. When you commit it displays a nice box where you can check whether you want to check in a file. If you doubleclick on the filename it pulls up the diff with the repository version. Good stuff. I've even updated my sandbox from a File open dialog!! Gone are my days of forgetting to checkin files because it is obvious what is and is not in the repository. I heard that someone was working on a Nautilus plug in but that work seems to have reached a stand still. Oh well, maybe some day.
The inclusion in GNOME of the improved MIME lookup engine, with configurable renderers, is a tremendous step. Apps should use IPC to exchange data, each handling only their own processing specialty. Transport apps that merely retrieve data per specified protocol (eg. FTP, HTTP, torrent), and presentation apps that merely render data per type, and accept user interaction, with standard APIs among them, make the entire system more stable. And easier to expand. Sometime soon we'll have apps which include layered, overlapping window panes each rendering and accepting user events, calling across to mixed logic components, and down into any data source, whether local storage, network, or sensors. Compilable flowcharts, anyone?
--
make install -not war
Phffft! Aaack! Horrible idea!
I have to deal with think like that at work too much, to tolerate it at home on my desktop. I don't want new features, I want a desktop that WORKS!
Commercial software does this because it has to persuade people to fork over more money for another release. But GNOME (and KDE) are free. As in free beer. There is no compelling need to force people to upgrade. If they upgrade they upgrade, if they don't they don't. Considering the price, most people will upgrade anyway.
Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
Need I point out that Hitler, for all his evil, was the one who started work on things like the Autobahn and the Volkswagen.
Well, that's got to be in the top ten fastest Godwin's Laws at least, and at the top level no less!
This might have window dressing of windows but it's layout and some of the ideas they have seem more like OSX than Windows.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
As to the specific applications you ask about, well, I use Firefox too.. MS office is still better, sorry - though, if I were paying for it, justifying MS as truly more productive would be difficult. I was mostly addressing the window system -- if I can between a few key things quickly, good key combos, configurability, etc wonderfully for the dev stuff on linux.. for the random, "never know what you're gonna run" kind of work or surfing, bouncing around between lots of different stuff, the consistency & cohesiveness of most UIs in windows is superior (to KDE&G, not that it's good)
/. is a great place to discuss the little differences -- in some ways.
/.'s wide exposure changed how effective/understood/absorbed/impacted the headline stories are -- i.e., which would have the better long-term influence.
As to the rest, well, I don't disagree with you, though how many Joes hear a mention of slashdot between geeks at work, articles, etc.. especially the psuedo-geeks who can be *very* influential.
I really just wonder how much the marketing spin means -- don't get me wrong,
I'm hit by the irony of the question.. how much has
Not truly answerable, I know, just thinking 'out loud', well, just for the hell of it.
My thinking is, Average Joe just dipping a toe into 'non-conformist' ways, and sees a big new announcement.. he looks in and sees a ton of stuff he doesn't understand, and a long list of bugs fixed that makes him think 'ugh, this still has too many problems.'
.... New graphics engine leverages 3d hardware to be 80% faster! .." he is going to have a very different view.
If he looks in and sees mostly "Now imports Word 2006 docs with perfect formatting!
I'm not sure I understand what your suggesting, that the bugs that are fixed should not be listed? That a minor digit release should not be advertised? or that open source projects should market their releases better?
Sure, the cost is a good point -- but the open source movement generally doesn't have the monopoly to think only about upgraders.. the breakthrough comes from the new people, the current fans' will be happy with all the fixes.
And I'm not advocating features over solid function by any means.. just considering the marketing / exposure level of what IS done.
"I'll probably get blasted for this"
<sarcasm>
Oh gee, I can't imagine why.
</sarcasm>
"but like it or leave it, MS is known for making an interface that's usable to the masses."
So what does that imply about Apple? That they can't make an interface for the masses?
"Want Linux on the desktop? That's the way to do it."
Gee, whatever happen to quality standards? No wonder Apple users mock PC users.
