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GNOME 2.16 Released

Kethinov writes "The GNOME Project has just released version 2.16 of their popular *nix desktop environment. Among many snazzy new features, is lots of new eye candy, including an experimental compositer in Metacity, feature enhancements, usability improvements, and much, much more. Ars Technica has a review."

7 of 473 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Probably that you're running Ubuntu, like me. by Hikaru79 · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not a coincidence that Ubuntu's release cycle is the same as Gnome's -- six months. That's the defining feature of a new Ubuntu release: a new Gnome release. It was especially designed to be this way.

    So to answer your question, 2.16 will be in Edgy. And 2.18 will be in whatever comes after Edgy. And so on.

  2. The important part: Mono by kestasjk · · Score: 5, Informative

    This release is very important because Mono is now a dependency! This single move pretty much moves Mono from an interesting project into mainstream OSS.

    As a C# fan, and knowing how much of a pain GTK was in C, I think this is a very good move. KDE has always had a better API, official Mono support with GTK reverses that! This could really clear up GNOME, and the Linux desktop generally.

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    1. Re:The important part: Mono by benplaut · · Score: 5, Informative

      Regardless, it is still an accepted standard (ISO/IEC 23270)

  3. Re:Almost sounds like KDE 3... by cloricus · · Score: 4, Informative

    You're not a troll. You are stating the clear to see and the only problem with your post that I can find is that you don't think it is a good thing. Note Gnome had perms and the ability to add to the menus beforehand, just no where near as easily/well. Out side of the childish flame wars between kde and gnome the devs and community are getting on with life and taking features off each other while implementing new ones independently. Also moving into line with freedesktops specs. I think this is great for Linux desktop interoperability and really does allow people to use what they want with little hassle and not missing the features and functionality they really need.
     
    For the record I use Gnome, Enligthenment (DR17), and Blackbox and I refuse to even touch the peice of bloated crap that is KDE. :)

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    I ate your fish.
  4. Re:But does it have a useable file-save dialogue? by say · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you are referring to the standard GTK File-open-dialog, try to press CTRL+H, as that will show hidden files. You could also right-click and choose "Show hidden files" from the pop-up menu.

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    Roses are #FF0000, violets are #0000FF, all my base are belong to you
  5. Re:Almost sounds like KDE 3... by a_karbon_devel_005 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Default KDE 3 takes up less memory and uses less resources to run than GNOME currently. Run them side by side and see for yourself. KDE is not bloated in comparison to GNOME.

  6. Re:Here's another problem with Gnome branding by Medieval_Gnome · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not quite that bad. When accessing these programs from the menu they *do* have the simple names you were hoping for.

    Totem is 'Movie Player'
    Baobab is 'Disk Usage Analyzer'
    Alacarte seems to be 'Menu Layout', although Ubuntu might have changed something here.
    Tomboy is unfortunately 'Tomboy notes'

    So overall they've managed to use fairly clear and simple names for these programs, much as you were hoping for.

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    :wq