Gnome Removed From Slackware
Anonymous Coward writes "After long consideration, Pat Volkerding has removed GNOME from Slackware. Pat mentions in the
-current ChangeLog that GNOME takes a lot of time to package, so this move should allow more time to be spent on the rest of Slackware." From the changelog: "Please do not incorrectly interpret any of this as a slight against GNOME
itself, which (although it does usually need to be fixed and polished beyond
the way it ships from upstream more so than, say, KDE or XFce) is a decent
desktop choice."
Slackware claims to be the most Unix-like... KDE doesn't strike as Unix-like... GNOME does more for me.
Mr. America walk on by your schools that do not teach Mr. America walk on by the minds that won't be reached
because you used the word ironic to mean something it doesn't, your grammar card has been revoked.
incidentally, you will be receiving Alanis Morrissette's "Jagged Little Pill" CD in the mail within 4-6 weeks.
I was always a big Slack fan. In fact, I run it on my server.
GNOME is my favorite desktop. Unfortunately, since you no longer choose to put it on your distro, I'm going elsewhere for a Linux distribution to run as a desktop.
I wonder if the term Dropline GNOME was any hint that this would happen.
ROMANES EUNT DOMUS
Didja read the post? I see you got the sublte parts, how about the part's where he points to THREE other options already having drop in gnome for slackware? the door's alway's been open...
"at this time XFCE 4.2 is a better GNOME than GNOME itself."
This comment is dead on.
Gnome seems to have an awful case of the Ahab from Moby Dick syndrome: they seem hell-bent on copying a certain whale of an OS company; duplicating good features is fine, but they seem to be trying too hard to duplicate much of the bad stuff as well. After Gnome 1.4 things seemed to move very much in this direction. Unfortunately one of my favorite Gnome apps, Gnumeric, seems headed this way as well, tacitly endorsing VBA as a scripting language (though kudos for supporting other bindings such as python.) You can see this influence in related projects such as Evolution as well. Presumably there's some sort of pressure to do this in the name of easy transitions, but I still think it's the wrong thing to do.
XFCE definitely seems to be more about a philosophy (use the unix small programs together model, and keeping it simple) than copying, and if they're copying anything it's closer to the Mac feel. In any case, it's not so bent on bloat and copying something with many features many don't want to begin with.
Hopefully we'll still be able to use a lot of the gnome apps under XFCE on future versions of slackware without too much additional work.
Looks like someone's daddy forgot to logoff again.