But we can't lose ourselves advertising to the Average Joe. And one thing I find refreshing about FOSS is that problems are acknowledged. As opposed to Microsoftland, where one feature of Office 2004 for Mac OS X is "improved Unicode support". Namely, it has Unicode support - Office X did not.
If he looks in and sees mostly "Now imports Word 2006 docs with perfect formatting! .... New graphics engine leverages 3d hardware to be 80% faster! .." he is going to have a very different view.
Yes, if you fill his head with pretty lies and buzzwords. Even Word doesn't import Word documents with perfect formatting. And "leverage" is only a verb inside PHBs' offices.
Sorry for the ambiguity. I think "Good" bug fixes should be promoted, like: Bug: too #%@ slow, and promotion 'Now 220% faster!' Stuff such as 'crashed, corrupted' should be summarized and not prioritized.. link the gut-level details.
Market better, absolutely. Maybe part of that means advertise less, get more impact for the real stuff. Don't have a real justifiable opinon on that one.
Look at many dot releases from M$ or Apple.. 90% is NEWNEWNEW and a little is 'does xyz better, zyx works now'
Huh? In my experience it's the inverse. Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows ME were practically the same system but with service packs applied. Same goes for Mac OS X - the latest release was hyped for Expose FFS - if they have to tout a nice graphical gimmick as one of their leading features, you know there's not much new.
Let's look at things from a Windows user's point of view :
:
:)
1) Things work.
2) They look good.
3) Few options available, but most are hidden in the registry. Those few options seem more than sufficient for the teeming masses.
Now take someone from that environment and put them on Gnome. What does he/she experience?
1) Stuff works.
2) It looks good.
3) Few options available, but most are hidden in the registry. Those few options seem more than sufficient for the teeming masses.
Now, let's take a windows power user
1) Things work, but always looking for ways to make them work faster.
2) It looks good, but always looking for ways to customize it.
3) Few options available, so the user always has some program Xteq XSetup Pro to tweak hidden settings all over the place.
Take THAT user and put him/her on KDE:
1) Things work and work fast. User is quite happy.
2) It may or may not look good, but hey, it's VERY customizable, so it WILL look good after a week.
3) Tons of options available all over the place - the former windows power user is in heaven.
So to sum it up, KDE and Gnome in my opinion, both serve a VERY good purpose - they cater to the needs to both ends of the spectrum of Windows users - and they're both getting better/faster with each new version.
Now since we're celebrating Gnome 2.8 RC1 here, kudos go out to the Gome devs out there for capturing the essence of Windows' ease of use and porting it to Linux. You guys are doing a great job.
It would be nice to have a unified Desktop one day, but hey, I'm not complaining right now, even tho I'm a KDE fan - GREAT WORK GNOME! - I'm seriously thinking of setting up Gnome 2.8 as my mum's default Linux account and see how she likes it - she currently uses KDE 3.3
Find a job you like and you will never work a day in your life.
Let me quote Homestar, "Seriously, you guys."
Would it make it better if he had said "looks just as confusing as Windows"?
Microsoft may have had some good ideas, but the Windows UI was not among them. It's not easy to use, it's just what most people have learned, and how they expect stuff to behave. But for those of us who never learned how to use Windows, and are just expected to magically know it, it's confusing as hell.
I think it look good. I like it... Looks clean...no dirty pixels, applied minimalism.. and good color scheme.. Except those shadows. I think I'm gonna change to GNOME 2.8 from XFCE..
the breakthrough comes from the new people
And to the new people, it's ALL features! There's no need to add new features to entice them in, because as a new desktop, it's all new features to them.
I just bought a new car last month. Compared to the old car, the only new feature it had was a CD player. Let me assure you that the reason I spent $15,000 was *not* to get a CD player! Honda didn't need to add a superflous feature in order to get me to buy a new car. All they needed to do was to make it good and new.
But just in case your new user wants to know what he will be getting out his new desktop, remember that both GNOME and KDE are chock full of stuff that a stock out-of-the-box Windows simply doesn't have. To them it's all good and new.
Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
"Maybe Apple's interface is technically better, but (like the parent poster said) if you want to bring it to the masses, use something people are already used to. That way the switch to a linux desktop won't be such a big difference."
And we will call it...Windows: Linux Edition.
Seriously why would the "masses" want what they already have? Maybe in all the geeks eyes out there you think you have a better product. But from the "masses" perspective, all you have is a look-alike. At least Apple has the "balls" to be different, despite all the calls to be conformist. Be another "Microsoft". The gold standard by which success==good is measured.
I see a lot of "x much like ms" commentary. This is pointless. The interface for a ford, a chevy or a toyota are the same. It just kind of happened that way. It's a strange attractor. The real thing we should be discussing here is: "Is the graphical user interface a strange attractor? If so, what can we do to understand it?"
Gui isn't some product of a keenbeen somewhere. It may be an attractor that we took notice of. How similar our implementation is to others is a distraction. We shoud be concentrating on understanding this and coming up with the best solution we can think of.
Dissecting what others have done in the past and deciding what do do from there is adequate if you want to follow. If you want to lead you have to get at the real root of the problem and decide which is the right solution.
So this is the real conflict: are we going to make clones of other peoples guesses to make newbies comfortable or are we going to solve the problem and let the guessers catch up to us?
Until we lead on the desktop, we will continue to be the butt of their jokes.
Basically, what you're saying is 'open source should be marketed better'. But keep in mind... that is explicitly not what open source projects are about; almost all of them are technology-, not marketing-driven. Most open source coders aren't writing code to extract cash from people's wallets, they're doing it because they love doing it, or because they're solving an issue.
And these point releases aren't meant for Average Joe anyway; they're bleeding-edge and unstable. Joe doesn't want this stuff.
This is where the distros step in; they take the results of the technically-driven development, and THEY market it.
The very last thing you want is for open source groups to 'start being more feature-focused'. We've seen what happens with that approach; bloated, unstable, unreliable software that costs a fortune.
The purpose of most of these groups is to write great software, and I submit to you that, by and large, they're doing a fantastic job. Let the distros do the marketing.
gnomecal is a small tool that only does one thing, and it allows you to use the mail client of your choice. At the moment I am using the gnome-1.3 version (with great pleasure), but I would love to have an updated version :)
There's a nice overview over what's new in 2.8 here.
"Oppression and harassment is a small price to pay to live in the land of the free." -- Montgomery Burns.
If it's reproducable (which it sounds like it is) and you can provide the document then please let the OOo folks know over on their issue tracker.
C'mon! Don't compare Microsoft with Hitler. You know, Microsoft employee are not like us, they have queer habits, eat strange food, use a different OS and -- which is worse -- don't release their code under the GPL. In a nutshell, they are very strage people. But as far as I know, they don't eat chldren, and don't organize satanic masses.
No, seeing posts where someone chews someone else out for something that was clearly stated to be an opinion, is why Slashdot has so little credibility. Heaven forbid someone form an opinion! "If I were to take your argument to an extreme", you haven't already done this? Uh oh.
You're using an old version of GTK+. The issues you're talking about have been fixed for some time. Showing hidden files and folders is available via a right-click context menu, and type-ahead find eliminates the need for tab completion.
Letting people know your preference is not trolling. Calling something it's not is trolling.
Time they gave up,
Gnome can not compete
Gnome will be exterminatede
exterminate exterminate exterminate!
Well, we are not releasing new versions of the patched human genome yet :-)
:-)
But I sure hope it will be under the GePL(tm)
I'm still trying to figure out what people mean by 'social skills' here.
Well, from the screenshots, I don't think it looks anything like Windows (other than having the features that all GUIs have, so there will always be some similarity).
But part of the problem with Free desktop critics is you're damned if you do, damned if you don't. If you make your interface look like Windows, these critics will have a go because it looks like Windows. If you make it look unlike Windows, they will criticise you because it's "unfamiliar".
Oolite: Elite-like game. For Mac, Linux and Windows
I've downloaded the tarballs yesterday, Garnome is outdated.
Ok, use jhbuild from the GNOME CVS, it's fine, install tla, docbook-xml, libbz2-dev and docbook.
You may need to tweak the configure.in here, or modify a C file there "happened with me in Xrender, But i can't remember what i did!". But, It's going smooth now.
Apps are included when it makes sense to include them. There are plenty of good reasons to include Evolution.
If the only reason you are offering to support not including Evolution is some general 'principal' that isn't demonstrably useful to anyone then you don't have much of an argument
Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
...than cold, hard cache!
You always see this pocket rant against KDE/Gnome. exactly what is "windowsey" about it? I admit that ONE of the gnome themes may use similar buttons to windows, but KDE, by default, looks nothing LIKE windows!
What changes would YOU recommend to change this? Get rid of the taskbar? (this is a few clicks away..). Abolish the "close" button? How about we stop using blue and grey!
jeez..
Note that this text has been modified, and is not the original text in the article. Mostly it is the same though.
KDE is slick at first, but after I get my hands on Gnome it works for me better then any UI designer could do. Because I designed it for ME.
You are right, except for the fact that you can do all this of course also with KDE.
No, I don't like the look of things either. For me the main reasons to start using Linux were:
1. It wasn't Windows
2. It was free
- in that order. The only thing in Windows that was good was the fact that the printer interface was reasonably standardised, but fortunately CUPS is getting OK now. Everything else in Windows was bad, the dumbing down, the instability, the sleazy ways of Microsoft, the oh, so 'cool' style of hype etc etc.
So to see that GNOME is going that way really isn't any joy. But there may be hope:
http://www.goneme.org/
- these people are forking GNOME to get away from the current sucking up to Windows.
Good grief, this is good news. File associations and MIME stuff was always the least working part of GNOME for me. I have no idea what they've changed, but any change is probably good. I hope custom filetype icons and icon themes actually work from now on =)
And tons of SVG stuff? Yay.
>> I don't think it was rediculous to have an opinion to discuss put in a news article.
Sorry, but your opinion isn't newsworthy. Neither is mine. That's why it's in this comment. You just felt like taking a gratuitous shot at Gnome.
As for "editors" at Slashdot: Story pickers might be the better description. Slashdot plays a game of disavowing responsibility for what's on the site ("it's not us talking, it's our users") while at the same time welcoming (undeserved) praise as a news site and touting its brand of "journalism". No journalism here.
-- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
Answer me this: Why is anything that even remotely resembles Windows automatically a bad thing? Is this just a case of "Windows? It's made by Microsoft. And since Microsoft sucks, Windows suck as well. And since Windows and Microsoft sucks, the Windows UI sucks as well!".
I don't think Gnome looks like Windows. Well, of course it (and KDE as well) shares some common things with Windows. They all have windows. they have a taskbar. They have a start-menu or equivalent. And they all offer integrated system with similar look 'n feel between apps and tools. Are ANY of those things bad things? Why? Just because Windows has them as well?
Why don't you whiners start your own GUI-project. Call it UTIADFWAP, or "UI That Is As Different From Windows As Possible". Make sure that it doesn't look anything like Windows. Maybe then you will be happy. Who cares about usability or consistensy, at least it would be different from Windows! And it seems that many people think that being different from Windows is the primary feature of a Linux/Unix-UI these days!
Some "anything but Windows!"-zealots usually whine about KDE that "it looks too much like Windows". I use KDE at work (occasionally I boot to W2K for a game or two) and XP at work. I don't think KDE and Windows'es look that much alike. Well, the file-dialog is a bit similar, but that's it. And that's not really a bad thing, since I think the Windows file-dialog serves me well. The one in KDE looks somewhat similar, but it's alot better.
Yes, I dislike Microsoft as well. And Windows the OS has it's share of problems. But it's UI is OK on the basic level. Yes, the UI does have problems as well, but luckily KDE (and Gnome I think) fixes those issues.
repeat after me: just because something can be found in Windows does not automatically mean that it's a bad thing.
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
He would have given us prehensile noses.
So, the parent poster (the author of the article) says something about "looking too much like windows" and everybody is either trolling about microsoft or defending it, saying "well, there's a finite number of ways of doing it". Let me add this: when somebody says "I don't like Gnome, it looks too much like windows, I like KDE better" and when everybody knows that KDE is the one that resembles Windows the most (no top menu bar per default, browser integrated in file manager, etc - don't get me wrong, I'm a fan of KDE...) don't you feel the fishy smell?
I'll do the stupid thing first and then you shy people follow...
How come Beagle is not in this release? Too alpha (0.02)?
Also, does anyone from 'the inside' know why Evolution was chosen over Thunderbird? I understand Evolution integrates well with Exchange and its calendaring service, but Thunderbird seems to be more popular.
Simpy
I recently tried Gnome and KDE together and came out of it liking KDE better. That's not to say that I didn't like Gnome. In fact, I think Nautilus is a great design. It just boiled down to KDE having features that better suited my needs. Specifically, thier in-file-manager FTP was easier to use and just worked better. Also where Epiphany and Galeon are based on the Mozilla enginer, Koqueror is a good compliment to Mozilla. If a web page has trouble rendering on one, it'll almost certainly render on the other. A lot of it I just chalked up to KDE being more mature.
Then again, if maturity matters, Evolution will probably be a better program than Kontact. I'd be real curious to see how they've cleaned up thier FTP. This is important to me because I regularly connect to the server where I work.
I guess what I'm saying is that I'm neither a KDE or Gnome zealot. KDE just happens to suit my needs better right now, but I'd be more than willing to take another look at Gnome.
A goal is a dream with a deadline
"My opinion: the GUI changes look too much like Windows/Internet Explorer for my tastes; I guess it's not just KDE."
Couldn't agree more.
An important step for kids when growing up is learning how to do things differently from the way their parents did things, not for the sake of being different, but because the new way works better.
In that sense, the Linux GUIs need to grow up. They don't even have to invent new ways, there's an entire science of how to build a good user interface, and bunches of good examples. All microsoft products violate those guidelines left, right and center, even though they pay lip service to them.
Until we get a good GUI, I'll stick with WindowMaker and live without the 3 features it doesn't have that I would really love to have.
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
Does anyone know if this new version of Gnome will take advantage of the eye-candy features of the new X.org server?
mouse click + keypress or clicking an alternate mouse button ? It's six and two threes.
I'd tend to say that having two mouse buttons helps to get to lots of things faster than requiring two hands (one on the mouse, one on the keyboard) to get there.
At the end of the day, both require a conceptual leap to mentally take on board. The newbie user will simply have been less confused by the single button on the mouse (except if it's the puck horror, in which case all bets are off) in the run-up to the concept of contextual menus.
As a "power user" (herm), I'd rather have my two buttons.
I didn't know you could measure signal strength for and ethernet connection. Oh I suppose its wireless.
o me -netstatus.png
Just wondering is there such a thing for a wired connection?
http://www.gnome.org/~davyd/gnome-2-8/images/gn
Evolution also integrates well with Gnome, wich is what all of this is about.
Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
Hidden extensions are bad news.
[
Wow, gnome's still around. After they gutted the features of 1.4 to create the first 2.x release, they began a downward spiral. I prefer windows XP over every gnome 2.x release. Gnome's clearly stated that they've intentionally dumbed down the interface. Windows has more features than gnome now. Pretty sad. For all they've stripped out, it can't even be considered a light weight GUI with all the library requirements. The GTK tool kit is pretty nice, but Gnome as a user envronment is pretty much worthless. I don't know anyone who uses it any more. They've all switched to KDE. All because of poor reasearch [on the part of the gnome team] on user interfaces. Pretty sad....
That sounds right from the user point of view. Do you know, from a technical point of view, what it means to integrate better with Gnome? Is it the use of certain libraries? Just skins? Something else?
Thanks.
Simpy
It uses the default Gnome browser, what esle do I need? :-D
Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
and change gnome icon, isn't it?.
Is the author using X.org with that shadow hack or something? I noticed all his screenshots have shadows under the window edges. Anyone know how he's doing this?
I hate Hitler as much as the next guy here, if not *MORE*, since I am german. But afaik he never ate children or organized satanic masses. He might have attended some, though. ;-)
I have not read all the posts yet, but since this is a GNOME article go ahead and queue up the people who say KDE is better.
And queue up the minimalistic zealots who wonder why everyone runs KDE and GNOME when they run FVWM/Openbox/WindowMaker, etc because it just does what they want it to and nothing more. And my favorite, "it is so lightweight" "It puts no strain on my Dual Athlon, 1GB RAM system."
And queue me up as saying why the hell do those people feel they need to post in a GNOME forum if they don't like it.
It's called choice people, as in "freedom of".
Hey now! The consumption of young is a time honored and well respected tradition... umm.. wait, what species is this *shuffles note cards* oh dear.. I meant to say... down with child eaters!
I mean, who cares if they copied this feature from MS or Apple? Or this design looks similar to Windoze or OSX? What does copying have to do with the technical aspects of a design or feature? Practically everything in man's history is about building off of the works of others.
<futile post>Please, PLEASE stop it with the "It looks too much like so-and-so" posts! Instead, just quote the things you dislike about the system you're talking about. When you want to say you dislike something because it is too similar to another product, it would make no sense to people who actually LIKE the product you're comparing it to. </futile post>
Guess what you do when you are 2 or 3 years old, learn how things work, learn that those big things that seem to be named doors have something named knobs, and that you have to do something in the knob if you want door to open. Or when you go to school to learn to read and write, so you can communicate later, read books to learn more (even novels can teach things). But by pure luck you are not going to know how a new (to you) different things works. Computers are by definition complex, the are typewriter, airbrush, paintbrush, film edition room, musical instrument... all in one, and all trying to fit into a single interface.
I WANT GNOME to work on FreeBSD, but it wouldn't compile outside of ports (with many patches) in 2.6, in my experience.
I don't think there's anyplace that GNOME will compile without a ton of patches and kludges. I'm sure I'll get modded down for saying so (thus the AC post), but it's the truth. GNOME is nowhere near the finished product at the source code level that KDE is. Building KDE is a long, but simple process. Build a set of source packages in order, and it's installed and works. Building GNOME, on the other hand, is a dark art. The build order the GNOME people provide is always incomplete and wrong, and when the newest (incompatible) version of something like libgnomeprint comes out, half the stuff will want the new version and half will want the old. Hell, some of the stuff will want the new version before it's even available!
If GNOME doesn't get it's act together it'll become strictly the domain of companies like Red Hat and Novell that can afford to assign development teams to fight the continual breakage. They should devote an entire release cycle to cleaning up the build, and merging sources into larger archives to simplfy the build, like KDE does. You oughta be able to build things with a "configure ; make" without having to learn so much about how everything fits together that you could practically join the GNOME development team.
My opinion: the GUI changes look too much like Windows/Internet Explorer for my tastes; I guess it's not just KDE.
Perhaps if you hate Windows so much you use the desktop behaviour wizard to make it behave how you choose!
desktop behaviour wizard
Nick...
make it STABLE first, pleeeease! I don't know how some people can work with either GNOME or KDE, but each time there's a new release, I try it out. Then, after a few days/weeks I go back to icewm simply because I am sick of GUI freezing, infighting sound servers, ugly font settings that cannot be changed (hello GNOME! Why don't you accept that there is more than ONE font on my system??).
I have more than 1GB of RAM and my cpu is fast enough as well, I don't care about "bloat" and other disadvantages often cited by others. But give me stability - and not just a nice crash manager! (KDE!)
I was really surprised to see this:
a selection of traditional games sporting a new cleaner Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) look.
I had no idea that Gnome supported both vector graphics (via the open standard SVG) and alpha blending. (Libart) I guess I haven't been paying attention.
...they will make it installable under alternative locations like '/opt'. Gnome 2.6.x always tries to write files to /etc although using the /opt prefix... do they ever test their distributions before going public??
KDE is MUCH better in that respect. Their konstruct tool is just great and installs by default into a directory under the user's home. I'm running it on an old distribution like redhat 9 where no KDE 3.2.x RPMs are available.
The screen shots do look cool indeed, but...
Anyone else noticed that the "Abort" button changes place, from the right to the middle to the left, where it is most often and which is - the reference being Windows - the most unexpected place.
The point is, "Abort" is the safe choice. You maneuvered yourself into some arcane dialog and don't understand nothin' - you hit "Abort" a.k.a. get me the hell out of here. This emergency button (as in, "Oh shit I'm gonna wreck by document") should always be in the same place.
Now when you align the buttons to the lower right (which the Gnome dialogs do), then this place is of course just there, in the lower right corner. Unlike Gnome, Windows got this right.
My favorite is the property screenshot. Instant inconsistency. (Shakes head and leaves.)
--- The light at the end of the tunnel is probably a burning truck.
This whole GNOME thing is a total waste of human resources. All this system is trying to do is to catch up with QT/KDE and it won't. But why?? Why duplicate when you can build on top of whats already been done.
Seems to me the "real" enemy to the open source movement is Microsoft and this movement will never beat Microsoft if the wheel just keeps getting reinvented every time a group of open source developers decides unix needs another GUI library on top of the dozens already available. Thats the major problem with open source. Total lack of direction and inability to harness resources.
Besides, the most powerful and complete GUI for unix has already been invented. Its called Aqua and Apple owns it. Just goes to show what a little financial incentive can do for an open source operating system. Yes, Apple's Darwin kernel is open source. It's GUI however isn't.
Someone needs to just decide already on an "offical" GUI for unix. Just like Linus decides on the "official" Linux kernel. If that can happen, then the kernel and GUI can be more intergrated, developers can focus on better docs because they only have to work with one library and applications will play nicer and "see" each other. All of which will make the unix system much more useful to the end user. End of story!
Now for the really bitter pill: On the Linux side of the street, there is no comparable pool of experience, or research data. If mimicry is the sincerest form of compliment, then has finallt recognized what the KDE developers have long known: all comparisons to Windows appearance and operation accrue to their favor.
--- Bill
Maybe if they just copied from MS to replace the parts of Gnome that totally fucking suck. Like the file selector. And the color selector (to a lesser degreee). And the file browser. Other than those things, I pretty much like Gnome. I prefer to have my OK/Cancel buttons in the opposite order, cause I have years of muscle memory pushing me in that direction, but I manage. But the file selector is so the worst thing I've ever seen (and HOW many fucking years has it been bad?), and nautilus is the crappiest file browser around. I'm not just talking about the stupid "spatial metaphor", either.
Parent isn't thinking very deeply about desktop environments - as if placing the menubar at the top of the screen is the defining characteristic of the MacOS desktop!
Spatial Nautilus today and the sawfish window manager in it's day are examples of ways GNOME has, from time to time, been significantly less MS Windows-like than KDE.
I would guess that it's because...
Also, if you think Thunderbird is "more popular", you have an awfully strange sample of users...
Libraries, mostly - using Gtk and the Gnome UI components for screens, using GConf for managing configuration, using gnome-vfs to access files transparently over sftp, smb, etc. Also following the Gnome UI guidelines.
Because it shares the common framework with the rest of the platform, the new e-d-s backend for Evolution can be used by any app for which access to a shared datastore is useful. For example, the IM client can use the same list of contacts as the email client. In 2.8, the calendar displayed by clicking on the clock applet now shows your appointments, because it can access the same datastore used by the calendar client. Right now, the mail and calendar clients are both Evolution, but anyone could write their own client to use the same backend.
That kind of integration isn't really practical if you're not using a common framework. Besides, Thunderbird is a pretty decent mail client, but it's only a mail client - Evolution does mail, but also provides things like calendaring as well.
I have a great idea. Lets abolish all file extensions including .c and .h. Therefore linux.h will be renamed linux_cpp_header and SDL.h willl be renamed sdl_cpp_header.
.tar's and .gz's. All tar'z will begin with tape_archive. So if I type in tar -cvf myfolder myfolder, I will get a new file entitled tape_archive_myfolder. If I compress it using:
- -encry pted-with-gpg
Also we have the issue with
gzip tape_archive_myfolder, the resulting file will be named tape_archive_myfolder--compressed-with-gzip. This last bit is important so that I know whether to uncompress the file with gunzip of bunzip2....
Now, if I encrypt the file with gpg, I will get:
tape_archive_myfolder--compressed-with-gzip
This is a whole lot more readible than myfolder.tar.gz.gpg or is it?
Perhaps anyone who really thinks extnesions are outdated needs to seriously consider naming schemes which can be good alternatives....
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
I migrated my parents from Windows 95 to Red Hat 6.1.... With Windows 95, they were calling me for help every 2 weeks. Immediately after the migration these calls went down to once very two months, and steadily decreased after that. I have been searching for why this is. In the end, I don't think that it is that one is objectively easier to use than the other, but that one is easier to learn and for reasons which seem somewhat off-topic here.
One thing I have noticed for many of my customers and for my parents is how *intimidating* a computer really is. Windows makes this problem substantially worse because it is unstable. In my parents case, I think it was registry bloat in a 5-year-old system. With many of my customers today, it is spyware and adware. Either way, if your computer does not work predictibly, and if this makes it intimidating, how can one be expected to learn it?
As a technician and programmer, sometimes I find myself feeling out of my depth. Sometimes I realize that I don't fully understand what I am trying to do. My reaction, like that of many end-users is for my brain to shut off and for it to become impossible for me to logically approach the problem. I can only imagine being in the position of someone who is afraid of Windows...
My point is that if the underlying system is stable and does what it needs to in a predictible way, that people can learn it more easily than if they have a spyware-laden Windows system which doesn't really do what they expect and with which they don't have a good working relationship.
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
aka ratpoison
Retired from software... maybe. Sort of.
The GUI is better, I like the overall look of it, but not quite as much as I like KDE, Gnome lacks the professional look of KDE, and is slightly harder to use in some aspects.
I guess the main thing I dislike about Gnome, is the lack of "3d-ness" in the graphics, everything looks very flat, almost exactly like the old MacOS gui!
And certianly eye-candy isn't everything, functionality is important too. That is also one thing that Gnome is minorly lacking, its overall fairly good, but I have run into a few programs that refuse to work in anything aside from KDE.
A concept so bad even Apple dumped it despite being a corp that often likes to be different for the sake of being different.
Sorry spatial as example is like saying Gnome is not Windows-like because it gets segfaults twice as often
sawfish window manager
What exactly was different about sawfish? I'm really interested because I know a lot of people who loved it but I never really used it (I used it mostly as an app collection for enlightenment =). That said, Kwin is getting more and more powerful too.
Parent isn't thinking very deeply about desktop environments - as if placing the menubar at the top of the screen is the defining characteristic of the MacOS desktop!
The goal of MacOS is to present a well integrated simple interface. Now you can reduce the complexity of KDE with relative ease (kiosk) but bonobo (IIRC it was the counterpart of kparts) never took off and it lacks the framework. Most of the Gnome HIG talk about placing a button three pixels to the left and two down and every app has to be hand-coded to adhere to that standard while all of that can be changed once in KDE. Similar the button order, for half a year some gtk apps had the new some the old some something else.
Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage