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GNOME To Lose Minimize, Maximize Buttons

An anonymous reader writes "When GNOME 3 arrives in a month, users might be surprised to see old UI staples 'minimize' and 'maximize' buttons gone and replaced by... nothing, in the case of minimizing, and either drag-up or double-click-titlebar for maximizing. Says Allan Day, GNOME Marketing Contractor: 'Without minimize, the GNOME 3 desktop is a more focused UI, and it is a UI that has a consistent high level of quality. Yes, moving to a minimiseless world might take a little getting used to for some, but the change makes sense and has clear benefits.' Some users already welcome the change, while others are in an uproar, swearing to wait for GNOME 3.2, switch to KDE or even Windows. What do you think? A better, simpler interface for new times, or a case of making something simpler than it should be?" I like minimize and maximize buttons, but I'll admit to liking the look of GNOME 3 .

797 comments

  1. Is that really well tested in the real world? by Jugalator · · Score: 1

    Maximizing a window is such an uncommon thing to do, that few will be annoyed by the much smaller target surface that a window border makes up?

    With that out of the way -- why are they removing them?

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    1. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Tested in the real world? No, not at all. But the developers have done a lot of reading of theoretical papers, so how could this go wrong?

    2. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by devxo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Eh, maximing window sure isn't an uncommon thing to do. I run my browser and pretty much every other window maximized, it just works better. Only windows I keep small are something like instant messenger and setting panels. Granted I've learnt to double-click the title bar instead, but many people use the maximize window button.

    3. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We're too dumb to be faced with so many options. They know what's good for you better than you know yourself :p

    4. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by TitusC3v5 · · Score: 2

      On a day to day basis I rarely use any of the titlebar buttons. I double-click the titlebar to maximize/restore, click the taskbar or dock to minimize, usually just punch Alt+F4 or Alt+Q to close.

      --
      And the masses cried out, "09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0!"
    5. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > Maximizing a window is such an uncommon thing to do

      Not on a netbook it's not! If an app lacks a full-screen mode I'll maximise it.

      Netbook screens are so small that I tend to have one application per workspace.

    6. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Nerdfest · · Score: 1
      People on low-end laptops (I have a couple) with limited screen resolution use it a lot more than those with a nice big monitor with lots of real estate. I frequently run my browser and email clients in maximized mode. Granted, in these cases I don't tend to leave maximized mode either.

      In general, I'm willing to give it a try, especially since there will still likely be keyboard shortcuts for the operations and a way to restore the functionality if you don't like it.

    7. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by dejanc · · Score: 5, Interesting

      With that out of the way -- why are they removing them?

      Minimize is removed because the concept doesn't make much sense in GNOME Shell. Minimize only has an intuitive function when used with a panel, while in GNOME Shell all it does is make the window disappear. The last time I tried GNOME Shell, minimizing did prove to be a frustrating habit acquired by years of having a panel.

      Maximize on the other hand is removed because... well, because this is GNOME we are talking about...?

    8. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      I regularly unmaximize a window, drag it to the other monitor, and maximize it again. My two monitors have different resolutions, and I move things back and forth so I'm always reading from windows on my left and typing in windows on my right.

      And I minimize all the time so I can find things.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    9. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by moonbender · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They're arguing that minimizing is an uncommon thing to do and also one that doesn't work well within the general interface ideas behind Gnome Shell. So minimizing is, basically, deprecated. OTOH, they're not at all saying that maximizing is infrequent. What they are saying is that you should maximize in other ways: primarily by dragging the window to the top edge (that'd be the same as in Win7; the mouse gesture might be different, I haven't really tried Gnome 3); double clicking the title bar will also still work, I assume. Mouse gestures are supposedly more "gratifying" or some similar thing that will undoubtedly get a lot of hate on Slashdot.

      FWIW, it's true that I only really use the close button on the title bar. I rarely minimize windows, and I invariably maximize by double clicking the title bar.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    10. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Ooh, falling back to the keyboard? You're a real anachronism.

      Somehow the code is there to minimize and maximize the windows anyway. I just don't understand the reason for taking away part of the flexibility that is supposed to make the Linux Desktop so much better than Windows. Oh, wait, Windows will still have the Maximize and Minimize buttons, so the reason must be to differentiate the Linux Desktop experience from the Windows Desktop experience.

      For heavens sake, just leave them in as an option that people can turn off or on as they wish. Damn developers are getting as bad as our city council. They know what's good for us so they make changes with no consultation except among themselves.

    11. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Funny that you do that.
      Personally with an old flavor of gnome 2 (shipped with SLED 11), and two screens with different resolutions,
      I have a maximized window on my left screen, simply drags it to the right screen : it automatically gets there maximized, switching to the correct resolution.

    12. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Do you have a tiny monitor? I could see maximizing on a laptop with a smallish resolution, but on a 1920x1280 desktop screen the concept is ridiculous.

    13. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I agree there is a problem there, but I would argue that it is not the presence of a minimise button.

    14. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rubbish. I have a 1,920 x 1,200 pixel, 24" flat panel (Dell U2410) myself, and I too run most applications maximized. I paid for the real estate, why would I want to waste most of it?

    15. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Zappy · · Score: 2

      But,double-click-titlebar should roll-up the window

    16. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Retron · · Score: 0

      I too use maximised applications most of the time on my 24" 1920x1080 monitor - partly due to force of habit (it was a must back in the 640x480 days) and partly because even with that high resolution runing two applications side-by-side makes things feel a bit cramped, as well as looking weird. I'm used to windows being wider than they are tall, as I suspect are many folks.

      There are times when it's beneficial to have two things open and visible at the same time, but not very often for me. Alt-tab is second nature and I prefer it for flicking between say a code window and a webpage. It may not be the most efficient way of using a windowing system but it works well for me.

    17. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You only use ONE application at a time? Ok... 1980 called, it wants its workflow back.

      It's not a waste if:
      1) Maximizing the window makes it actually harder to absorb the content in that window (as is the case with web browsers)
      2) I use the extra space for something I look at often, like my IM buddy list and messages.

    18. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 2

      Do you have a tiny monitor? I could see maximizing on a laptop with a smallish resolution, but on a 1920x1280 desktop screen the concept is ridiculous.

      1920x1200 here. I run most of my major and often-used programs maximized; browser, email client, Adobe Creative Suite applications, IDEs, etc. Winamp and FileZilla are some exceptions.

      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    19. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by pipatron · · Score: 1

      What makes you believe you can't turn them on and off? You can do that today. They are just changing the defaults.

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    20. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Plouf · · Score: 1

      You only use ONE screen? Ok... 1990 called, it wants its hardware back. I typically have my main application maximized on my main screen (Eclipse...), whereas all side applications are left on the secondary screen.

    21. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by MaDeR · · Score: 1

      I do both often. While there is alternative to maximize button - doubleclick on title bar - lack of min button woud be rather hampering.

      --
      What modern Obelix would say today? Of course, "Those crazy Americans!".
    22. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For what it's worth, I love the "drag to/from the top edge" motion in Windows 7. Easily the best thing about the OS / Shell from a user-visible perspective.

      That said, I also really like being able to minimize things. Being able to take a window and say, "I don't want to think about this right now" doesn't strike me as something that you can do away with and still expect to be taken seriously as a work environment. I guess you could fake it by having one virtual desktop dedicated to "things I don't want to think about", but that just seems like a poor solution when you already had a good one and chose to take it away.

    23. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Do you have a tiny monitor? I could see maximizing on a laptop with a smallish resolution, but on a 1920x1280 desktop screen the concept is ridiculous.

      Not so ridiculous when working on design for print. Should I have had Photoshop running in a small window all this time?

    24. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 0

      We're too dumb to be faced with so many options. They know what's good for you better than you know yourself :p

      That's why I like KDE. It has a design philosophy of supporting the smart first and pandering to the wallies second.

      Naturally, I consider myself in the former category. ;)

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    25. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by puhuri · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Spreadsheets, graphics and diagrams are one thing that benefit from maximal area. However, for other applications I maximise them only vertically, if any. I have configured title-bar double-click to expand window vertically.

      Text editors, terminals, email message panels run 80 character wide as they have always been. A browser window where I type this is a bit wide, 1175 px, but it still leaves room for window below be that much visible I would notice if it scrolls. If web page is too wide for it, then C-- few times will make it behave.

      On 7" netbook using Ubuntu 10.10 most windows are maximised and there the usage is just fine - expect for those dialogs that do not fit on screen. But if screen size is 1280x800 or better I very seldom maximize windows.

    26. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Sal+Zeta · · Score: 2

      I wonder what kind of studies they've done before writing such cases then. UI Design is something you develop from test cases, real world experience and is a research branch much more closer to psychology, anthropology, Comparative Linguistics than Computer Science. It's extremely subjective, as there isn't something like the perfect "UI", like there isn't any perfect human language or the perfect blueprint for an house. The idea that an UI be done using some kind of theoretical , mathematical-like approach just because it's done "on a computer", would be not much different from trying to develop a C++ GUI framework using a manual of anthropology just because it's "Graphical" . Hope it's not the kind of reasoning behind such decisions with GNOME 3.

    27. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      both gnome (desktop effects i believe) and win 7 have this nifty thing where you click and drag down the title bar on a maximized window, this unmaximizes and attaches the window to your cursor, drag to other monitor, drag to top, once hitting the top, release button, window is now maximized on other window. I really enjoy this feature when i work with my 4 monitors.

    28. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Uh, that's why Virtual Desktops exist, so we can have multiple windows maximized at the same time and switch with a simple combo.

      Sure, some times having more than one window in the same VD is useful, but usually I keep them maximized.

    29. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by dargaud · · Score: 1
      I don't care that they want to do that. What I care about is that with Gnome, as usual, there won't be a simple setting somewhere to bring back those options. That's why I cannot stand Gnome. Sometimes it's very nice, like the customized versions for NetBooks, but the default version for PCs which has NO option to tweak it (unless you count recompiles which are worse than Windows registry edits) make it so that I don't and won't use it.

      On the other hand after 4 years of use at home and at work I still have no idea what half of KDE's options are for...

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    30. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Shh.. I don't want them to figure out why I have yet one more reason not to use gnome. If they don't get it through self discovery, they won't learn anything.

    31. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Sepodati · · Score: 2

      expect for those dialogs that do not fit on screen.

      Yeah, I'm looking at you Adobe Reader print dialog! >:-|

    32. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by CAPSLOCK2000 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Maximize all your windows by default, that's what I do.

      I got rid of the minimize and maximize buttons a long time ago.
      All windows (except for dialogs) are started maximized.
      If I don't want a window maximized I double-click the title bar.
      I've bound "minimize" to mouse-wheel down on the titlebar.
      This way I can scroll through my windows by positioning my mouse on the titlebar and scrolling down. (remember, all windows are maximized, so the title bars are perfectly aligned).

    33. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Maximizing a window is such an uncommon thing to do

      The first thing I do when opening almost any window, including xterm on a 1900x1200 monitor, is maximize it. I can think of only a few programs like gimp or nautilus where seeing more than one window at a time is advantageous.

    34. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I'd say I almost never use one application at a time. As we speak, I'm currently running five separate applications (excluding system tray apps), plus two explorer windows. And that, by my standards, is pretty low -- I'm frequently running 2-3 times as many applications simultaneously. You're not familiar with Alt-Tab, it seems. It probably takes me no more time to switch between applications with a quick "Hold down Alt-Tab and left click to jump straight to my chosen window" than it does for your eye to resettle on the side-by-side windows and figure out what's part of a specific program's interface.

    35. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Culture20 · · Score: 1, Funny

      What makes you believe you can't turn them on and off?

      Awesomebar. FOSS writers are becoming French nobles, locked up in their personal versions of Versailles. "The people have no minimize button? Let them recompile"

    36. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 0

      I never maximize anything except my IDE or a game (if fullscreen counts as maximizing ;D)

      E.g. I have several chrome windows open, 2 of them nearly fit side by side on my laptop monitor.

      As I use Fire Fox for some obscure sites, that one has a window size fitting for the purpose, that means it is much smaller than fullscreen, I could nearly place 4 of them on my screen, same for my mail program.

      It would make no sense to have it full screen ... 90% of my screen would be glowing white then, rofl.

      Regarding this Gnome changes: isn't gnome the least used desktop manager for a reason?

      Every window I know, I won't use for a while, I minimize.

      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    37. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Minimize is removed because the concept doesn't make much sense in GNOME Shell.

      You never want to see the things on your desktop? Will the new gnome lack a desktop that stuff can be stored on? Just a picture, or totally blank? I have to quit/kill the programs to see the desktop? Minimize is MORE functional than maximize, and I maximize every window.

    38. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      For what it's worth, I hate the "drag to/from the top edge" motion in Windows 7. Easily the worst thing about the OS / Shell from a user-visible perspective. Maybe I want a gimp layers window up on the top of the screen, but not maximized to half the screen?

    39. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm using the regular Ubuntu, which so far comes with GNOME.

      I use these two buttons all the time:

      minimize = get out of my way
      maximize = i'm now going to do some real work with this one app (which includes browser).

      A patch to bring them back in 3, 2, 1...

    40. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by digitig · · Score: 1

      Yes, it looks as if I switched to KDE just in time.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    41. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Isaac-1 · · Score: 2

      The Gnome developers have been removing features with every release for over a decade, this is just the next step. Give them a few more years and they will remove all interaction and running Gnome will be just like running X with no window manager.

    42. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I rarely minimize windows, and I invariably maximize by double clicking the title bar.

      Interesting, I never knew about that until you said it. I never use minimize or maximize and to me the loss of such buttons ranks right up there with removing the caps lock key.

    43. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      That statement is completely and utterly out of touch with reality. Just read the comments in this thread, and you will see that it is highly common. While there are SOME people that don't use maximize, the vast majority of people use it regularly.

    44. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      It may not be uncommon but that doesn't mean it's something that makes sense doing. While a lot (as in, most) people I know maximize pretty much every window they can. What do all of these people have in common? They started out using Windows, generally on low-res monitors and learned the behavior from others who did the same. That doesn't mean it makes sense to maximize everything when you've got a monitor with a resolution of 1920x1080 or higher.

      Personally I transitioned away from the MS world around the same time as Windows 95 was popular (I had never been a fan of Windows) and wound up in the *nix world where the idea of maximizing windows was generally met with snide remarks about how you should get a better monitor. This is something I've noticed in others who don't maximize habitually, they were Mac or *nix users fairly early on and never got into the habit of always maximizing their windows.

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    45. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      2 x 1920x1200, and I usually have stuff maximized on one, if not both, screens.

      Fortunately, there are so many other window managers that there's no need to use gnome.

    46. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by SETIGuy · · Score: 2

      I rarely maximize and frequently minimize windows. Rather than remove these buttons I'd rather see an additional "a maximize vertically" button that doesn't change the left and right boundaries of a window. I'm hoping that panels, and having a window list in a panel are still allowed, and that clicking on a window button in the list will alternately minimize and restore it.

      I'll reserve judgment until forced to upgrade during as OS upgrade. But if I don't like it I have no problems with changing to something better. Remember the good old days when window managers would allow you to customize what would be in your title bar?

    47. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Elbows · · Score: 1

      I'm also in the maximize-everything camp, even with a 1920x1200 monitor. Even if I don't need all that horizontal space, I like to be able to focus on one task without bits of other windows distracting me.

      Plus, I can split my emacs window horizontally and look at two files side-by-side. :)

    48. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by tomhudson · · Score: 2

      That doesn't mean it makes sense to maximize everything when you've got a monitor with a resolution of 1920x1080 or higher.

      There are plenty of reasons to use applications maximized. Here are 10 off the top of my head:

      1. tail -f /var/log/apache2/error_log - saves using the scrollback buffer, especially when there are lots of errors, long query strings, etc.,
      2 code editing using a real tab instead of 2 or 4 spaces, and an editor that supports multiple views into a file, and multiple windows inside the editor itself. I've sometimes stretched this across TWO 1920x1200 screens;
      3 web sites that aren't designed by morons back in the previous century to have a fixed
      4 spreadsheets
      5 graphical work, esp. on images zoomed in at 800% or more
      6 various IDEs (such as eclipse)
      7 games
      8 file browsers (esp. with previews)
      9 PIMs (not everyone uses gmail or hotmail or another webmail program)
      10 table dumps

      The only truths I've found are that the more screen space you have, the more uses you'll find for it, and that you eventually always want one more screen,

    49. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

      I have tried Gnome 3, its sizing options are similar but not exactly the same as Gnome 3 and in part it seems they want you to drag a window to an edge of the screen to size it. So to the side, it takes up the side of a screen with max height etc.

      Does it work? Part of it all is that workspaces are now far more an integral part of the setup. Not some tiny icons or obscure key commands, they are major sidebar so that you will not be minimizing apps, but switching work space with an easy option to arrange two windows next to each other for day to day tasks of reading something from X and doing something in Y.

      If it would be more finished and more apps are build to work with the new flow it could be intresting. If nobody every tried anything new, we would still be stuck with computers controlled by rewiring them physically.

      --

      MMO Quests are like orgasms:

      You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    50. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Alef · · Score: 1

      That doesn't mean it makes sense to maximize everything when you've got a monitor with a resolution of 1920x1080 or higher.

      Assuming you use the resolution to make things tiny, rather than increasing dpi, of course. Not that I maximize everything myself (I'm pretty much of the *nix variety), but I've never really understood the point of having lots of stuff on the screen that I'm not looking at -- it consumes screen space and distracts. I usually try to get rid of everything I'm not actively using, including many toolbars, tool buttons and scroll bars (the mouse wheel or PageUp/Down is sufficient for scrolling).

      That said, removing the maximize/minimize buttons seems a little bit drastic, especially considering they don't appear to make use of the available window bar area for anything other than painting a rather large homogeneous surface.

    51. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by bugi · · Score: 1

      Yes, for at least one person. I've been living happily without iconifying/hiding/minimizing windows for about 15 years now. I've been using the fvwm pager as workspaces. Works great.

      While I'm at it, I'd like to note that getting rid of title bars works great too. Window movement, sizing etc works great using keyboard modifiers with mouse gestures. That's the way your god and uwm intended it.

      Strictly speaking, workspaces aren't needed either. Before fvwm, I used vtwm. One big workspace with blindingly fast scrolling, even on crappy hardware with the complete lack of acceleration so prevalent back in the day. That said, I prefer pager-style workspaces. Best of both worlds.

    52. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by justsomebody · · Score: 3, Interesting

      actually, i just tested live image. and boy... it rocks like hell. as much as i was skeptical about minimize, maximize removal... in 1 minute i started wondering why were they there in the first place. managing maximization like in gnome 3 fells so much more natural. and minimize? when you have smart desktop managing, there is actually no point in having it. and automatic desktops... ROCK

      so... in 1 minute it felt natural
      in 5, i started wondering how dumb interfacing with desktop was before shell

      now, just give me good session manager and i'm willing to forget every single pain with interfaces as they were. don't know if i like docked dialogs copied from apple though, but fortunately they can easily be set off to standard behavior with settings manager. although i don't plan to do that first second, i want to be sure i have it right.

      p.s. the version that came with fedora 14 annoyed the hell out of me and i went back to standard after 1 day

      --
      Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
    53. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by ferongr · · Score: 1

      GIMP toolbars (and generally all kinds of toolbars in different programs) do not respond to mouse gestures, so you can actually drag them to the top and they wont maximize.

    54. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by justsomebody · · Score: 1

      actually in shell settings (Settings manager>>desktop>>shell) there is buttons setting which only contains close:. my best guess is that you can get them back here

      --
      Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
    55. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Well each to their own. It seems silly to take the functions away. I run fvwm by day at work and gnome at home by night. I haven't used windows primarily since 1990 or so and on windows in vmware at work I never maximise either. In fvwm I only maximise vertically, but I have a lot of screen to work with. At home with one, smaller screen, I maximise.

    56. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Knuckles · · Score: 1

      Rubbish. I have a 1,920 x 1,200 pixel, 24" flat panel (Dell U2410) myself, and I too run most applications maximized. I paid for the real estate, why would I want to waste most of it?

      "I run most stuff maximized" is not good argument for the requirement of a maximize button. For this use case the proper solution seems for the window manager to remember that you maximized certain applications (using a doubleclick, drag, or keyboard combo, all of which continue to be available in Gnome 3), and save this setting in the session manager. I don't know whether Gnome 3 does this (yet), but this seems to be consistent with the predictability and unobtrusiveness that the designers strive for, if you read TFAs.

      --
      "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
    57. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's all good to me. While I've got Ubuntu, Suse, and Fedora scattered around, my interface of choice is still:
      Gentoo & WindowMaker

      Take that Advanced UI CONCEPTS!

    58. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      And I minimize all the time so I can find things.

      According to the article the minimise button is going because there will be no way to find anything which is minimised, so there will be no task bar or window list. I look forward to a time when Gnome deprecate windows, dialogs, pixels, etc and shut up shop. Its a shame because I like the version I am using now. These guys are the worst fiddlers. They can't accept that maybe something has been finished and doesn't need more "enhancement"

    59. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by tjwhaynes · · Score: 1

      That's why I cannot stand Gnome. Sometimes it's very nice, like the customized versions for NetBooks, but the default version for PCs which has NO option to tweak it (unless you count recompiles which are worse than Windows registry edits) make it so that I don't and won't use it.

      Pretty much every Gnome tweakable can be changed with gconftool-2 or similar. If you want to hack the code to pieces and compile in something new, feel free, but it's mostly wasted effort because almost everything important can be altered. That the main GUIs are NOT cluttered by dozens of options actually makes a fair bit of sense. Alterations made with gconftool-2 are typically instantaneous, so if you want to change the spacing between buttons or enable compositing, it'll be done as soon as you make the change.

      Now with Gnome-3 there is a new level of tweakability for the power users - the entire UI is written in Javascript and theming is controlled by CSS. So anything you like/don't like/need to change can be rebuilt trivially and tested. So yes - the main UI is getting stripped down but the underlying infrastructure is not.

      --
      Anything I post is strictly my own thoughts and doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the opinions of IBM.
    60. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by PhilipTheHermit · · Score: 1

      I am also i this category. It appears I will be switching back to KDE as well.

      Since I've been using Ubuntu for a while, that means I'll be switching distros. I have decided to focus on Debian from now on, since it lets you choose which desktop you want to run. It seems better than Ubuntu anyway.

      The people who build Gnome seem intent on forcing everyone to do things their way. I hope their system falls out of favor, and they are all relegated to the scrap-heap of history, like all tyrants.

      --
      Thus spake the master programmer:
      "When the program is being tested, it is too late to make design changes." (Tao)
    61. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by bjwest · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how Win7 does it (Win7 is my gaming platform, so I don't spend much time on the desktop) but in KDE, you can drag windows to the top of the desktop easily by not clicking on the very top edge of the window (which will make the window resize anyway). Click and drag anywhere in the titlebar and as soon as the top edge of the window hits the top of the screen, the window will stop moving. Continueing your upward "dragging" will move only the pointer, and as soon as that hits the top edge of the screen, you will get window maximisation. Works left and right as well. Normal window dragging until the cursor hits the edge.
       

      --

      --- Keep the choice with the user..
    62. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I do the same thing but with virtual desktops. Each desktop might have a different setup including an app that is maximized becuase it makes sense for that particular application to be maximized.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    63. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by spitzak · · Score: 1

      Indeed both Gnome and KDE and Windows allow you to drag maximized windows to another desktop, so his reason for the minimize button does not make sense.

      You do have to remaximize it after dragging. On Windows 7 (and it sounds like on new Gnome) you do it by hitting it against the top of the screen, which is pretty easy since you are dragging the window anyway.

    64. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by cgomezr · · Score: 1

      I also maximize almost everything. That's why I can't stand Mac OS X. It has no maximization, or at least not in the way that Windows and KDE have it (there is a button, but it works different from program to program and doesn't make the window take up the entire screen...)

    65. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      Of course there are plenty of reasons to run software maximized, I was thinking more of the vast mass of users "trained" to always maximize everything. I see this at work sometimes, co-workers who are by no means computer illiterate (they work in IT or software development) yet they run everything that's full-screen if possible, then they use alt-tab to find the window they're looking for.

      The only truths I've found are that the more screen space you have, the more uses you'll find for it, and that you eventually always want one more screen,

      True, I myself have 2560x1440 + 1920x1080 for my main desktop at home and I still use six virtual desktops to maintain some semblance of order.

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    66. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      Sadly, that doesn't always work. I've run a few different apps that simply forced the window back to its original size...

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    67. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 'desktop' metaphor is ridiculous anyway. Why should you need to move/minimize all my windows just so I can start an application or to open a document? Why not just make them available without disturbing your current window setup, so you can focus at the task at hand instead of dealing with windows.

      I don't know about you, but I don't want do deal with windows. I want to deal with my data, not try rearrange my working environment just because I need more documents and data.

      I got rid of the desktop myself (disable nautilus desktop) and don't regret it. My applications are fullscreen most of the time, with shortcuts for horizontal and vertial split screen. I also make use of workspaces, one workspace for each work setup. Applications can be started through Alt+F2, folders can be opened the same way. I rarely re-arrange my windows after I started working - there is no need to.

      AFAIS, the developers of the gnome-shell are trying to make this more easy. And that's a good thing.

    68. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      OK.

      FWIW, I minimize windows all the time, and almost never maximize them.
      OTOH, this does depend on having a task bar in a fixed place on the screen. Currently I have it at the bottom, and frequent applications bar on top. If they've removed these feature, I'll definitely be using something else. I might even switch back to KDE4 rather than put up with the garbage they're announcing. But presumably someone will release a patched version. Or maybe Trinity (KDE3) will actually start working. (Perhaps they're just having systems troubles, but I can't even apt-get the thing.) Or maybe I'll give LXDE a shot. Many people are saying nice things about it, and if they've removed the task bar, then even TWM would be better.

      OTOH, this is just based on release announcements. It might not be quite a terrible as it sounds. But I'm certainly in no rush to try it.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    69. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Misagon · · Score: 1

      You are evidently using MS Windows, where you sometimes have to maximize to evade clutter. Unless you have been using multiple workspaces, you can't really compare.

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
    70. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Odinlake · · Score: 1

      Tiling WMs, people.

    71. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With that out of the way -- why are they removing them?

      You kidding? Because they're GNOME. They remove features for the hell of it.

    72. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rubbish. I have a 1,920 x 1,200 pixel, 24" flat panel (Dell U2410) myself, and I too run most applications maximized. I paid for the real estate, why would I want to waste most of it?

      I bet you have loads of tattoos and a massive dick too.

    73. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by nglbrkr · · Score: 1

      you know that if you alt-drag anywhere in the dialogue, you can move it as if you were grabbing the title bar?

    74. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's just a pain. Alt-O is print (ok), so I just use that.

    75. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by baryluk · · Score: 1

      And how is this releated to the story? I do not see, as gnome is disconected from its window manager, namely metacity, and (for gnome shell), mutter. And as many people already stated you can still maximize, minimize stuff even without buttons (in about 6 different ways). And If you want you can actually easly add them back. And actually they are not even removed if you do not use gnome shell...

    76. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by baryluk · · Score: 1

      Yes there is not desktop in "gnome SHELL" (yet, and will probably not be). And anyway you have this "show desktop / minimize all" buttons, geastures in compiz, etc.

      You do not need to use gnome shell, just use normal gnome desktop (gnome-panel + nautilus + metacity) with real desktop. And If you want you can easly readd minimize/maximize buttons if you wish. They are only chaning default for gnome shell.

    77. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      You're joking, but I accidentally maximize the window on Windows all the time because of that. I don't think I have *ever* intentionally maximized a window.

    78. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      Double clicking the bar in KDE can be set to activate windowshade mode, or restore a full window from it, which is a nice feature for some of us. It used to be people actually wrote third party apps just to add this function to early versions of Windows, up to about Me or 2000 at least, which leads me to conclude there was at least a small segment of the user base that finds windowshade effects seriously useful. Of course, my current KDE window configuration has 5 to 6 buttons in the top right corner (depending on whether "help" is included in that program), so there's probably very few people who want the same features I chose set the same way. KDE for the win.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    79. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by bicho · · Score: 1

      Except for the people that already use double clicking on the title bar for some other operation (like shada/unshade)

      --

      errera hunamum ets
    80. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These days I typically drag a window to the top of the screen to maximize.

    81. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by ikono · · Score: 1

      " Heh, only M$$$ SHEEPLE maximize stuff. don't they know maximizing is a Bad Habit??? They should learn to do things they way REAL people do it" /smug /neckbeard

      --
      Karma is for whores
    82. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      And how is this releated to the story?

      ... and how is your post related to the previous dozen posts? Oh, wait, you're one of the "threads must not deviate from the parent topic" nazis :-)

      Seriously though, the reason the buttons were removed was because they wanted to make it more "touch-friendly" - having the two buttons so close together was a problem, and the obvious answers (put more space between, or move one to the left) eluded them, and "why bother with desktop and laptop users, we want to INN-OWE-V8!"

      The end result is a LOT of wasted screen real estate. I'm sticking with KDE, and from the comments, there are a lot of people who will be dropping GNOME. Sure, you can change the defaults, but defaults should make sense, and this one doesn't, any more than making the cancel button the first one does. No matter, whether it's gnome or unity they both suck.

    83. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      I use the buttons. On KDE, left-click on the maximize buttons maxes horizontally, middle-click maxes vertically. In particular, I use middle-click all the time.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    84. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Lanteran · · Score: 1

      39" 3080x1050. Got me beat on vertical resolution though.

      --
      "People don't want to learn linux" hasn't been a valid excuse since '03.
    85. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by kiddygrinder · · Score: 1

      you use more than one application at a time? what absolute bullshit, people can only do one thing at once and while you might think you're "multitasking" what you're actually doing is just wasting time trying to re-adjust to whatever 3 things you're giving bugger all attention to.

      --
      This is a joke. I am joking. Joke joke joke.
    86. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Jello+B. · · Score: 1

      Kubuntu is the best KDE distro I've tried recently, as strange as it sounds. It used to be miserable but there's just enough Ubuntu in it that it has more support by software developers.

    87. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      Now with Gnome-3 there is a new level of tweakability for the power users - the entire UI is written in Javascript and theming is controlled by CSS. So anything you like/don't like/need to change can be rebuilt trivially and tested. So yes - the main UI is getting stripped down but the underlying infrastructure is not.

      thus bringing never-seen-before sluggishness in pc ui. why in hell would you use javascript for the fucking ui on your computer? things like these prevent computers from getting substantial speed improvements over computers 5 years older.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    88. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      You only use ONE application at a time? Ok... 1980 called, it wants its workflow back.

      It's not a waste if:
      1) Maximizing the window makes it actually harder to absorb the content in that window (as is the case with web browsers)
      2) I use the extra space for something I look at often, like my IM buddy list and messages.

      yes. i really can't interact with more than one program simultaneously. and i've not seen anyone who can read slashdot and chat simultaneously. you switch between windows or tabs to chat, and for me it really breaks the flow of conversation if it is interspersed with arrogant boasts of people like you.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    89. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      switching windows is easy on the computer, but it takes my mind time to switch tasks.
      alt+tab=100ms
      brain task switching~10s

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    90. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      You don't even need to reinstall, just get the kubuntu-desktop meta-package.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    91. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Javascript is actually a powerful but lightweight language. There is no reason for this to introduce lag.

      You're used to JS being slow because of the difficulty in dealing with the HTML DOM model, and the low quality of actual code written by people who are really interface designers.

    92. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by tixxit · · Score: 1

      I have a Mac for work and have never minimised anything either. Between "expose" (tiling the windows for easy picking) and workspaces I've never had to minimise. The biggest thing I miss on my home laptop (Lenovo T60 + Ubuntu) is the 4 finger gesture for expose that the MacBook Pro has.

    93. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by marsu_k · · Score: 1

      You do have to remaximize it after dragging. On Windows 7 (and it sounds like on new Gnome) you do it by hitting it against the top of the screen

      In KDE as well, since 4.something. Although if you have your virtual desktops configured in two rows or more, you'll have to be careful not to push too far or you'll end up in a different desktop.

    94. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by kiddygrinder · · Score: 1

      double click to maximise is the the only way i do it, however it is less than obvious. It's a bold move but they need to figure out some non-annoying training wheels to get away with this.

      --
      This is a joke. I am joking. Joke joke joke.
    95. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by globaljustin · · Score: 2

      Hey Sal, you said:

      >>UI Design is_closer to psychology, anthropology, Comparative Linguistics than Computer Science. It's **extremely subjective** as there isn't something like the perfect "UI", like there isn't any perfect human language or the perfect blueprint for an house. emphasis added

      So b/c there is no 'perfect UI' then Usability can't be a 'real' science? So then where is the perfect model of the universe? Because surely by the same standard Physics would have had to produce such a document.

      As a scientist, I'm sure you see the logical fallacy of your claim. It is the method, data, and analysis approach that makes research truly 'science' or more in your example of "UI Design" case studies.

      Yes it is true, most Usability and Human/Computer Interaction (HCI)studies use only case reports and ordinal data. Yes typically psychology and similar disciplines use that same approach.

      However, HCI researchers are becoming closer to true cyberneticists (http://www.colorado.edu/communication/meta-discourses/Papers/App_Papers/McGarry.htm) every day.

      Communications, specifically telecommunications, will help us take the analog signal of human intelligence and link it with our digital creations....it is already...quantization bits

      --
      Thank you Dave Raggett
    96. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Minimizing is not uncommong thing to do, it is just stupid to do from top of the window corner.

      I have now since KDE SC 4.2 used a KWin configuration where I dont have a buttons in window decoration.
      And since KDE SC 4.6 (or was it 4.5...) I have enjoyed it even more because they finally toke in the possibility close window by double clicking titlebar.

      I have taskpanel at bottom of the screen. When window gets minimized, it moves (animated of course) to that panel. When I want it back, I need to click it from the taskpanel.
      I find it very stupid to miminize the window from window corner as it and the taskpanel are two different thing.

      So I removed the minimize button from decoration and it is now more natural to miminize the window by clicking it on taskpanel and bring it back up from there. And same thinks everyone who has taken that function in use (old people or totally new users) as now they totally get the taskpanel idea to hide and include tasks.

      The the maximize thing... I liked very much the idea what MS presented at Windows 7 (I have feeling it has been on other window managers at Unix world before that) and when KDE implented it to KWin in KDE SC 4.5, I can just maximize window by dragging it to top edge of screen. 50% maximize by dragging it to left/right edge of the screen. And now even more since KDE SC 4.6 release, I can drag it to top or bottom part of right/left edge of the screen to get window take 1/4 part of the screen. Very great for konsole windows or text editors. So basicly what KDE did, was improve again more the functionality what MS did.

      So, I could remove the maximize button as well.
      Long time I used the (Since KDE 3.5 to KDE SC 4.2) just the close button at decoration, double clicking decoration to maximize the window and miminize it from the taskpanel. But now I dont have a single button there.

      Double click decoration = Close window
      Mouse wheel up/down decoration = shade/unshade window (used most)
      Click taskpanel = minimize window / show window
      Drag window edge of screen = maximize / un maximize window

      And the KWin effects (cloned from Compiz-Fusion) for Expose kind effect (from Mac OS X) combined with Desktop Grid... makes the window and virtual desktop management perfect and intuitive for new users.

      Top left corner of screen = show desktop grid + expose effect for window (you can see all window open, even if minimized)
      Top right corner of screen = show windows from current virtual desktop (even if minimized)
      Bottom right corner of screen = show all windows from all virtual desktops (even if minimized).

      With this setup, I have more fuild, intuitive functionality than that GNOME 3.0 offers at this point (nightly build in tests).

      I have never liked shortcuts for window controls (min/max/close) but I have found window managemet shortcuts nice (Ctrl+Shift+F1-F4 to move active window wanted virtual desktop, but I dont use it neither anymore with KWin features on top left corner).

         

    97. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      Except of course for the fact that this was not what I wrote.

      If you look back to the mid-to-late '90s you'll notice that the average Windows user was using 800x600 or even 640x480, meanwhile the *nix world had pretty much "standardized" on 1280x1024@72Hz.

      There's also the issue of lots of new computer users being introduced to both computers and GUIs through Windows at that time, a time when it was often necessary to run your applications fullscreen if you wanted them to be usable.

      Now throw in the fact that while in 1995 the average Windows user had a 486 or a low-end Pentium the *nix world frequently had workstations with 200-300 MHz CPUs and often had two or more CPUs. And of course there's RAM, Windows 95 required 4 MiB of RAM while many workstations could handle a lot more than that. SGI's mid-range Indigo^2 series with R4400 CPUs could handle up to 384 MiB of RAM and they were released in 1993. If I recall correctly they originally shipped with 96 MiB, not exactly memory starved when compared to the average desktop wintel machine of 1995.

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    98. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by moonbender · · Score: 1

      I remember using a system extension to add window shading to Mac OS 7.1. :) These days, I never use it, even though Compiz supports it.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    99. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by pmontra · · Score: 1

      I have no problem doing without the maximize button because it's much easier and faster to double click on the title bar than aiming at a small button. I also agree that if you don't have any place to minimize a window to, you don't need the minimize button anymore but the real reason I have no problem with them removing it is that I'm not going to use Gnome Shell: it's just not the way I like to use a computer. A thing as simple as ALT-TAB becomes so complicate with windows moving, screen resizing, icons appearing. It's just unbearable. What's very wrong is that the desktop moves: everything must stay still and only the window I select must come on the top of all the others. And for virtual desktops, well, I always use two or three of them and I know where my windows are. So, no thanks, Gnome Shell is not for me. Not that Unity is much better but it looks that it will be easier to make it work the way I want, that is, just one panel at the bottom of the screen. I think that the default configuration of Unity will look good only on my small screen netbook.

    100. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by justsomebody · · Score: 1

      i'd only say one thing, try it http://gnome3.org/tryit.html it is free and you don't even need to install (last image has some problems with intel drivers, rest should work)

      there is a difference how it works, since most of it works trough object introspection and calls native code, same as python. did you ever feel python apps would be sluggish? i sure didn't.

      if anything shell is one of more responsive desktops there as long as you have 3d hardware. i tested it with nvidia ion and ati 3650 and it performs just as well as my tweaked desktop with compiz if not better. both cards are shit of the line not top of the line.

      why do people comment blindly instead of trying to test and actually make sane comments standing on the ground?

      --
      Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
    101. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Sal+Zeta · · Score: 1

      Hold on. Of course this system is by no means perfect, I thought it was quite clear when I associated it to "humanistic" branches of knowledge.

      And of course your reasoning is correct, but it would be the equivalent of saying "we should not be bothered by the Second Law of Thermodynamics while building our engine, we can always implement a Maxwell's Demon trough nanorobotics after all". It's not physically impossible, but it's an irrealistically hard objective to achieve.

      I've been lucky enough to see in action the result of neurolinguistic experiments applied to design and communication, and despite the amazing results, they're still in a very initial phase; I think that the "old school approach" it's still good enough and cost effective to be used in a project like GNOME 3, and it would require no less than 50 years before a change in attitude.

      And by the way, pragmatically speaking I doubt that the common user would be glad to have a CAT in order to reconfigure their interface to better suit their current mental patterns.

    102. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Why have a UI built in a high level interpretive language? Because that makes everything incredibly powerful. Emacs is a perfect example of this sort of interface. There is a small bit of C-code which gets ELisp running and from there everything is in ELisp. Emacs went on for several decades to be essentially an operating system, because end users were able to write small programs to customize the UI to have exactly the features they wanted. That's a hacker's dream.

      Another example was (though this one failed) was Microsoft's Active Desktop. A while collection of web based rich clients were created almost instantly because of the power of Active Desktop combined with Active X. The applications were simply amazing, and were able to take advantage of technologies like Active Channel which still today is complicated in other contexts. Just imagine if Microsoft had solved the stability and security problems where the web could have been.

    103. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      That's an interesting comment. I had a situation where I had a bad quality monitors at home (17" 1024x768 interlaced for many years) while having a paper white VGA X-Terms (with terrific resolution) at school.

      My daughter so far seems to contradict your theory though. AFAIK she's never seen a bad resolution monitor and likes to run maximized. She's got good eyesight. It may be because both of her parents run virtual terminals, tabs, lots of windows.... she just sees more than 1 as a mess.

    104. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by dominious · · Score: 1

      Maximize all your windows by default, that's what I do.

      I have a 25 inch monitor you insensitive clod.

    105. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by PhilipTheHermit · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but I find myself drawn to Debian. In an age where everyone seems to be trying to dumb things down for the hoi polloi, the folks at Debian specifically keep power users and geeks like me in mind. They pay attention to us, and deliberately make it possible for us to do our thing our way.

      I'm definitely switching to Debian and using KDE from here on in. I'm going to spend some money in their store too. I wonder what they've got available... At the least I'll buy a full DVD set.

      Incidentally, I remember back in the old days, using Red Hat and Slackware, that I was able to do a lot more tuning of my GUI than I've been able to with Ubuntu. How I have missed that. I'm looking forward to what I can play with under Debian.

      --
      Thus spake the master programmer:
      "When the program is being tested, it is too late to make design changes." (Tao)
    106. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I (mostly) second justsomebody. I was pretty sure I was going back to KDE in April, but I tried the alpha, and I may stay with Gnome. I had a few problems with speed, which I assume will be ironed out with the beta/release, but I like the replacement of maximise with drag up. The Tiling WM part helps with minimise, but I would like to have seen a motion (drag down?) that preserved the function without right clicking. I sort of regret that they kept the title bar at all: It's a waste of space now, since it's only function is tied to a tiny triangle in the upper right. Ultimately, if they decide to pursue this sort of minimalism, I hope that the menu buttons for applications are placed there. All in all though, the transition was natural. I suspect that, if I go with Gnome 3, it'll take me hours, not days, to get used to it.

      I think Gnome could greatly ease the transition by making all this configurable. Unfortunately, I doubt they will, but I'd love to see the option to turn on the standard buttons, or specify what motions did what, etc.

      All in all, Good Idea. It's going to be sudden, and I wish Gnome had eased into it a little more, made all this configurable, but it looks clean, and I don't think it will impair my productivity after a day of messing around (which I'm willing to offer), and I think it will improve it in the long run.

    107. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      Ok fine then. Other than web browsing, word processing, spreadsheets, photo editing, video editing, Tweetdeck, gaming, and a few other categories, there's really no reason anyone needs their app maximized.

      Everyone knows that all comps are really good for is instant messaging anyway.

      --
      This space available.
    108. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      I use EEEbuntu on my netbook.
      Do you know of a distro with KDE desktop that has been optimized for netbooks? If dropping features I use isn't enough reason to dump software, arrogant designers make up for that and give me more than enough reason.

      I hate that kind of shit. Firefox morons dropping the status bar in 4.0, etc.

      --
      This space available.
    109. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by justsomebody · · Score: 1

      here is your patch

      gconftool-2 -s -t string /desktop/gnome/shell/windows/button_layout ":minimize,maximize,close"

      happy?

      --
      Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
    110. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by PhilipTheHermit · · Score: 1

      UPDATE: I tried Debian, and I'm sorry, but I don't know what's going on with that distro. First, the default background was some kind of space scene that looks like it was done by little kids, with whooshing kiddie rocket ships and simplistic drawings of a vaguely saturn-like planet. Horrible, just horrible. I thank GOD I didn't show that to my boss, he'd have laughed out loud and banned me from the server room.

      I'm not going to pick on the Debian guys, but I was completely unhappy with Debian. It was terrible. I'm going back to Ubuntu; if the Gnome guys keep acting like idiots I'll switch to Kubuntu or install KDE like the other guy said.

      --
      Thus spake the master programmer:
      "When the program is being tested, it is too late to make design changes." (Tao)
    111. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by CSMoran · · Score: 1

      If nobody every tried anything new, we would still be stuck with computers controlled by rewiring them physically

      And that would be bad how?

      --
      Every end has half a stick.
    112. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by AigariusDebian · · Score: 1

      BTW: you can try the Gnome 3 way now - just double click the window title bar to maximize and to 'minimize' click the middle mouse button on the title bar. Instead of minimizing the window will be sent to the back to the visual stack, which is what you want anyway most of the time.

    113. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by PhilipTheHermit · · Score: 1

      Thank you! I'll try that. Good suggestion...

      --
      Thus spake the master programmer:
      "When the program is being tested, it is too late to make design changes." (Tao)
    114. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by Spakman · · Score: 1

      Strange. I have the same setup and GNOME 2 usually manages to retain maximisation when I drag them between monitors.

    115. Re:Is that really well tested in the real world? by PhilipTheHermit · · Score: 1

      Firefox is dropping the status bar in 4.0??? What???

      But... But... WHY?

      I see a status bar plugin in my future.

      --
      Thus spake the master programmer:
      "When the program is being tested, it is too late to make design changes." (Tao)
  2. Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The world becomes more and more like satire every day.

     

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by mickwd · · Score: 5, Funny

      Odd that they have a GNOME Marketing Contractor, when the GNOME Devs themselves seem to be doing such a good job of contracting their market (share).

    2. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by mickwd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Fortunately, it was well planned, not just a result of someone changing their mind while writing an email.

    3. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by TheLink · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It might seem a bit strange to make a big change based on only reasonable certainty, but more than that is hard to get. User studies can be informative, but in this area, we're really interested how experienced users work with a lot of windows, so the most basic approach of paying people off the street to sit in front of of a computer for an hour to do predesigned tasks wasn't going tell us much.

      Yeah hilarious. Are they really interested in how experienced users work? Or have they been paid by someone to sabotage GNOME (just looking at the stupid ideas they've been coming up with).

      Not sure if I count as an experienced user but the way I work with lots of windows (e.g. 30+) is, I use Windows (2K/XP/7) and have all the task buttons ungrouped and in two rows, so that I can click directly on them to raise the window I want. I also have a utility I wrote called LinkKey[1] so that I can quickly bind alt-1 to alt-9 to various windows - so for example if I have to work amongst 4 windows, I can just press alt-1,2,3,4 to switch amongst them.

      GNOME or KDE don't suit me for handling lots of windows - they order task buttons vertically first then horizontally so if I close a window, ALL task buttons on its right change relative vertical positions making me lose track of where stuff is. Windows orders the task buttons horizontally first then vertically, so only a few edge buttons are affected.

      I find it funny that friends I know who use unix/linux as their primary desktop tend to use "screen" to manage their tasks/"windows" quickly. To me that shows how crappy the GNOME and KDE GUIs are. They can't even beat "screen" after so many years.

      [1] http://sourceforge.net/projects/linkkey/
      I have no idea who did the recommendation (wasn't me!). I think only a few people in the world will find it useful, but I figured I might as well put it on sourceforge.

      --
    4. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Gnome core modules are dominated by Redhat devs. Gnome sites are hosted by Redhat. Gnome foundation board is populated by Redhat employees. Anything that goes on with Gnome is preternaturally influenced by Redhat's agenda. Who stands to lose the most by Gnome's lost market share? Ubuntu, of course. This is move like Redhat's decision to release kernel source with the patches already applied in order to screw with Oracle. By driving users away from desktop, Redhat effectively kills Ubuntu's (Canonical's) ability to gain in market share because producing a polished desktop is Canonical's avenue to selling value-added services and tie-ins to their server support options.

      Of course, Redhat loses some desktop share too, but that's not been their focus for a long time. And as soon as Canonical folds, you'll probably see Gnome adding support back to the version 2 type interface with gnome-panel and such.

      Btw, Redhat also unduly influences freedesktop.org projects as well. They are very much the Microsoft of the Linux community.

    5. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt that the primary reason they use software such as Gnu-screen or tmux is to "manage their tasks/windows quickly".

      Other reasons might include (but are not limited to:)
      - It allows you to restart X (say, after an upgrade) without killing the apps inside the screen/tmux-session.
      - It allows you to reattach the same session from multiple computers.
      - It allows several people to use the same session.

      And honestly, your way of working with "lots of windows" sounds like crap. Lots and lots of searching the task-bar.
      If you have 30+ windows open at the same time, you could save yourself of a lot of unnecessary task-bar hunting just by using virtual desktops, and grouping your windows by task, like "work", "www", "code", or whatever.

    6. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BnLbv6QYcA I have no clue what you're talking about.

    7. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by phantomlord · · Score: 2

      I realize that you're just another anonymous troll, but...

      Ubuntu is moving away from X11 and GNOME to their own windowing system (Unity on Wayland), so whatever "Redhat does to GNOME" will matter little to them anyway since Ubuntu is abandoning the platform.

      The GNOME devs have been pigheaded ever since the inception of GNOME 2 with their mentality of "dumb everything down and take away options from the users. Some functionality got added back sometime around GNOME 2.12 (I had stuck with 1.2 until then) making it usable again, but the vast majority of what was taken away never came back. I'm already preparing to abandon GNOME for something else once support for GNOME 2 has ended, though I haven't decided what I'll be using yet.

      Redhat may have a lot of influence over the Linux world, but that's because they're the ones actively funding work and distributing efforts of that work. While they're busy paying the devs to work on some of the most critical tools and libraries (kernel, gcc, glibc, GNOME, etc), Ubuntu has gotten criticism for not even contributing patches back upstream.

      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    8. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your experience with MS windows is not very helpful in discussions of Gnome design. You claim to use 30+ windows at a time, and have some established scheme for arranging them in MS Windows.

      Now introduce workspaces. Suddenly, your organization and efficiency changes drastically. Now rarely used windows get pushed into workspace 5 or 6 or 8. Soon enough you begin to realize that you don't really need to have the windows in workspace 8 open all the time and you might as well just close them.

      You might also appreciate tabbed terminals in gnome-terminal. So 8 terminal windows collapse into one. 12 browser windows consolidate into 3 with 4-5 related tabs each.

    9. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't wish to be in any way rude, but I think you may be an edge case in the way you work.

      I'm a sys-op for a smallish company and we use a mix of Linux and Windows (Ubuntu and Win7/XP). I find that most people on both platforms either use the taskbar/alt-tab to move between windows, and either never minimise or use 'show desktop'. Maximise is either never done (they just resize or leave it at the size the app opened at) or done by double clicking the app title bar.

      The plural of anecdote is not data and all that...but you may find this interesting anyway.

    10. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by turbidostato · · Score: 2

      "GNOME or KDE don't suit me for handling lots of windows"

      No, this isn't the point. Your problems with Gnome/KDE are that, as it usually happens in other usability realms, you being a kind of "power user", have invested a lot of time doing things in some particular way that fits proper in some particular environment, then you try to export your way of doing things to a different environment -and fail.

      "they order task buttons vertically first then horizontally"

      No, they don't. They do that, maybe *by default*, but you can bet they don't work that way, i.e. on my own desktop.

      "I find it funny that friends I know who use unix/linux as their primary desktop tend to use "screen" to manage their tasks/"windows" quickly. To me that shows how crappy the GNOME and KDE GUIs are. They can't even beat "screen" after so many years."

      They show another quite common usability pattern: once you have invested heavily in one tool/behaviour, you tend to use it in as many scenarios as possible (for a man with a hammer everything looks like a nail). Screen is such a powerful tool and pales to such a big extent anything you can find on Microsoft-world, it isn't even fun. No wonder a user confindent on screen uses it even on less than perfect scenarios.

      With regards of using a lot of apps open with i.e. KDE, I can tell that the ability to have multiple desktops (I usually configure KDE to use six of them), bind given applications to some of them (i.e.: mail/calendar/tasks to #1, shell to #2, web browser to #3...), saving either current sesion or a predefined one state so it automatically goes that way when starting your session (I use the latter, so mail, shell, web browser -with different tabs pointing to specific URLs, and some others automatically are there, in my predefined virtual desktops, in the desired state, when I start a session) and preconfigured key-bindings makes me envvy your productivity on Windows not the slightest.

      Of course, trying that approach on Windows may force me to conclude how crappy the Windows environment is that lacks such obvious productivity enhancers.

    11. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May I recommend the "Window grouping" feature in kwin/kde? Although arguably nothing new, I'd argue it has been a real boon.

    12. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by andydread · · Score: 1

      Excellent very punny

    13. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu is moving away from X11 and GNOME to their own windowing system (Unity on Wayland), so whatever "Redhat does to GNOME" will matter little to them anyway since Ubuntu is abandoning the platform.

      Every day mainstream Linux projects move Linux closer and closer to windows.

      KDE 4 - Initially a joke. Might be less of one now.
      Upstart - No benefits that outweight the added complexity.
      Systemd - No benefits that outweight the added complexity.
      Unity/Wayland - a disaster for X11 programs.
      Gnome - Patronizing, dumbed down, and inflexible.
      rm --preserve-root by default - Sick.
      I'm sure there are loads more examples.

      Linux has a lot going for it but the way things are going it risks being just another OS for retarded end users, just like windows. Where are the simple and effective distributions?

    14. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Bitmanhome · · Score: 2

      On Windows, my task bar is on the left. It leaves me the full height of the screen for windows, plus gives me a single huge column for the task buttons. Only once have I gotten close to filling the thing. It's set to auto hide if I have one monitor, but not if I have two.

      I'd like to do the same thing in Gnome, but the panel widgets don't behave correctly when the panel is vertical.

      --
      Not that this wasn't entirely predictable.
    15. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Win-1 to Win-9 are already linked to the 1st through 9th taskbar buttons in Windows 7, and you can drag-and-drop to rearrange them and pin them to make sure the respective apps are always in the same taskbar position, making linkkey somewhat unnecessary. As an added bonus, if a pinned app isn't running, pressing the corresponding hotkey will start it (if it's already running it will simply switch to it).

    16. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Justus · · Score: 1

      You're presenting that a bit disingenuously; it reads more that he was writing the e-mail and used the opportunity to review the data, which is what caused him to change his mind. It's not like he arbitrarily decided from one paragraph to the next that “well, I guess minimize and maximize are going away today!”

      This seems more like the GNOME folks don't have a solid idea how to integrate minimization into their new UI paradigm, so rather than saddle users with an implementation that seems poor (i.e. the complaint would probably have been “minimization in GNOME doesn't make sense any more”), they just took it out. I'm not quite sure why the maximize button was removed, although perhaps because they felt it would be odd to have only “maximize” and “close.” The functionality remains, however, and I will say that in Windows 7, I actually always maximize windows using the mouse gesture (or keyboard shortcut) and not the button.

    17. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the VAST majority of average computer users would simply waste time (work time and CPU time) with your setup.

      The pendulum for workflow is shifting the other way... With Apple's iPad people have "seen the light" that the idea of "windows" is outdated. Simpler tasks, that optimize the whole work area are preferable to toggling lots of windows around. Basically your workflow is just like on an iPhone or iPad.... only those systems are designed to give nearly 100% of the resources to the "user's" program rather than keeping a bunch of crap in the background. They do it on 256MB of RAM and 8GB of flash... modern PCs have 4GB+ of RAM!! alone. Even Apple is going to shift Lion in that direction... and having used full screen apps that are starting to show up, I can't stand using "windowed" apps anymore. Gnome's people see the writing on the wall and are moving ahead.. Gnome's focus is simplicity... and emulating iPad/iPhone is a logical step because that's what everybody understands now.

    18. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check out ion3. It's a window manager designed exactly for the usage scenario you described. It's somewhat based on moving up screen's paradigm into a window manager. It's all of 300kB, and handles gazillion windows with ease. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion3

    19. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      So you are saying that Redhat is secretly trying to ruin Gnome so as to hurt Ubuntu... I imagine you suspect Redhat is also secretly writing a new desktop to use in future releases of RHEL, right?

    20. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GNOME or KDE don't suit me for handling lots of windows

      Virtual desktops. Try them.

    21. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Linux has a lot going for it but the way things are going it risks being just another OS for retarded end users, just like windows. Where are the simple and effective distributions?

      If you don't want dumbed down and complex, set up a Gentoo config that does what you need and leave it at that.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    22. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      The nice thing, and the hard thing, about X11 is that there are lots of different window managers, depending on your needs there's probably one that's ideal for you.

      Based on your preferences, you might check out Awesome. It even works with KDE, if you want that.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    23. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two words for your friends: scrotwm and tmux. That way you can have windows and "windows" all the way down, and all perfectly managed in a rational way. The GNU desktops are easy on the eyes, but for work nothing beats tiling wms.

      I'd recommend a tiling wm for windows users as well, and I use a heavily modified one at work, but sadly many Windows apps are bad players, and are window manager wannabes(MS Excel), aren't resizable, or are otherwise bothering enough to take away the benefits of tiling.

      In X you generally have a resizable non-screen-hog alternative. And the terminal which is the most important app isn't limited in any way.

    24. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't it a bit presumptions to assume that all "experienced users" do things just like you?

    25. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I find it funny that friends I know who use unix/linux as their primary desktop tend to use "screen"
      > to manage their tasks/"windows" quickly. To me that shows how crappy the GNOME and KDE
      > GUIs are. They can't even beat "screen" after so many years.

      I am an avid screen user. My reason for using screen instead of (or rather in conjunction with) multiple windows / tabs has little to do with window-manager shortcomings. The primary reasons are detaching long-running tasks from terminals (X/terminal crash-proofing myself), and resource consumption.

      The part about isolating myself from accidental window closures, X server crashes, terminal crashes, ssh-session drops, whatever is self-explanatory.
      Then there's the resource-consumption. Gnome-terminal handles resources like a pig. It's a pleasant enough terminal on most other respects, but the ram... the ram.

      That's really the jist of my disagreement. I don't know about the horizontal-vertical ordering thing - I don't tend to use the taskbar for window management, but your remark about screen was just untrue. IMHO, terminal-type tasks are better managed in terminal-ly ways:)

      Personally, I'm for the removing the minimize button. I've been dealing with swells of annoyance for years now, watching people's misuse of minimization.

    26. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by atlasdropperofworlds · · Score: 1

      Because I work, I need a windowing system. Dedicating the screen to a single windows would obliterate my productivity. I need to be able to see my browser, my editors, my debugger, etc. Perhaps a single-app display is fine for the few who like to use tablets, but it's not fine for those of us to have to produce. The iPad is an example of a niche product. You're better served using those functions in a phone, whereas the iPad is a toy, plain and simple. It will only replace casual browsing and casual computing, which isn't the ONLY type of computing people do.

    27. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Adam+Jorgensen · · Score: 1

      Yes, well, that's what you get for using Gnome. I would recommend you try KDE, it has better support for vertical panels. @TheLink: You're obviously a Windows Power User and not a Linux User, because if you were the latter you would already known about the multi-desktop paradigm which most Linux users live by. My own setup consists of a my laptop hooked up to a 24" LCD. My system runs KDE 4.6 and is configured to use 8 virtual desktops organised into 2 columns. The laptop screen is configured as primary display and located to the left of my LCD which is set up as a secondary. Usage -wise, at home I use the LCD as my primary, while on the go the laptop screen takes over this role. My laptop screen is scattered with various widgets such as TODO lists and so forth as well as a vertical panel containing useful things like the system tray etc, while the LCD is a big empty space with no panels or anything. For fast terminal access I use Yakuake. To me, this is the natural order. The fact that Windows 7 still doesn't support Virtual Desktops out of the box means I never run more than about 5 apps at once when I do use it. Then and again, I only use Windows for gaming. Linux is where the work happens, which is as it should be.

    28. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by pmontra · · Score: 1

      Linux has a lot going for it but the way things are going it risks being just another OS for retarded end users, just like windows. Where are the simple and effective distributions?

      OSX is by definition aimed to retarded end users (don't touch it, it just works!) so if Linux and Windows are for retarded end users too what OS are we left with? But I disagree with you: I'm using Ubuntu 10.10 and I've been able to tweak the GUI to behave the way I like and that's probably a substantial tweak from the point of view of the GNOME team. So, the defaults could be for retarded people but there are ways to work around them (the defaults).

      Oh, thanks for mentioning --preserve-root. I didn't know about it but I also never tried a sudo rm -fr / this century :-)

    29. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      [1] http://sourceforge.net/projects/linkkey/
      I have no idea who did the recommendation (wasn't me!). I think only a few people in the world will find it useful, but I figured I might as well put it on sourceforge.

      That is great, thanks! I filed this feature request on KDE:
      https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=267781

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    30. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I prefer linux to deal with a lot of projects and windows, because in windows there is no good way to manage that at all, which is pity...
      Well, I work with a lot of windows using Desktops... Additionally I use utility called superswitcher, which is just perfect. It really depends on which taks one work, if that is bunch of terminals, they can use tabs or screen, but GUI apps won't work in screen. So for terminal users screen still might be a way to go, GUI needs to be done otherwise. There are a lot of tabbed tools which is strenght of nix.

    31. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by dominious · · Score: 1

      In Gnome 4 they will also remove windows since they take up so much space. Simple command-liners are much faster and make more sense right?

    32. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Why would I need to taskbar hunt? The 30+ buttons will remain where I remember them as long as the UI doesn't shuffle them.

      If I use virtual desktops it would be slower, because I would:
      1) have to switch to a desktop first
      2) take extra time to move windows to a desktop.

      --
    33. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      I'm well aware of multi-desktops. I just rather not use them: why would I want to make extra clicks when I can just click directly on the task button I want? I don't like OSX's Expose for similar reasons.

      FWIW I never claimed in my post to be a typical user (I even hinted about that when I mentioned the program I wrote for my own usage- that very few in the world would find useful :) ).

      Here's more about how I set up Windows 9x/2K/XP (no longer works for Windows 7 unfortunately): http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=175866&cid=14627608

      --
    34. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Win-1 to Win-9 are already linked to the 1st through 9th taskbar buttons in Windows 7

      to make sure the respective apps are always in the same taskbar position, making linkkey somewhat unnecessary.

      Windows 7's approach doesn't work so well if you want to switch quickly amongst a particular app's windows.

      For example say you have three spreadsheet windows and one word processor window, and you are using info in the three spreadsheet windows to edit the word processor document.

      Windows 7's method would be significantly slower and more error prone.

      Whereas to use LinkKey you would just click the four windows in reverse order, press alt-0, and after that alt+1 through to alt+4 would be bound to those windows in order (you can configure LinkKey to use alt instead of winkey so as not to clash with Windows 7's usage).

      --
    35. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Failed reading comprehension? You're the one assuming stuff and falsely too.

      --
    36. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      I actually made the feature request to KDE years ago: http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=121349

      And more recently to GNOME too:
      http://www.mail-archive.com/usability@gnome.org/msg04993.html

      Since nobody in KDE/GNOME was interested in implementing it, I wrote LinkKey (for Windows since I prefer Windows for desktop stuff to KDE/GNOME. FWIW, my home server is running a Linux distro, so I am far from anti-Linux or OSS).

      I might revisit Desktop Linux if Windows gets worse. But KDE and GNOME are currently worse and GNOME sure looks like it won't be good for me any time soon.

      --
    37. Re:Has slashdot been taken over by The Onion? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      I cannot speak for Gnome, but usability feature requests can go unattended for years at KDE. I've filed literally hundreds of them.

      As the RFE that I filed is not quite a dupe of yours, I'll not mark it as a dupe. We'll see if anyone ever gets around to implementing them. I suppose that a plasmoid might be able to do it as well.

      Have a great week.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
  3. Vin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's idiotic, I suppose I'll be switching to KDE (barring GNOME coming to its senses in future versions, of course).

  4. executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Windows: focus groups, study users, never get it quite brilliant but basically give people what they want.

    Apple: try to think about what will appeal to the user, deliver to maximise experience.

    Gnome: WE DID COMP SCI IN COLLAGE AND HURD OF DON NORMAN THIS MAEKS US EXPURTS ON UI DESIGN. WE HAVE NO EVIDENCE OR TRACK RECORD BUT U WANT WAT WE WANT. WE WANT TO MAKE A NAME 4 OURSELVES PLS ACCEPT ONE OF OUR IDEAS PLS!!!

    1. Re:executive summary of approaches by Heliologue · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Let's be honest, though; both Apple and Gnome have pretty much the same design approach. The only difference is that when Apple does it, all their douchebag fanboys call it a design win, but when Gnome does it, it's a terrible, uninformed, arbitrary decision. It's stupid either way.

    2. Re:executive summary of approaches by aix+tom · · Score: 1

      LXDE / Openbox: Just fix the technical things, and let the user decide how it gets put together, that way they leave us alone with their nagging.

    3. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because for the most part Apple is right, whereas GNOME is wrong.

    4. Re:executive summary of approaches by Shin-LaC · · Score: 2, Informative

      This is bullshit. Mac users have been hammering Apple with criticism all the way since Rhapsody, and a lot of things you see now are the result of Apple listening to that criticism. I know this sounds strange to you, but that's because you have no idea what you're talking about.

    5. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More like:

      Windows: We'll copy anything that seems interesting, but we're stuck with legal UI.

      Apple: We don't care what you want or desire.

      Gnome: ...

    6. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they are just board and want to make gnome a better windows manager how about getting rid of all the hald dependency. Merge with some compiz that seem people are really enjoying and merge correctly gvfs so that it is a more secure desktop. I think this shows there will be a new desktop I am thinking enlightened this is retarded.

    7. Re:executive summary of approaches by Clsid · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you, but using a Mac is much better than using Gnome. Go ahead and rent a Mac for a week to see what I'm talking about. And it's not that GUI intensive as people may think, I got used to Command-Q, Command-H for hiding the window (so yes, I don't minimize stuff), as well as some other stuff. The only thing lacking in the OS X version I'm using (10.4) is decent Alt-Tab functionality and I read that they either fixed it in the latest version or are going to do it in Mac OS X Lion. But seriously, even Windows feels clumsy when compared to the Mac. But GUIs aside, I still use both a Windows PC and a Mac, since gaming for Mac means Boot Camp these days and I do most of my programming in Visual C++, .NET and LAMP. Xcode is pretty good but I still like Notepad++ better for PHP. So design, surf the web, edit pictures on a Mac, and work on a PC. It has been like that for decades and I think it still stands for a lot of people, unless you are doing iPhone programming :)

    8. Re:executive summary of approaches by Donniedarkness · · Score: 1
      Actually, most people I know struggle with the OSX interface. It might be because they were raised on Windows, but a lot of it never quite made sense to me ("X" doesn't mean "close"???). People tend to also expect the "maximize" button to make something take up the whole screen, which it often does not in OSX.

      I would actually go as far as saying that Windows has a very nice interface. My only real problems with it at this point are:

      A) The amount of viruses that seem to be able to infect even the machines with reputable anti-virus programs.

      B) Some of Microsoft's actions as a company.

      --
      Earn a % of cash back from Newegg, Tiger Direct, Walmart.com, and more: http://www.mrrebates.com?refid=458505
    9. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple: try to think about what will appeal to the user, deliver to maximise experience.

      More like...

      Apple:
      The Lord thy Jobs declares that thou shalt not have Flash support, for it is wicked and the unbelievers shall convert to HTML5 or be put to the torch.
      The Lord thy Jobs declares that thou shalt not have bluetooth headsets +mic on thy iPad, for it is wicked and shall cut into iPhone sales.
      The Lord thy Jobs declares that functionality thou hast grown accustomed to in thy current iOS version shall be laid waste in the next iOS version.
      The Lord thy Jobs declares that USB shall not darken the iPad, save by a hideously huge dongle.
      The Lord thy Jobs commands that you will accept this and abase yourself before his wisdom, for he is the Jobs, and thou are but a lowly worm with a credit card.

    10. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/Gnome/Linux and open source in general/

    11. Re:executive summary of approaches by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      A) The amount of viruses that seem to be able to infect even the machines with reputable anti-virus programs.

      B) Some of Microsoft's actions as a company.

      C) Lack of multiple desktops. I don't know how windows users survive with only one desktop.

      D) Non--deterministic behavior of the operating system and applications running under it. Yes it's still a problem even on utterly clean machines.

    12. Re:executive summary of approaches by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      Let's be honest, though; both Apple and Gnome have pretty much the same design approach.

      That would be because Gnome is copying OSX, not because of any magical synergy.

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    13. Re:executive summary of approaches by qmaqdk · · Score: 1

      Windows: focus groups, study users, never get it quite brilliant but basically give people what they want.

      What!? Who asked for the Ribbon or Clippy? Who asked for the Control Panel being completely changed every version since NT (getting progressively worse IMO)? Who asked for being spammed with User Account Control windows at every turn?

      Gnome: WE DID COMP SCI IN COLLAGE AND HURD OF DON NORMAN THIS MAEKS US EXPURTS ON UI DESIGN. WE HAVE NO EVIDENCE OR TRACK RECORD BUT U WANT WAT WE WANT. WE WANT TO MAKE A NAME 4 OURSELVES PLS ACCEPT ONE OF OUR IDEAS PLS!!!

      Yeah, pretty much dead on :)

      --
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    14. Re:executive summary of approaches by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Windows programs make a single desktop less damaging by using nested windows (MDI).

    15. Re:executive summary of approaches by Donniedarkness · · Score: 1
      C is less of a problem in Windows 7 than it was in other versions. The way applications stack on the taskbar is much more efficient now.

      I LOVED the ability to have multiple desktop environments when I was first introduced to them (I think in Ubuntu Breezy Badger). It was one thing that kept me using Ubuntu as my primary OS for a while. I eventually switched back to Windows because of school, and I've not missed Ubuntu since Windows 7 was released.

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    16. Re:executive summary of approaches by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Go ahead and rent a Mac for a week to see what I'm talking about.

      Been there, done that.

      I own 3 Macs and have no interest in running MacOS.

      Although nonsense like this from the GNOME team certainly makes Apple's annoying UI seem a lot less so.

      --
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    17. Re:executive summary of approaches by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      Examples or references about D?

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    18. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Apple doesn't have good design. Trying using the OSX interface on a large monitor, or better yet, multiple large monitors. I have, and man it is ever a pain. The last time I used a Mac Pro with dual 30" monitors I could standing using OSX for about 3 days before I got completely pissed with the UI boxing and installed Linux. What a relief that was.

      I think it's cool Gnome is trying out new ways of presenting the UI, but IMO it's not the best choice of change.

    19. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would say that a key difference is that when Apple does it, it's well executed. And before you call me a douchebag fanboy, let me say that I personally run Gnome on my home and office workstations. But for my family members who are less tech savvy I wholeheartedly recommend Apple products, and I am constantly being impressed at the things they able to do without consulting Google, instruction manuals, or yours truly for advice.

    20. Re:executive summary of approaches by jenningsthecat · · Score: 1

      Your comment was modded 'Funny', but in my experience as a Gnome user, it is sadly true. At that, I've always found Gnome to be the best of a bad lot as far as Linux goes. But with this latest lot of 'innovations' from Gnome, Fluxbox with a few other apps added is looking more and more attractive.

      There's new for the sake of improvement, and there's new for the sake of being new. Gnome seems to fall into the latter category pretty consistently.

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    21. Re:executive summary of approaches by gregrah · · Score: 1

      What percentage of Mac users do you think are using dual 30" monitors? Now I'm not trying to defend Apple and say that they *shouldn't* try to offer a great user experience for users with large monitors - especially since one of their target demographics seems to be graphic designers - but I also think that you're missing the point somewhat if you cite an issue that probably affects fewer than 1% of users as evidence that "Apple doesn't have good design".

    22. Re:executive summary of approaches by perryizgr8 · · Score: 2

      as far as i know, apple does not remove useful buttons just because "They don’t make sense within the current shell design. There’s nothing to minimize to, like a dock or window list, and it’s potentially confusing, since users will not know where their windows have gone."
      my advice to mr allan who wrote tfa: if minimize does not make sense in the current design and you dont have anything to minimize to, your ui sure needs a lot more work!

      --
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    23. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you. You have won this war of words with perfect sense. As bad a design change as this is I do think it tends to follow what Microsoft and Apple have been doing since about 2000. They've made things worse. Without any logic behind it.

    24. Re:executive summary of approaches by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      Examples or references about D?

      Try using any version of windows and come up with your own examples. No-one sane documents each time windows freezes, crashes, or a system call returns nonsense instead of the expected value.

    25. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because a lot of the time the Mac GUI is the result of extensive user studies (see asktog.com) but with options to change back to older settings, or a different UI that is at least internally consistent (see iPod, iPhone, iPad).

      With Gnome, while this may have been planned, it usually seems like each developer has their own ideas on how everything should work, and each application is its own little fiefdom (see evince, nautilus, Gnumeric, and Abiword). The thing that results is inconsistent (for Firefox, Nautilus, and Gedit, try to switch tabs, close individual tabs, and close the whole window and tell me that's consistent), and consistency is a valuable thing in user interfaces.

      This is somewhat the result of the development process of each desktop environment, with Apple having a well-written HIG that it strictly enforces on its own apps and tries to force on its developers using the App Store as bait, and Gnome having open source discord throughout the process. I do like the openness of Gnome, but I do like the UI of Apple (and I only own an iPod, so good luck trying to label me as a douchebag fanboy), and this is one case where the licensing of Gnome may actually hurt its adoption a little bit.

    26. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever discussed with a Apple fanboy about the Mac's lack of a proper maximize button? First they'll tell you that you don't need it, and if you persist, they'll tell you that your workflow is wrong, and ultimately make fun of you and call you a moron for being unable to multi-task or something like that. The ability of the Macfags to rationalize Apple's decisions and suck Steve Jobs' cock is amazing.

    27. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like your reference of apple fan boys as douchebags. It sounds about as right as f*gg*ts.

    28. Re:executive summary of approaches by justsomebody · · Score: 1

      well, i for one don't struggle with OSX interface. i literally lose my mind after 1 minute with it. but i only need 5 seconds with official OSX terminal to have my head bursting out of pure anger

      even though i hate windows, after 1 minute i can start getting respect for windows xp that barely works and it completely ridden with malware. gnome-shell is actually really nearing my current desktop where
      - i don't have application menu or any launcher at all, i use gnome-do
      - i don't have desktop files enabled to prevent clutter and kinda force my self to save files where they belong
      - perform all my internet searches from my desktop, not browser
      - don't have taskbar as i never minimize windows, instead i'm rearranging them across desktops with my order
      this kind of work simply boosts my productivity

      but then again, that is just me. someone might like osx desktop and hate mine. someone might feel wonderful about windows. there will never be perfection in this department

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    29. Re:executive summary of approaches by justsomebody · · Score: 1

      MDI? you mean MDI which was suggested to avoid from xp onward? even MS is avoiding it like plague. you mean SDI or CSDI more likely

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    30. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's an interesting point of view. You say that Apple tries to think about what will appeal to the user and tries to deliver that, while GNOME ... What is the real difference there? Are you arguing that education makes you less able to come up with good ideas?

      I think exploring new ideas is important. Microsoft and Apple cannot do that. They don't have the freedom necessary to do so. They have customers and they have stockholders, both of which have rights and expectations. They have to provide a single solution that will fit all human beings. I personally don't believe in those kinds of systems.

      I don't necessarily like GNOME Shell and Unity, but I think both are interesting experiments and I always have the option of replacing that little piece of software. I think Xfce and Xubuntu seems to be moving in a direction more compatible with my preferences.

      Some ideas are good, some ideas are bad. As long as we're willing to drop the bad ideas, the net result is evolution, which I think is a very good thing.

    31. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'd say that's about right for Gnome3. Which is a darn shame, because the 2.x UI came about through the opposite approach: iteratively improving real-world functionality through time-tested tools. And the result was the most usable desktop around...nothing super fancy, but everything usable. Let's take a look at the useful things they're stealing from us:

      1)Window List. The killer app of the windows 95 desktop UI. Still the best way anybody has come up with to switch between applications...just one click. Why on Earth is everyone abandoning this incredibly useful tool? And could someone explain to me why they think it's useful to put the title of the currently active window in its place? Isn't it already obvious what the active window is?
      2)Applications/Places/System menus. A great way to get to just about everything with two clicks. Also, everything is in a predictable place. Instead, now we get the "Activities" button, which a)changes its content based on recent user behavior, b)mixes up documents, filesystem access and applications, c)Resizes the whole desktop(s) every time you open it. WTF?
      3)Widgets. I'm sorry, but the fucking clock is not important enough to take up the whole goddamn panel. Give me back my 1-click application launchers and my weather app!
      4)Minimize/Maximize/Windowshade. Shading windows is really handy. But now that we don't get a maximize button, you get to pick one or the other. And mimizing windows really shouldn't be a second-class operation relegated to a context menu.

      Gnome3 is a trainwreck. I'd like to see Unity pick up the slack...but unfortunately I'm not sure they're doing much better.

    32. Re:executive summary of approaches by Pinky · · Score: 1

      The cynic in me suspects this is the attitude of many UI designers.

      That said, you can do a quick mental checksum on the idea:

      The classic MacOS, for instance, never had a minimize button. It did eventually have a window shade capability and later a windows shade button but I used system 7 for ages without minimize and suffered no ill effects for the experience.

      I never use MacOS X's minimize feature since it's redundent with the "hide application" capability of that OS. You can hold down the option key while clicking on a window of another application in the background and it will hide all the windows of the application you're switching from.. for example.. If you hold down option and comand it will hide all applications except the one you're switching too. I find this feature much more usefull in MacOS X. I sometimes click this MacOS X's minimize button by accident and it makes the window harder to find later. Personally, I'd remove the buttons if I could.

      I do use the minimize button in gnome and windows 7 however. I'm not sure if I'll miss it if it's gone.

      On the topic of maximise,

      I use Windows 7 fairly often and have basically stopped maximing windows. The reason is that I have 3 1080p monitors. On these monitors I usually don't want to maximize windows because this almost always results in a window that is too wide. I tend to double click the top or bottom of the window to "maximize" the window's hight automatically. This is the greatest new feature in Windows 7 IMHO. The only downside to this is that when you try and move a window horizontally, there's only a small distance you can move the mouse cursor vertically before the window "unsnaps" from its vertical maximization. I often want to move these windows between monitors and so I'd like the system to keep the windows veritcally maximized while I drag them around.

      The classic MacOS didn't have a maximize button either. It did have a button that was supposed to resize the window to the minimum size required in order to show a window's contents. Much of the time this effectively maximized a window. There was a MacOS convention to have a small border area between the edge of the screen and the window when you did this. You could this this edge with an option-command-click to rapidly jump to the Finder and hide all other windows. If I had a choice I would bring this smart-resize button back. Also the option and option-command click features. The smart resize button is still there in MacOS X but often mistaken for a maximize button. Maybe because it's green and has a "+" on it.. or maybe because it's often implemented wrong... or "wrong". This makes me cry into my grey beard.

      So life is indeed possible without a minimize or maximize. To me it seems somewhat arbitrairy to remove them though. I mean why? You can add new features to make using windows on multiple, large monitors easier without removing the buttons.. If the new features make the two buttons redundent *then* you can remove the tem.. Anyway, I'm not ready to grab a pitchfork over it.

    33. Re:executive summary of approaches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gnome: We cater the UI to only one user per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow doesn't look good either.

    34. Re:executive summary of approaches by pinkushun · · Score: 1

      +1 for Openbox.

  5. Even more reason.... by fishlet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For ubuntu to drop Gnome for Unity.

    1. Re:Even more reason.... by andreev · · Score: 1

      Indeed. When the news for Ubuntu dumping GNOME came out I was actually disappointed, but it's starting to make some sense now.

    2. Re:Even more reason.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, let's be clear here, Ubuntu is only replacing Gnome-shell for Unity, not any gnome based applications ( except maybe those that depend on gnome-shell) Also, gnome-panel will be available for users that don't want, or can't run Unity on their machines due to lack of driver support for 3D acceleration.

    3. Re:Even more reason.... by takowl · · Score: 1

      While gnome panel will still be available, the plan is apparently to have a simplified version of Unity, dubbed "Unity 2D" for machines which can't handle the necessary graphics acceleration.

    4. Re:Even more reason.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. I use mini & maxi buttons all the time.

    5. Re:Even more reason.... by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      i think ubuntu is doing their own set of mindless ui overhauls. moving titlebar buttons to the left, no tooltips on the battery icon, etc.changes like this add nothing and remove functionality/increase the number of clicks for something that used to be simple. all that for the sake of 'consistency'.
      a ui does NOT need to be perfectly consistent to be good. it has to be good to be good.

      --
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    6. Re:Even more reason.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because, of course, Unity has nothing to do with GNOME at all, right?

      Right?

    7. Re:Even more reason.... by FencingLion · · Score: 1

      For ubuntu to drop Gnome for Unity.

      I thought the exact opposite. Gnome 3 and Unity see remarkably similar in what they deliver. It strikes me as odd that Ubuntu wants to strike off in their own direction after all the features and polish of Gnome, when the end products are going to be so functionally similar. To each his own, I suppose.

      --
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  6. Obsession with defaults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really?

    This is about as newsworthy as Ubuntu changing their color scheme. It's just a default, right?

    1. Re:Obsession with defaults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      RTFA. It's not a default, the buttons are removed for good and you can't put them back.

      Though to be fair, they are not removing the functionality... they are just making it harder for the users to actually use it. As in, you can minimize with a keyboard shortcut, but not with a button anymore. Harder to use functionality = better design?

    2. Re:Obsession with defaults by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 1, Insightful

      ...they are not removing the functionality... they are just making it harder for the users to actually use it

      So, more like Windows then.

      --
      No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    3. Re:Obsession with defaults by Xtifr · · Score: 2

      RTFA. It's not a default, the buttons are removed for good and you can't put them back.

      Really? 'Cause last I checked (which admittedly was a while ago), Gnome had a default window manager, not a required one. Has that actually changed?

      I'm also not sure how you can call a keyboard shortcut "harder to use". Harder to learn, perhaps, but I would have expected someone on slashdot to understand the difference between "easy to use" and "easy to learn", even if so many so-called "UI experts" can't. The concepts are orthogonal, but in this case, something that readily involves muscle-memory (like a keyboard shortcut) is invariably going to be easier to use--and almost as invariably harder to learn.

    4. Re:Obsession with defaults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because it's called a "keyboard shortcut" that doesn't necessarily make it faster. For example, if I'm looking at porn and I've got one hand on the mouse and the other hand... not on the keyboard... and my wife comes home, how am I supposed to minimize the window? Or are you suggesting that I need to learn a more efficient way to masturbate?

    5. Re:Obsession with defaults by justsomebody · · Score: 1

      really? can't put them back?

      gconftool-2 -s -t string /desktop/gnome/shell/windows/button_layout ":minimize,maximize,close"

      you shouldn't listen to your self too much... after RTFA ... do also a little RTFM

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  7. Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Laebshade · · Score: 3, Informative

    Running Ubuntu 10.10 with a gnome-shell build from the git repository, and I have to say, I love the change. The minimize and maximize functions themselves are not gone; as the summary says, you can still double click the title bar to maximize. If you want to minimize, you can right-click the titlebar, then click minimize, or using ALT+F9.

    I think this is a great design change. In Gnome 2.0 and less, like windows, you would minimize windows to make room/less clutter for windows you're actually using at that top. Now, instead of minimizing, a better method is to move it down a screen (right-click, move to workspace down), or zoom out to activity view, drag the screen from one screen to another. I find when I have a lot going on -- multiple browser windows, terminals, ftp client -- I use this a lot. It comes in handy being able to separate each website you're working on, each server, into it's own workspace, free from intrusions and other unrelated stuff.

    Good job Gnome devs!

    1. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      >In Gnome 2.0 and less, like windows, you would minimize windows to make room/less clutter for windows you're actually using at that top. Now, instead of minimizing, a better method is to move it down a screen (right-click, move to workspace down), or zoom out to activity view, drag the screen from one screen to another.

      And if I don't know how to do any of those things, and wouldn't think to ask about 'activity views' or 'workspace downs', then i'm just entirely lost and feel that your UI is opaque and obtuse.

    2. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by evilviper · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Now, instead of minimizing, a better method is to move it down a screen (right-click, move to workspace down), or zoom out to activity view, drag the screen from one screen to another.

      All things you could already do with any decent X11 window manager. How is it that GNOME's removing easy access to these features, and cluttering the context menu making them much harder to access, only to come back around and make them easier again, is a positive feature? Hell, if GNOME/KDE weren't trying so hard to imitate Windows all the time, they wouldn't have to remove the normal options, to FORCE people to kick their Windows habits, which GNOME/KDE have been encouraging, while all other X11 WMs used a different and superior model to Windows.

      I use blackbox based WM's because they make it this quicker and easier than anything else. Mouse-over the title-bar and wheel-up to shade, wheel-down to unshade. Mouse-over the maximize button, and middle-click to maximize vertically-only, or left-click for horizontal-only maximization, in addition to the normal left-click. Right-click on the titlebar and the top entry is "send-to", select the workspace and it's gone. Don't need to mouse-over a tiny "switcher" applet to switch workspaces, either, mouse-over any blank area on the desktop, and wheel-up/down to go next/prev. Or you can middle-click for a list, or you can always use the toolbar (but you don't NEED the toolbar at all, if you don't want it).

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    3. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      Wow this is starting to sound like "How do I create a desktop shortcut in KDE 4?" but even more boneheaded on the part of the devs...

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    4. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by kdekorte · · Score: 1

      Gnome is not emulating Windows these days, but the Mac interface. If you look at the majority of the changes you can see many "inspirations" from Apple.

    5. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I went through and bound CTRL + ALT + Arrow to move a window to another screen.

      Personally, I love it! Imho, the "state saving" ability of working on multiple screens makes it a lot more useful than any taskbar / minimize functionality.

    6. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, frankly I'm a Windows guy these days and mock Linux on the desktop as pointless. I was hoping to find myself adding this to the list of reasons why, but I don't think it's a bad idea. Why _not_ just double click on the titlebar to maximize or use context to minimize? I don't really care about the min/max icons and they take up a little space and cost a little in terms of aesthetics.

      I don't think it's a bad idea, and one of the strengths of a UI like Gnome is they can afford to try new shit.

    7. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      replace one click by a (not obvious) double click,
      and the opposite fonction by a right click / choose in a submenu ...

      how the hell can anyone here say it's an improvement ? if the function stays, why complicate it ?

      anyone remembers Fitt's law ?

      If it is no more necessary : go one, remove it, see the user cry (or not) ... but please be consistent.

    8. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by ACS+Solver · · Score: 1

      Frankly, sounds horrible. I usually maximize by double-clicking the titlebar anyway, but I do minimize often, and now the options are to go through a context menu or use a two-hand keyboard shortcut only?

      Different workspaces area great feature in GNOME and other common environments, but that has nothing to do with minimization. Just because I like using workspaces doesn't mean I don't want to minimize.

      I'm still on Ubuntu 10.04 because I don't like where the UI has gone lately. Unity has for me been the worst desktop experience in a long time, and now GNOME is being all weird. Oh well, gonna stick with KDE.

    9. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      . If you want to minimize, you can right-click the titlebar, then click minimize, or using ALT+F9.

      I also love having one more click required for minimizing. Especially cool since I minimize dozens of times every day. This might give me the extra activity needed to avoid carpal tunnel syndrome.

      Adding extra clicks to achieve the same functionality as the prior version is a great idea! This will surely help Linux desktop overtake both Windows and Mac.

      This is a much better plan than merely thinking of ways to make Windows XP and Vista users less confused when evaluating a potential migration to Linux desktop. Keep going with that "lets require more clicks for the same shit" strategy and you'll be zillionaires!

      Yours truly,

      Ballmer & Jobs

    10. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The number one rule of UI design is to make things easier, not harder. Last time I checked, two clicks is more than one. You can spin it whatever way you want; this is a failure.

    11. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How *DARE* you express a positive reaction to this change? Do you not know that Gnome is not APPLE, so any time they "think different" they need to be attacked and SHAMED, not supported with bizarre expressions of "like".

    12. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by yelvington · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you want to minimize, you can right-click the titlebar, then click minimize, or using ALT+F9.

      There's no better way to say it: This decision is asinine and incredibly arrogant.

      The change to the maximize function is ... well, minimal. Double-clicking the menu bar is something that can be learned (although certainly confusing if you expect it to windowshade the window).

      But killing miminize? Minimize is an important, frequently used function for anyone who does real-world work with multiple applications. Multiple screens are NOT a substitute. Anybody who thinks right-click/pick is an adequate substitute must not use a laptop. Clumsy, oafish interface.

      I wasn't bothered when Ubuntu moved the close boxes around, because Gnome traditionally has followed a path of encouraging user customization, and I could easily move the controls back where I wanted them.

      But if Gnome 3 removes the minimize button, it's dead to me.

    13. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1

      > If you want to minimize, you can right-click the titlebar, then click minimize, or using ALT+F9.

      Seriously? In Windows 7 you just left click the icon in the taskbar to both minimize and restore. In Gnome's UI I have to right-click and then select a menu item?

      If they wanted simplicity and sleekness, they just failed.

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    14. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 1

      LOL
      Careful there, you have to go a long, long way to get to that level of boneheaded.

      --
      No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    15. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by dargaud · · Score: 1

      So basically they are reinventing Awesome...

      --
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    16. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by rtaylor · · Score: 1

      You can left-click the icon in the taskbar to minimize and restore on Gnome as well. That has worked for quite a few years as I recall.

      --
      Rod Taylor
    17. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are many ways to get the activity overview. I prefer the super key (windows key).

    18. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I agree with you that the transition to Gnome-shell is shaping up. I had been using expo with Compiz (I think the plugin is expo) and it allows you to zoom out to see all your workspaces and manage your windows. Very quick. Far quicker than minimizing and maximizing, especially for higher resolution displays. Gnome-shell feels like it's going this route and after using my Compiz configuration for so long I found myself completely ignoring the minimize/maximize paradigm. It became all about workspaces.

      To all the nay-sayers, you guys haven't tried it either. Stop telling them that because they haven't tried it it doesn't work. That's like saying "no one has done this before so it's not going to work." Way to stifle innovation, Slashdot.

    19. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use XFCE and set alt-down arrow to minimize my windows and alt-up arrow to maximize a window. If you hit alt-up arrow twice it maximizes the window, then brings it back to the original size. It works well for what I'm doing, but I bet there is some app out there that uses those keystrokes, so it may not work for everyone.

    20. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Running Ubuntu 10.10 with a gnome-shell build from the git repository, and I have to say, I love the change. The minimize and maximize functions themselves are not gone; as the summary says, you can still double click the title bar to maximize. If you want to minimize, you can right-click the titlebar, then click minimize, or using ALT+F9.

      I think this is a great design change. In Gnome 2.0 and less, like windows, you would minimize windows to make room/less clutter for windows you're actually using at that top. Now, instead of minimizing, a better method is to move it down a screen (right-click, move to workspace down), or zoom out to activity view, drag the screen from one screen to another. I find when I have a lot going on -- multiple browser windows, terminals, ftp client -- I use this a lot. It comes in handy being able to separate each website you're working on, each server, into it's own workspace, free from intrusions and other unrelated stuff.

      Good job Gnome devs!

      I really don't see what the absence of two little, unobtrusive buttons next to the close button does to some people. Are these the same people that "want" a Minority Report like interface, where you have to wave your arms around? Looks cool for a couple of minutes, you might be able to do it for an hour, but if you're going to have to do that 10 hours per day, you're going to wish for your desk with keyboard and mouse.

      Go ahead and make double-click the titlebar maximize as well, I have that on the XP box I'm typing this on and still have the single-click maximize/restore button. Here's the deal. I want to be able to do things with the minimum of physical effort possible, and yes, most people who work on their computers all day want the same thing. So I don't want to right-click-and-then-do-something-else when I'm used to One Click Minimize.

      To "separate each website" I'm working on, I use tabs in the browser. That's why we got tabbed browsing in the first place. Less effort = improvement.

      If I had to venture a guess, this is all meant to slowly pave the way for a touch-screen based interface where precise point-and-click is not that easy.

    21. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I already make extensive use of virtual desktops to keep projects organized - simply shifting windows to other desktops (that are already filled with windows for other projects) means I lose what (meager) organization I've achieved in that regard.

    22. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by cOldhandle · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, I agree, this is a great change. Before, I always wanted more blank space on the title bar, and it was a bit boring and unsatisfying to just maximize windows with a single input event. Minimizing windows to organize them with a single input event was always a bit unsatisfying too, your approach seems much more logical, and only requires a few dozen extra input events - I'm glad the choice to work either way has been eliminated. Yeah, dragging and dropping is very enjoyable, I always try to incorporate that into my workflow.

    23. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But if Gnome 3 removes the minimize button, it's dead to me.

      Indeed. I'll stick to Gnome 2 myself when I'm not using KDE. The sad fact is these boneheaded design ideas will never stop coming from Gnome and for every radical re-design the userbase shrinks a little. I bet it never occurred to the Gnome devs that for a user who wants to minimize an application (*gasp* the horror!) there won't be any visual cues left (the minimize button) on how to do it by simply looking at the application. Now the user has to know in advance how to do it or even worse - Google for the answer. It wont be long until a guide is needed to teach new users even the most basic tasks in Gnome because they've hidden just about every feature it has in common with other desktops. It's becoming increasingly more difficult for someone who has never used Gnome to just sit down and work with it without a lot of head scratching.

      Switching the Ok/Cancel button order.
      The "intuitive" file dialog.
      Spatial browsing.
      No minimize/maximize buttons.

      I never ends. I say fork the damn thing and end the madness. If I was a little more paranoid and didn't know any better I'd think Gnome was being deliberately sabotaged.

    24. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      to minimize, you can right-click the titlebar, then click minimize, or using ALT+F9.

      Seriously: why not have a button to do that?

    25. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by richlv · · Score: 1

      Double-clicking the menu bar is something that can be learned (although certainly confusing if you expect it to windowshade the window).

      that. shading is awesome and, depending on the task or application, i use it pretty much daily. it's a good thing i use kde, they'd never do such stupid thing. er, wait... =)

      (one of the lamest changes in kde was making list of applets/plasmoids to add to the panel horizontal instead of a vertical list. just braindead waste of space - at least in kde 4.3, haven't checked yet whether they returned to sanity later)

      --
      Rich
    26. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      I dunno. It seems to be the same argument... "We don't care if you've been able to do something in every desktop environment you've used for fifteen years, our new way is BETTER and we're doing you a FAVOR by taking it away."

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    27. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by datsa · · Score: 1

      Maybe a "move to different desktop" button would make sense, then, as a replacement for minimize. I vastly prefer the multiple desktop metaphor to minimizing on a single desktop. The purpose of minimizing in the first place is to get the window off the screen, but I find that minimized windows on MacOS get "lost", and I have to hunt for them. Sometimes MacOS "unminimizes" by switching to a different desktop, which can be jarring. I'm with Gnome on this one. But I would still like a single button to move the window out of view, since that's a common action for me.

    28. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have always been able to minimize by clicking the window's button in the task bar. It's often/usually quicker to use, and the same motion can be used to raise windows.

    29. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      The important detail is that all those other options for minimize involve more than one click, and actually having to read the menu to make sure you click the right one (at least until muscle memory kicks in or whatever). So it'll take 5 times more effort now, rather than just point and a single click. Brilliant.

      --
      Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
    30. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by HiThere · · Score: 0

      Well, mono came out of Gnome, and also the push for it.

      I'm not certain that it's being too paranoid to think it's deliberate sabotage. OTOH, the developers could just be arrogant pricks. One can't really tell, as the effect's the same.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    31. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and then throw out my QWERTY keyboard for a DVORAK

    32. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not certain that it's being too paranoid to think it's deliberate sabotage. OTOH, the developers could just be arrogant pricks.

      I suppose it could be possible. Miguel de Icaza's obsession with Microsoft and .NET technologies are downright creepy, and it worries me that he seems to have a blind spot for the bigger picture - like freedom and openness, by mostly ignoring patent threats and Microsoft's murky history in such matters. Either that or he's a Microsoft plant, in which case Gnome would be a prime target for sabotage; it's the default desktop for many of the major distributions after all. Personally though, I think it's a little too far fetched and I believe the devs are just being pricks, here's a prime example. A Gnome dev actually replied to Linus Torvalds, in spanish no less, knowing full well Linus doesn't speak the language: "Linus, you don't know how to read Spanish, so are you an idiot too?" (see thread). I know for a fact that Linus speaks at least three languages so it's not like he linguistically challenged, and implying that he's an idiot for not speaking Spanish in particular just blows my mind. I'm not even sure what point the hispanic Gnome dev was trying to make but he sure came off as an incredibly arrogant prick, and he wasn't the only dev to do so IMO. So my money is on the Gnome devs being asshats. I'm sure a large number of Gnome developers are nice and reasonable people but there also seems to be quite a few rotten apples in there too.

    33. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outside of using the scroll wheel to shade a window or middle clicking the desktop for a list (there are config options for both, though), KDE/KWin does all of that by default.

    34. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Erpo · · Score: 1

      I had no idea you could move the menu, minimize, maximize, and close buttons back to where they were in previous releases. I've been suffering with the new system since Ubuntu 10.04. Thanks for the tip!

    35. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, we have one mechanism to maximize a window, which is largely non-intuitive (and personally, I prefer to "shade" my windows by doubleclicking the bar), and a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT METHOD to un-maximize a window.

      Nothing says "idiot designer" like an inconsistent UI whose design brief is "do it my way".

      This is as brilliant as the handle that allows me to rotate a KDE plasmoid an arbitrary number of degrees-- I have yet to find a good use case for it, and the fact that plasmoids resize in a different fashion than KDE windows, is asinine.

    36. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point about blackbox; make the target bigger and you spend less time going to it. It's like my fav FVWM2's menus: Don't click somewhere, click anywhere on the desktop to get them. Compared to that, working on my son's Snow Leopard machine feels like a huge waste of energy and mousing. Prettier? Certainly. But a PITA to actually *work* on. (And it was a crime, in 2010, to have to pay for "spaces"; something Unix has had since the Late Cretaceous.

    37. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      and how is "right-click, move to workspace down" or "or zoom out to activity view, drag the screen from one screen to another" better than a single click on a button placed on the titlebar? one that every single desktop has had for as long as i've been using computers?

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    38. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      there's no taskbar to speak of in gnome 3, as i gather. windows have nowhere to minimize to.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    39. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > you can still double click the title bar to maximize.
      Fuck no!
      When I double click on the title bar, I want it to expand vertically, I use it that way so I can open a terminal or other stuff I know that has a fixed width and get it to fill height.
      And maximize remains the maximize full screen. Which I don't use often but can happen.

    40. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by ET3D · · Score: 1

      Minimising is obviously an important feature to you, but I rarely use it, so I'd appreciate it if you could tell me its benefit over just bringing the window you're interested in working on to the front.

    41. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In KDE's window manager, ye know, YOU CAN CONFIGURE IT!

      can't believe ppl really want such a hard coded thingy on their desk.

    42. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey thats great if you have a wheel mouse / 3 button mouse ALL OF WHICH LAPTOPS DO NOT HAVE! Why would I want to carry an extra piece of hardware? NOW What happens when the mouse gets completely worked over. It will happen. Or how about when the mouse just goes away, also will happen.

    43. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a case of messing with it just for the sake of messing with it.

    44. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Minimize is an important, frequently used function for anyone who does real-world work with multiple applications.

      This is just bs. I have four big monitors and several hundred windows. I never use minimize. I use virtual desktops and tabs. Minimize function would only mess my workflow. Then again, I don't use Gnome or any other Windows-esque desktop either.

    45. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      Maybe they need a book to help explain the new way of minimizing and maximizing. I wonder how it would start.

      "So, you have a web browser running, but you can't find it."

      Later on, it should provide tips.

      "Here are 10 things to remember when minimizing your windows."

    46. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does this work in Chrome (or other apps) that don't have the window managers decorations?

      See? Now you have an inconsistent UI.

    47. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Hey thats great if you have a wheel mouse / 3 button mouse ALL OF WHICH LAPTOPS DO NOT HAVE!

      All these features can be accessed with a 2-button mouse. It would be foolish, however, to NOT add convenient and time-saving features available for those who aren't as constrained as you...

      Besides, input devices on laptops are universally horrendous. It was actually far better in the early days, when the first laptops had pretty good trackballs. I can't imagine why we don't have them these days. A touch-screen (ala tablets/phones) will at least be a significant improvement.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    48. Re:Already Running that Version on Ubuntu by awshidahak · · Score: 1

      Gnome traditionally has followed a path of encouraging user customization

      Tell that to the developers of Gnome-Screensaver.

  8. Looks suspiciously Mac-like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps the GNOME developers will come up with some ideas of their own with version 4?

    1. Re:Looks suspiciously Mac-like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell the Gnomes to Get Off My Lawn! Damn Gnomes!

  9. So have they fixed the Window List by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    Such that it can be used vertically?

     

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:So have they fixed the Window List by gehrehmee · · Score: 1

      They have, in the sense that the window list doesn't exist anymore :) Instead, you zoom-out to a expose-style view of what's going on. For windows that need your attention (they used to blink in the window list), you should get notifications by another means.... but I'm not up on what that looks like these days.

      --
      "You know, Hobbes, some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help" -- Calvin
  10. IceWM FTW by dabadab · · Score: 5, Informative

    It seems like both the KDE and the GNOME folks have decided that they need to reinvent this whole desktop thing. KDE decided that icons are unnecessary, now GNOME deems maximize/minimize buttons unneeded.
    Guess I'm lucky to use IceWM which still works the way it worked ten years ago - and I find that a good thing.

    --
    Real life is overrated.
    1. Re:IceWM FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you can have your icons on your desktop if you like. It is an option away.

    2. Re:IceWM FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I agree. I haven't tried GNOME yet but having used KDE 4.x I have the feeling that these new UIs seem to be designed for people who want everything to be taken care of. For example: When I put in a CD/DVD on KDE 4.x I don't get a simple CD/DVD icon, instead I get a menu which just gives me a couple of choices. I'm really annoyed by that. It seems like these new UIs are designed for users who don't want to think too much. I think there's a certain trend away from the folder-paradigm to a pure UI- or maybe application-paradigm without folders. Your Photos are stored somewhere but you don't really know where, you just click your photo application and there they are. For inexperienced computer users this might be useful but for experienced users i think it's annoying.

      Thus, I love the quick and simple UI of Haiku which gives me all the freedoms I want, is stripped down, without any bloat. Is there anything quick and slick available for Linux?

    3. Re:IceWM FTW by Baseclass · · Score: 1

      KDE has gotten way to bloated for my taste.
      I haven't used Gnome for over 10 years so I have no comment in that regard.
      For me, XFCE strikes the perfect balance between form and function. YMMV

      --
      ^^vv<><>BA
    4. Re:IceWM FTW by jgrahn · · Score: 1

      Guess I'm lucky to use IceWM which still works the way it worked ten years ago - and I find that a good thing.

      I use ctwm. It works the way it worked almost 20 years ago. If I need a "maximize" button, I configure it to have one. (I had to do that at work. At home I just have "maximize height" which I find more useful.)

    5. Re:IceWM FTW by chammy · · Score: 1

      Icons are unnecessary - after you open a window all your icons will get covered up anyway. It's by far more convenient to use a quick launch mechanism like alt-f2 or store your icons on a panel that can't be covered as soon as you open a window.

      Also note that KDE4 does have desktop icons. You just have to turn them on in the desktop settings.

    6. Re:IceWM FTW by hedwards · · Score: 1

      I think it's more an issue of forcing it on the actual users. Personally, I like to keep my desktop clear of icons, because I tend not to use them. Having all that dead space isn't useful, but they could make it useful, by allowing people to use it for terminals, calendars and desklets if they chose to.

    7. Re:IceWM FTW by dargaud · · Score: 1

      KDE decided that icons are unnecessary

      With about 150 widows that reopen automatically from my last session, the last time I saw my desktop is about 3 years ago, so I'd say that's a good idea.

      Guess I'm lucky to use IceWM which still works the way it worked ten years ago - and I find that a good thing.

      That's the good thing with Linux, plenty of window managers to chose from. There are plenty of interesting contenders, like Awesome and others which are really different.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    8. Re:IceWM FTW by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      I find it much simpler to go to a new workspace or just minimize everything than remember firefox is "alt left control a f2", or having a web2.0 dock floating around ala mac or older window managers

    9. Re:IceWM FTW by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Yup - I used to love KDE (had functionality but didn't kill the system). The new versions are only somewhat more functional than 3.5, but they suck so much RAM that they're unusable on my older desktop (which runs a lot of other stuff too).

      About the only thing I miss in xfce is stuff like fish:// or smb://, but that's about it. It basically does what I need - it is a window manager and launcher...

    10. Re:IceWM FTW by Issarlk · · Score: 1

      It seems like KDE and GNOME are slowly converging to no icon, no button, no windows :) Ion/Ratpoison anyone ?

    11. Re:IceWM FTW by bkgood · · Score: 2

      KDE decided that icons are unnecessary

      The last time I created a new profile, kde opened with a folder view plasmoid on my desktop -- so it's not full screen files like Windows, but the icons are still there. I can even navigate to other folders from that folder view without opening Dolphin (or another file manager), which I find wonderful. But if I actually did want the old behavior, all I have to do is right click on the desktop, select desktop settings, and choose "Folder View" in the layout dropdown.

      KDE has a reputation for being customizable (someone described GNOME as being customizable in these comments and I about snorted laughing), and the default desktop they give you (with the plasmoid) gives the user the idea that "hey, I can put these little things on my desktop, and a silly folder view doesn't take up the whole thing." Just giving a desktop-hogging folder view wouldn't well represent the customization KDE4 is capable of.

      But yeah, if you don't like new features, things that change or a desktop that actually looks nice, use IceWM.

    12. Re:IceWM FTW by mpyne · · Score: 2

      KDE decided that icons are unnecessary.

      Icons have been allowed on the desktop even since KDE 4.0 (where the equivalent Plasma widget for a desktop link was automatically created). Mapping a filesystem path to an icon view on the desktop has worked since 4.1 and in fact is far more flexible than it was in 3.5.

      I should know we use icons everywhere, as I had to write KSharedDataCache just to keep icon loading from slowing down the entire desktop!

    13. Re:IceWM FTW by PhobosK · · Score: 1

      Well i would rather say that GNOME is slowly taking the wrong road that KDE is going on...
      The main reason i started using *nix long long ago was that it gave me the freedom to choose/change/tweak every single thing i wanted to - GUI, options etc...
      The moment KDE4 was ou,t i hated it because it was totally disappointing in terms of bugs, functionality, look... The fact is that it still has these shortcomings, though the KDE Devs try to convince us it is great... Well... they have a great problem... They do not listen to their end-users' ideas and they do not care if the features they introduce are functional and are liked by the users...
      What i see in GNOME3 is almost the same... And well, the lack of ability to tweak things in GNOME2 (compared to KDE3 of course) was annoying, but at least there were some tweak abilities.... Obviously in the "next generation" GNOME, tweaking will be even worse... Then why not go back to a simple terminal and the command line huh? :)
      Obviously when GNOME3 is out i will change to XFCE for example... the same way i changed to GNOME2 when KDE4 was out....
      Too bad for GNOME... Anyway...

    14. Re:IceWM FTW by richlv · · Score: 1

      KDE decided that icons are unnecessary

      can you specify what you meant by that, btw ?

      --
      Rich
    15. Re:IceWM FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When did KDE decide that icons are unnecessary? As far as I can tell, they made it possible to show more than just icons from your ~/Desktop directory. The old way still exists, there are just more options.

    16. Re:IceWM FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems like both the KDE and the GNOME folks have decided that they need to reinvent this whole desktop thing. KDE decided that icons are unnecessary, now GNOME deems maximize/minimize buttons unneeded.
      Guess I'm lucky to use IceWM which still works the way it worked ten years ago - and I find that a good thing.

      not sure what you are talking about?? KDE decided icons are unnecessary? you most definately have not used KDE for a very long time and just like regurgitating something you heard someone say or something you read a year or two ago. I use KDE 4.6 and can choose a standard desktop setup with icons on the desktop similar to GNOME 2.x or Windows or I can choose to use Widgets (which is my preference by the way) to organize icons on the desktop any way I like. So you go ahead and use IceWM. Linux is all about choice and you certainly have the choice to use IceWM but please don't try to slam a window manager you obviously know nothing about.

    17. Re:IceWM FTW by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      I also like that one can use KDE without Kwin. Xmonad + KDE4 is quite nice.

      --
      Not a sentence!
    18. Re:IceWM FTW by chammy · · Score: 1

      For sure! There is a tiling option for kwin but its nowhere near as good as xmonad.

    19. Re:IceWM FTW by trapni · · Score: 0

      You can have plenty of icons on your desktop, which by default even is (called "Folder View"). KDE in general is highly configurable, so it is basically up to you, whether you actually want it, or not.

      --
      it wasn't me.
    20. Re:IceWM FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      KDE changed the way desktop icons work at some point, but it has _always_ been possible to have icons on desktop. On the other hand, IceWM has never had desktop icons, so I don't really understand what you are complaining about. You are right, though, that GNOME has made some really stupid decisions.

    21. Re:IceWM FTW by Anzhr · · Score: 1

      Exactly so. Xfce will be seeing a flood of GNOME refugees.

    22. Re:IceWM FTW by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      I do want my icons to be covered when opening a window. If I'm working with a program, I don't want my space to be wasted with icons I don't actually need at that point. OTOH in situations where I do use those icons, they aren't covered anyway. Things I would like to use on a non-empty desktop don't go to the icons, but to the panel.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    23. Re:IceWM FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've decided BlackBox is the most innovative solution and will replace all window manager..
      End of Line

  11. I'll try it when it comes out... by T-Mckenney · · Score: 1

    I'll try it when it comes out, (No i havent tried the beta, nor do I want to), but if they completely screw the pooch on this one, ill stick with Gnome 2.x or if Unity is any better, ill try that. If KDE gets any better, ill use that, but until then, im sticking to my Gnome 2.x

  12. nothing like progress to fsck things up by FudRucker · · Score: 1

    when kde-4 came out i hated it, i still dont like it and i keep trying it hoping it will improve, it took me a long time to tolerate gnome-2.x after switching from gnome-1.4 (which i loved) anymore i prefer using xfce, icewm or openbox, with rox-filer drawing desktop icons & wallpaper, and i like keeping an eye on the lightweight window mangers anymore, the Gnome/KDE environments are just too busy and try to be too much for me to like anymore.

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    1. Re:nothing like progress to fsck things up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So how much better were things back in your day, grandpa? I know, I know, you're probably still hurting over the obvious clutter and bloat that resulted from microprocessors getting these new-fangled on-board floating-point processors all them years back, because you could get cheaper integer-only calculations that could emulate floats and your generation LIKED it, dagnabbit!

    2. Re:nothing like progress to fsck things up by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      Yes. IceWM for me, please. Simple, elegant, functional. And doesn't stand in the way.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    3. Re:nothing like progress to fsck things up by allo · · Score: 0

      + rox-filer for filemanager and desktop

  13. I dont want to drag anything. by unity100 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dragging is more stress-inducing to the hand than simply clicking mouse. we do countless minimize-maximize actions over the course of a normal workday.

    I cant risk more potential for RSI, just because a few people think that is better to do so.

    Excuse me gnome, but you are losing me.

    1. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by tabrnaker · · Score: 0

      we do countless minimize-maximize actions over the course of a normal workday.

      It seems like you do not know how to work your window-manager. I can't even remember the last time i had to use maximise or minimize.

    2. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by Nerdfest · · Score: 1

      The keyboard is still the least stress inducing ... and I think it will still be there as well.

    3. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by peragrin · · Score: 1

      countless minimize maximize actions?

      Damn what are you doing wrong and why doesn't your GUI open windows properly?

      I spend more time dragging things between monitors and rarely touch hose dumb buttons.

      it sounds like you need a better task switcher too.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    4. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by unity100 · · Score: 1

      im not doing anything wrong. i have to open many windows with different apps. and not everyone has to fork out cash to buy multiple monitors. its the job of a window manager to manage windows. not hardware.

    5. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by dingen · · Score: 1

      i have to open many windows with different apps

      So... what's wrong with your tab button?

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    6. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like a true gnome-brain; when users dislike your stinking brainfarts, blame the user.

    7. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by tabrnaker · · Score: 1
      Spoken like a true AC, drivel based on nothing.

      What i said has nothing to do with Gnome, but how to use any windowmanager. You do know they are there to actually MANAGE windows right? If you don't know how to set it up so windows start where you want them and in the state you want them, then you're probably a windows user no? Why minimize something (except to look at the pretty graphics) when you can more quickly alt-tab it away? If it's a problem because you have multiple windows occupying the screen, learn how to organize your information into desktops. This is just complaining by people that haven't learned how to use the new abstractions and are caught in windows 3.1 stage.

    8. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by TheLink · · Score: 1

      How about you just click on the relevant window's task button to raise that window?

      For what it's worth, I don't like this GNOME idiocy either - it adds nothing to the people like me who have most stuff maximized, while it annoys people who like to minimize and maximize stuff.

      Sure people like you could change the way you work, but why make you change the way you work? What benefit do the rest of us get?

      It only benefits people who like most stuff maximized AND are so obsessive about how things look to the point where they can't stand those "ugly buttons".

      --
    9. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by spasm · · Score: 1

      I mapped ctrl-m to toggle window min/max ages ago for exactly this reason - no need to use the mouse at all.

    10. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

      Dragging is more stress-inducing to the hand than simply clicking mouse. we do countless minimize-maximize actions over the course of a normal workday.
      ...
      Excuse me gnome, but you are losing me.

      Well, on Ubuntu 10.10 the default Ambiance theme has 1px wide window borders...
      It's rediculously difficult to resize a window by grabbing the edge or bottom -- Not every window has the resize widget in the lower corner.

      If you have shaky hands (like my neighbor) or use a touch screen device it's not ridiculous, its damn near impossible to grab the window edge and resize the window. Right click the window title, then choose "resize", yes, I know -- I actually have a script bound to the window placement hotkeys that allow me to 1/2 width resize a window and position it on the left or right (most users don't know how to do this). Some themes have wider borders, but come on -- UI design testing? Did they even TRY using the theme!? If they did, they forgot to try resizing windows.

      Ubuntu has no credibility IMO, when it comes to UI, and when Gnome comes out with statements like, "I think the first thing to realize is that minimization doesn't make sense if you maximize everything," It just proves they don't know shit about UI. Hint: The larger & higher res my monitor, the less shit I maximize. I have NEVER maximized Tomboy notes, Pidgin, Terminal, and about 10 other apps I'm running right now.

      Maximized WebBrowser!? What the hell? If I do that then I'm just wasting a HUGE amount of space on many websites because of my high desktop resolution (big blank areas with a content strip in the center), sites that opt for reflowing layouts look decent when resized to 1280 wide, so UNmaximized browser is a general purpose solution for me... I prefer to have a workspace with the browser 1/2 covering, and other multi-media apps (radio, chat, etc) all sized to fit -- NONE ARE MAXIMIZED.

      The only thing that is maximized is my (code | document | image ) editor on the other screen (actually -- I NEVER run Gimp maximized either, the toolboxes cover up the image, and my Wacom tablet's pen interface doesn't play nice with wide mulit-screen virtual desktops + Synergy (control multiple machines w/ one keyboard & mouse). The assumption that everyone just runs maximized is retarded (Problem, Calculator?!)

      Forgive me if I call "bullshit" on both Ubuntu & Gnome's "UI research"; To me it seems like neither have done any.

    11. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Why minimize something (except to look at the pretty graphics) when you can more quickly alt-tab it away? If it's a problem because you have multiple windows occupying the screen, learn how to organize your information into desktops.

      I've been exposed to workspaces for over 10 years, have given them a shot, and never liked them. I like minimize. It works for me. Do what works for you, and let others use what works for them. There's no need to be insulting about UI preferences.

    12. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by tabrnaker · · Score: 1
      Just out of curiousity, do you actually use the minimize icon? Or do you use one of the key-combinations? Remember we're talking about the icons here, you can still hide windows. Second, why do you use minimize?

      Personally, i'm all about choice which is why i'm writing my own window manager that can be customized however anybody want's it, using whatever keystrokes, mouse event, or gesture, which is why i'd be interested in why you use minimize.

    13. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiousity, do you actually use the minimize icon?

      Yes, I use the minimize icon. It's natural to me to use the mouse. It's not that I can't or don't use keyboard shortcuts, it's just sometimes it feels more natural to use the mouse. I really don't see the positive in taking it away for people that are comfortable using it.

      Second, why do you use minimize?

      As you mentioned in your earlier post, to get rid of clutter when I don't need a window. And not to rehash things, but I don't like using workspaces for that.

    14. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by Homburg · · Score: 1

      "I think the first thing to realize is that minimization doesn't make sense if you maximize everything," It just proves they don't know shit about UI. Hint: The larger & higher res my monitor, the less shit I maximize.

      Did you notice the if in that quote? The GNOME dev isn't saying that everyone maximizes everything, he's describing the role minimize plays in two different usage patterns. One is the "maximize everything" pattern (which I use on my fairly-small screened laptop, and lots of less technical users use even on large screens). So, everything he says about this usage pattern is irrelevant to your usage pattern; that's why he goes on to the "else" branch of the "if," and talks about how minimize is used by other users, who don't maximize anything.

    15. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by Kidbro · · Score: 1

      If you're afraid of RSI, get a tiling window manager. I haven't used the mouse for rearranging windows in three years. Actually, I've hardly rearranged windows at all in three years. It's a task better left to a computer.

    16. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "They came for 'those dumb' buttons and I did nothing... so they moved them"
      "Then they came for 'those dumb' buttons again and I did nothing ... so they completely removed them"
      "Next they'll come for the close box... and I'll go postal because I hate the ESC button"

    17. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

      "I think the first thing to realize is that minimization doesn't make sense if you maximize everything," It just proves they don't know shit about UI. Hint: The larger & higher res my monitor, the less shit I maximize.

      Did you notice the if in that quote? The GNOME dev isn't saying that everyone maximizes everything, he's describing the role minimize plays in two different usage patterns. One is the "maximize everything" pattern (which I use on my fairly-small screened laptop, and lots of less technical users use even on large screens). So, everything he says about this usage pattern is irrelevant to your usage pattern; that's why he goes on to the "else" branch of the "if," and talks about how minimize is used by other users, who don't maximize anything.

      Yeah, I get that... I also get that with such quotes as:

      Many people (most people?) never minimize.

      He's got to be talking out of his ass as well in the "else" condition of the justification for the idea they've had (Note: They didn't create an opt-in behavior reporting tool to create actual statistics -- they dreamed up some UI changes, then pulled rationals out of their asses for why they did so based on how much two people didn't like the new UI, but didn't refuse to use it either...)

      "Many people" -- A term that can honestly describe nearly any amount of people. "(most people?)" -- Unsure if more people or less people on average actually do or do not fall into this classification <-- That's the truth folks; translation: "We don't know if more people do or do not ever minimize, but at least some people never do."

      So, yeah, some people never turn their machines on Sunday. "Many people (most people?) never use their desktop machines on Saturday (well, the two I asked didn't outright refuse to refrain from powering on their machines on Saturday), so we're changing grub to not boot the machine on Sunday. It will save tons of money (we think) on electricity. Also: People that do need to boot on Sunday can still boot if they really must, simply dance a jig while sacrificing a virgin."

      Your pedantic arguments about me missing the "if then else" do not apply when both branches are based on is bat-shit stupidity. I actually RTFAs and the articles that they link to before I come to a conclusion... Unlike some people.

      Repeat this two person UI test with a much larger sample group, then we can call this BS research.

    18. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiousity, do you actually use the minimize icon? Or do you use one of the key-combinations?

      i use the icon. i use key shortcuts for many things, but not for minimize, cause its got its own button!

      Second, why do you use minimize?

      so that i can hide away the windows i don't wanna see right now, but i think i will need to in the near future. i think minimizing is much more efficient than switching between virtual desktops (i assume that's what you mean by workspaces?).

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    19. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      and how is dragging>clicking a button?

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    20. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by tabrnaker · · Score: 1
      Right, virtual desktops. Personally never liked those things and don't use them, hence the reason for writing my own :) My view manager has workspaces which are a collection of tasks. Tasks can have different views on different workspaces, e.g. media player only displays scrolling song title/tags on most workspaces but shows albums, lyrics, equalizer, etc... on media workspace which can also be accessed just by clicking/touching a media view on any workspace

      Well, minimize buttons could be added in my framework, but i know i won't do it, i don't even like title bars stealing my real estate. :) I kinda of like alt-tab to switch between workspaces (internet, coding, media, etc...) or just swiping the screen when in tablet mode to flip through them.

    21. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      ok, that sounds something completely different from whatever i've used till now. and it sound good :)
      the kind of management you describe really does not need minimize buttons or titlebars.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    22. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by dominious · · Score: 1

      I haven't tried it but my idea is drag quick from the titlebar for a split of a second downwards for minimize, and drag quick for a split of a second upwards for maximize. Try it is not hard. Also you save mouse movement if you have a big screen and you dont want to move the mouse all the way to the upper corner.

    23. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by trev.norris · · Score: 1

      In all honesty, the movement of your hand to the mouse from the home row is a lot more strenuous then dragging the mouse 6 more inches once it's reached it. I can't remember the last time I used any of the minimize, maximize or close buttons on the UI. One of the first features I geeked out about when I started to use Ubuntu was that all the keyboard shortcuts were customizable, and the first thing I did was to make it simple to move, resize, minimize, maximize or move to another workspace from the home row. Now I just feel bad for all you mouse hugging wussies. I can rearrange a couple dozen windows over my 8 workspaces in a matter of seconds. Love to see someone do the same by dragging everything around.

    24. Re:I dont want to drag anything. by MrNemesis · · Score: 1

      RSI aside - anyone who's had to do any amount of drag-dropping with only a laptop trackpad will know just how painful it can be, especially whenever a trackpad runs out of space and/or decides you've randomly lifted a finger and drops all your stuff en route.

      Sill decision in my book, but then I gave up on gnome years ago.

      --
      Moderation Total: -1 Troll, +3 Goat
  14. What do you think? by countertrolling · · Score: 0

    Translation: I'm bored. Let's start a flame war

    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    1. Re:What do you think? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The left wing in Europe: what happened over the last 15 years?

      Why is the response to banker misbehaviour even more pro-banker government?

      How can capitalism, a philosophy which relies on working only for yourself, be regarded as the tough-but-rewarding option, but socialism is regarded as for the lazy. Socialism requires you to both work for yourself and for the good of others.

      And how can anyone argue that an approach which assumes that humans are inherently selfish cunts and which relies on greed is going to be more successful than one which takes the positive aspects of humanity and assumes that humans are able to take responsibility of their own means of production in order to benefit the whole group?

      Should we be glad that society is destroying itself? Must it fully receive what it deserves before the critical third group together to do what's overdue?

      Proceed.

  15. What does this improve? by occamsarmyknife · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I like clean interfaces, but seriously, what does this help? It doesn't save space, the title bar is still there. Ignoring those buttons costs nothing, and replacing a button with a non-graphical multiple-action like double clicking isn't making an interface simpler, it's making it more complex. I understand the confusion about a minimize button with no taskbar, but this doesn't seem like a particularly well thought out design change. We got rid of feature X, so action Y isn't the same anymore. Okay, just get rid of it.

    --
    "Until the become conscious they will never rebel, and until after they have rebelled they cannot become conscious"
    1. Re:What does this improve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It improves job prospects for so-called "usability" geeks who can sell themselves by writing pseudo-intellectual crap about how they improved things. See also the removal of the status bar, protocol string and other such stuff from web browsers.

      Most people can't be bothered to learn how to use software applications so everybody should dumb-down to their level! Of course Gnome was a real innovator here with v2 when everybody stopped using it. And hey; I hear mobile devices are the new coolz so no matter how limited you find mobile apps, desktop software is now going to copy the UI.

      You just know these usability bastards are going to show equal contempt when, having fucked-up desktops, they set their sights on the command line.

    2. Re:What does this improve? by equex · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Seems to me Gnome 3 screenshots had their titlebars eating like 20% of the vertical space. Plenty of room for _more_ buttons in the title bar, actually. This is bull.

      --
      Can I light a sig ?
    3. Re:What does this improve? by digitalhermit · · Score: 1

      I dunno...
      I switch somewhat regularly between small screens (my netbook), to larger single screens (my workhorse laptop), to large multiple displays (my desktop in my home office). One of my big pet peeves with any interface is the inability to bring up context and OS menus at whichever location the mouse is on. For example, if I use my three screen display (1920x1200 each), I potentially need to scroll three screens to get to a menu. Windows UI is particularly atrocious. If I'm on the rightmost screen, I may have to scroll all the way to the left to hit the Start menu. I could place the home screen (main desktop) in the middle. This minimizes the longest scroll, but then I lose the benefit of keeping a purely monitoring display (which I don't interact with often). You can tweak certain things by making the display continuous (mouse wraps on each edge) or orienting vertically (fewer pixels to scroll through), but this changes how I like to work.

      Under traditional Linux desktops it is easier. In xfce4 I can customize my desktop menus. I can create multiple keyboard shortcuts. In others I can even tweak how the window borders react to double clicks, control clicks, etc..

      The point is that I configure the UI to how I work and not change my work habits to conform to the UI. That's the biggest issue I have with the Windows UI. I hope Gnome doesn't lost the ability to customize the UI to how *I* want it and not what some developers think is the right way.

    4. Re:What does this improve? by dnaumov · · Score: 1

      Most people can't be bothered to learn how to use software applications so everybody should dumb-down to their level!

      Yes. Ever wonder why Apple products are popular?

    5. Re:What does this improve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think this is the last time I upgrade window managers for a while. I use minimize all the time as I multitask to the extreme on my desktop.

    6. Re:What does this improve? by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Actually removing the status bar and that other stuff from browsers was a positive move for usability, the problem is that it's limited to just mobile computing and times when you have a small screen. If you've got a generous screen like I have, it actually makes it less usable, and so removing it completely was stupid.

    7. Re:What does this improve? by dargaud · · Score: 1

      Most people can't be bothered to learn how to use software applications so everybody should dumb-down to their level!

      Yes. Ever wonder why Apple products are popular?

      I can understand selling 'simple' computers that work well. What I can't understand is making it impossible for power users to have the options they need. Or only if they purchase a paid app, or compile it themselves (Fink). I've used Mac 3 times in my life for about a year (1988, 1995 and 2001) and each time they made me want to gnaw my foot off by the amount of artificial limitations. And also the fact that Mac users find it absolutely normal to pay extra for an 'app' that does something absolutely elementary that was possible with DOS 1.0.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    8. Re:What does this improve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. Ever wonder why Apple products are popular?

      That would be because Microsoft Windows is utter crap and support for linux by commercial vendors was limited!

      I've used Apple products for years and most of my work time is spent in terminal.app using vim, my email using pine/alpine over ssh. Given the choice between an employer provided Windows or Unix (OSX) laptop, most developers picked a Mac and that market remains huge and influential.

    9. Re:What does this improve? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      You just know these usability bastards are going to show equal contempt when, having fucked-up desktops, they set their sights on the command line.

      Fortunately they have a coronary just looking at it, so they don't get around to changing it.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    10. Re:What does this improve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was my first thought. They've removed the minimize button - which takes no extra space because it sits on the title bar - and then made the title bar fucking bigger. One less feature, much less usable application space. Thanks Gnome!

    11. Re:What does this improve? by boteeka · · Score: 1

      Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away. - Antoine de Saint Exupery

      It seems like Gnome devs are aiming for this kind of perfection

    12. Re:What does this improve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to third this complaint.

      One of the things I like about Gnome is that the window borders are just the right size for a display with 1280x720 resolution. They could be a bit bigger (like 50% bigger) on a 1920x1080 display (try vectorizing the UI).

      I like to have multiple ways of doing things. Sometimes I double click the title bar to maximize, sometimes I click the button. In Windows 7 I sometimes drag the window to the top.

    13. Re:What does this improve? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      The command line is heavily standardized by POSIX. I don't think a lot of changes are likely.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    14. Re:What does this improve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Advertising real estate. Mark my words.

  16. Win7 already marginalized them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I often switch between WinXP and Win7 computers at work. The #1 feature that I like about Win7 is NOT using the minimize/maximize buttons. Dragging the titlebar for a 'restore' is practically built into my psyche now, even though it's a relatively new action.

    That means I don't really think I'll miss those little buttons. I always thought there were too many up there anyway. I cringed at additions that added MORE buttons to the corners.

    1. Re:Win7 already marginalized them by Totenglocke · · Score: 2

      I use Windows 7 and never, ever use that. In fact, it pisses me off that a good 10% of the time when you're just re-arranging windows, it wants to maximize something instead. I'd be interested in knowing why you like the click and drag over clicking a min/max button, which means taking a good 300% more time to maximize a window.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    2. Re:Win7 already marginalized them by IceCreamGuy · · Score: 1

      ...which means taking a good 300% more time to maximize a window

      I disagree, I feel that the time it takes me to center my mouse over a tiny little button and click it is about the same amount of time as it takes me to quickly swipe the pointer up the screen dragging the titlebar to the top. In addition, if you use multiple monitors, this feature rocks - you can drag a maximized window from one monitor to another and keep it maximized. This may sound trivial, however if you used multiple monitors in XP you would know how annoying it is to have to minimize or restore a window, then drag, then maximize. In addition, I rarely actually use the mouse for these functions (indeed I rarely use these functions), I use meta+up for maximize, meta+left/right for side-snap, and meta+down for minimize. I guarantee that's quicker than doing anything with a mouse.

      I also never, ever minimize, I just keep everything maximized and alt-tab. I can't stand using an application that's not taking up the whole screen. If I really need to look at two things at once I use the Win7 side-snap. That's what the Gnome designers are saying, as well: just don't minimize, ever, because what's the real point? And with maximize - are you really claiming that double-clicking anywhere in the titlebar is 3x slower than getting your pointer into the maximize button? In the end It still does just come down to personal preference, though; if you have two programmers watch each other use a computer for 30 minutes, I guarantee each of them will walk away thinking that the other wastes time in navigation.

    3. Re:Win7 already marginalized them by visualight · · Score: 1

      This happens to me all the time in KDE4 and I wish I could slap someone for it. I've wondered if someone was trying to condition my behavior to never want a window a the top of my screen.

      --
      Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
    4. Re:Win7 already marginalized them by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      In addition, if you use multiple monitors, this feature rocks - you can drag a maximized window from one monitor to another and keep it maximized. This may sound trivial, however if you used multiple monitors in XP you would know how annoying it is to have to minimize or restore a window, then drag, then maximize.

      KDE has had that as one of the settings (Configure Desktop > Look and feel > Window behavior > Moving > Allow moving and resizing of maximized Windows) for ages. Another example of Microsoft "usability innovation" that's been around for years.

    5. Re:Win7 already marginalized them by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      I also never, ever minimize, I just keep everything maximized and alt-tab.

      If you only have a few things, sure. However, once you get past say six programs, it starts taking way longer to alt-tab than it's worth. I'm not telling you what to do; just confused by why you prefer doing things the hard way.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    6. Re:Win7 already marginalized them by IceCreamGuy · · Score: 1

      once you get past say six programs, it starts taking way longer to alt-tab than it's worth

      At that point I just start closing programs. I don't often encounter situations where I have more than six programs open at once and am actually using all of them.

  17. "Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by VGPowerlord · · Score: 2

    Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable than pressing a button to resize.

    UI tasks enjoyable? What drug is this blogger on?

    A UI's purpose isn't to be enjoyable, it's to let the user do what he wants/needs to do and otherwise stay out of the way.

    Case in point: Clicking a button is going to be a lot quicker and require me to do less thinking than dragging a window around.

    Having said that, I like snap and would like to see several of its features included, but not as the primary replacement for the maximize button.

    --
    GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    1. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by zoom-ping · · Score: 1

      Drag to snap is, well, snappy. I like Aero Snap feature of W7. Just grabbing the window by it's bar and dragging it to top or sides is actually quicker than sniping for the maximize/restore button. Especially when using a touchpad - hold down a button and just swipe your finger.

    2. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 1

      That's what I thought too, but look at Aero/Compiz.

    3. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by Tyr_7BE · · Score: 1

      "A UI's purpose isn't to be enjoyable, it's to let the user do what he wants/needs to do and otherwise stay out of the way."

      Not necessarily so. Look at Apple. They released the iPhone, and for its time it was quite the piece of crap. It took many generations of the product to reach par with what other phones can do. But it sold, and it sold well. Why? Because it's shiny, and it's "fun" to use. This is the way UIs are going. An interactive, fun, rewarding experience is going to sell more than a functional experience. It's just like anything else, really. If A is more fun to use than B, and they both do the same thing, A will appeal to more people. There will always be people who are sticklers for efficiency such as yourself, but you're increasingly in the minority.

    4. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that the trend is going from "this works well for my needs" to "ooooh! Shiny!!"

      I hardly see this as a good thing.

      I've just invented a new bread machine. You know those old ones, that used a metal flipper paddle to roll and knead bread?
      They look so pedestrian, definitely not cool anymore. And a FLIPPER for making bread? Decidedly unsexy.

      My new bread machine has the latest in high tech styling. SERIOUSLY hi-tech - no buttons whatsoever, just like the iPhone.
      (There will also be a limited edition $10000 Steampunk version, looks like Jules Vernes' bread machine)

      NO BUTTONS. Why no buttons? It's all touch sensitive. Touch the machine anywhere and it works - control is THAT SIMPLE. One touch and it does everything.
      Everything being of course that it lights up a light which says "knead bread."

      No more stupid looking little padles rolling a ball of dough around. Studies I have conducted of 5 six-year olds show that they LOVE to knead play-doh. And my grandma says the movement is good for her arthritis. Clearly hand-kneading dough a is a much more enjoyable experience and reduces stress.

      So when my machine is touched, it says "knead dough," which you then do by hand on your counter. Later, in case you forget to put the dough in a pan and bake the bread in your oven, the display on my machine changes to say "Hey did you remember to bake your bread?"

      VERY user friendly!

      --
      This space available.
    5. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by Glonoinha · · Score: 1

      Unless you are using multiple monitors, so the 'side' of the monitor you are on doesn't have a hard edge. Keep dragging - goes right onto the next monitor.

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    6. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by sjames · · Score: 1

      "Enjoyable" in the UI gives us those Hollywood über cool looking holographic gesture based controls that would be exhausting in real life and would probably lead to exciting new repetitive stress injuries.

    7. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Compiz is great. You can install it and disable all the effects, the consequence is that on the older heavyweight DEs become GPU accelerated, and reacted instantly to your actions.

      But now Debian has upgraded to KDE 4, and I discover that a gaming GPU isn't enough to accelerate it. No poblem, IceWM does react quite fast.

    8. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand why people care so much. How do you people get any work done when you spend all day minimizing and maximizing your windows?!?

    9. Re:"Drag-to-snap is more enjoyable" by SharpFang · · Score: 1

      Drag-to-snap is not only more enjoyable. It also smells like a fresh equation, and makes the cute little sounds of a vanilla pudding in the sun.

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  18. Need to get windows out of the way by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

    I don't care so much about minimize or maximize buttons. I just need two things: a way to get the window as big as physically possible for when I'm working in one app and need the screen real estate, and a way to get windows that I need open but don't need to pay attention to at the moment out of the way. Example the first: I'm working in a graphics app, don't expect to be doing anything but drawing and working in it while I've got it open, and want as much of the screen for the image as I can get. Example the second: the documentation web site I'm referring to occasionally while I'm coding that I don't want cluttering things up when I'm not actively reading it, but I don't want to close it and lose my location or page history on it.

    1. Re:Need to get windows out of the way by dingen · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I never ever use the minimize function. What I do use are the functions to hide windows and I don't need a button in the top of the window for that.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    2. Re:Need to get windows out of the way by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Well, here's one use for minimize: (Depending on your settings) it removes windows from the Alt+Tab switcher. Or it sends them to the bottom of the Alt+Tab list.

      Yeah, I know: workspaces. But just let people work how they want to instead of removing features.

      By the way: I hope they're not removing Alt+Tab, as well.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    3. Re:Need to get windows out of the way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Back in the days when I was using AfterStep, which you could customize beyond recognition (due to it being an FVWM variant and all), my titlebars had four buttons. Close, maximize, minimize, and drop. The first three you're no doubt familiar with -- the fourth, which I called "drop", dropped the window to the bottom of the window stack. Double-clicking the titlebar rolled up the window, a la NextStep.

      Whenever I needed to get a window out of the way, I had 3 different options, depending on how long I needed it out of the way for. If I just needed to get it out of the way so I could get at what was under it, I dropped it. If I wanted it shrunk down but still within arms reach, I rolled it. If I wanted it completely out of the way for a while, but not so long as to actually close it, I minimized it.

      Unnecessarily complex? I never thought so. It's same same reason my toolbox has not only a hammer, but a screwdriver, pliers, and a wrench.

    4. Re:Need to get windows out of the way by Homburg · · Score: 1

      But just let people work how they want to instead of removing features.

      The thing is, though, that the GNOME devs can't possibly optimize for everyone's different workflow. They have to make decisions about how their software is going to work, and sometimes that might mean choosing between two incompatible options. The GNOME Shell devs have made various decisions which improve the multiple-workspace workflow, but as a consequence, they make the minimizing workflow worse. I think it's a good idea that they've de-emphasized minimizing by removing the button, rather than leaving in a crappy implementation of minimization that won't really "let people work how they want" either.

    5. Re:Need to get windows out of the way by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

      Why not? The basic concepts are UI items/events and the actions that can be bound to them. Simply let me configure button icons that can be placed on the left and right sides of the titlebar, and let me bind actions like "minimize" and "close" to them or to mouse gestures or events like double-clicking on the titlebar. Then Gnome can ship with a default configuration, and if I happen to like something else I can configured it to work the way I want without impacting anyone else.

  19. Somewhere by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    Somewhere a million Microsoft employees are smiling.

    --
    I come here for the love
    1. Re:Somewhere by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 4, Funny

      Somewhere a million Microsoft employees are smiling.

      And they're smiling because, when the boss comes in while they're looking at Natalie Portman pictures, they can click the Minimize button...

    2. Re:Somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ^^^^

    3. Re:Somewhere by hduff · · Score: 1

      Somewhere a million Microsoft employees are smiling.

      Does that include sellout gnomista Miguel de Icaza?

      --
      "I believe in Karma. That means I can do bad things to people all day long and I assume they deserve it." : Dogbert
  20. I was reluctant when... by emanem · · Score: 1

    ...Ubuntu moved the minimize/maximize on the other side, but I have to say it hasn't been too much trouble. Looking forward to this one! Cheers!

  21. Just how do minimize and maximize complicate? by MikeV · · Score: 1

    I like being able to expand my windows for more acreage - and put them aside when I need to focus on other things. Just how does that complicate the UI? Two little buttons - is that too much to ask for?

  22. Make it configurable by mfnickster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When are we going to get an interface that is totally configurable to user preferences?

    Someday, I'd love to sit down at a computer, point it to the URL where my interface preferences live, and presto - it instantly becomes the desktop I'm most familiar with.

    Think of it as the GUI equivalent of setting your shell in .profile.

    --
    "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    1. Re:Make it configurable by pretzel87 · · Score: 2

      That would be way too logical... give us a ..... choice? what would we complain about then? this happens every time developers try to be progressive. It's like why don't they just make it an option? or a simple UI plugin to change it back.

    2. Re:Make it configurable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be way too logical... give us a ..... choice? what would we complain about then?

      We'd complain about the default options on the choices. Duh. ... or the lack of a default option, if the devs are sneaky enough to try to nip that in the butt.

    3. Re:Make it configurable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I have this.
      My .fvwm/ on a git repo on my USB stick & home server.
      And an file with one-liner: "apt-get/yum install ".

      Any new computer instantly feels that much more usable :)

    4. Re:Make it configurable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Learn to write JavaScript, gnome 3's interface is written in object oriented JavaScript, its the closest you will ever get to what you want.

    5. Re:Make it configurable by aix+tom · · Score: 1

      since a few years ago

      http://openbox.org/wiki/Main_Page

      You can basically copy your rc.xml. Which, on the topic of title bar buttons, has a "titleLayout" field which let's you define in what order the buttons and the title are in the title bar.

    6. Re:Make it configurable by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      Sounds like something you could do in Rio

    7. Re:Make it configurable by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      Exactly, this is what KDE has done. To be fair, I find myself dragging a window to the top to maximize more often than clicking the maximize button, but I feel no need to remove it. (You can also drag to the middle of either side to cover half the screen or the corners to occupy a quarter of the screen, very helpful). All this is however configurable with a simple GUI in KDE, I can add or remove as many buttons as I like.

    8. Re:Make it configurable by spasm · · Score: 1

      This. This is a really good idea. By extension, I also like the idea of being able to set .profile by url..

    9. Re:Make it configurable by Xtifr · · Score: 4, Informative

      When are we going to get an interface that is totally configurable to user preferences?

      You mean like FVWM or IceWM or WindowMaker or E or any of the other WMs that experts love and newbies hate? Gosh, I don't know--when will we get something like that? :)

      I actually find FVWM's eight separate configurations for a window border (the four sides and the four corners) to be a little bit overkill. I can't really imagine wanting the left edge to act differently from the right. Fortunately, my editor does copy-and-paste, so it's not a big issue. :)

    10. Re:Make it configurable by DaMP12000 · · Score: 1

      Amiga OS had it done years ago : MUI

    11. Re:Make it configurable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > When are we going to get an interface that is totally configurable to user preferences?

      I was thinking about this the last week, motivated by this Gnome controversy as well as by KDE 4 polemical changes (FTR I'm a KDE user and agree that 4.4n+ has become has usable as KDE 3.2n, so returning to 3.5 has become less appealing).

      That said, my real question is: why are we discussing these things? Important or not, Gnome, KDE & the rest should all have a pluggable structure. There should be themes with factory made configurations, should the user desire instant automatic configuration -- as well as toggles for fine tuning by those with uncommon needs. All this should be secondary to real desktop functions which both DEs must provide.

      We're losing a prime opportunity to transport the Unix' philosophy of small one-function modules to the desktop; instead we're falling for the same trap M$ has fallen: excessively complex integration (though their motives might require that).

      I also think at least the KDE folks are right about some changes, because they're correctly envisoning our future context, where multitouch surfaces (not just screens -- or tables, BTW) might become common (think about the age-old pat on the horse's back to make it go faster). I also don't know if we can call the desktop as such for much longer... just think about games: is it right to have a cave on your desktop?

      [Digression]
      Then again, some 10 days ago I tried LXDE and it seems very pleasant to use, as it way lighter than KDE4. I was surprised that this would happen, since I have lots of memory (I had a hunch that the change would help FPS games, but the whole system -- including browsers -- got more responsive). And a lot of known shortcuts work out-of-the-box, like Meta-E (calls the file manager). Some things were not ok, though: focus-follow-mouse had to be selected in an Openbox text file config (does LXDE have this?), a snapshot app is missing (I used ksnapshot, but it's weird having to call it in advance), Chromium lost its configs (after a power failure) and could not auto-configure proxy settings (but it managed to do it previously under KDE).
      [/Digression]

      Apparently LXDE is missing a few key aspects, but all in all it brings the same charm IceWM and XFCE3 have -- and it's almost as configurable as, say, KDE 2.0.

      That kind of problem which Chromium had is IMHO one of the things which holds Linux back: the inability of DE designers to make non-intrusive software (like IceWM proposes). And everytime I talk about standard behaviour, someone comes up with that "choice" speech. As if the two things were opposed.

    12. Re:Make it configurable by mfnickster · · Score: 1

      You mean like FVWM or IceWM or WindowMaker or E or any of the other WMs that experts love and newbies hate? Gosh, I don't know--when will we get something like that? :)

      Okay, maybe I should have been more specific! When will every computer come with an easily configurable interface built-in? :)

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    13. Re:Make it configurable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Install Awesome WM
      2. rsync ~/.config/awesome folder from server.
      3. startx

      Alternatively, repeat above steps with your non-awesome window manager.

    14. Re:Make it configurable by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Actually every desktop/laptop computer does come with a completely configurable interface. Mind you, it's not easily configurable, but you can configure it any way you want by just writing the necessary code. ;-)
      OK, if you are unlucky, your computer may break before you finished writing the code. :-)

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    15. Re:Make it configurable by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      When are we going to get an interface that is totally configurable to user preferences?

      When you stop using Gnome.

      Someday, I'd love to sit down at a computer, point it to the URL where my interface preferences live, and presto - it instantly becomes the desktop I'm most familiar with.

      If I'm setting up a new machine, I just copy over my .kde folder from my main desktop. This does have drawbacks and pain points, though, and I too would like to see a simplified way to achieve this.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    16. Re:Make it configurable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure! Or, I could just sit down tonight and re-write the dictionary that took Dr. Johnson 10 years. :)

    17. Re:Make it configurable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have that, with no caveats, I use Awesome WM and my desktop conf is in a git repo.

      I don't have minimize or maxize buttons on my desktop either since windows don't have useless decorations and the task bar is quite thin, I just love the auto tile features of awesome, and still have floating resizable windows where needed.

      And of course I'm not a regular user, I choose a lot of my configuration based on what makes my life easier, and I do know what I want and don't like being forced otherwise.

  23. Off to KDE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That tears it. I guess I'm switching to KDE. Lots of interesting changes there too but mostly in a positive direction.

    If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Was that minimize button really hurting anything?

  24. A new hope by VincenzoRomano · · Score: 2

    The hope is that the developers will put more attention to the meat by fixing the numerous bugs that are lurking into the GNOME suite.
    Otherwise they'll end up with a new KDE 4.0 fiasco.
    Anyway, hiding buttons is not a real great advance in my humble opinion.

    --
    Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
    For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
    1. Re:A new hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes!
      I sit here on an Ubuntu box that was just updated this morning. If I want two panes visible in the Nautilus file browser window, I have to click the option in the 'View' drop-down menu every time I use it. In searching forums, it appears that this has been a problem for a while. I have not found any magic incantation to fix it. There really should be no magic incantation required to do this anyway - it's an option on a drop-down menu, for god's sake. I also have a problem with Nautilus and cairo dock shortcuts. It has been fixed before, now it's broke again.

      Look, just because it's possible to do something does not always mean you should. I find the current maximize/minimize scheme to be useful and easy. It requires only a tiny bit of screen real estate, and there's no hue and cry from people saying that it should go. Double-clicking on title bars requires extra steps and adaptation that provides no clear benefit. Hell yes, I'll gladly break old habits and learn new ones if there's some benefit. I don't see one here.

      There seems to be a culture among some programmers that encourages futzing with every little working thing and introducing features of questionable value rather than fixing the broken stuff. Only futz with it if it *doesn't* work, not the other way around.

      Yeesh!

  25. Is that really the most noteworthy change? by penguinchris · · Score: 1

    I didn't read the article, but clicked on the link to the Gnome 3 page. Seems like an incredibly massive overhaul with loads of changes. Is this really the best article that could be come up with to start a discussion on slashdot about Gnome 3?

    Personally, I like the sound of it, but the website is extremely ambiguous. I can't tell what's going on in any of the screenshots. Some screencast videos or something would be helpful. The text descriptions don't really help, either. I might have to try it out - kudos to them for providing a live CD just to test Gnome 3.

    It seems heavily inspired by OS X, including some stuff we won't see until OS X 10.7. Not a bad thing at all, as I primarily use OS X these days and really like the interface and am looking forward to the improvements in 10.7. I don't see the need to rip on UI designers for copying good ideas from elsewhere, everyone does it, and it eventually makes every OS UI better (KDE 4 is still pretty shocking, though).

    1. Re:Is that really the most noteworthy change? by uglyduckling · · Score: 1

      It looks to me like there's huge amounts of wasted space at the top of each and every window. The title bar + menu is even bigger than the standard icon bar. How is that possibly progress? If they had OSX style menus swallowed into a universal menu bar than I could understand reclaiming the screen real estate, particularly with the push towards netbooks and ever smaller displays. But all they've done is turned three buttons into one button.

  26. Xfce 4.8 is already out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >swearing to wait for GNOME 3.2, switch to KDE or even Windows

    Pfff. Xfce 4.8 is already out. Let's switch to that and leave GNOME 3 to it's fate.

    1. Re:Xfce 4.8 is already out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Xfce or KDE for me, haven't quite decided yet. I didn't like older versions of Xfce, has it improved much lately?

    2. Re:Xfce 4.8 is already out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hold off on xfce 4.8, it still has a few minor usability bugs here and there.

  27. How about Zoom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The old Mac "Zoom" button was actually the best. It would resize the window to fit the content, then toggle between that and the size of the window before zooming. It is probably difficult to understand how useful it is unless you have used it for a while. Some developers also incorporated an option-click to maximize.

    Not even Apple does it right with any consistency anymore, as they drift more and more toward Windows conventions or try to jam a touch interface onto their desktop OS.

    1. Re:How about Zoom? by liteyear · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, I miss those days when the Mac OS didn't have to be dumbed down to appear less confusing to Windows users.

      It appears Gnome is trying to rid itself of this lowest common denominator style too. One must keep in mind in UI design that familiarity sometimes feels a hell of a lot like superiority. In fact, there are often superior paradigms out there, but they can take quite a while to become familiar.

      I see all the time people bringing their familiar "maximise" and "minimise" ideas to the Mac OS and it's frustrating. There are better ways. The "Zoom" button is one - it only made the window as big as necessary to show the contents, without needlessly obscuring other windows. The "Minimise" button on Mac OS was rarely used and only when one wanted to, literally, keep a miniaturised version of the window handy in the Dock. If you just wanted to hide it, hide it with Command-H. Better yet, leave it there and just switch to the window you're interested in.

      I'm not familiar with Gnome's implementation, but I can well imagine a superior interface could be designed without the maximise and minimise buttons.

      --
      * Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently talented fool *
  28. Don't force UI changes on users by rmcd · · Score: 2

    I haven't used Gnome 3 so I don't know if I like this change. But I have one request for the devs: ***PLEASE*** make it *easily* possible to retain the Gnome 2 look and feel if a user prefers that. TFA wasn't clear about whether this would be possible.

    You become comfortable working in a particular way. Then you upgrade ---all your reflexes are wrong and you have to waste time relearning the interface. If I'm productive, let me stick with what I know. For a developer to alter the UI without a downgrade path (as MS did with the Office ribbon) is the height of solipsistic arrogance.

    1. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by dingen · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If a minor UI change like this really is that much of an impact on your productivity, then maybe working with computers is just not for you. Things change all the time. You're not working the same way you were 5 years ago, which is different from 10 years ago, which is different from 20 years ago. People adjust to that an carry on, or try to stick with what they're used to in vain and get left behind.

      I'm not saying every time something changes, there is progress. I'm not saying every change is really an improvement. But people should be able to adjust to almost any change in computing without too much of a fuss, because things just change. That's just how it is, how it has been and how it will be.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    2. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      problem is that this is making things harder on the user and likely to cause people to stop using gnome...I guess you don't know how to use a computer since you could already remove those buttons in gnome, it's elitist attitudes like this that keep 'nix from being a mainstream app, truth is most people DON'T like change. Having to relearn something, no matter how trivial to you is hard for some people when a computer is involved, some people just don't have the time to relearn, and yes this is a behavior that will take time to relearn, it's not easier either, it's harder and more clicks. I personally don't use them much but I don't knock people who do and I hate being told how I want to use things isn't good enough for some developer.

      Your analogy of people changing is wrong, people using desktops and laptops have used the same interface for 20 years and it's worked for 20 years, there's an adage of if it isn't broken don't fix it.

    3. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by rmcd · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure if you're joking or not.

      I started computing over 30 years ago. For a long time I was a Windows user, on the upgrade treadmill and I found it fun, but these days it's Emacs, LaTeX, Octave, and bash shell scripting. One of the great things about these tools, for me, is that they are all about the getting the task done and the interface is *not* changing all the time. Of course some things change over time. But for writing I am pretty much working the way I did 10 years ago (emacs/latex). I'm a fan of changes where I'm lured to do something new (learning R for example, which I'm now doing), rather than being coerced into it.

      As I said, I haven't used Gnome 3, so I don't have an opinion. And yes, I know that I can always use KDE or fluxbox or whatever. But I repeat: I see no reason to force UI changes on users.

    4. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by aix+tom · · Score: 1

      That was fine as long as not many "normal" people used computers. But writing applications for "normal" retail people out there, I can tell you:

      Change one little detail, and 80% of them will stand there like deers in the headlights. Every time I tell them about some new menus or new features, at least 50% of them don't know how to move windows around, or that windows can actually be resized. Telling them "click on that" works sometimes. Trying to tell them "grab the title bar and move it up to maximise" would be a futile exercise.

      All Desktops, Win, Gnome, KDE, etc... seem to be running after the next shiny thing right now, and leave the people who are not really interested in computers, but just need them to get work done, in the dust. Just imagine a car where every 3-4 years they change the steering from the steering wheel to foot pedals, and the gas / brake from the pedals to hand levers.

    5. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had Min/Max/Close buttons on my GUI windows for 25 years. (AmigaOS on up) They do a useful task and are not in the way. Why don't we take away the brake pedal on your car? To slow down you can just let off the throttle and if that isn't enough you can then pull the handbrake. Don't like it? Well, we're slimming the car interface to make is more slick. Don't like it? Do you drive the same way you drove 5, 10, 20 years ago? Things don't get changed when they work. Min/max/close works.

    6. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by dingen · · Score: 1

      When cars were only around for 25 years, the interface changed all the time. The current model (steering wheel, two or three pedals) was first used in the 1916 Cadillac type 53, but it was not until the '40ies or '50ies that all cars were built like this.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    7. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a major change, not a minor one.
      Forcing changes on users is not respecting their choice and freedom and completely goes against the spirit of Free Software.

      The GNOME Shell is an awful mess and poor design. Hopefully GNOME 3 can exist without the crappy GNOME Shell. Otherwise everyone will abandon ship for XFCE/OpenBox/etc.

    8. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by CFBMoo1 · · Score: 1

      "If a minor UI change like this really is that much of an impact on your productivity, then maybe working with computers is just not for you."

      Tell that to my mother who wants to scan and email and had a fit finding things again from the "minor UI changes" between Windows XP and Windows 7.

      --
      ~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
    9. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am working more or less the same as I did 15 years ago. No major differences except hotplug/plug-and-play and some "automagic" that makes some stuff easier.

      I do not see much of a difference since the early Red Hat distros, OS2, Amiga, and so on. Better, but not much of a revolution.

    10. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by sjames · · Score: 1

      Ideally a UI lets you mix and match to some degree so you can try out "the new way" a bit at a time as you like rather than having to waste a week of productivity on an all or nothing leap.

    11. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see why the Gnome devs don't seem to see fit to retain Metacity and Panel. If they want to jettison everything and start over like this, why not just call it something else? Leave those of us who like our interface the way it is alone.

    12. Re:Don't force UI changes on users by mldi · · Score: 1

      Things change, sure, but change for change's sake is not progress. If it makes n00bs go "I can't figure out how to X" and veterans go "WTF", maybe consider if that "change" is worth making.
      Touch screens = change that is positive for certain types of devices. It's adaptable and makes sense. GOOD.
      This change = moronic. Confuses users (even new ones), adds time to accomplishing simple tasks, and for Desktop users it's completely pointless. BAD.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  29. Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I love Linux, but it's like everyone mutually agreed to abandon desktop sanity. KDE never met an option they didn't like, and Gnome never met one they did. I've used both extensively and recently but both make me spend more time cussing at the screen than I want to. I've held on to Linux (and FreeBSD) desktops for over a decade but I give up. It's not going to happen. I'm still going to work on a Unix all day, but I'm switching to the pretty one.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    1. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by pizzach · · Score: 2

      You would also be switching to the OS that traded the zoom to fit button for maximize, added a minimize button on version 10, put back icons on the desktop after users revolted, and now just like MS Windows you can resize the windows from any side of the border.

      It might not be a bad change for most people.

      The only thing that scares me is the drag to top to maximize. I flick my windows around my desktop, so having them do that when I brink them to the top on a small screen drives me nuts.

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    2. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by the_humeister · · Score: 2

      Try Xfce4.

      Besides, this is not a Linux issue because Linux is just a kernel. It's a UI issue, mainly GNOME's issue. Whether you're running Debian or FreeBSD, it's the UI you're interfacing with, and that's more or less the same on the mainstream unix-like OSes.

    3. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What kind of Linux user are you, if you don't know there are other options that KDE or GNOME with all the default settings and default components such as window managers?

      Oh. I guess the kind of Linux user who switches to a Mac...

    4. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Ah, but you have yet to look at what GNU/Linux wants to offer, in its the proper & desired way... which apparently, maybe, sort of includes GNUstep ;)

      (coincidentally, very related to current Mac)

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    5. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2

      I've tried XFCE and it was pretty great on an old laptop I have. I like the heavier desktop environments, though, and I'm not fond of any of the Free options. I wholeheartedly agree about the difference between UI and kernel, but given that I can't use OS X's interface on a Linux distro, the choice of IU is strongly affecting my choice of OS.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    6. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      What kind of Linux user are you, if you don't know there are other options that KDE or GNOME with all the default settings and default components such as window managers?

      I came to Gnome via WindowMaker, Enlightenment, XFCE, and KDE. I'm aware of the options, but they suck for me. Others obviously love them, and that's cool! Want to live on ratpoison? I'm glad you found a choice that suits you!

      But none of the current options suit me, so I'm switching to a non-Linux desktop that I actually enjoy using.

      Oh. I guess the kind of Linux user who switches to a Mac...

      You have withered my soul with your rapier-like wit, sir.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    7. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by dingen · · Score: 1

      and now just like MS Windows you can resize the windows from any side of the border

      Seriously? Is that new in Lion or something? Because on Snow Leopard it's still right bottom corner only.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    8. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      try xfce.

    9. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good luck with that.

      It turns out you can't get focus-follows-mouse behavior on OSX. Not with a preference setting, not with some kind of registry key, not even with a commercial app (that works properly). And if you complain about it in a forum, you're lambasted for wanting the wrong thing.

      We'll see you back, after you get past the "Oooh, shiny!" and into the "How am I supposed to get any work done on this thing?"

    10. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Stratoukos · · Score: 1
      --
      It may be 7 digits, but at least it's a semiprime
    11. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by dingen · · Score: 1

      Thinking different is becoming less and less different I guess...

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    12. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but I'm switching to the pretty one.

      If your reason for switching to OSX because it's prettier, perhaps you'll want to check out the the screenshots for gnome 3.0 first: http://www.gnome3.org/.

      If you've been using Lin/Win-desktops for over a decade, the switch to OSX most likely isn't going to result in less frustration.

    13. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you might try Xfce with AWN.

    14. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I don't know why people try to convince others to stay with linux after they've made the decision to leave. For one thing it's their choice. For the second why would you care? Third is that they almost always wind up coming back.

    15. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Burz · · Score: 1

      I made to same switch to OS X in 2005 for the same reasons. Welcome, it'll be good to have you!

      I don't know if OS X is prettier than some Gnome/KDE distros, but it sure is a lot more coherent. Its also much easier to write a program and just have it work on another system because its defined as a complete system, not just a bunch of optional pieces (which KDE and Gnome are themselves).

    16. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Mac? You would be better off switching to Windows, at least they have spent a lot of money determining what people actually want (no process is perfect but Microsoft spends a lot of money on figuring out a good user experience).

      OS X is insecure as hell. Again you would be better off with Windows. I don't have time to go in to all the details but the security in MacOS is a huge myth.

      At least Linux gives you the flexibility to use what you want. If you don't like GNOME then use something else.

      In any case I don't think you will find a perfect solution. Software just sucks in general; all of it (I say this as a developer myself).

    17. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...but I'm switching to the pretty one."

      Ok, I'll bite, which "UI" is that?
      We're on slashdot so it can't be about a girl. (darn)

    18. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On linux, its your choice to use an old version of gnome if you wish...jeez...

    19. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're giving things up on the Mac too. Apple's trying to turn OS X into iOS now so that everything is like an iPad. Read up on Mac OS X Lion before you make the switch. Between losing Java and the new "freeze dry" feature for unloading applications, I feel like Apple's taking huge steps backward.

      I was planning on buying a Mac Pro this year, but now I'm thinking I should wait until I see what they do to OS X first.

    20. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before you do anything rash, remember there are options such as TDE (KDE 3.5 fork), Xfce, LXDE, Fluxbox, IceWM, or, if you're a masochist, fvwm.

    21. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mac's can all go to hell until they get the always on top option for window managment.

    22. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Really, I've tried all of those (and a few tiling WMs, too). I'm not ignorant of the options - I just don't really like what I've found. I'm currently compiling Gnome Shell to see what that's all about.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    23. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by justsomebody · · Score: 1

      obviously... as a developer... YOU FAIL!

      ever heard of static building? there is a reason why distros are built dynamically, but there is also a reason why some company would want to ship static compiled

      --
      Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
    24. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      I like the way KDE does that "drag to top to maximize" thing. When your mouse hits the top of the screen you see an outline of the maximized window, but it doesn't actually change size til you let go.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    25. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Holy crap. What's next, a mouse with two physical buttons?

    26. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by boristhespider · · Score: 1

      I've never actually liked focus-follows-mouse since I tend to fiddle with the mouse a lot while I'm reading something onscreen, or knocking it out of my way otherwise. It frustrates me, so its lack in OSX isn't an issue for me. Obviously it's something other people like, but if the lack of focus-follows-mouse is actually a deal-breaker then I think you're probably inventing reasons not to go for OSX instead of just admitting that you don't want to swap to OSX, which would be just as reasonable. (It's only a fucking OS. Seriously, why is this such an important issue?)

      As for "How am I supposed to get any work done on this thing?", well, depends what work you're doing. I've not found anything that I can do on Linux that I *can't* do on OSX. It's still a UNIX-like system (yes yes I know it's certified UNIX and Linux isn't; but who actually cares? All we care about is that it's UNIX-like), it's got a GNU-based userspace, the versions of things like gcc might be a couple of steps behind the bleeding edge but they're that in something like Debian, too, and I can still get hold of software I want and compile it up. It's just another UNIX. Drop to command-line and I can basically do what I want.

      Maybe you're doing something really niche that seriously *does* need Linux, in which case great - don't go for OSX, why would you? That's like someone who uses Windows-only software swapping to AmigaOS.

    27. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by boristhespider · · Score: 1

      Alternatively, get hold of a copy of Snow Leopard and put that on your Mac Pro, it'll still be supported for a good few years. And while I agree that I don't like the look of some of Apple's "features" in Lion, on the whole it looks like a very minor change over Snow Leopard and I suspect it'll be possible to ignore most of the new stuff. If not, well, I can always swap to Linux or FreeBSD.

    28. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by mldi · · Score: 1

      "Thinking different" isn't positive if the Different way is less usable.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
    29. Re:Screw it, I'm getting a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm still going to work on a Unix all day, but I'm switching to the pretty one.

      XFCE?

  30. Usability testing by actual users? by Vellmont · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is such a drastic step of changing a UI paradign that's existed for the past 25+ years, and the only justifications I see for it are completely theoretical ones. Where's the usability testing by actual users to see if the theories hold any water?

    Both sides can argue about what THEY think the user will prefer. The arguments can sound extrodinarily convincing, but what actually matters is how it performs in the real world with actual users. The solution to this problem seems to be "just put it in the next release and see if people revolt enough" rather than conducting actual controlled tests. IMO this is an extrodinarily flawed approach. A controlled test gives you non-biased opinions rather than political ones. This approach only seems to create a rift between the two opposing sides rather than finding out what's the best UI experience for the user.

    --
    AccountKiller
    1. Re:Usability testing by actual users? by dingen · · Score: 0

      25 years of minimize/maximize buttons in the title bar of a window? What GUI from 1986 are you talking about?

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    2. Re:Usability testing by actual users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      X11 ? NeWS? MacOS? All were around in 1986, all had minimize/maximize buttons on what we would call a Titlebar.

    3. Re:Usability testing by actual users? by dingen · · Score: 1

      Is that really so? I was looking at some screenshots from System 1 and couldn't find minimze/maximze buttons.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    4. Re:Usability testing by actual users? by ArrogantLemming · · Score: 1

      I had been willing to give them the benefit of the doubt and at least try it out before forming an opinion. Then I read the following:

      User studies can be informative, but in this area, we're really interested how experienced users work with a lot of windows, so the most basic approach of paying people off the street to sit in front of of a computer for an hour to do predesigned tasks wasn't going tell us much. - GNOME Shell 2.91.90 released

    5. Re:Usability testing by actual users? by Vellmont · · Score: 1

      Quibbling over exactly when max/min buttons came in is really missing the point. The point being it's so long that for 99% of users the max/min button has always existed. While an old design should never be considered unquestionable doctrine that cannot change, you equally shouldn't just change such a built in expectation without sufficient testing and input from real users.

      --
      AccountKiller
    6. Re:Usability testing by actual users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      standard crap you get from developers in IRC:

      "If you dont like it, fork the code."
      "Stop whining or I'll ban you."
      TOPIC: "Complaining about the project's recent changes will result in being banned."
      "If YOU want a feature, code it in and submit it"
      "Sorry that change doesnt go by our impossible to adhere to standards."

      The pidgin guys are guilty of this sort of crap too. They'll harp on how they dont need users and that they make this software for themselves.

      Yet in 10 years they still dont have proper voice and video support, namely because the core devs dont like it. They meregd the gaim-vv project, then immediately dumped it and never talked about it again because they didnt like the coding, and still to this date only have limited video and audio support. Doesnt matter anyway, no one uses AIM, YIM, or MSN much these days. Everyone's either on facebook chat or skype.

    7. Re:Usability testing by actual users? by mldi · · Score: 1

      Bingo. And a fork is born. 'Fome' (Forked+Gnome), anyone? Could use a hand-print as the logo.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  31. We have found... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .. The perfect candidates to the title "The most stupidest people in the world" (Peraphs the universe): The GNOME usability team and maybe the GNOME UI Coders.

    Really.

  32. How many windows do you have minimized rignt now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If your answer is zero then you may like the new Gnome plan. But I currently have five windows minimized.

    I probably won't be using the new Gnome interface on my Linux box...

    Crap, I went to Gnome from KDE because KDE broke their interface... Now I will have to move to one of the lesser known user interfaces.

    Nothing like change for the sake of change...

  33. Re:Windows? by crank-a-doodle · · Score: 0

    I soo agree with you! and frankly it's not that big a change! i mean i never use those buttons, in fact i removed them a long time ago from metacity!

  34. Good idea / Cleanup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I seldom use them anyway. Either I double-click on the title bar to maximize/unmaximize a window or use the task bar or the window hider. Do really all of you move the pointer to these small, almost rudimentary icons to do these things?
    Hopefully this won't be the reason many people drop gnome and switch to KDE for, but IMO it would be worse to remove the close button.

  35. Re:Windows? by icepick72 · · Score: 1

    Indeed you deserve what you're signing up for: a familiar and usable UI. The Desktop has always been a contentious point between Windows and *unix. Windows likely wouldn't survive if it made flagrant UI changes because desktop users would be confused. At least there are alternatives. In this case alternatives to Gnome for those who do not wish to use it any longer. On a side note it reminds me of the damned ribbon bar introduced my Microsoft into Office products and no way to change back - people still have a hard time finding what they need, but then again they still use it, so that works against my previous point.

  36. And Bruce Byfield accuses Ubuntu of tyranny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    maximize and minimize buttons are an integral part of the existing UI in most desktops shells (except those on mobile phone OSs).

    But for some apparent reason GNOME always want to saddle UI with "interesting designs" (remember spatial view in nautilus, it only took GNOME 8 years to figure out it was a step in the wrong direction).

    But in the recent Article - "Where did to the Love Go",
    http://itmanagement.earthweb.com/osrc/article.php/12068_3925641_2/Ubuntu-Where-Did-the-Love-Go.htm

    Bruce says:
    "When changes proposed by Ubuntu were slow to be accepted in GNOME -- some say out of hostility -- Shuttleworth began making interface changes to GNOME within Ubuntu. They were accompanied by the announcement of an elaborate new look for Ubuntu that included complicated color codes and a new font.

    Then, faced with the choice of supporting these changes in an old version of GNOME or transferring them to GNOME 3.0, Ubuntu announced Unity, a shell for GNOME that was originally designed for netbook computers, would be its new desktop.

    This growing tendency to develop in-house has been accompanied by other signs of insularity."

    Who is insular now and forcing things on people?

  37. Hold up if your running to Windows. by CFBMoo1 · · Score: 1

    Apparently they might lose the buttons as well for Windows 8 if the rumor mill about a bubble interface is true.

    http://www.ispyce.com/2011/02/microsoft-shows-off-radical-new-ui.html

    --
    ~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
  38. Double clicking titlebar... by xded · · Score: 2

    ... always worked as an alternative for maximize/restore on MS Windows. Just like double clicking the top-left corner closes a windows since Windows 3 at least.

    1. Re:Double clicking titlebar... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad that moving the window twice in quick succession also counts as "double clicking". When a window maximizes, for me 95% of the time it is unintended. This is the drawback when you give rare actions a huge UI footprint.

    2. Re:Double clicking titlebar... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... Windows 3 at least.

      windows 2.0 at least

    3. Re:Double clicking titlebar... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is precisely why the minimize button should stay. When no pixels are used to convey the information, who knows about such hidden functionality?

    4. Re:Double clicking titlebar... by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      Nice! You learn something new every day :-)

      --
      Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
    5. Re:Double clicking titlebar... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mine does vertical expand/restore height. And I like it that way.
      And maximize is the regular fit all screen function.

    6. Re:Double clicking titlebar... by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      Yep. Though it's hard to go back to using Windows 3.0 now, the lack of a top-right button for close drives me barmy.

  39. No problem by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    Just use Sawfish. I can maximize/unmaximize horizontally and vertically either independently or together, roll up windowshade style, and of course minimize or close, each with a single click. More options in a menu, which I could move to buttons if I used them often enough.

    The first thing I do when I upgrade Ubuntu is start seeing what it's going to take to make Sawfish work.

    Sawfish was GNOME's original WM. They've spent years replacing good functional WMs for less functional ones. Sounds like they've just about finished the race to the bottom.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just use fluxbox. I finally have a snappy interface. And yes, I have HW accelerated video cards (nvidia).

    2. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit - GNOME's original WM was enlightenment

  40. I use them all the time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who's stupid idea was this? They should be fired!

  41. So many people complaining every time GUI's change by Isaac+Remuant · · Score: 2

    I'm thinking, for example, about Firefox 4. It's bar is very customizable and you can set it up to fit whatever needs you might have (ultimately resembling FF3 look, if you so please) but people still keep complaining before, during and after.

    I'm not sure if GNOME is customizable or to what degree and think that this should probably be the case, BUT, what's wrong with us as users/commenters of this software/websites that we manage to make 90 % of all the feedback sound like cynical blabbering?

    Disclaimer: Statistics in this post are made up to represent the poster's view.

    --
    "Science can amuse and fascinate us all, but it is engineering that changes the world. " - Asimov.
  42. Mobile Applications? by NateOsit · · Score: 1

    Might this be a move to adapt GNOME to mobile devices? Or to give users an experience similar to mobile platforms? Not having a Min/Max button on my phone has certainly simplified things for me.

  43. Oh, Gnome... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yet another example of the Gnome devs having their heads up their collective asses. No idea why any distro would willingly use Gnome as their design philosophy seems to be "let's try randomly doing things that make no sense in the real world and giving users fewer options".

  44. Addendum by Isaac+Remuant · · Score: 1

    I'm not discouraging discussion and critique. I'm just expressing my wish that said critic focused more on the necessary changes and an attempt to be constructive instead of insulting, demeaning or outright trolling the creators of the GUI or other people who wish to incur in a sane debate.

    --
    "Science can amuse and fascinate us all, but it is engineering that changes the world. " - Asimov.
  45. There is no need for them anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ALT+F5
    ALT+F10

  46. Re:Windows? by jellomizer · · Score: 0

    A platform where most major applications and hardware works on.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  47. Double-click in title bar to maximize?? by Jaxoreth · · Score: 2

    This can't possibly be the least bit confusing to Mac users who've been double-clicking in the title bar to minimize for fifteen years. /sarcasm

    --
    In general, it is safe and legal to kill your children. -- POSIX Programmer's Guide
    1. Re:Double-click in title bar to maximize?? by kcitren · · Score: 1

      However, it's not the least bit confusing to the larger number of Windows users who've been double-clicking the title bar to maximize.

  48. I can go with this, but for fixing one bug by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 2

    There is a bug in GNOME which screws up the window manager if you double click the title bar.
    Noted here:
    https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=436537
    "clicking in upper right corner closes window in background - very unexpected"

    Very frustrating and GNOME is doing the wrong thing.

    I suppose it will be good to remove the other buttons so that more people experience this, and hence a fix can be found.

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  49. April Fools? by michael.j.boldischar · · Score: 2

    I think the Gnome developers need to check their calendars. It's the wrong month for one of these pranks.

    1. Re:April Fools? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      I think the Gnome developers need to check their calendars.

      They would, but they removed it :(

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  50. Wasted space by The+Infamous+Grimace · · Score: 1

    Seems to be a lot of it on the top portion of the window. I've noticed this same thing in Ubuntu - i.e. Rhythmbox. Seems like better use could be made of the title and menu bar space. IMHO.

    -Peter

    --
    Ignorance and prejudice and fear
    Walk hand in hand
  51. Re:So many people complaining every time GUI's cha by dingen · · Score: 2

    Well, I guess there are 2 types of GUI's: ones everyone complain about and ones nobody uses.

    --
    Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
  52. None of the reasoning makes any sense by Posting=!Working · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So they took a button on the screen you could click and turned into a keyboard shortcut, and one of the benefits listed in the article is that it is more touch-friendly.

    It is nice that they took them out and used that space for nothing. I'm not sure how replacing useful buttons with more pixels that do nothing and convey no information helps.

    Another argument given is that there's no dock or windows list to minimize to, but if you want to switch to a different window, you go to the overview, which is exactly like a windows list or dock, but less convenient.

    Reading Owens explanation was painful. He starts with revealing that he never minimizes anything and then speculates randomly on why people would use it (missing nearly all of the reasons I use it), then bases everything on 2 peoples opinions who he had work without minimize buttons for a while.

    The reasons for getting rid of the maximize button is they though it emphasized the title bar as a way to resize the window (WTF?) and that the new way is more enjoyable (WTFFF?)

    I haven't found a single reason that wasn't based on incredibly minor aesthetics or really screwed up views of "emphasis" or "mental models."

    Can anyone give an actual reason for doing this?

    --
    This sentence no verb.
    1. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hubris?

    2. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure the reasons they had in mind, but

      1) Less buttons means more title bar and thus more space to accommodate long titles.
      2) No minimize button means more space on which double-click to maximize work.

    3. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems mostly a case of "I work this way, so it is naturally the best way to work, and anyone who doesn't do it like this is an idiot who needs to be trained, persuaded or bludgeoned into Correctness." It is an attitude that seems to come naturally to Gnome developers (viz: metacity). (And for that matter Ubuntu and the new non-X system, whatever TF it is called.) It also misses completely the fact that people really are different, have different ideas about what works and really do want to do things in different ways.

    4. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The GNOME project has come close to completion. Then they looked at the budget and said Dammit, we still got $$$ left? /Mumbles what to do...what to do...

    5. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      Bingo.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    6. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by zippthorne · · Score: 2

      Please list some of your reasons for using maximize.

      Personally, the only reason I find myself using maximize is to get around some braindead ui design that basically requires it, but doesn't just take up the space anyway. For instance, web sites which specify obscene widths for their layout....

      I'm not saying there's no other reason, or that getting rid of it entirely makes sense, just that I'd like to hear some of these "other reasons" that keep getting referred to without ever being mentioned.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    7. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can anyone give an actual reason for doing this?

      Assburger's syndrome

    8. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by SomebodyOutThere · · Score: 1
      It has to be a branding thing, don't you think? It just can't be mere Linux-geek snobbery; that would be too incredibly stupid after all the years of criticism.

      Sigh. I did like Gnome.

      --
      Everyone but you is telepathic.
    9. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would have to agree. I do use multiple desktops, but I also regularly minimize windows. Yes, I could learn the keyboard shortcut, but after several decades of using Windows/X11/Gnome for window management I've never felt the need to learn that bit of arcana. Since embracing the Linux desktop in '05 I found I preferred Gnome over KDE. This change will push me to look for a new window manager, as I cannot foresee my liking this change.

    10. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by Posting=!Working · · Score: 1

      There's several, I'm only going to type up one though.

      Copying music and photos to and from my phone. Open up the folder for photos on my hard drive & maximize, plug in the phone and the memory card pops up as a resizable window, drag photos off the memory card window and drop onto the maximized photo folder. Go to hard drive window, switch to themusic folder on hard drive, click maximize on that to return it to a smaller, resizable window, maximize the memory card window and drag/drop music from computer to phone.

      Yes, I could do that moving windows around or arranging them nicely, but this is much faster and easier. I need to drag and drop both ways, and I don't want to be limited to a half a screen when I'm picking out either the music from my drive or photos on my phone, so two equal sized windows filling the screen won't do it.

      --
      This sentence no verb.
    11. Re:None of the reasoning makes any sense by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Well, there are always applications where having a large amount of screen real estate is helpful. Thinks like spreadsheets, photo editors, and the like. Browsing a directory of images via thumbnail view is also a good reason to maximize a window.

  53. Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... from the very beginning.

    I lost track of all the "cool" but horrible ideas which made it into gnome.

    - CORBA after it had long died
    - XML
    - GConf (the horrors of the windows registry re-implemented by monkeys)
    - C# and Mono - embracing Microsoft technology!
    - Umpteen window manager changes, none good enough

    The sad part is that the other DE's are not in a good shape either. KDE 4 has come out of the woods recently. Enlightenment is still not out. XFCE does not have that traction. GNUstep is like HURD, barely alive.

    May be writing a good GUI is beyond something that can be accomplished by a mainly volunteer community...

  54. Touch prepare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Something must be done to be able to use multi touch with standard Gnome and KDE. We should not wait for Apple or MS to solve this problem and then just copy them, like OSS uses to.

    Apple is working on merging iOS and Mac OSX if you don't realize it. When they are done you will have the power of a traditional OS onto a tablet format. MS knows if they loose this battle they will loose the war, they NEED to make possible standard win32 work fine with touch screens or they will loose Windows and Office monopoly.

    If Apple is the first to secure big touch screen mass production, MS will lose so much that MS will do EVERYTHING to not let this happen, like they did with netbooks(where are the linux netbooks anymore?, MS bought every single netbook manufacturer to comply(Asus only recommends...) like they did with DirectX market over OpenGL ).

    MS got their monopoly on the Windows paradigm sift with the control of the graphic environment witch gave them at least 2-3 years ahead competition, they let them use outdated libs while they used the new ones. Wordperfect(once THE word processor) or Borland could not compete with word or Visual Studio as they did not have the libraries MS used until it was too late.

  55. GNOME3 = KDE4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks like the GNOME3 team is following in the footsteps of KDE4. Basically, a bunch of idiots who don't use their computers for real work are designing the UI.

  56. The Jump into Irrelevancy by Compaqt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nothing. It's just the latest from the Department of Stuff Nobody Asked For.

    Who exactly is supposed to be the target audience for these inanities? On the one hand, you have people who have already being been using computers for a long time. They already know how to work a standard Win/Lin interface. What's the need to present a "baby" interface?

    For children? 5-year olds can (and do) run current versions of GNOME without a problem.

    Meanwhile, how many mod points do you want to bet that Gnome still will not have fixed 5 or 10 year old basic usability bugs in the file chooser, etc., as opposed to creating whole new ones with shiny, fancy stuff?

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    1. Re:The Jump into Irrelevancy by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Gnome still will not have fixed 5 or 10 year old basic usability bugs..."

      The timezone chooser is horrible as well. Please, just let me choose a timezone without sifting through a lengthy but not comprehensive list of cities that does not include mine. Guessing which city is in my timezone is *not* easier than just choosing my timezone.

    2. Re:The Jump into Irrelevancy by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Removing it isn't really much of an issue, the problem is that this breaks the paradigm and people that aren't aware that you can double click to maximize and minimize aren't likely to know that you can do that. With XP I can double click to restore and maximize which makes it that much more confusing since this actually minimizes instead of restoring.

    3. Re:The Jump into Irrelevancy by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      That's not just Gnome, but I agree.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    4. Re:The Jump into Irrelevancy by Disfnord · · Score: 1

      The point of the "baby" interface seems obvious to me, yet no one seems to pointing this out. It's not for the desktop. Gnome has moved on. The large buttons, the removal of a taskbar and maximize/minimize buttons, these are all clearly moves designed for devices with small touch screens, ie. tablets and cell phones. What I'm wondering is why they would just give up on the desktop like this. It's all fine and good to design a spiffy phone interface, but it seems like that should be a side project in addition to your main desktop UI, or even a spin-off. But this is it. There is no full desktop interface. This is the direction they are choosing to go in. It will be interesting to see the future of desktop Linux. I see two main paths: either desktop Linux dies off, or a new DM rises up to replace the old. And I really don't think KDE has what it takes, but only time will tell.

    5. Re:The Jump into Irrelevancy by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

      I think at the root of this issue you will find a BSD or GPL licensed near-copy of an original Unix time zone support file...

  57. GNOME by SigmundFloyd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ROTFL.

    --
    Knowledge is power; knowledge shared is power lost.
  58. Re:Windows? by commodore6502 · · Score: 1

    >>you deserve what you're signing up for.

    Linux -free
    Windows - free

    So what exactly am I losing again? It isn't money. Oh that's right. TIME. I'm losing precious time having to relearn a system because Gnome and/or Ubuntu changes its interface every six months!

    If I wanted that much change in my life, I'd divorce my wife and hire a mistress.

    --
    Information wants to be expensive AND wants to be free. So you have Value vs. Cheap distribution fighting each other.
  59. Hardware driven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This move seems to be a response to the growing problem of letter-box screens.
    I'll stick with my old 4:3 hardware & task-bar thanks.

    Does anybody prefer the modern screen format - particularly on laptops?

  60. Roll your own. by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

    Openbox with Bpanel2 FTW.

    Also, double-click the title bar to maximize? WTF? Isn't that supposed to be 'shade'? Am I the only one who still uses that?

    1. Re:Roll your own. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that supposed to be 'shade'? Am I the only one who still uses that?

      Yes.

    2. Re:Roll your own. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ehrm, no.

    3. Re:Roll your own. by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Also, double-click the title bar to maximize? WTF? Isn't that supposed to be 'shade'? Am I the only one who still uses that?

      Yes, no, and yes.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
  61. Re:Windows? by dingen · · Score: 0

    Indeed you deserve what you're signing up for: a familiar and usable UI

    Because obviously, only that what is familiar is worth using.

    --
    Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
  62. What's the big fuss? by Haedrian · · Score: 1

    When was the last time you minimsed a window? I usually alt+tab when i want a window to gain focus. The only time when I ever use minimise is when I'm trying to share the screen between two windows or so, and even that is rather rare.

    As for maximise, after using Windows/KDE for a while I just 'bump' it to the top. No biggy.

    1. Re:What's the big fuss? by Arlet · · Score: 1

      I use minimize all the time, and I never use alt+tab. As far as I'm concerned, the alt+tab functionality can be removed. What's the big fuss ?

    2. Re:What's the big fuss? by Theotherguy_1 · · Score: 1

      I've always had one window maximized and all other windows minimized. When I want to focus a program, I minimize the current maximized window, and maximize the program I want to focus on. I have never used alt-tab unless a program was unresponsive.

  63. to boldly go... by arikol · · Score: 1

    Truth be told, I'm just happy that the GNOME team is bold enough to experiment and try other methods of interaction. Without some bold moves then they risk being uninspiring and dull. There is an obvious risk with bravery, but it has to be worth it.

    As a usability and interaction designer I will play with Gnome 3 as soon as I have the time.

    1. Re:to boldly go... by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 4, Funny

      Ya know what would be REALLY bold? Replace the keyboard.

      A radical departure would be a wall hanging with little pictures on it. Now, the unimaginitive would likely want the pictures to represent actions and things a computer would do. NO. That's too microsoft. A BOLD wall-hanging device would use pictures that DON'T correspond to actions. Like, a cartoon of a dog is what you hit to delete files.
      But here's the fun part - there are TWO pictures of dogs, both hidden behind blank tiles. When you uncover one, it shows the dog for a few seconds and then goes blank. You have to remember where that is and then find the SECOND dog to complete the action.

      I know what you're thinking- "That's not innovative, I've played that game before!" oh no, not THIS bold game you haven't. THIS one changes the position of all of the pictures under the blank tiles every time you open one. So you CAN'T memorize where the 1st dog was to find the second one.

      Plus you can't use fingers. Nope. You use BEANBAGS. A sensor makes sure you're at least ten feet from the control, and you have to peg the tiles in the right order, throwing blindly, to complete the action. And these are not just ANY beanbags, they're special RFID beanbags. Don't lose any, though, they are expensive and demand is outstripping production so the wait for replacements is about 6 months.

      Studies have shown that people LOVE bean bag toss games. This will make the computer using experience MUCH more enjoyable.

      We also have a contract with Adobe. They have hired us to make Photoshop more user friendly. Currently we're looking at the bold move of replacing the entire Photoshop paradigm with something entirely different. The final decision hasn't been made. but the current favorite concept is to replace the entire Photoshop Suite with MKV files of Underdog cartoons. (MKV, not AVI. MKV is more fresh and innovative!)

      Our internal studies show people in an office would rather watch Underdog than do photo editing anyway.

      --
      This space available.
  64. I don't really care by Leolo · · Score: 1

    As long as alt-spacebar-n continues to work, I'm OK with this.

  65. Apple's Single Button UI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it were up to Apple, the world would be controlled by a single button...on one device... in the whole world. You press this button one and it would know that you selected wearing a black turtle neck with jeans, and that you meant to play Enya at full volume from every device that was capable; that one button knew that you want to maximize that solitaire window while you were talking to your boss; and the button knew that the cold beer in your fridge was put there for your neighbor. I think that's the design interface that we should all aspire to achieve.

    1. Re:Apple's Single Button UI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it were up to Apple, the world would be controlled by a single button...on one device... in the whole world.

      In version 1.0 anyway. Version 2.0 removes the button.

  66. trolling arround... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really interesting idea! I don't like it!

  67. Car analogy by Compaqt · · Score: 2

    And why is constant change better *inherently* than stable interfaces?

    Consider: round steering wheel, left to go left, right to go right. Brake, accelerator on pedals.

    Is there a need for a car company to replace that with, say, a touchpad plus software stop/go buttons just for the sake of "Mini-Steve Jobs" points?

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    1. Re:Car analogy by dingen · · Score: 1

      And why is constant change better *inherently* than stable interfaces?

      I'm not saying it is better, I'm saying it is going to be this way, whether you like it or not. At least for a while. It took the car industry many decades to get to the standardized interface we currently use.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
  68. Professional Film Makers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, this is a HUGE let down for professional film makers. Everyone just got done switching to Gnome since it was a more stable UI than KDE with high-end 3D/2D applications and custom applications.

    I guess everyone will move back to KDE. And have to deal with that stupid copy/paste bug they always say they have fixed but I have yet to see it work once on KDE.
    Try copying from a KDE application to a gnome application with a "middle-click" paste ... all sorts of mess.

    Much of the film industry uses "Min/Max" buttons all day. ALL DAY!!! I have 10 desktops alone for my day to day tasks. With easilly 20 windows open. Some I have to maximize because the Interface does not always work well otherwise. And, yes, I do minimize a lot to keep things organize. And, I usually have "double-click" the window bar to rollup the window. Did they remove that too?

  69. Nobody gives up Linux for Windows by petes_PoV · · Score: 1

    Almost every Linux user has a Windows instance somewhere. Whether it's dual-boot, in a VM, on a laptop or a separate machine. All that happens is (unless the individual in question is pursuing their own holy war) that people use whichever one gets them to their goal fastest and with minimum hassle. It will be interesting to see whether this change in the UI causes much of a shift in either direction, or away from Gnome to a more traditional UI.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
    1. Re:Nobody gives up Linux for Windows by Isaac-1 · · Score: 1

      I will agree almost everyone has a copy of windows, the question is how often do they use it. In my case I keep a copy of windows on my notebook computer, I will boot into it every few months to run windows update for those rare occasions when I need to run a windows only application, or go to an IE only web site.

  70. KDE is much better by mangu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In KDE you still have the minimize and maximize buttons. "If you want to minimize, you can right-click the titlebar, then click minimize, or using ALT+F9"??? WTF, I have been using computers since 1975 and find that difficult, how about n00bs?

    In KDE, if you are a "power user", you can middle-click the maximize button to maximize the window vertically while maintaining the horizontal size, or right-click it to maximize the window only horizontally. Nice, easy, simple, and keeps working what has always been working.

    In other words, you can always improve something, but ***IF IT AIN'T BROKEN, DON'T FIX IT***

    1. Re:KDE is much better by Homburg · · Score: 1

      But GNOME Shell already broke minimize when they removed the taskbar. Now, minimized windows just vanish, and it's not at all obvious how to get them back. Given that minimize doesn't make sense with GNOME Shell's model, removing the minimize button is, precisely, fixing something that's broken.

  71. Long lines of text by tepples · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I paid for the [1920px wide] real estate, why would I want to waste most of it?

    There's a reason that newspapers have several columns of text, and this reason is that text becomes harder to read once lines become longer than 80 characters (roughly 40em in CSS). With long lines, too much of the effort is spent on finding the next line of text and making sure you don't repeat or skip a line. So put one browser window in half the screen and the other browser window in the other half.

    1. Re:Long lines of text by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Clearly reading text on browser windows is the only thing people could possibly do in a large-screen computer. Absolutely no applications could conceivably benefit from more screen real estate. You, sir, are 200% correct!

    2. Re:Long lines of text by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Even if people do need more screen real estate for other apps, it doesn't negate the need to re-size the windows they are shown in. In fact, it sort of supports that idea as you will now need multiple windows sizes at their discretion.

      I take from your tone you were trying to be sarcastic in pointing to how the parent was wrong. However, I believe you proved his point in that one size windows doesn't fit all. Just in case you're confused, he didn't say all anyone needed was 80 characters, he said there's a reason why we need to re-size the windows regularly.

    3. Re:Long lines of text by Mystra_x64 · · Score: 1

      I'm reading /. within maximized 1980px width screen. Seems perfectly fine. I get less scrolling as a bonus too.

      --
      Quick way to get 30% Funny 70% Troll: defend Opera browser on /.
    4. Re:Long lines of text by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I'm reading /. within maximized 1980px width screen. Seems perfectly fine.

      Maybe that's because the redesign put 800 pixels of whitespace at either side.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    5. Re:Long lines of text by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Or maybe, just maybe, those problems with newspapers are because they are dead tree databases and don't have true type? Because not only do I run all of my apps on my 1600x900 monitor maximized (which BTW is the current "sweet spot" and what I find in most households) but so do all my customers. One of the first things I had to show my GF with XP machine at the shop was "where is the bigger button?" since I use a theme on it different than default.

      Maybe its just a Linux thing but frankly I can't remember the last time I saw a PC where they DIDN'T maximize everything. In fact I just got back from setting up a college kid's PC at the dorm and I swear that kid used minimize and maximize more than anyone I'd ever seen, and he certainly wasn't hurting for space on the 1080p LCD TV he is using as a monitor.

      So maybe what you are saying is true in print but IRL as someone who works with average folks 6 days a week I can tell you maximized apps are the norm, not the exception.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  72. Devs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, were a bunch of KDE4 devs fired and they moved to Gnome? Seems like the same kinds of stupid decisions are being made.

  73. Double-click the title bar? by darkpixel2k · · Score: 1

    On a day to day basis I rarely use any of the titlebar buttons. I double-click the titlebar to maximize/restore

    Now might not be the best time to upgrade to Chrome...

    --
    There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    1. Re:Double-click the title bar? by vlueboy · · Score: 1

      Alternative GUIs are lame --they always break something down the road.

      Chrome has issues when you've selected a higher DPI. Tabs overtake the min-max-close area so that you can't interact normally with the window, and it looks like a wont-fix. I had to go back to squinty 96dpi fonts on this laptop.

      Derivatives like Chromium and Iron are also affected.

    2. Re:Double-click the title bar? by swilly · · Score: 1

      This works just fine in Chrome.

  74. KDE by brunes69 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sounds like you want KDE.

    In KDE whether or not you want minimise or maximize buttons is a simple click in the control panel.

    1. Re:KDE by mfnickster · · Score: 2

      But can I load a configuration in one step, without having to click through control panel options every time?

      I hope KDE takes that direction, it would be a joy to use.

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    2. Re:KDE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are completely missing the OP's point. I'd love what they are suggesting. You could publish interface preferences and anyone could use them, so just like you'd share a project, you could share an interface on something like github, allowing others to fork it, and you'd get specialized interfaces for programming, graphic design, word processing, etc. That could be really useful, I think.

    3. Re:KDE by zippthorne · · Score: 2

      Next to a mountain of mountains of other simple clicks in the control panel....

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    4. Re:KDE by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      You just need to replace the .kde and .kde4 directories at you home. Make them portable, mount them over the web, carry them on pen drives, whatever.

    5. Re:KDE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the problem is finding that button amongst every button. hell every possibly choice is just a button in kde

  75. Options are a good thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't have a problem with it as a default setting, but everything should be optional. Gnome seems to be moving away from this and is embracing the dumbing down of the linux UI. Not cool.

    Personally, I don't need those buttons, but I like knowing I can turn them on if I need.

  76. Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone else remember the good old days when GNOME wasn't a window manager?

  77. Re:Windows? by iluvcapra · · Score: 0

    If you divorced your wife you wouldn't need a mistress.

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
  78. This is FUCKING STUPID by sootman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It does NOT make the UI easier to use. Cleaner looking, yes, but NOT easier. A button sits there, visible, inviting you to click it. You see that the option is exists and if you care to find out what it does you can click it and see what happens if you're adventurous or you can RTFM if you're not. Either way, you know the option exists. Double-clicking the title bar, however, is completely non-discoverable except by accident. Look at the screenshot at the top of the screen. The title bar has the title, a close button, and... NOTHING ELSE. Just a bunch of wasted space. Gnome devs are doing their users--present and future--a great disservice by removing these buttons.

    I think they're trying to copy the super-clean look of iOS, but iOS looks super clean because it works differently, not because it is clean for cleanliness' sake. There is no close button because you press the home button to leave the app. There is no minimize/restore because that's not how iOS apps work. There are no scroll bars because you scroll by dragging anywhere. Steve didn't just say "I'm going to throw away all these controls," he said "I'm going to change the UI" and as a result of THAT those controls were no longer needed. Gnome has not changed its underpinnings--it just threw away all those controls.

    Double-clicking the title bar to change the window is a great shortcut for power users who know it's there because it's a nice big target and sometimes it's easier to double-click a part of the screen close to where the mouse is, rather than going after a button. But that shouldn't be the ONLY way.

    Decades ago, as a kid, I absolutely HATED the original Mario games on the NES because there was all this totally undiscoverable crap where you had to jump in just the right spot to mash your head into an invisible block to get points. I thought it was the dumbest thing in the world--how could you possibly know to do that? I didn't think it was a good way to make a game back then and I'm positive that it's not a good way to make a UI now. Gnome devs are ON CRACK if they think this is a good idea.

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    1. Re:This is FUCKING STUPID by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      Double-clicking the title bar to change the window is a great shortcut for power users who know it's there because it's a nice big target [asktog.com] and sometimes it's easier to double-click a part of the screen close to where the mouse is, rather than going after a button.

      You are right about the idea, of course, but the present example makes me smile... Indeed, double-clicking the titlebar maximizes the window... How many power users do you know who maximize their windows...?

    2. Re:This is FUCKING STUPID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think they're trying to copy the super-clean look of iOS, but iOS looks super clean because it works differently, not because it is clean for cleanliness' sake. There is no close button because you press the home button to leave the app. There is no minimize/restore because that's not how iOS apps work. There are no scroll bars because you scroll by dragging anywhere. Steve didn't just say "I'm going to throw away all these controls," he said "I'm going to change the UI" and as a result of THAT those controls were no longer needed. Gnome has not changed its underpinnings--it just threw away all those controls.

      I think you're right. It does look like they are positioning GNOME to work on tablets and mobile devices:

      The omission of a window list or dock also reduces the amount of screen space occupied by the Shell, and therefore makes it better suited to devices with smaller screens.

    3. Re:This is FUCKING STUPID by dirtyhippie · · Score: 1

      Yeah I don't get it. If you're going to nuke maximize and minimize, you should nuke the close button too. If maximize is fine in a context menu, so is close. Besides, most programs have a "redundant" file->exit type functionality. And at that point, the utility of the title bar is getting pretty low - maybe it's time to lose that too. And all the rest of the window has in it is this wacky thing called an "application" - it would make for a very elegant and consistent UX to eliminate that variability as well, wouldn't it??

    4. Re:This is FUCKING STUPID by ProbablyJoe · · Score: 1

      It's funny you mention iOS, when I looked at the screenshots it made me think of a UI that was designed for mobiles, tablets, netbooks etc. It all looks like it's been unnecessarily simplified, and lots of huge buttons that would look at home on a touchscreen. I don't really understand why. Saving space is all very well on those sort of interfaces, but I don't get the logic behind removing things that take up neglibible amounts of space I do prefer double click to maximise, and I do quite like the option to maximise by draging to the top of the screen, but Windows gives you those options without removing the buttons. I'd hope these are actually customisable options, not just forced on people Ah well. Things like this irritate me, but it doesn't really affect me, I use XFCE and Fluxbox. I sometimes wonder why I don't just use Gnome or KDE, then see things like this and realise why. I'll just be staying away from Gnome. That said, I can't really see how these sort of changes are good for -anyone-, and when Gnome 3 is what the majority of people are likely to see when they try Linux for the first time, it's things like this that will put them off sticking with it. There's a fine line between being different and being stupid

  79. Time to move out by darojasp · · Score: 1

    Too good I already started my transition to KDE and I have to admit it feels good.

  80. Half way there... by Endophage · · Score: 1

    I can do without a maximise, double clicking the title bar has been around long enough on windows that I sometimes do it by accident on Linux only for it to do something completely other than what I want. I do use minimise enough that not having it is going to be a pain in the ass... I assume there will still be a keyboard shortcut that does the same thing.

  81. Maximizing is extremely common by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Do you have a tiny monitor? I could see maximizing on a laptop with a smallish resolution, but on a 1920x1280 desktop screen the concept is ridiculous.

    Not ridiculous at all. I run spreadsheets every day that use every inch of screen real estate I have and I could use more. My monitor is a 24" with 1920x1280 resolution. On my home rig where I have multiple monitors I normally keep one application maximized on each monitor. I use lots of applications that maximizing is beneficial for the way I work.

  82. Glub-glub by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Understanding Gnome first requires reading Stanislaw Lem, in particular parts of "The Star Diaries":

    "Tichy has to escape from a planet whose government has legislated that all of its inhabitants shall henceforth breathe underwater. The citizens sing patriotic anthems about fish and humidity, and learn that in a future paradise all shall become "gwats" and "sunkers," idealized water-breathing forms. Debates rage over whether gurgling is allowed."

    --http://world.std.com/~mmcirvin/stardiaries.html

  83. Flame, not RTFA by Pecisk · · Score: 0

    As traditionally, for such controversial topic no one reads TFA, but try to make jokes for mod points sake, try to be insightful calling author of this blog article drug user, etc. etc. Geeks, you are so pathetic and predictable sometimes.

    Minimize - in GNOME 3 default shell is GNOME Shell, and in this shell there is nowhere to minimize to. You switch between windows using either Alt+Tab, or Expose, which can be reached just moving cursor to left top corner.

    Maximize is more tricky, but more or less I always have wanted that confusing button gone. Nevermind that it toogles between maximize/restore functionality, double click on title of the window will do much better.

    These changes are risky, but I would definitely not call them rushed or stupid or "just because authors want it that way". Keep in mind, that those are hired professionals which have brought us GNOME 2.x series.

    Before criticizing understand that GNOME 3 and Unity (which also have got lot of "love" from Slashdot flamers) is created with future controls in mind - multitouch, gestures, etc. (I won't discuss here if their ways are right ones). If someone wants classic desktop back - there are choices out there, starting with Xfce, trying to fork GNOME 2.32 in some kind of "GNOME Classic" project which supports gnome-panel and other stuff.

    --
    user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
    1. Re:Flame, not RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forking GNOME 2.32 seems like a good idea.
      I'm extremely productive with GNOME as it is.

      Even Microsoft and Apple haven't forced ugly changes like this Shell on their users. They took the continual improvement route.
      If they go ahead with GNOME Shell, it shows another reason why Linux will never win on the desktop.
      I'm evaluating the switch to XFCE.

    2. Re:Flame, not RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Re: Minimize
      How do I tell a window to get the hell out of the way then?
      Even if I don't care where it's going (because I can alt-tab to it later), how do I get to whatever is underneath it?

      Unlike all you stupid casual users, occasionally people use their computers for real work.

    3. Re:Flame, not RTFA by Joe+Jay+Bee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh jesus effing Christ. I'm not a Linux hater but by god KDE, Gnome and Ubuntu seem to be having great fun in a spectacular race to the bottom.

      Minimize - in GNOME 3 default shell is GNOME Shell, and in this shell there is nowhere to minimize to. You switch between windows using either Alt+Tab, or Expose, which can be reached just moving cursor to left top corner.

      As a brother poster just put, what happens when you want a window hidden? I like this window existing, I don't want to see it - click, gone. Windows does this. Mac does this. Even bloody WindowMaker, blackbox and virtually every other WM in history do this. But GNOME want to differentiate themselves by removing a feature nobody wants removed. Good for them. They can suck somewhere else.

      Maximize is more tricky, but more or less I always have wanted that confusing button gone. Nevermind that it toogles between maximize/restore functionality, double click on title of the window will do much better.

      "Confusing"? Confused, by a maximise button? You click it, the window fills the screen. If it's filled the screen it shrinks it back. This is elementary. By all means complain about Apple's Zoom button (which is confusing to most users who don't understand what was going through Apple's head when they put it there, which is most of them) but a maximise button is probably the simplest thing there is. And by all means put Aero Snap functionality in - it's a feature of Win7 I simply cannot do without without going crazy now - but don't take a reasonable option away from me.

      These changes are risky, but I would definitely not call them rushed or stupid or "just because authors want it that way". Keep in mind, that those are hired professionals which have brought us GNOME 2.x series.

      They're risky because they're absolutely retarded. You would have to be absolutely insane to fuck around with something that is, to most people, an intrinsic part of using a computer. These changes are rushed, and whether their architects brought us GNOME 2 (which is hardly a case study in excellent UI idea, all things considered) is completely irrelevant. It's a silly idea.

      Before criticizing understand that GNOME 3 and Unity (which also have got lot of "love" from Slashdot flamers) is created with future controls in mind - multitouch, gestures, etc.

      Windows 7 does this right. I actually thought about this today - it looks like a desktop OS, it works like a desktop OS, but it would work equally well as a touchscreen OS, and neither gets disadvantaged by it. All of the controls and buttons are touch friendly without the user even realising it. To contrast however, GNOME's approach, from the looks of things (and Unity's) is "fuck you, we want it touchscreen friendly and desktop users can lump it". Bear in mind that touchscreens are still niche devices, especially on the desktop. It's stupid, stupid, stupid.

    4. Re:Flame, not RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you find a button that you click on to maximise and then the same button changes roles to restore? You must be really stuck dealing with push button table lamps, once you've pushed the button to turn them on you obviously can't figure out that the same button also turns the lamp off and you're stuck with just leaving it on all night long?

      Sheeeeeesh.

      If a toggle button is 'complicated', I have no idea how you managed to post your comment.

      (Also, I use a laptop with a touchpad. Dragging is painful, not 'fun'. Author clearly is reasoning from self.)

    5. Re:Flame, not RTFA by sjames · · Score: 1

      Minimize - in GNOME 3 default shell is GNOME Shell, and in this shell there is nowhere to minimize to. You switch between windows using either Alt+Tab, or Expose, which can be reached just moving cursor to left top corner.

      Well there's your problem! I did RTFA and tried to read the website to get some vague idea how the thing is supposed to work. I didn't get very far with that. Nearest I can tell they ripped out the taskbar because someone there has ADHD and gets distracted easily by a relatively static display item. It's a bit disingenuous to rip out the major functionality without comment and then proclaim that people shouldn't complain about ripping out the last bit because "it doesn't do anything anymore". Would it kill them to provide some sort of suitable equivalent of the taskbar? Another workspace isn't it, I already have those and use them as workspaces. There are things I want visual reminders of but want them out of the way for a moment. That's when I minimize.

      I'm not paying them and they can do what they like, but at this rate they may be their only users.

    6. Re:Flame, not RTFA by Pecisk · · Score: 2

      1. Wait a minute - so it is wrong to try different just because your subconscious reacts angrily to changes that will require to retrain your motor skills? :) To be more serious, well, it's their decision. I'm fine with this decision and will try GNOME 3 out when it will be finally released. No one forces you to migrate or use it. I don't need minimize so frequently, and I can try to live without it. If you can't - fine, but don't call me idiot just because I and GNOME 3 devs want to try new paradigm;

      2. You haven't done proper user support, have you? Then you would know that it is very hard to understand when pressing button will maximize and when restore it to "normal" version. this concept has been always broken, I just don't fully agree with GNOME 3 devs that removing it would solve a problem. But it should be changed;

      3. Again, please, don't call me or them idiots or retarded just because you don't agree with us. It is very simple thing to ask, no?

      4. It works like Windows, looks like Windows, but it is not definite desktop OS per se. Because no one is. And please, tell me it's a joke that Windows 7 can be used as touchscreen OS. Because it simply can't.

      I would also like to remind you that similar anger outbursts where registered here, on Slashdot just after Canonical moved buttons from left to right. I won't dive into details why such angry flame wars shows up after such decisions, but something can be said - my truth is mine, and your truth is yours.

      --
      user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
  84. Sigh.... by asm2750 · · Score: 1

    I wish Fluxbox was still being actively developed.

    1. Re:Sigh.... by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Fluxbox is alive and well: http://fluxbox.org/news/

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
  85. PLEASE make it optional and turn it off by default by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's do away with the close button as well. People are just going to have to hit alt-F4 or something. Menus are wasted screen space too- let's give people vi as default text editor instead of gedit- after all GUI elements are just clutter, right? Wrong. All GUI elements exist for a reason, which is to provide visual clues so that programs can be used intuitively, without training.

    Removing the minimize button also means removing a visual clue. As a result, people will require being told how things work ("training") instead of being able to just go by trial and error. Every platform (mac, windows, linux) is then bound to use slightly different ways to do the same thing, whereas right now the minimize/maximize/restore/close buttons are pretty much standard. If a graphical user interface provides no visual clues about what it can do, functionality is bound to get overlooked. Our current GUI environments are partly so successful because people are given just enough input to allow them to figure things out for themselves.

    So just leave the minimize button alone, will you? Or at least make turning it off optional, rather than default.

  86. It should NOT be a default feature by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    This should not be a default feature, those who are interested in it should be able to turn this on, but for the rest, this is going to be a huge put off, especially for people who don't care whether they are on Windows, GNU/Anything, some other Unix or whatever, they just use the computer to access the web, send pictures, who knows, but this is going to be confusing.

    But the WORST thing about it is not the fact that the buttons are gone, but the feeling that the GNU/Linux desktop is completely unstable and is LOSING features while gaining bloat version to version.

    Yes, excuse me for saying, but in the eyes of MOST people this will look like something is missing, like it's an incomplete desktop and as such - broken.

    --

    Here is a sensible approach to this: add this ability to the distro, advertise it and how it can be turned on but do not turn it on by default.

    An actually useful feature can be moving the normal main window menu ('file'/'edit'/'view'/....../'help') to the title bar, but with this too, it shouldn't be a default feature.

    1. Re:It should NOT be a default feature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Completely agree.

  87. People don't multi-task well by sjbe · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You only use ONE application at a time?

    Regularly. Despite what many believe about themselves, most people are shitty multi-taskers. I merely acknowledge that fact with regard to myself - I simply don't do more than one thing at a time effectively. While I may have several applications open, I normally only am working directly with one at a time unless I am transcribing data from one to another. I do have multiple monitors because it makes the occasions when I am working with multiple apps much easier but most of the time I could turn off the second monitor and never notice it missing.

    1. Re:People don't multi-task well by grimsweep · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't assume that multiple monitors means someone is trying to juggle multiple tasks. 3 monitors has become a part of my life at work. Here's how:
      Left - Maximized browser window looking at my web app
      Center - Maximized IDE to develop/debug my web app, providing sufficient space for my code, log monitoring, and package browsing
      Right - IM Window, Resource Monitor (particularly CPU and Memory), and a handful of widgets. If there's a web-share meeting, it gets maximized here.
      When I switch to a portable environment or lose a monitor, believe me, my productivity suffers.

    2. Re:People don't multi-task well by HiThere · · Score: 1

      You left out reading the documentation. If I had room for a second monitor, that's what would go there.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  88. Please save your sarcasm by tepples · · Score: 3, Informative

    I acknowledge that some applications benefit from more horizontal real estate in a single window. I was merely pointing out that word processors and web browsers usually aren't among them.

    1. Re:Please save your sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and yet the person you replied to never mentioned word processors. Or web browsers.

  89. Give me choice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't just get rid of it and that's that! If I want it, let me have it. If someone else doesn't, then let them get rid of it. I don't even care if the default is bare, and I have to flip a switch somewhere to bring it back, but give me a choice to keep it if I want it. If the choice is zero, and you are getting rid of it, I say Chuck You Farley! Don't remove functionality from my box, damn you!

  90. Time to go back to text mode. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since GNOME can't work right, lets all go back to console with lynx, emacs and perl. Its GNU experiences.

  91. well said by unity100 · · Score: 1

    Sure people like you could change the way you work, but why make you change the way you work? What benefit do the rest of us get?

    precisely.

    design should be for enabling users. not enforcing what one things that is 'right'.

  92. Just the buttons not the feature by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    The Gnome developers are just removing the buttons from the windows borders. You can still maximize and minimize windows with keystroke. But, as they say, with their new desktop paradigm it doesn't really make sense.

    1. Re:Just the buttons not the feature by Luchio · · Score: 1

      Your car just got its blinkers controls removed, but don't worry, the feature is still there. It just got moved to the gloves compartment... Don't worry, people will figure this out, and it will be as easy as before!

    2. Re:Just the buttons not the feature by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Your car just got its blinkers controls removed, but don't worry, the feature is still there. It just got moved to the gloves compartment... Don't worry, people will figure this out, and it will be as easy as before!

      Actually that analogy has nothing to do with it. In your analogy, they controls are still there but moved and hidden. In Gnome, the actual controls are not there anymore, but you can still accomplish the same thing. A more accurate analogy would be that they removed the starter button from the floorboard, but you can still start the car by turning the key.

    3. Re:Just the buttons not the feature by Luchio · · Score: 1

      Maximized is being hidden (changed to double-click, which you have to guess somehow, or RTFM, which means the UI is not intuitive) and minimize is not removed either, they say it could be re-enabled through gconf/dconf. So, they did hide the stuff in the glove compartment, without taking into account that these buttons have existed for the last 15+ years. If you don't use blinkers, that's your problem, but don't remove mines, and moreover replace it with blank space!

  93. And while we're at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... let's get rid of mouse buttons too. Let's make the whole mouse one big button so you move the whole mouse and your whole hand up and down to click. Oh wait...

  94. I think ubuntu was right about dropping gnome by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    ... in future versions.
    nuff' said.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  95. Not for this child!!!!! by BudAaron · · Score: 1

    As a developer running dual monitors on a Windows 7 x64 box I keep a number of apps running and minmized. It's easy to switch between apps using the task bar but I would not use any app that forces me to use a maximized view. I'm sure there are those who will do this but forcing choices like this on the user is a bad idea in my view. If it was an option it might be a better idea. Personally I love IE9.

  96. So those GNOME guys still think they know best? by BlortHorc · · Score: 1

    The endless march toward what the GNOME devs think the "average user" wants continues unabated.

    I should be shocked, but somehow I no longer can.

    The side note in TFA about dconf made me cry a little, but only a little. Alas for the GNOME of old.

  97. Re:Windows? by hubie · · Score: 1

    XP was the last version of Windows I used regularly, so I'm commenting on this looking in from the outside, but it does not appear to me that the shift from XP to Vista, then Vista to 7 had anything that you could call a familiar and usable UI from version to version. Those were major UI changes for the desktop user. I often hear the argument that you can't switch a company or your grandma to linux because they would have to relearn the whole UI (even if that were true, I have never seen that as a major disruption), but it is just a given that they would move to the next Windows version seamlessly. I regularly hear complaints about the Office suite still, and it revamped its UI a couple of years ago or so.

  98. Change for the sake of change... by Thraxy · · Score: 1

    I originally chose Gnome because it was an interface I liked and felt at home in. I've felt all along that gnome-shell was kinda like the Gnome team giving me the finger, saying that what I liked in Gnome 2.xx was wrong and I shouldn't like it because I'm an idiot and shouldn't be allowed to think for myself.

    For me this is a case of change for the sake of change. It's not about improving design/usability. It's about changing stuff that wasn't broken and - in my case - ruin the user experience.

    I think they should leave Gnome as it is and focus on making THAT interface smoother, and the whole gnome-shell crap could be called something else... like crap-sprinkled-with-glitter-wm. CSWGWM for short... now isn't that catchy?

  99. Switch your input device. by solios · · Score: 1

    I moused through school and for the first three or four months of work, with my wrist pissing and moaning at me all the while, raising to a shrieking crescendo of near disability a couple of days before a major deadline.

    Desperate for any improvement, and fortunately working as a kiosk designer (thus having access to several different types of input devices, including touchscreens), I tried a WACOM tablet, then I pulled a trackball from the "spares" pile. My wrist stopped screaming immediately - the throbbing subsided to a twinge, then left altogether.

    I've been using a trackball exclusively for the past twelve years. The closest I've gotten to RSI since the switch is a grumpy index finger from marathon work sessions, and a brief trial period of a new keyboard - the board was maybe 1/4 inch lower than its intended replacement, and that much of a drop at my work desk made both of my wrists shriek at me with a homicidal rage.

    If the hardware interface is making you hurt, seriously consider changing your ergonomics (level of input devices, type of input devices, etc). The window manager isn't to blame,

    1. Re:Switch your input device. by unity100 · · Score: 0

      i dont want to switch my input device. i have my own habits. i am comfortable with a mouse than a trackball, and i have tried both.

  100. Here's what I did to fix this: by aussersterne · · Score: 0

    Switched to Mac OS X. Last fall.

    NeuKDE + NeuGNOME = Linux desktop fail.

    And now I wouldn't go back. OS X is Unix for the desktop done right. The filesystem, the simplicity, the consistency... And I still have my command line, and emacs, and all of my old bash shell scripts still work.

    Here's what to do for a Linux-like experience:

    1. Copy your .profile to the OS X /Users/youracct directory.
    2. Install Xcode from your OS X Snow Leopard disk for development tools.
    3. Download and install the latest MacPorts.
    4. Download and install iTerm.
    5. Navigate to /System/Library/CoreServices and start the 'Directory Utility' application.
    6. In Directory Utility, select Edit -> Enable Root User to make root accessible via the 'su' command.
    7. No that you have root, MacPorts, and iTerm, start iTerm, su to root, and do "port install coreutils" to install GNU utilities.
    8. Edit the PATH statement in your profile and add '/opt/local/bin:/opt/local/sbin:/opt/local/libexec/gnubin' to the front.
    9. If you're an Emacs lover, also download Emacs from http://emacsformacosx.com/ and add /Applications/Emacs.app/Contents/MacOS to your PATH.

    Now you have a more-or-less Linux-like command line environment complete with development tools, ports tree, and GNU utilities like the color 'ls' command and the enhanced 'tar' command. You can start Emacs via command line to open text files (keeping in mind that you need to use capital 'E' if you want the GUI version).

    And you have a rock-solid, highly usable, very logical, concise, and efficient desktop environment without all of the silliness that increasingly mar the KDE and GNOME worlds. Not to mention that you also have native access to tons of accessories and applications without the need for emulation or virtual machines, as well as some things that never worked in Linux even with emulation and/or virtual machines (i.e. desktop voice recognition, a lot of specialized peripherals, and so on).

    Try it. You probably won't go back.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    1. Re:Here's what I did to fix this: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      emacs is preinstalled on Snow Leopard.

    2. Re:Here's what I did to fix this: by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      And now I wouldn't go back. OS X is Unix for the desktop done right. The filesystem,

      Huh? The filesystem? Care to explain?

      the simplicity, the consistency... And I still have my command line, and emacs, and all of my old bash shell scripts still work.

      I don't find OSX simple. I find linux simpler. It's kind of subjective.

      1. Copy your .profile to the OS X /Users/youracct directory.
      2. Install Xcode from your OS X Snow Leopard disk for development tools.

      And enjoy ancient versions of GCC, messed up headers on newer versions (to make the newer versions *feel* ancient) and my favourite: frameworks.

      3. Download and install the latest MacPorts.

      Ayiyiyiyiyiyiyi. Firstly, I don't really enjoy source based distros due to the painful slownessof things like upgrades. I also find macports to be way less reliable than other rolling update systems (e.g. OpenBSD ports, Arch). I find that this is one of the major showstoppers with OSX. I like the way you can build alternative versions of packages, but it's not worth the price.

      4. Download and install iTerm.
      5. Navigate to /System/Library/CoreServices and start the 'Directory Utility' application.
      6. In Directory Utility, select Edit -> Enable Root User to make root accessible via the 'su' command.

      Never had much of a problem with sudo bash, myself. I don't really get the fuss over this one, personally.


      7. No that you have root, MacPorts, and iTerm, start iTerm, su to root, and do "port install coreutils" to install GNU utilities.
      8. Edit the PATH statement in your profile and add '/opt/local/bin:/opt/local/sbin:/opt/local/libexec/gnubin' to the front.
      9. If you're an Emacs lover, also download Emacs from http://emacsformacosx.com/ and add /Applications/Emacs.app/Contents/MacOS to your PATH.

      OK...

      Now you have a more-or-less Linux-like command line environment complete with development tools, ports tree, and GNU utilities like the color 'ls' command and the enhanced 'tar' command. You can start Emacs via command line to open text files (keeping in mind that you need to use capital 'E' if you want the GUI version).

      More or less, but I'd go for less rather than more. Things never seem to work as well. The ports always seem more brittle than Linux distros.

      And you have a rock-solid, highly usable, very logical, concise, and efficient desktop environment

      I'm not even sure what all of those adjectives mean with respect to a desktop environment (concise?), but I don't find OSX particularly usable. It's certainly not consistent if you throw macports in there, since the integration between X and OSX is only so-so. E.g. drag 'n' drop doesn't work between the two. I also, emperically find that OSX seems to be just a little bit more crashy than Linux.

      without all of the silliness that increasingly mar the KDE and GNOME worlds.

      Or you can install a different window manager and have a perfectly usable system without the hassle of changing operting system. I rather like fvwm, myself, but it's not to everyone's taste.

      Not to mention that you also have native access to tons of accessories and applications without the need for emulation or virtual machines,

      That's also the case on Linux. There are far more applications and accessories than I will ever use.

      as well as some things that never worked in Linux even with emulation and/or virtual machines (i.e. desktop voice recognition,

      I've used it and it's a fun gimmick, but frankly rather useless, for me at any rate.

      a lot of specialized peripherals, and so on). ... well that one cuts both ways. On Linux, you have access to a far greater range of computers. There are also plenty of older peripherals which now ONLY work on Linux.

      Try it. You probably won't go back.

      I did. I actually use macs on a fairly regular basis for a variety of not especially interesting reasons. I have never found them terrible pleasant to work on.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    3. Re:Here's what I did to fix this: by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      But not GUI-based XEmacs.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    4. Re:Here's what I did to fix this: by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      There's a lot of you, personally in there.

      Here you go, fast:

      Filesystem: /Applications, /Users, and /System vs. /bin /etc /home /sbin /usr etc. If you think the latter's more intuitive OR more easy to manage in terms of the way each tree is organized, you haven't been using Unix long enough.

      MacPorts: Suit yourself. And tell all the Gentoo fanboys that you don't like source-based ports systems. Oh, and while you're at it, tell that "open source" crowd around here that keeps saying "You have the source, edit and compile yourself."

      Concise: "Brief, yet expressing all important information." As in, how many directories in the / tree in OSX vs. traditional Unices, and/or how many distinct operational elements are present in the desktop GUI in OSX vs. traditional Unices. OSX does more with a lot less, and clarity is the very admirable result.

      Applications: Nope, there are none on Linux. Well, there's GIMP and OpenOffice.org, but that's about it. Beyond that, of course, is all of the stuff narcissistic geeks don't care about. "Photoshop? iMovie? WriteRoom? Evernote? iTunes? Who uses that stuff?! Nobody I know..." (No doubt.)

      Gimmick: That's right. Desktop voice recognition = gimmick. Just like the totally inflexible Time Machine, the absolutely worthless Creative Suite, and the silly and gadgety sheet-feed straight-to-PDF scanners and digital pens out there. REAL USERS just need a command line (oh, and a bunch of X11 applications, apparently...)

      X11 integration: Any newer or 'drag and drop capable' X11 applications are put to shame by Mac OS X native equivalents. Any older and/or specialized X11 applications for research/industry/development/etc. don't support drag and drop in the first place, ergo, you're not losing anything. The only way this matters to you is if you want to run GNOME on OSX or similar... which was the point of my post in the first place. A lot of people don't want to run GNOME or KDE at all these days. Look around you.

      'nuff said.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    5. Re:Here's what I did to fix this: by gullevek · · Score: 1

      I did the same. KDE/Gnome and the whole Linux on the desktop was just a constant downward spiral where I was less and less productive.

      --
      "Freiheit ist immer auch die Freiheit des Andersdenkenden" - Rosa Luxemburg, 1871 - 1919
    6. Re:Here's what I did to fix this: by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      There's a lot of you, personally in there.

      Just one, I'm afraid :(

      Filesystem: /Applications, /Users, and /System vs. /bin /etc /home /sbin /usr etc. If you think the latter's more intuitive OR more easy to manage in terms of the way each tree is organized, you haven't been using Unix long enough.

      That explains it. I thought you were talking about the relative merits of Hfs+ and ext4. The unix one isn't always that well organised, but the mac one isn't flawless. I'll not address the point about "intuitive" since it's more or less impossible to separate intuitive from fmailiar.

      MacPorts: Suit yourself. And tell all the Gentoo fanboys that you don't like source-based ports systems. Oh, and while you're at it, tell that "open source" crowd around here that keeps saying "You have the source, edit and compile yourself."

      Sure. Hey Gentoo fans: I don't particularly like source based distros! And then you start simply making stuff up. I know of no binary distro which doesn't let you easily recompile things from source should you need to. My /usr/local tree is well populated, and I even have hacked programs installed as packages.

      But I still don't want to wait for firefox and gimp to recompile (again).

      Concise: "Brief, yet expressing all important information." As in, how many directories in the / tree in OSX vs. traditional Unices,

      Well, you have /, /usr and /usr/local. Each has a bin, lib, include, etc and share tree. Quite straightforward. There's also some X11 in there somewhere. In OSX, well it's different but more of the same, especially when you start considering all the GCC frameworks, one directory per application and macports and so on. It's not a point I see any particular difference on other than superficialities.

      and/or how many distinct operational elements are present in the desktop GUI in OSX vs. traditional Unices.

      Given that one could argue that "traditional" unix came with twm for a while, you might want to rethink your stance on few GUI elements being better. OSX is certainly busier than twm.


      OSX does more with a lot less, and clarity is the very admirable result.

      I completely disagree. My desktop is far more spartan than any apple machine I've ever used, and I find my setup far more usable. In fact, if I have to use a mac for an extended period, I tend to run X fullscreen and bring my desktop setup over.

      Not everyone like Macs. They are not simply universally better than all other systems. GUIs are a matter of taste, and I happen to prefer FVWM to OSX. That makes FVWM better for me. And, compared to a binary system, the ports system is slow and also brittle compared to the other source based and/or rolling update systems I have used.

      Applications: Nope, there are none on Linux.

      I guess my day job must be a figment of my imagination, then. There are plenty of dev tools, and CAD programs.

      Well, there's GIMP and OpenOffice.org, but that's about it. Beyond that, of course, is all of the stuff narcissistic geeks don't care about. "Photoshop? iMovie? WriteRoom? Evernote? iTunes? Who uses that stuff?! Nobody I know..." (No doubt.)

      What on earth has narcissism got to do with photoshop? Are professional photographers the only people who aren't narcissistic? I don't actually know anyone who has photoshop because I don't know any pro photographers. Likewise, I don't do any video editing and neither do any of my linux- mac- or windows-using friends. iTunes? I gather there are other music stores one can use. And you've also picked on a couple of random, obscure apps.

      Gimmick: That's right. Desktop voice recognition = gimmick.

      Yes. It is a gimmick. Also, it was the one you suggested...

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  101. Re:So many people complaining every time GUI's cha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firefox and GNOME are both very alike. They were once dominant, but are now getting their asses kicked by competitors who don't get bogged down in stupid shit, and who thus provide a better product.

    Chrome alone is destroying Firefox, thanks mainly to the stupidity of the Firefox developers. With each new Firefox release, we get some stupid UI change that only makes things worse. Each one of those Firefox releases sends another batch of disgruntled users over to Chrome, but there's no longer anything drawing new users in.

    In GNOME's case, their stupid decisions are driving people towards KDE, XFCE and various standalone window managers faster than ever before.

    GNOME is basically dead at this point. The significant Linux distributions are abandoning it, and GNOME 3 is looking more and more like one of the biggest fuckups we'll have seen from the open source community in a long time. There likely won't be a GNOME 4.

  102. Don't drag, it's still easy to do it by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

    Double-click the titlebar to toggle between maximize/restore, and click the taskbar button for the active window to minimize or restore it.

    I agree that we should have a choice though, maybe a simple option in the "Appearance" settings window that lets you toggle between "Minimalist" and "Standard" settings. The minimalist setting will have the reduced clutter, and the standard setting will retain all of the normal functionality we expect. There could even be more granular settings in an "Advanced" tab.

    The more I thought about this change though, I realized I personally never use the minimize/maximize/restore buttons myself, I do tend to just double-click the titlebar, and there is really no reason to minimize a window.

    1. Re:Don't drag, it's still easy to do it by unity100 · · Score: 1

      so i should double click instead of single clicking.

    2. Re:Don't drag, it's still easy to do it by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

      In essence, you double-click a large area vs regular-clicking a small button. Sounds like you never want to double-click. Some suggestions: Bind a mouse button to double-click, or perhaps set a keyboard modifier that turns the primary mouse button into a double-click. You may also want to just enable mouse-keys, so you can hover your pointer over the area you wish to double-click, and press the 0 key on the numeric keypad. You might also want to add some fire to this conversation.

    3. Re:Don't drag, it's still easy to do it by DocHoncho · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it potentially saves extra mouse motion and having aim for the maximize button. I mean really, is one extra click going to ruin your life? I don't have an opinion on this issue, seeing as how I'm not a GNOME user. But honestly, some of the butt-hurt whining going on here is getting to be absurd!

      --
      Celebrity worship is a poor substitute for Deity worship and costs more to boot.
  103. Exactly. Or rather, by aussersterne · · Score: 1

    they think that computers ARE for designing the UI and showing it off... and little else. Any UI is merely a bootstrapping tool to help design the next UI. Other kinds of work... Wait, there are other kinds of work?

    KDE and GNOME have both gone off the rails.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  104. Very bad for novice users by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

    This change will dumbfound the average user. They don't know that double-clicking the titlebar will maximize/restore, and when the button to do so disappears, they will switch to dragging the corner of the window in order to expand it. This is tedious and frustrating for novice users who don't recognize the context switching mouse icon when it rolls over a draggable window edge. They often miss the thin window border and end up dragging some other area and wondering why the mouse won't work, or they think they hit the wrong mouse button.

    This leads me to wonder, are expandable window borders next on the chopping block?

  105. Except that you can minimize windows by aussersterne · · Score: 1

    to the dock on your Mac by clicking, you guessed it, the minimize button.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  106. Like the Open File Dialog? by hduff · · Score: 1

    The reason they took minimize/maximise out is that they can't fix their implementation of it. They must be remembering the Open File dialog debacle that plauged them for years. Why do they code themselves into these corners?

    If FOSS is all about providing choice to the user, GNOME has long ago chosen to focus on restricting and removing choice from the user. I have nothing against a consistent UI, but GNOME goes too far. I recall that a lot of GNOME devs work for RedHat who, corporately, wanted a minimalistic, easly locked-down desktop for corporate use, Instead of allowing an admin to lock or remove features, they just gutted them from the GNOME desktop (and from KDE as well) and justified it as some glorious quest for 'simplicity'.

    If I want complicated and highly configurable , I'll use KDE, If I want simple but flexible, it's IceWM. If I want simple with a little glitz, it's LXDE.

    But never GNOME.

    --
    "I believe in Karma. That means I can do bad things to people all day long and I assume they deserve it." : Dogbert
  107. How about contribute instead of insults? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft market cap: $218 billion dollars
    Apple market cap: $331 billion dollars

    Oh riiight, I forgot, it is bad form to criticize people who insult FOSS developers because it makes US look bad.

    1. Re:How about contribute instead of insults? by kevinmenzel · · Score: 1

      And Apple, not paying dividends, has a stock value based purely on market speculation. Therefore it's pretty much BS. I'm not sure if Microsoft pays dividends or not, but if they don't at all, then again, pretty much BS. Then again, in general, the stock market is pretty much all BS these days. In no way does the market cap of a company reflect how well they do UI research, or development, or anything really besides how well they "market themselves" to traders, investment bankers, and to an extent, sheeple.

    2. Re:How about contribute instead of insults? by definate · · Score: 1

      Sorry, you missed one, probably just a simple mistake on your behalf...
      Red Hat market cap: $7.90 billion dollars

      Oh riiight, I forgot, it is bad form to remember that a large amount of the FOSS comes from companies, even the Kernel.

      --
      This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    3. Re:How about contribute instead of insults? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So an $8 billion dollar server OS company is supposed to be competitive with companies that are worth a HUNDRED TIMES MORE and who focus almost entirely on desktops?

      Are you retarded?

    4. Re:How about contribute instead of insults? by definate · · Score: 1

      Good point. I forgot there's only one company, and I said explicitly that "they're supposed to be competitive with companies that are worth a HUNDRED TIMES MORE". But hey, if you don't think they can, then we should just use Microsoft and Apple, because apparently they can't.

      --
      This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    5. Re:How about contribute instead of insults? by gregrah · · Score: 1

      Microsoft stock pays about a 2.5% yield. Compared with Apple or Google, Microsoft actually seems like a relatively low risk investment.

    6. Re:How about contribute instead of insults? by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      and your point is?
      gp says that windows' and osx's uis are better than gnome 3 because they have lotsa money, and gnome guys work essentially on their own time. so why do you wanna drag in a pointless debate on the way we measure the size of a company?

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
  108. maximize is redundant by roc97007 · · Score: 1

    Since we already have two gestures that fill the same function as maximize, it can go. But if I understand TFA, there needs to be some way to temporarily iconify or otherwise eliminate windows that you're not currently using but you don't yet want to dismiss. If they don't want to provide a dock, fine. But there needs to be a different paradigm.

    One of the reasons I have a powerful machine is so that I can do one heck of a lot of things in parallel. Taking away the tools I use to manage that is not a good idea.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  109. When Apple does it, by aussersterne · · Score: 1

    you still have a minimize button, a dock, and launchers, and you don't have to deal with GConf. When GNOME does it, you get GConf for your preferences and windows you can't conveniently maximize or minimize.

    The method may be similar, but the results are very different.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    1. Re:When Apple does it, by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      I can minimise on macos but I frequently struggle to get the windows back. I wish it just had a single, global list of windows or apps which always worked.

  110. Just FYI by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

    There was a bunch of stuff in early Nintendo games that made absolutely no sense. In Zelda you had to burn some random bush to find the entrance of a dungeon, try burning every bush on the map and see how long it takes. Sometimes these frustrations were due to translation errors which gave obtuse or outright botched instructions. Most of the time, these secrets were there so that when you got to the playground, some kid would tell you something that sounded crazy, but you would get home and try it and it would actually work. Perhaps these secrets were introduced to sell Nintendo Power magazines, which mapped out every easter egg, but for a lot of kids it added to the social aspect of gaming. If you happened to jump in that one spot, the next day you'd be talking to your friends about what you found. In any case, you were never required to find that 1up mushroom or hidden vine in Super Mario Bros, it was just a bonus, and you could finish the game without it.

    As for GUIs, I have to agree, there needs to be some sort of indicator for the functionality. GNOME is not primarily a touch-based UI, users won't be tapping and dragging to "find" the functionality they're looking for.

  111. Right click by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 1

    Get rid of the right and middle clicks next. After all, Linux users are sufficiently unsophisticated to be confused by the extra buttons.

    1. Re:Right click by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why stop there... REAL linux diehards don't even need a window manager. GNOME 4 might just be a bash clone, BUT with uber-alpha-blended characters that fly in from the sides and punch you in the face before invoking all sorts of flashy epileptic-fit-inducing animatronic effects, AND it will even include all the corny sound effects and mind-reading commands that you see in movies... too bad it will only run on an ipad :P

  112. REAL windows managers ... by DrJimbo · · Score: 2
    Real windows managers give the user and theme creators complete control over the buttons, not just on the titlebar but on all parts of the border.

    I've added buttons for:

    • full-screen (like a borderless maximize)
    • vertical maximize toggle
    • take window to next desktop
    • take window to previous desktop

    When I get around to it I might add a button to move the window and the cursor to the other/next monitor. I also have complete control over the right-click titlebar menu which I've heavily modified.

    --
    We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
    -- Anais Nin
    1. Re:REAL windows managers ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which windows manager is that?

    2. Re:REAL windows managers ... by DrJimbo · · Score: 1
      I use the venerable, yet still-maintained, Enlightenment e16:

      One of the aims of the [e16] window manager is to be as configurable as possible, and to this end, it includes customization dialogs for focus settings, window movement, resizing, grouping and placement settings, audio, multiple desktop, desktop background, pager, tooltip and autoraise settings.

      It really is the most configurable piece of software I've ever used.

      I had used KDE for over a decade and I was usually very happy with it but I couldn't deal with 4.x. I am now much happier with e16 than I ever was with KDE-3.5.10, which IMO is the 2nd best windows manager. Of course, YMMVG.

      --
      We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
      -- Anais Nin
    3. Re:REAL windows managers ... by Provocateur · · Score: 1

      I have used it. The hi-quality snapshot pager on e16, is a thing of beauty and has not been seen elsewhere, not even in e17 *sniff* T_T I tried going back, but I think only a few skins (presence, orange juice, a few blue-ish themes) age well.

      --
      WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  113. So long, GNOME. Hello, KDE... by jejones · · Score: 1

    All it took was seeing in the comments of TFA that GNOME shell is headed up by the man who brought us gnome-screensaver. I'll be moving along, thanks.

  114. Target audience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm in the target audience for these 'inanities', I guess. I have a lot of work to do and I just don't want to toy around with a gazillion desktop settings anymore. That used to be fun, but I've grown up, I've got bills to pay and work to get done.

    For several reasons I can't use Windows (several of my killer-apps aren't available for it, how's that for a change), so I use Linux. I've used KDE in the past, but I just don't get it to conform to my workflow. Gnome gets that part exactly right.

    Seriously, if I had to spec a desktop manager (or whatever the hell it is), it would be identical to Gnome. That is Gnome 2, and I've yet to get hands-on with Gnome 3, but what I've seen of it, I'm sure I'll love it. Not because I can tinker with it, but because it gets my work done, fast and without hassle. That's all I ask of my computer.

    1. Re:Target audience by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      None of this rhetoric actually addresses in any meaningful way WHY you are the target audience for any of these GNOME shenanigans.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  115. The Geek As The Lone Gunslinger by westlake · · Score: 1

    When are we going to get an interface that is totally configurable to user preferences?

    Never.

    Multiple configurations are a nightmare to support.

    Half your clerical support may be volunteers or temps who must be prepared to take any desk and be productive.

    Working outside the default configuration wastes their time and yours.

    1. Re:The Geek As The Lone Gunslinger by mfnickster · · Score: 1

      Multiple configurations are a nightmare to support.

      Half your clerical support may be volunteers or temps who must be prepared to take any desk and be productive.

      Pardon me for asking, but how is this a problem when you can use the same mechanism to restore the default settings in one click?

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    2. Re:The Geek As The Lone Gunslinger by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      I read this in a Dalek voice.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
  116. Uh-oh, by aussersterne · · Score: 1

    somebody's not as big a "geek" as they think they are. Way to reveal your Windows roots.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  117. How about fixing other shit first? by FreakyGreenLeaky · · Score: 0

    In windows, ctrl-c/ctrl-v or ctrl-c/shift-ins is the universal way to copy/paste. No matter what application you're using. Not so in gnome. oh no, that's way too god-damn simple, gnome has to spice things up. Ctrl-c (or simply highlighting) seems to be universal except in those apps where you have no choice but to right-click on the mouse and select Copy (which is fucking stupid, since it takes my hand away from the kb), but paste is schizophrenic: ctrl-v, shift-ins, shift-ctrl-ins, right-click on mouse and select paste (ie, sometimes this is the only way to fucking paste). What a joke. It seems like every application has their own interpretation on how to copy/paste and co-operating between apps is a vague afterthought. ...and Linux wants to compete with windows? excuse me while I spit. /hawks 'n spits

    Can we please have a simple, built in, universal copy/paste mechanism? ...and no, don't suggest I install some stupid app just to get copy/paste to work. This is basic shit that must work out of the box.

    1. Re:How about fixing other shit first? by spitzak · · Score: 2

      This is probably a troll, but you will find on Windows that you cannot use ctrl+c/v to cut and paste in the terminal. You use ctrl+shift+c/v. Amazingly enough, this is the EXACT SAME keys you use in most terminal emulators on Linux (the ones you seem to think require the context menu, without realizing that Windows has the exact same context menu in it's terminal!)

      I also find it hilarious that you say "In windows ctrl-v or shift-ins is the universal way to copy/paste" and then later say "Linux paste is schizophrenic: ctrl-v, shift-ins". You then try to make Linux sound more confusing by adding "shift-ctrl-ins" (which exists on Windows) and the context menu paste (which exists on Windows in the same terminal emulator programs). You could at least have mentioned Emacs which uses different keys (but of course you can run Emacs on Windows and it has the SAME keys).

    2. Re:How about fixing other shit first? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      woosh

    3. Re:How about fixing other shit first? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      I windows ... Not so in linux

      Quite. In today's lesson number 1, you learn that Linux isw not windows.

      or simply highlighting

      I'm afraid this innovation has only been relatively recently introduced (1987 or so). The world of computers does move fast, but do try to keep up.

      Linux wants to compete with windows

      If you want windows, I suggest you start here: http://www.microsoft.com/

      ...copy/paste...

      Oops. IHBT. Never mind. Can you now complain abot CMYK in the GIMP?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  118. Rubbish! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is of no benefit to the end user and makes no sense at all. Changes of this scale should increase not functionality not decrease it. I am not interested in alterations to a UI that take away my control of the interface.

  119. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

    >CORBA
    I'll give you this one

    >XML
    Not the greatest, but tolerable if used correctly

    >GConf
    You have to have some kind of config system, and gconf isn't bad
    Dconf is looking really good now.

    >C# and Mono
    Gnome does not use them.
    Many C#/Mono use GTK and/or Gnome, but not the other way around

    >Umpteen window manager changes, none good enough
    Sawfish -> MetaCity -> Mutter (part of a radical interface change)

  120. Leave an option to turn them on by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    One of the things I love about Linux and Unix software is that it is customizable. If you can disable them by default I would like the option to turn the buttons back on. As long as we can turn them back on I do not care. One of the points of using Linux over Windows is I can make the gui, development tool chain, and even the kernel exactly as I want it. It is open and it feels more like mine than Apple's or Microsoft's.

    Gnome developers reading this comment should remember what happened to KDE and amorak? They tried the minimalist approach and many hardcore KDE users including myself and even Linus Torvalds eventually switched to Gnome. Take your time please and do not rush it and make sure it is stable after all the features are ironed out. You should not be making decisions like changing the GUI only a month before release! I can only imagine the bugs.

    I hope Ubuntu and Fedora have the option to still install gnome 2.32 for those who wish to wait.

  121. Isn't that the point of open source? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean seriously what is the point of open source software if it doesn't actively foster the user being able to tweak these settings so they can turn them back on if they want?

  122. Re:Windows? by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

    Ask yourself if you use a Dvorak keyboard. Then make that comment again.

    --
    Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
  123. Sorry about that by tepples · · Score: 1

    I was just confused by "most applications". At home and at work, I spend a lot of my time either in a text editor writing code or in a web browser testing it.

  124. I'm confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been double clicking the title bar to maximize since I accidentally figured it out years ago. The maximize is a no brainer. Minimize is a bit more tricky.. perhaps it'll take a few iterations of user-feedback to get this right. BUT CHANGE IS GOOD.

  125. How hard is to make this a configuration option ? by Foske · · Score: 1

    Oh wait, KDE has this since 1.0 already, so and since Gnome is everything KDE isn't, it has no option but to enforce a setting many people won't like.

  126. I made the swtich by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back to Windows when Windows 7 came out; I'm a lot happier and far less frustrated; since the bulk of my work was in the microsoft-centric world anyway. No more running XP in a VM to get around macro-laden document conversions.

    Nope.. Windows 7--beats Linux by miles, I'm sad to say..I had been a linux desktop user since 1998. but in 2009, I switched to Windows 7. I haven't looked back.

    Gnome is playing catch-up as a UI to Apple. I'm not an iPhone/iPad user either--I pay enough for my data connection for my home, why should I pay more for one on my portable phone. I don't text---hate it in fact. I'm on the phone with clients or third-party vendors all day so I rarely make calls, except to family members once a week. If my friends and I want to talk, we either hit a bar or coffee shop; all handled via that little used tool (at least by the 18-34 crowd) called e-mail.

    I like being able to minimize each window if I'm not working in it--and to do so with ease. Sorry Gnome..removing the minimize/maximize buttons is a mistake.

  127. Re:Windows? by dingen · · Score: 1

    I have nothing against using a Dvorak keyboard and the reason I'm not using one right now has more to do with a lack of time and devotion than not believing it's worth using.

    --
    Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
  128. GNOME is always removing things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GNOME seems to have a philosophy that if they remove enough stuff, people will like them better. This is why I hate both the GNOME and KDE desktop environments... rather than go for the most *power* they could give the user, they treat them like idiots.

    I'll still with the standard window managers, thank you very much.

    1. Re:GNOME is always removing things by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      In all fairness, if you're using GNOME, you are an idiot.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  129. Thank God That Laptop and Netbook Fad Is Over by TheABomb · · Score: 2

    Dragging UI elements used to suck back in the days when you had to use those touchpads to navigate around the screen. Those buttons that you only had to click once were a great kludge for that situation, but now that people finally have computers so big they fill up a desk, with a device that sits on the desk for clicking stuff, this will totally make ergonomic sense!

    --
    MSIE: The world's most standards-complaint web browser.
    1. Re:Thank God That Laptop and Netbook Fad Is Over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad touchpad and cellphone fad is on.

  130. Who makes these decisions? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a Mac guy these days, but I always used KDE when I was a Linux user. I have always found the design decisions of the GNOME people to be more-or-less braindead. This is another excellent example. Removing minimzation results in a "focused UI"? What does that even mean? It has "clear benefits"? I don't think so. The first reason they give for removing minimization is great, "We've already oversimplified the interface so much that minimization no longer makes sense. Therefore, minimization must go!" I'm paraphrasing, of course.

  131. Gnome is more like this... by Burz · · Score: 2

    Someone from outside (Ubuntu in this case) is applying pressure for us to change/move something to emulate Apple, so we'll remove most of that feature instead.

    It's called taking your ball and going home. Ha! That'll teach em!

    KDE would do the opposite: Make the feature user-relocatable and put little black arrows on each widget turning them into drop-down menus. They would also add a new section to the browsing tree in Konqueror allowing you to browse windows that are minimized/maximized and to save 'favorites' for the windows you minimize/maximize the most. This, in turn, would send people who try KDE because 'its more like Windows' running and screaming away from the environment days or weeks earlier than they had been before.

    1. Re:Gnome is more like this... by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      It is relocatable on KDE since when I remember. I used to have the keep windows above and bellow buttons, but I ditched them lately because the window menu is more convenient.

      I'm missing that "favorites" feature now.

    2. Re:Gnome is more like this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In KDE, you can already relocate the minimize/maximize buttons to anywhere on the window bar. There's no browsing tree in konqueror for open applications, but there are plenty of different ways you can set up to expose them all (expose windows, a la macintosh, expose all desktops, alt-tab in 3d, etc etc etc).

      That said, by default, the minimize and maximize buttons are in the upper right hand corner of the window, and the task bar is on the bottom of the screen, pretty much where a Windows user would expect. You never see the options unless you go into the system settings, and most people who are afraid computers wouldn't dare venture there. :)

    3. Re:Gnome is more like this... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I think it's a new evolved form of trolling. It started with deleting articles on Wikipedia and now they are looking for ways to fuck up major OS software. Firefox seems to be going the same way.

      Seriously, what other explanation can there be for this kind of action? It is too well calculated to screw things up to be random stupidity.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  132. Why did they keep the close button? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't you just move the mouse in an "X" shape?

    [Sheesh -- what a stupid idea]

  133. I'm not the only one! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Glad to see someone else likes IceWM...look me up on Box Look, Hazuki.

    1. Re:I'm not the only one! by sslayer · · Score: 1

      I've been using IceWM for about 10 years now. And I maximize and minimize a lot and, guess what? I've been doing it with the keyboard for years too. People who watches me managing my windows can't follow my speed of action and are frequently amazed.

      The trick is simple: alt+space activates the context menu of the current window (just as if you clicked right button on the title bar). The, you have the three most common options just a centimeter from your finger: X to maximize, N to minimize, C to close. Both X and C can be typed with the same hand that has pressed alt+space, so it's quicker than, say, alt+F4. By the way, this three options work exactly the same under Windows, so it's a pretty good habit.

      If I need to move a window around, I will never click on the title bar: I will type alt+space+m in 20 miliseconds and then I can move the window just moving the mouse from where it is, without the need to go to the title bar. This also works on Windows.

      If I want to send a window to another virtual desktop, it's pretty easy: alt+space+t (for move To), and then the number of the desktop. Want to make a window on top of all the others? alt+window+y (for laYer) and then A (for Above dock) or N for Norma, or maybe B for Below... and all that just with one hand at the speed of light.

      Long live to IceWM!

  134. Have to agree on that point by Burz · · Score: 1

    The KDE maximize vertical/horizontal using middle-click was something I got constant use out of. The rest of KDE however drove me away.

    1. Re:Have to agree on that point by threepenpals · · Score: 1

      FWIW, mangu's comment prompted me to check, and XFCE has the same (awesome) middle and right-click behavior.

  135. GNOME from Uncyclopedia by David+Gerard · · Score: 3, Funny

    Whereas KDE policy is "If you disKover some empty spaKe, add an useless feature or somethinK very very irritatinK. The iKon must be shiny, rotatinK, and Kontain at least one K.", the GNOME policy is the opposite: "If you find a feature, it might confuse a user, so remove it."

    The alpha 3.0 release, Project Topaz, will be the perfect GNOME's desktop, as it will have absolutely Gno features at all. It will simply use excessive amounts of system resources, and do Gnothing but sit there. This final version will contain only a single button. When the user pushes it, it pops up a beautifully anti-aliased text box on a white screen telling the user to use a pen and a piece of paper to do their work and to shut their computer off.

    GNOME 2.30 will be renamed to 3.0 because it will require 3GB of RAM and a modern graphics card with OpenGL 3.0 support; the graphical debugger requires a 128-bit processor, which has Gnot yet been invented, and a 3GB video card with optional 5-D rendering capability.

    GNOME's logo is a huge footprint, but it is Gnot clearly established whether it is a huge memory footprint or a huge disk footprint.

    (from Uncyclopedia)

    --
    http://rocknerd.co.uk
    1. Re:GNOME from Uncyclopedia by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      GNOME's logo is a huge footprint, but it is Gnot clearly established whether it is a huge memory footprint or a huge disk footprint.

      I think it was quite clearly established to be both. Or was it CPU footprint?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  136. Thanks for proving my point. by Isaac+Remuant · · Score: 1

    Your comment is exactly what I was talking about.

    You talk about Firefox's stupid shit without specifying what and why. You say users are drawn into chrome but don't explain why either, why can't they keep using the same FF3 instead of trying out a beta they dislike or customizing it to their liking.

    I don't think Chrome is gaining more users because of Firefox's mistakes but because it implemented a very good design from the get go and pushed an extremely aggressive advertising campaign. The fact that there's a lot of development of Chrome plugins (to resemble those available in FF) makes it able to compete with Firefox on that level as well.

    On an interesting note, Internet Explorer 9 imitates Chrome's design.

    Tl,Dr: AC just proved my point by insulting developers and stating things matter-of-factly without even trying to show one example of what he considers stupid shit. One has to wonder why does he even bothers to critique instead of just using whatever software he finds suitable?

    --
    "Science can amuse and fascinate us all, but it is engineering that changes the world. " - Asimov.
  137. Losing Critical Controls by Necron69 · · Score: 1

    I don't know about the rest of you geeks, but my basic use of desktop Unix/Linux for work hasn't altered all that much since I was a student sysadmin in 1990. I spend most of my work day opening up various terminal windows and ssh (ok, that has changed :) to network and SAN switches all day long. I'm frequently working with a heterogenous group of 30-40 different systems\switches and I damn sure DO NOT WANT to lose the ability to minimize, maximize, or arrange as many damn windows on my screen as I care for. The single, full-screen application model is just fine for my Android phone, but it sucks on a desktop box.

    Ughhhh. I guess it will be back to fvwm if this happens.

    - Necron69

  138. Obviously bored by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

    Obviously some developers were bored and decided to do this instead of focusing on real bugs. Or there was a bug with it and they took the easy way out.

    --

    -]Phreak Out[-
  139. Good job. Someone makes an informative post, by aussersterne · · Score: 1

    but because it mentions Apple, it gets modded down.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  140. Minimize vs Hide by lullabud · · Score: 1

    As a linux user who long since gave up the GUI and switched to Mac OS X for those things, I have found that the minimize function is far less useful than the "hide application" function built into OS X. I rarely minimize anything, but I hide things frequently.

    OS X features aside, I don't agree with taking away the option to minimize. Just because you have a bad ass hammer doesn't mean you'll never need a screwdriver.

  141. Get rid of the X by SilverJets · · Score: 1

    I don't understand why they wouldn't get rid of the X (close) button as well. Every windowed application I have ever come across in Linux, Mac, Windows, and Solaris has always had a way to close the application (usually through File-->Close or File-->Exit). So why put thought into getting rid of minimize and maximize (and changing the way people deal with windows) but keep the entirely redundant button?

    1. Re:Get rid of the X by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in KDE you can use a window theme that doesn't have the close button.

    2. Re:Get rid of the X by spitzak · · Score: 2

      I was wondering about this too. Getting rid of the close box was one of the earlier changes tried by window managers (wm2 for instance). Even 20 years ago most programs had a way to close them other than the close box. The only counter examples I can think of were trivial demo programs written without any toolkit but making them quit on a the user hitting Escape would require very little code added to the demo.

      It does seem like the titlebar can be eliminated entirely. All operations could be done by the user clicking in "dead" areas of the application. If you click on the blank area in your control panel, you can move the window around, or if you are near enough to the edge you resize it (probably like most Linux WMs do now, you can in effect make the entire window dead area and draggable by holding down Alt or something). The maximize, minimize, and close have been removed. The text in the title bar is either useless or repeated inside the window somewhere. So the title bar is no longer needed.

      This would also get rid of the annoying distinction between "maximized" and "full screen".

    3. Re:Get rid of the X by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      I occasionally come across windows/programs that have no menu and no obvious way to close the window or kill the program. Most often this is a media player spawned from firefox. Without the X button, I'd have to run ps, examine the output, and then use kill; or use some other roundabout technique.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  142. GNOME continues to insanely hardwire 96 DPI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While the effective DPI/pixel density (at a books distance) depends on how far away your monitor/TV is,
    GNOME is continuing to fight any user's effort to override the DPI.

    And not just fix it to the monitors DPI, but hardwire it to 96.

    http://osdir.com/ml/commits.gnome/2011-03/msg01170.html

    You can no longer set DPI in gdm.conf, or xorg.conf.

    Even if you pass -dpi to X, gnome-settings-daemon aways changes it to 96.

    Personally, I was trying to increase DPI to make menus, scrollbar, and fonts scaled bigger to be usable on a tablet.

    A global scaling feature is applicable to many situations. Allowing setting DPI is the easiest way to allow this.

    I think GNOME (or a replacement UI) should be completely redesigned to account for modern devices, instead of focusing on the traditional PC/windows interface.

  143. Doesn't save any space by smart_ass · · Score: 1

    Judging from the screen captures (linked with article) they still have a big ole X in the corner.
    Meaning the minimize and maximize functions would live in otherwise wasted space.

    Why bother?

    If this was gaining a line of text in a web browser or word processor .... great ... I just don't get this.

    --
    Ouch ... did I just say that.
  144. The people are bitches by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    You whining little toad.

    Here the nobles give you flowers, egg, water, sugar, cream, strawberries, butter and YOU still complaining you don't have anything.

    Go to MS, get them to listen to your demands. Tell it to Apple, see if they listen.

    When Apple changes how things are done, it is design and a brave new world. If FOSS working for free does not obey your every whim, they are dictators.

    Maybe if Gnome charges a hundred bucks for every point upgrade and breaks backwards compatibility on a full release you would be satisfied?

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:The people are bitches by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      You whining little toad.

      You snobbish whining noble.
      Everything the nobles give us comes from the people. I've dabbled in coding FOSS myself, and more than once edited my own patches for things I needed. The gnome devs are giving us things that they got from other FOSS developers from the 90's. Maybe some of the gnome devs are from the 70's-80's.

      When Apple changes how things are done, it is design and a brave new world.

      Shut the hell up. Apple is Satan. Microsoft is a servitor demon. Some FOSS devs are traipsing the path to Hell with their idiotic good intentions ("let's be like the big boys"). Dumbasses.

  145. Another Maximizer... by LibRT · · Score: 1

    I'm on a 37" 1920 X 1080 monitor and I tend to maximize about 80% of programs (I also sit a fair distance from the screen - about 4.5 feet - and have scaled up the font sizes significantly to compensate).

    Off topic, but I think one of the things not being considered in attempts to include browsing etc on TVs is how web sites scale when default font size is increased by more than about 20%. Many sites simply do not handle this well, and I suggest about 15% of the time I need to disable minimum font size and zoom the screen because the text and/or graphics start getting superimposed upon each other or essential buttons disappear entirely.

  146. mod points ! my kingdom for mod points ! by unity100 · · Score: 1

    someone mod this guy up ! i posted in this discussion ! quick !!

    and yes, im serious.

  147. Why not actually try IT by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not saying that I like the idea for Gnome Shell but they are moving away from the old desktop idea. Storing things on your desktop by the way has LONG been a BAD thing done only by the terminally disorganized.

    For files, there are places like Documents, and program links should go in the menu. There shouldn't be anything on your desktop to look at.

    I know, not how we are used to doing things, but change is not something to be feared.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Why not actually try IT by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Storing things on your desktop by the way has LONG been a BAD thing done only by the terminally disorganized.

      Really? I use it for temporary files. File comes from somewhere. I save it to the desktop, then move it elsewhere. I much prefer that to saving files to "Downloads" or something because when I get a file I want to see it right in front of me. Typically to mail a file I:

      • Open a folder
      • Compose a new mail message
      • Minimise the mailer app so I can see the folder
      • Drag the file I want into the new message
      • Click send
      • Restore the mailer

      This whole thing smells of "Spatial Browsing". Gnome dropped that when the distros turned it off. I wish they would stop telling me how to work.

    2. Re:Why not actually try IT by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Like the physical item that the metaphor is based on, if something is on your desktop it usually means that you are currently working on it and you want it to be at hand so you don't forget about it off in some pile you don't ever see. It's the graphical equivalent of $HOME or $PWD.

      That said, even my desktop has folders that are intermediate storage for things that will eventually go into other "long term storage" locations.

      It's by no means "disorganized".

      It's just another arbitrary location. Just another folder.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    3. Re:Why not actually try IT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No offense but your habits are poor and lead to desktop clutter after a while of neglecting to save files elsewhere. If you want to move it "elsewhere", why not save time and just fucking moving elsewhere in the first place? That is more organized and simple solution.

      I've lived a long life without useless desktop clutter and I am happy.

    4. Re:Why not actually try IT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the fuck are you to tell others how they should use their computers?

    5. Re:Why not actually try IT by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      If you want to move it "elsewhere", why not save time and just fucking moving elsewhere in the first place?

      Because every application which provides the file has their own, not very useful way to navigate the directory tree. I find it much easier to use the file manager for that, after the application has saved the file. "Downloads" has much more junk than "Desktop" because I never notice it. Applications save files and I may or not find them there. And my desktop is very clean thanks very much. It has two folders on it.

    6. Re:Why not actually try IT by Lendrick · · Score: 1

      They're the GNOME UI team. GNOME lost me years ago, when they decided to shove that stupid "spatial file browsing" thing down everyone's throats. I still don't see how it was any different from the default settings in Windows 95, which I would immediately change every time I used a new windows box. Some people think of their files in terms of a position on their desktop. Some people have a lot of files and don't want to put everything eight folders deep, so they put them in one directory and then have the file manager alphabetize them. Sometimes people even want to see advanced details, like how big their files are and when they were last modified. Around that time, they were also having discussions about doing away with tabs in applications.

      Essentially, if GNOME says something in the UI is "too complicated", then there's a very good chance that it's something I use and like. So I just use KDE. :)

    7. Re:Why not actually try IT by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but if showing icons all the time right out in front (as opposed to some menu or tree) is bad, what would Gnome/Ubuntu have to say about the iPhone/iPad? They also feature everything out in front all the time.

      For me, I actually prefer the menu/tree approach, but desktops have worked great for a lot of people for a long time.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    8. Re:Why not actually try IT by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      Interesting. I never really thought about that specific use. I just tried dragging something into Hotmail, after you click that "Choose" button, and it seems to work well. I think that I might start using the Desktop like that, more often. I'll probably clean it out, more often than not. Thanks for your example.

    9. Re:Why not actually try IT by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      I forgot to point out that I tried it with Kubuntu, and Opera.

    10. Re:Why not actually try IT by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      Exactly. People ask me why my desktop is cluttered.
      It's cluttered because it's kind of a weigh station. Shit I've downloaded, files I've copied off a thumb drive, a PDF I'm working on, etc., all go on the desktop because I use a file manager and saving to dektop is a lot quicker and easier than navigating through a shitload of folders with single clicks for each step of the way just to save something where I want it.

      Save it to the desktop, no clicks required. Then in a file manager, drag the files when done to appropriate folders - no multiple clicks through menus needed - just drag the file to the folder in the appropriate branch of the tree.

      Desktop functions sort of like a root folder, but better. "Shit I'm working on."

      Who cares if the fucking desktop is cluttered. I don't LOOK at the DESKTOP... I mean seriously, who the fuck other than my 71 year old mother opens files by clicking an icon on a fucking desktop?

      Sure, if you're only using a comp for iTunes and Facebook.

      If you're actually doing WORK, the desktop as a visual metaphor is indeed stupid. But it makes a fantastic "in box" to for all the shit you need to do before sending the files off elsewhere.

      Much easier to access than fucking around through menus in a dialog box to save a file to "My Vacation Photos, Edited Version." etc.

      --
      This space available.
    11. Re:Why not actually try IT by Late+Adopter · · Score: 1

      You might want to change your Downloads folder to /tmp. It enables you to forget about the file once you're done using it (and encourages you to put it somewhere more meaningful than "Downloads" if you want to keep it).

  148. It's sad by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

    I swear, with the crap that Gnome is doing with Gnome Shell and now this nonsense, I'm tempted to go back to Windows. I've been on Ubuntu as a full time user for nearly 2 years now, but it seems that just when Linux started getting polished up to a usable state, somewhere along the line idealists have taken over and are striving not to make things work, and work well, but rather, to do things "a new way". Doesn't matter if it's good, bad, or whatever - we just have to be "different" for the sake of doing so.

    It sucks. Apple is building locked down stuff, Microsoft is building shoddy stuff with security holes, and Linux is making UI and design decisions that make me really question whether or not the batch of hypothetical monkeys at a bunch of typewriters are making design decisions.

    --
    "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  149. Does anyone else find it Odd..... by tempest69 · · Score: 1

    That a GUI named after diminutive humanoids-- is removing the maximize button.

  150. LXDE to the rescue! by water-and-sewer · · Score: 1

    I read this, went to www.gnome3.org to see the screenshots, and just gave my LXDE system a big hug. I still use KDE3.5 (and will for as long as I can find packages; fortunately openSUSE 11.3 still has them), and just as often boot into Windowmaker or the console. But KDE4's Plasma desktop sucks (I like the apps, but not the desktop). And Gnome3 seems to be an effort to see just how far they can go without pissing me off. I look forward to avoiding both of them for as long as humanly possible.

    Meanwhile, LXDE is fast, easy, intuitive, powerful, and STAYS THE @#$#@ OUT OF MY WAY as I work. It's lightweight, and isn't trying to herd me into a new paradigm of computing. It's just useful.

    Suddenly I'm more grateful than ever it exists, but KDE and Gnome are both apparently on a one-way trip to sucky land.

    --
    If this were Usenet, I'd killfile the lot of you.
  151. That's how it is on Netbook Remix by oopsdude · · Score: 2

    I've been running Ubuntu Netbook Remix for over a year, and until this story was posted, I had not realized the minimize and maximize buttons were gone. Everything is maximized by default (although I turned that off), and if I want to see the desktop, I click the Ubuntu icon in the upper-left. I'm freaked out by this, actually; the thought, "But where are the min/max buttons?!" had never crossed my mind until this point.

  152. No Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've already been playing with alternatives. This just confirms that I will switch. The *LAST* thing I want is to screw around with the mouse to do this junk.

  153. Just WOW by lennier1 · · Score: 1

    With an idea to screw up the user interface like that it makes you wonder if they've been taken over by Canonical.

  154. See ya by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

    Without minimize, the GNOME 3 desktop...

    ...will also not have me. I've used Gnome exclusively for years now, but KDE has made great strides recently. Some of us like the old familiarity of Gnome. If it ain't broke, fix it twice? Tinkering with what works WILL cause some of us to jump ship. No loyalty for broken products when there are alternatives - maintaining a desktop is not a hobby.

    --
    This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
  155. Because KDE/Gnome don't really know by Burz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...what they're doing.

    If they did know, then they'd realize A) a GUI spec is pointless unless it forms part and parcel of a holistic OS platform, otherwise they might as well be trying to reinvent HTML; and B) being a *nix coding geek imparts a natural INferiority when it comes to GUI expertise, not the superiority that most of them obviously feel; and C) Personal Computing is a consumer culture with certain basic use cases and expectations that must be fulfilled, so you shouldn't be surprised that putting 'candy' on everything doesn't work when you expect people to operate their computers in some profoundly different ways.

    What are those profound differences? Here's a few:

    1) Leaving users to grope in the dark WRT hardware compatability, instead of marketing your software to hardware vendors by offering a simple test suite and standard, trademarked icon that shoppers can readily identify on the package. Leaving it to each distro to define hardware compatibility lists was wrong: They all sucked and were half-hearted at best. HCLs should be the Linux Foundation's job because hardware compatibility is the kernel's role.

    2) Leaving budding programmers and power users without an SDK or standard IDE that allows anyone to get their feet wet and share their work with confidence (as in, it will actually run on another novice's machine instead of going down in a dependency flames). If you think this is stupid or off the mark, consider that Linux is doing really well on handhelds and both Google and the Linux Foundation have their own SDKs. No one will do a Desktop SDK because of the old-hacker politics involved and their loathing of vertical integration; LSB does not go far enough and doesn't even define a way to install software packages (all it has is the package format, but no procedures or interfaces are defined).

    3) Leaving users to fight-it-out with their device settings. There are still some influential (old people) who behave like Linux video was good enough with VGA framebuffer support and /dev/dsp output for one audio app at a time. Yet others treat video and audio as simplistic and beneath their concern. This has lead, for example, to subsystems like X11 that could not support the use case of 'Change the display to these new parameters and if the user indicates they work, save those setiings'. Instead we got a situation where every distro had to write their own display settings code, and they all did it badly because the assumption that display settings were just too 'simple' for X11 itself to manage them just wasn't true.

    Also, what most PC programmers and techs refer to as 'OS components' (libraries, services, etc) are astoundingly referred to as 'applications' in the Linux world. This distorts the way Linux techs relay help and tips to novice users to the point where the distinction between OS and application tends to disappear.

    4) Relating to the "platform" primarily by its Kernel, a piece of software that is formless/invisible to most non-programmers. Suffice it to say that if Google were marketing a handheld "Linux" to phone users, their offering wouldn't be a tenth as successful as Android and there would be all kinds of negative politics involved that called for Gnome and KDE versions just for starters. The whole community is guilty of this misstep, which amounts to a sort of mass geek delusion. Note that Firefox didn't play this game and it succeeded because people knew how it looked and behaved by default, and any third parties changing the Firefox code were forced to change the name of their offering to something other than 'Firefox'. OTOH, "Linux" defines an almost formless sea of non-kernel alterations that we geeks expect users to become familiar with.

    5) Inserting the OS people between the user and the app authors, ensuring that only the biggest enthusiasts and coder-types make an effort to interact directly with the authors. This is part of what I call 'distro culture' which itself has many ill effects. Contrast this with the App Store concept where authors upload their wares themselves, and get a communication channel to/from users.

    1. Re:Because KDE/Gnome don't really know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For at least #2, this problem was solved many many years ago. Magic Ermine (http://www.magicermine.com/) is a packaging solution that creates truly portable Linux/ELF applications that can work on both x86 and x64 (or just x64) machines without the need for any dependencies whatsoever, while maintaining a single binary packaged application that does not require superuser privileges to install. It's been around for awhile too. You can use whatever libraries and dependencies that you want without the need for the end-user to have anywhere near a similar system or worry about mismatched libraries. For example, we've used it to deploy applications on machines ranging from RHEL 3 x85, RHEL 5, Fedora 12 & 13 on x86 and x64, Scientific Linux 5.x, FreeBSD using the Linux API, and LFS systems, all in production. You can ensure the application will work as long as the system is using Linux 2.2 or higher and supports ELF binaries (you aren't using 1.2.13 anymore, are you?).

      As for #1, #4, and #5, none of those are even relevant issues in the BSD community, yet their 'success' is in different areas than GNU/Linux systems, and they still aren't completely solved problems.

      Windows is the worst when it comes to #1, where every vendor is responsible for shipping and maintaining a kernel driver, and the source of much stability and reliability problems. WHQL certification does not go nearly far enough. I can't tell you how many times I've seen Windows BSOD, and it is always due to dodgy drivers. I recently had a BSOD on my Win7 system at work, which seems to be resolved by reinstalling nForce drivers which are now at a newer revision than they were before. Every piece of hardware out there you really need to inventory, and maintain constant vigilance to keep your Windows machines up to date. This would be solved by standardizing desktop and server hardware throughout the whole organization, and this is the direction we are moving to, but it will still be quite some time before all legacy systems are replaced with standard hardware and leaving us in administration only 1 hardware profile to manage. In contrast, managing *nix systems is a vacation.

      And I don't agree with your #4. Linux doesn't define "an almost formless sea of non-kernel" anything. This is where Richard Stallman gets something right. Linux is just a kernel, nothing more, nothing less! No one in their right mind expects a user to be familiar with kernel internals. In the BSD world, if it doesn't work on the GENERIC (as distributed, untweaked) kernel, then it is clearly a bug. OpenBSD used to only accept bugs using the kernel as shipped. Modern GNU/Linux distributions insulate the end-user from kernel tasks. You seem to take issue with the GNU/Linux/KDE and GNU/Linux/GNOME ecosystems, and possibly rightly so. But Linux has nothing to do with the problem.

    2. Re:Because KDE/Gnome don't really know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is why I use Linux Mint. I feel they addressed most of these issues. People complain it looks like KDE/Windows even though it is gnome. People complain about the auto update icon in the bottom right. but the fact is this is mostly a Windows world and if you want people to convert you have to make it easy for them. Linux Mint does it. Once they are on the Linux platform then the learning will take place just as it does when you are new to any computer OS.

    3. Re:Because KDE/Gnome don't really know by randomsearch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Whilst the parent post has plenty of valid points, I wonder if there is an underlying issue about the way people think about Linux.

      Some people seem to think that the goal of Linux is to become as popular as possible, and to beat immediate-term "rivals" like OS X or Windows. So "Linux on the desktop" is important. On the other hand, some may think that trying to produce a flashy UI to make this happen is not a good use of time.

      Some people think the goal of Linux is to create the best possible OS and to hell with what anyone else is doing. Some people may think this doesn't increase the adoption of Linux, and they see that as important, perhaps they think of Linux more as a businessman might think about a product.

      I think the truth is, that there is no goal of Linux. It's created by a disparate group of people with different ideas, intentions and ambitions. This is a good thing, as it produces a free OS that can be used for many purposes in a very robust way.

      Linux doesn't really care if people buying hardware in stores can use Linux with their hardware, because "Linux" is just a vague group of people pulling in different directions, not a coherent entity (and that is no bad thing, unless it happens not to agree with your personal view of what it should be used for).

      If we measure Linux by its use, by its deployment, then it is far more successful than any other OS in history, and is in the ascendancy. I don't lose much sleep worrying about the UI choices of one set of developers, or the hardware compatibility of a desktop distro.

      RS

    4. Re:Because KDE/Gnome don't really know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Leaving users to grope in the dark WRT hardware compatability, instead of marketing your software to hardware vendors by offering a simple test suite and standard, trademarked icon that shoppers can readily identify on the package. Leaving it to each distro to define hardware compatibility lists was wrong: They all sucked and were half-hearted at best. HCLs should be the Linux Foundation's job because hardware compatibility is the kernel's role.

      True, but haven't you just said yourself that this job would be in the wrong hands if KDE/Gnome handled it? How is this their fault?

      Leaving budding programmers and power users without an SDK or standard IDE

      For KDE: SDK = Qt/kdelibs; IDE = KDevelop. For Gnome, with its host of scattered libraries and no IDE, you do have a point, granted.

      Leaving users to fight-it-out with their device settings. There are still some influential (old people) who behave like Linux video was good enough with VGA framebuffer support and /dev/dsp output for one audio app at a time. Yet others treat video and audio as simplistic and beneath their concern. This has lead, for example, to subsystems like X11 that could not support the use case of 'Change the display to these new parameters and if the user indicates they work, save those setiings'. Instead we got a situation where every distro had to write their own display settings code, and they all did it badly because the assumption that display settings were just too 'simple' for X11 itself to manage them just wasn't true.

      This is a good point, but keep in mind that X is a complex (and, sadly, complicated) protocol that can do a lot of things. There's a lot more to it than running a GUI app on computer A and having it display things on computer A's single screen.

      Similarly, for sound, the limitations of the old model were indeed recognized ages ago, and people set out to come up with something better - something universal that would work across many scenarios and offer a lot of flexibility. Unfortunately, others than disagreed and started their OWN general solutions, so nowadays, we've got a lot of duplicated work, and effort wasted on compatibility layers; and also, equally unfortunately, the desired generality also meant that the software couldn't be finished in a year or two. It sucks, but if you want to solve the problems with Linux sound, you first have to realize that they're cultural rather then technical.

      That said, this is only partly related to KDE/Gnome, too; quite a bit of it touches upon underlying layers.

      Also, what most PC programmers and techs refer to as 'OS components' (libraries, services, etc) are astoundingly referred to as 'applications' in the Linux world. This distorts the way Linux techs relay help and tips to novice users to the point where the distinction between OS and application tends to disappear.

      I've never heard of a library being referred to as an "application". And again, what's the KDE/Gnome connection?

      OTOH, "Linux" defines an almost formless sea of non-kernel alterations that we geeks expect users to become familiar with.

      Indeed, and "Linux" is the wrong term. Don't say "my system is running Linux"; say "my system is running SuSE", or Debian, or Red Hat, or whatever. That IS precisely the kind of specific identity the lack of which you bemoan.

      And yet again, what's the KDE/Gnome connection?

      Inserting the OS people between the user and the app authors, ensuring that only the biggest enthusiasts and coder-types make an effort to interact directly with the authors. This is part of what I call 'distro culture' which itself has many ill effects.

      I'm not entirely sure what this means. Do you think that packaging systems and distributions are bad? But nobody is forced to use them. You CAN make your own packages available for Debian right now, or your ow

    5. Re:Because KDE/Gnome don't really know by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      What does any of this rant after the first paragraph have to do with KDE/Gnome?

      1) Since most hardware manufacturers aren't even creating drivers for Linux, and you expect them to go along with putting a sticker on their hardware saying that it works with an unofficial third-party open-source driver?

      2)SDK? Downloading qt and kdelibs or gtk+ isn't good enough for you? What more do you want? You can sit down at most any Linux machine and there's your SDK right there, preinstalled. There are several IDEs available if you want to use one, but why would a "standard" IDE be required? To each their own. Personally I think QtCreator is awesome for Qt/C++ applications, others may disagree..

      3)The specific use case you mentioned is possible and has been possible for years. Ever heard of xrandr? It would be nice if it was possible to switch between graphics cards on the new laptops that support that, I would be hesitant to get one of those until it's supported.

      4) It's just a name, is "Linux" somehow less PR-friendly than "Android"? If Google had used the name Linux-Phone or whatever and marketed that as well as Android why would that not have worked? Besides, distributions are not called Linux, they're called "Ubuntu", "Red Hat", "SuSe", "Arch", etc.

      5) If you want to publish packages on your website and forgo the repositories, you're free to do so.

    6. Re:Because KDE/Gnome don't really know by Burz · · Score: 1

      What does any of this rant after the first paragraph have to do with KDE/Gnome?

      If those issues don't concern KDE and Gnome, then there is something fundamentally wrong about their structure/definition in that they are too indifferent to the overall user experience. Distros like Ubuntu may purport to fill the role of holistic designer, but they really don't have the resources or vision to do so.

      ---

      1) Many of them would go along with advertising compatibility if the Linux people made it easy for users to find compatible products. Looking at places like Ubuntu forums and blogs, I see that the practice of "buy it and try it, then cry" still dominates.

      2) It's not an SDK if the core APIs and user interface components aren't well-defined and there isn't a clear distinction between the OS and all the stuff that's considered optional. You may think that distro repositories and their dependency management obviate that need, but you would be wrong. Its also not an SDK if the developer docs for the whole spectrum of libraries and services and cannot be accessed in one place in a single format. Its also not an SDK if developer docs are confused as to whether they are addressing application developers or system developers (they are often treated as the same audience in FOSS circles).

      3) Check this out: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Config/Resolution#Setting%20xrandr%20changes%20persistently
      According to Ubuntu, users must add commands to scripts or change xorg.conf manually to make X settings persist. What a joke. The same organization that writes the settings-parsing code must also supply convenient ways to WRITE/SAVE any adjustments to those settings (if the settings involved are even a little bit complex).

      In any case, Ubuntu has seen fit to dump X11 for future development. Hopefully they can dump the "we're a Linux too" identity-clusterfk also.

      4) Names and branding are extremely important, and 'Linux-Phone' would certainly have died a deservedly horrible death. No one should get away with foisting that must cognitive dissonance onto innocent phone users. The distros you pointed out (by truncating their names in some cases) all prominently identify themselves as Linux products and seek to lump themselves into the "Linux" genre.

      Here is the start of Ubuntu's own description from their home page: "Commercially sponsored Debian-derived Linux distribution that focuses on usability, a regular 6-month release cycle...". Red Hat is really "RHEL" with "Linux" right in name (not that I care... a server product isn't aimed at average users). They all want you to think they're basically the same OS, but from an end users standpoint they aren't -- from a tech support standpoint they aren't, especially if you must guide the user over a phone.

      All this is markedly different from how the Android brand/identity is handled. Same thing with WebOS (another success that includes the Linux kernel). These products refused to define themselves as "Linux distros". Even Blackberry avoided the syndrome when they acquired QNX (they do not call their new phone OS a 'QNX distro' or other such idiocy).

      I'd also like to point out that Apple's iPhone could have also turned into a clusterfk if they asserted it as just another hardware platform for "Mac OS X". It would have attracted the wrong set of first-adopters harboring unrealistic expectations and the iPhone would be in worse shape than AppleTV. Phones do not adhere to PC expectations (and vice versa) so Apple dubbed the OS X variant with a new name.

      5) Yeah, free as in 'go twist in the wind'. Incidentally Mozilla identified and avoided this game long ago, so they refuse to package programs for the many flavors of "Linux". Instead they have a tar file that any experienced tech can knit into their system tree structure with only an hour or two of their time (and before you go there, no, simply untaring does not w

    7. Re:Because KDE/Gnome don't really know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow... I guess you're arguing something about trying to market linux to "novice users" or the mass market, and I would have to agree that it's clearly not working and not going to work this way (and personally I don't care about it that much, "let them use macs"), but a lot of your points are rather odd.

      1) I doubt the hardware problem is so easily solved. This could be a whole novel itself, winding between the role of hardware vendors writing drivers, internal kernel api, release schedules, licensing... rather than write such a novel, I'll summarize my opinion by saying I like the way the linux kernel is managed.

      2) linux is an os by programmers, for programmers... the strongest argument against linux being a good consumer os is that it's too optimized for the programmer's and system administrator's use case... I think you're confusing "windows power users" with real power users and real hobbyist programmers

      3) X11 is an old subsystem, it's been around since before the birth of the linux kernel, yeah it's ugly... it's still the underpinning of virtually all gui components on linux systems, so it takes a lot of time and a lot of pain to get it out of the system... yes its kinda bad for flexibility in some cases. as for your complaint about distros writing their own display setting code, that's an odd one, if they write their own GUI for it it's because they want to (and the linux system allows the the freedom to), but xrandr is what is used under the hood, and GNOME and KDE provide their own GUIs for it that all distros could share (and some of them do)

      4) OK I think maybe I see what you're arguing here... I would agree that trying to advertise to "novice users" about the "linux" ecosystem is kinda silly. As for the firefox trademark thing, it's success started before the silly trademark policy prevented small distros like archlinux building their own packages, and firefox's success measured mostly by its use on windows and os x where this is a non-issue. Ubuntu is the closest thing you'll find to a "linux" which protects its trademarks, and it has established somewhat of a brand for itself - look there for the branding play I guess

      5) hahahaha there's nothing between app developers and users - many consumer app developers offer debs for ubuntu, and often add-on repos for automatic updates, and enterprisey app developers offer rpms for RHEL... and are free to offer packages for any distro they want to support, and users are free to install them. (Insert your arguments about fragmentation here). The most popular OS in the world doesn't have an app store either. Personally I'm rather annoyed about the "app" and "store" craze, if I wanted convenience I would use the distro's repo, if I wanted the latest and purest (or if I used windows, which I did as a child) I would go to the official website of the software in question. The internet is what really enabled the proliferation of great "apps", a lot of people just failed to notice until the iphone 2... typical really...

  156. Alice in UNIX Land by Puff_Of_Hot_Air · · Score: 1

    The Mad Hacker handed Alice a cup of custard-like substance and a spoon. "Here," he said, "what do you think of this?" "It looks lovely," said Alice, "very sweet." She tried a spoonful. "Yuck!" she cried. "It's awful. What is it?" "Oh just another graphic interface for UNIX," answered the Hacker.

  157. Sucks to be me!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always set mine to double click to shade, it really impresses the ladies :D

  158. how do I hide pr0n quickly? by aok · · Score: 3, Funny

    The GNOME developers clearly don't surf for porn or they don't do it in an environment where they could get caught :)

    It's like there's a unified anti-porn conspiracy. First Ubuntu makes me lose the ability to quickly cube rotate to another workspace, now GNOME prevents me from quickly minimizing. I hope they at least retain the ability to set the mouse scroll-wheel on the titlebar to shade windows! :)

    1. Re:how do I hide pr0n quickly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The GNOME developers clearly don't surf for porn

      But of course; they have found higher ways to masturbate.

    2. Re:how do I hide pr0n quickly? by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Oh, you want that?

      So you will really hate the next release, which will come out with a single window, and all the 'GUI' apps will be transparencies in that one window and there will be some sort of an 'intensity' control that you'll use to make one of the transparencies more intense than others, while others will still all be visible through the main window, and you won't be able to remove this feature.

      Think of all the new useful ways you'll enjoy your desktop more.

      There will be no maximize/minimize/CLOSE buttons!

      All applications you have installed on the computer will start at once and you'll just 'INTENSIFY' them when you need one more than the other, but all of them will always be there, right when you need them.

      The guess is that this is the right way to go. Why would anybody not want to see all of the applications at the same time, after all, if you don't need an application you shouldn't really have it installed. This will unclutter everything and everybody will love it.

      Of-course for you, you'll always be able to watch the porn, no matter what you are doing. You are using your bank website? You are still watching the porn scene 5310 through the transparent bank site window.

      Imagine all the time you will save by doing all of the things you want to do all at the same time! You'll get more done quicker and you'll never forget anything you have on your machine that's important. Like the porn scene 43011. All playing, all at once, forever, transparently.

      You'll love it.

  159. Luckily there are plenty of other window managers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For people who user their computer to do actual work, this is just plain stupid. But maybe the new market for GNOME is people who want to look at youtube videos and not much else.

    Somebody must have thought really hard before coming to the conclusion that a tiny button in the title bar makes everything so much more complex that users are just overwhelmed.

  160. bah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i use minimize functionality often in gnome. Alt-tab is sufficient to move around.
    surely a better idea would be to go one further and remove the title bar entirely? Perhaps using shift-click and throwing upwards to maximise and so on, thus saving screen real estate.

    Some of the arguments for removing the 2 buttons are just plain ridiculous, exactly how uncentred can they make things seem, and even if they did, how much does this disturb the user experience? How often do u stare at the title bar anyway?

    Pathetic.

  161. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Pecisk · · Score: 2

    1. CORBA wasn't dead when GNOME 2 was created, t.i. in 2001. It died few years later, sure, but guess what, D-BUS was created and CORBA was deprecatated;
    2. What's wrong with XML?
    3. You really don't know what GConf is, do you? It is nothing like binary spagetti of Windows registry. In fact, it's the best thing GNOME has delivered and afaik dconf - next generation of XML registry - will be adapted by KDE too. Now you can start running and screaming;
    4. C# and Mono - and while you refuse to embrase it, huge part of desktop apps are written in C#. Good luck being pure. Also I would like to note that Tomboy is only app written in Mono which is in official GNOME stack. The rest is C and Python;
    5. Don't wanna clarify?

    --
    user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
  162. I haven't used it... by andr00oo · · Score: 2

    so I'll reserve judgement on removing those two buttons until I've played with it.

    One thing that strikes me is that a title bar is a lot of screen real estate to dedicate to just a close button.

    Andrew

  163. Text column size by DragonHawk · · Score: 1

    "There's a reason that newspapers have several columns of text, and this reason is that text becomes harder to read once lines become longer than 80 characters (roughly 40em in CSS)"

    It's actually not the number of characters, but how far the eye has to track. If you get out of central vision (towards peripheral vision) comprehension drops measurably; the brain wants to move the eye and that's bad. So it's a combination of physical column width and how far you are from the text. (i.e., with bigger print you can sit further away.)

    The reason terminal windows are 80 columns wide is because IBM punched cards had 80 columns.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  164. Rearranging deck chairs on Titanic by gig · · Score: 1

    Instead of messing around with ancient features, they should build something new that is simple. For example, in Mac OS Lion, the window close/minimize/zoom is the same, but there is a full screen mode apps can use that essentially gives an app its own virtual Desktop, and the user can flip through virtual Desktops with a simple gesture. So the window close/minimize/zoom ends up confined to just 1 of many virtual Desktops. You end up with say, 8 Desktops, 1 with windows, 1 with widgets, 6 with apps. There is way less window management. And yet, if the user wants to have windows on every Desktop, that is fine, too.

    In other words, create a simpler new paradigm and move to that. Don't just remove features from the old paradigm.

  165. If it's an option by Anon8---) · · Score: 1

    I won't mind if the buttons are optional as they are now. Hopefully they won't force it on everybody using gnome or I might just really switch to KDE.

  166. Gross by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is, without a doubt, the WORST UI design decision gnome has ever conceived.
    They're essentially ripping off the iPod/iPad screens, which is a terrible interface for
    the linux environment. Anyone trying to actually WORK will be too hindered by this
    interface to get anything done at a reasonable pace. Epic Fail.

  167. How far the eye has to track by tepples · · Score: 1

    It's actually not the number of characters, but how far the eye has to track.

    And at typical reading distances and font sizes, these are highly correlated. In fact, the seek time to the next line is also largely a function of column width divided by line height; long lines become much easier to read when double-spaced. It also appears to have something to do with paragraph length and shape; the three to four-line 'graphs and indentation in the interspersed replies common on Slashdot appear to give the eye enough texture to find the next line in the 'graph.

    If you get out of central vision (towards peripheral vision) comprehension drops measurably; the brain wants to move the eye and that's bad.

    I don't know about you, but when I read even 60-column English text, my eyes tend to saccade to keep a chunk of text about 30 columns wide in central vision.

    The reason terminal windows are 80 columns wide is because IBM punched cards had 80 columns.

    Which in turn goes back to 60-80 columns between margins on typewriters.

  168. Gnome as bloatware... by petergk · · Score: 1

    Functionality always harms when you remove something from the fingertips. Why not make it more light? It's a bloatware (KDE too...). Gnome gives less and less and less in the name of simplicity and usability. Back to Window Maker. Metacity still eats my cpus with gimp.

  169. Still missing the point by Bitmanhome · · Score: 2

    So now we have a title bar which is completely blank, a menu bar which is mostly blank, and a button bar which is also mostly blank. I'm going to need another monitor just to hold all the blank space.

    --
    Not that this wasn't entirely predictable.
    1. Re:Still missing the point by asher09 · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it'll be completely a waste of screen real estate. Bummer. In the screenshots on Gnome3 page, it seems like there might be a panel at the bottom. What's the use of that?

      --
      Some were yelling one thing, some another. Most of them had no idea what was going on or why they were there. Acts19:32
  170. It should be a option by jetole · · Score: 1

    I don't know if I will be able to get used to the concept of no minimize/maximize buttons or not. Maybe I will but none the less, no one should just remove such a strong staple of the UI and say "Hey I hope you enjoy it and if not, oh well". If they feel that strongly about removing them by default then they should but leave a option to re-enable them. It would be stupid to take them out and hope the rest of the world just happens to understand your design concepts.

  171. The buttons can be readded. by justinjstark · · Score: 1

    For all of those complaining about this change and how in their case, maximize or minimize buttons improve their workflow, you can put the minimize and maximize buttons back on the titlebar by adding "minimize,maximize" to the appropriate gconf key (I forget the exact location). So, if you want this added functionality, you just have to make one simple change. For the rest of us, we will enjoy the simplified desktop experience.

  172. How about leaving well enough alone? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    How about leaving well enough alone and not forcing gratuitous change on users?

    Fine. Go off the cliff if you must but don't go out of your way to destroy the project for legacy users in the process.

    Removing window controls that people are used to and are similar to what people use on other systems is just retarded. Not only does this make Linux more difficult to deal with for actual Linux users, it also makes it harder to deal with for anyone else.

    This is the flip side of being "too original".

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  173. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by hippo · · Score: 1

    I just started a contract at a large chip manufacturer (thousands of engineers). Windows laptops everywhere but the real engineering design happens in X VNC sessions running fvwm2 (grotty fonts but the window management just works).

  174. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

    ">GConf

    You have to have some kind of config system, and gconf isn't bad
    Dconf is looking really good now."

    You don't need a config system. You need configurations, and people keep them at text files since forever. Gconf is bad, as are Dconf and Nepomuk. You shouldn't need transactions at your configurations, you also shouldn't need so many configurations that keeping them at memory is a problem, so you shouldn't need a database at all. Transactions alone could be a nice thing to have if you don't lose anything for gaining them, but transparency and simplicity are way more important.

  175. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    * Corba
      Well, that was maybe not such a good decision. The intention of using Corba was to get a programming language agnostic communication framework for the desktop, and at the time the first experiments with Gnome were made (we're talking about the late '90), Corba was hyped for exactly that purpose. In hindsight Corba was just to complicated and unwieldy to use. Yet the Gnome team learned from their mistake. The shortcomings of Corba in plain view, the need for a more simple and extensible framework led to the creation of D-Bus. And D-Bus is nowadays even empowering KDE, creating a first class bridge between the two frameworks.

    * XML
    I fail to see how the Gnome devs can be made responsible for the creation of XML. Gnome was started about thee years after the first release of the first XML specification. Also, XML was created by Tim Bray et al., non of which have anything to to with the inception of Gnome.

    * GConf
    The horrors of the Windows registration lye in its binary format, its inaccessibility, its cryptic structure and keys as well as the fact that it tries to do multiple jobs at once. The only way in which GConf could be compared to the Windows registry is in that they both store configuration settings and that they both work with hierarchical namespaces. But GConf and the Windows registry differ in very important ways; GConf's configuration files are human readable and can be manipulated by the unix command line tool tools. GConf even comes with nice command line tools itself, so scripting is easily achieved. Try to do that with the Windows registry.

    * C# and Mono
    C# is a Microsoft product, so I fail to see how Gnome ought to be at fault here. Mono also was not created by an active Gnome dev (although Miguel de Icaza is a founding member of Gnome), nor was is a Gnome foundation decision to create Mono. That said, although I tend to avoid Mono applications, it offers a very slick programming environment.

    * Umpteen window manager changes, none good enough
    Gnome changed window managers from Enlightenment to Sawfish, from Sawfish to Metacity. The next planned step, Mutter, is just a branch of Metacity relying upon the Clutter library. There were very sound reasons for those changes; Enlightenment was its own desktop project and used a different toolkit. Sawfish was written in Scheme, which non of the developers was willing to maintain anymore. As for 'none good enough', that is oppinion.

    You fail to see the reasons for dropping those buttons; the Gnome developers are willing to innovate and go beyond the desktop paradigms of the last 25 years. Most of the GUI interaction concepts used today stem from those early years and even many of them provide adequate, some are just plain wrong and even hurtful. We may be using them everyday and thus they seem to be working, but many times we're just working around them. I could name many problems but they mosty center around the theme 'force me to manage my applications instead of letting my do my actual work'. Do you're research and you'll find many topics.
    The current drive in the OpenSource community to innovate in desktop paradigms (KDE 4, Unity, gnome-shell) shows that this is a real hurt and I hope that the most obvious flaws of the current GUI metaphors will be addressed soon.

    Try to be open and accept that the ways we've been doing things in the last 25 years may not be the final answers to graphical computer interaction. We've gathered a lot of experience, maybe it's a good time to try out some new things.

  176. Open your minds guys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This thread is really disgusting. First of all, There are lots and lots of desktop environments that already exist using a minimize button. There are also tons that have some form of a task bar at the bottom to minimize to. The world already has this and if you like it just stick to it. That's right, you won't be forced to change, you can go on using exactly what you like. That's the beauty of all the choice that this world has.

    Now, it would not be worth a developer's time to go and write a copy of something that already existed. It already exists in the form of Win 95, NT, XP, Vista, Gnome 2, Gnome 1, and countless other operating systems. Developers are are around to develop things that don't exist. Sometimes an invention is not practical or just plain sucks so we quit using it and it does not get adopted.

    Sooo, don't worry , if it sucks, this idea will go by the wayside and we will just continue on with our lives. The best ideas always continue on to future systems.

  177. So gnome finally tries to catch up with wmii. by kayumi · · Score: 0

    wmii has this feature for a long time already.

  178. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Gconf actually not a bad thing. It has gconftool-2, which is a CLI interface. So, I can write a simple script to configure all the deskstop settings the way I like them.
    And settings take effect instantly. This is a major win compared to KDE - I love configuration files, but scriptably editing all the complex ones is a pain.

  179. And here I was complaining about Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought Ubuntu dropping Gnome for Wayland was bad news, and now this crap.

    What kind of monkeys call themselves GUI designers these days?

  180. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    ... from the very beginning.

    I lost track of all the "cool" but horrible ideas which made it into gnome.

    /---/
    - GConf (the horrors of the windows registry re-implemented by monkeys)
    - C# and Mono - embracing Microsoft technology! /---/

    GConf have only superficial similarities with the MS Windows Registry. It is more similar to Mac OS X plists (they both use xml-files and deamons that report changes in them, the most important difference is that GConf actually works) and good old fashion unix configuration files. Actually, it is good old fashion unix configuration files, but in xml-format and with a deamon that alert associated application when one of them change. GConf also has an editor to make changes in those files (superficially resembling the Windows registry editor that is used to edit the the MS Windows registry database (one very large file)) and a set of command line tools, if you don't like those tools you can use any text editor you want to change your settings (look in the ~/.gconf directory, it is ... gasp!... full of plain text files).

    The Windows registry is a really, really bad idea that has gone far to long. A big and fragile blob of a database that crashes everything once corrupted. To liken gconf with the Windows registry is not fair at all, if you like to compare it with anything, compare it with Mac OS X:s plists, both systems consists of many small separate xml configuration files (only plists are ususally larger and sometimes clash with other configuration files in unexpected ways, it also has (undocumented) deamons that take values from the plists and transfer them to parts of the system that use "classic" unix configuration files, but those parts of OS X become less with time, there used to be many of them but the only one I can think of that is left in 10.6 is CUPS, the time space between a change in a plist and in the other config file used to be a huge source of crashes in Mac OS X). I bet you will find the comparision favorable to GConf.

    That said, XML is not very human friendly. They could have picked a simpler to edit/read file format in GConf.

    Mono seem like a very bad idea. In my experience, the Mono platform encourage application makers to make really horrible user interfaces and when I have to run a Mono-application, even for the simplest of tasks, my otherwise cool and silent computer is transformed to a very noisy space heater. Most script languages produce applications that run faster and the crash frequency is just horrible.

  181. Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look at any Linux media player, Blender, GIMP ... uhhh never mind.

  182. Less function in more wasted space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I look at these screenshots and I see a huge deserted area around the window title. What a waste of pixels. Someone is clearly in love with the void, and that's why useful functionality had to go.

    Captcha: loathe -- exactly

  183. As the great Frank Zappa might have said... by jejones · · Score: 1

    "Is this Nautilus spatial mode Part II?"

  184. Wrong, it is just an default, not enforced by baryluk · · Score: 1

    GNOME is not losing anything.

    This is only if you have Gnome Shell enabled, and it is actually only epxeriment. It will be probably more reverted back, as currently minimize button isn't really minimising, as there is no task bar in gnome shell. It is more a hide button. Also Maximize button is redundant. As you can easly use titlebar double-click. Also with minimize/maximize buttons missing, you can still access it's functionality in about 5 ways. Shortcut, Right-Click on title bar, click application icon/menu, Alt-RightClick. And you can also enable minimize/maximize buttons easly in gconf editor.

    I disabled minimize and maximize button about 2 weeks ago, and noticed this fact only once during my normal work. They are useless to me. :) And i work in normal gnome desktop, not gnome shell. So I think experiment is good to be done on more people. :)

  185. Re:Minimize by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    I guess I don't understand the lack of both a window bar and minimize combo as you work with stuff. It takes you say 5 clicks and maybe a login to get to each window you want to work with, what are you supposed to do with it when it's on hold?

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  186. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by baryluk · · Score: 1

    I do not like XML, or C#, or GConf too much, but I think they are doing their job good, and I do not care too much. Gconf is actually pretty simple to use, and very clear. I do not like XML, but for most configuration files it is perfectly good solution: small, good strcture, self descripting, familiar syntax to everyone, easy to handle in all languages (as for configuration). As for datastoring I do not see it as best solution. C# is AFAIK pretty good technology, and Mono is now very good implementation. I not use it mainly becasue I just do not want to waste next 100MB of memory to just single application. But people with better machines will not care.

    Only think that i think was big mistake is a CORBA, and as we know GNOME is getting out of this rubish technology. I guess they used Corba, becasue it was only reasonable open-standard technology available for multiple languages at the time GNOME was create. I think they should just invent something simple, but I guess it will still took some work to do, and time. Thanks it now changes.

  187. Xmonad vs XP (or any other Win) by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

    I don't use either Gnome or KDE. I use Xmonad on FreeBSD (while on life support) and XP on all machines but my laptop which is Win 7. So I think I can speak to the lack of minimize though perhaps less so the maximize.

    While using XP I rarely maximize an application - the only ones might be video/image editing or to watch pron..err youtube. Everything else is a variable size as I like to keep chat windows and other apps visible, at least in part while browsing or using spreadsheet or similar. I use minimize often to declutter (I dont like title bars floating about) and I rarely, if ever, use virtual screens eventhough I have them available.

    While using Xmonad I rarely float windows - the only exception that comes to mind is the music player controls. On the otherhand, I make great use of virtual screens. Typically I have one or two browsers maxed on their own screen. Possibly also an open office document or Eclipse. Other things tend to get tiled on a screen. Chats on one, mail and shells windows on another, etc. There really is not any concept of minimize in Xmonad though I do at times find myself wishing for this. Instead I tend to just shift the application in question to another virtual screen.

    Neither approach is perfect, there are times I prefer one over the other but I can live with either.

  188. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

    >Nepomuk
    Nepomuk is good, and regardless of its good/bad status, it has nothing at all to do with configuration systems

    And gconf and dconf are text files, and not databases except maybe under a definition loose enough to include any classic *nix text config file.

  189. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is the Gnome development organization doing this? Don't try to improve something that doesn't need to be improved. If it ain't broke then don't fix it!

  190. motherfucker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you fucking whinging little bitches...who cares about the minimize buttons

    to minimize just click the bar in the taskbar and it minimizes/maximizes.

  191. Doesn't seem very intuitive by Cloud+K · · Score: 1

    I'd be curious to know if they've tested this out on anyone who's unfamiliar with computers. My gut feeling that icons like:

    _ [ ] X

    even in ASCII, would be discovered quicker than double-clicking on the title bar. That trick has been around in Windows for as long as I remember, but it took me a good few years before I noticed it.

  192. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    C# isn't a fundamental part of Gnome. GConf has only superficial similarity to the windows registry, idiots who don't understand either (e.g. you) shouldn't expose their ignorance, even if it's popular to do so. The problem with the latter isn't that it's a centralized place for configuration options, that part is actually a good idea. It's that the contents aren't documented, aren't necessarily settings and corruption can break your whole OS, not just lose some settings.

  193. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by donscarletti · · Score: 4, Informative

    You know, when they announced GConf, I thought like you, because I had bad experiences with the registry and back then I was an arrogant 20 year old programmer who didn't like any framework for anything, especially not tasks like configuration. However, I have warmed to it as Gnome 2.0 slowly became an OK system. Configuration should not be something that needs to be re-designed and re-implemented in every application. Things like policies, handling multiple instances of the one program, external configuration tools, etc. should work on a layer below the app. When I am writing an application, I want to be able to say, "OK, I have these options, make sure they are stored somewhere and tell me when the user wants to change them" and it works really well. It's no harder to use than libconfig or libxml2 but it has the addition that it notifies the application when a variable changes. It is a shitload easier than writing a custom parser by hand or with bison.

    --
    When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
  194. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Malc · · Score: 1

    I gave up on Linux years ago. It's like the Linux devs work in a little closed box that they can't see out of, and don't seem to see the bigger picture or just have a general understanding beyond the small group with whom they share that box. These days I still with Windows at work, and OS X at home. They both work out of the box, and don't overly annoy me.

    I recently had to work on a project with Samsung, that required me to install Red Hat. I spent more time fiddling with the installation than actually doing productive work. I was reminded why I ditched Linux.

    The last time I used anything GNOME based were some ports to Windows of things like GIMP and Ethereal (now Wireshark).... again the GNOME implementation was clueless using it's own totally unusable open/save dialog for instance. They could have at least copied Windows or OS X functionally, but no, they had to come up with some new twisted bastardisation. It beats me why they wouldn't have just delegated that kind of functionality to the OS (Win32 API) and used the existing common (standard) dialog.

    I don't know what planet those GNOME guys are on, but thankfully I can just ignore them.

  195. I for one welcome by BroadbandBradley · · Score: 1

    our new non legacy window overlords!

  196. The slashdot reciprocity law by kayumi · · Score: 0

    The discussion here once again suggests the slashdot reciprocity law.

    I * N = const

    where I is the importance I of a topic and N the number of comments
    There is a small minority which believes the correct statements is

    I * N^x = const where x is somewhere between 36.462159607207902 and 42

    Until today I favoured the first version. Today I switched.

  197. I thought GNOME learned already. by seeker_1us · · Score: 1

    Last time they did something this stupid, it was forcing spatial Nautilus on everyone (yes, you could change the behaviour but it was buried in gnomeconf, and when I tried, it screwed up the shared KDE settings on Fedora). I quit using Gnome at that point. Now it's gotten to the point where I actually like it and use it, and they decide to fuck it up again.

  198. Dicky Idea by akayani · · Score: 1

    Hang on that is like a hard on that won't go down. ;) GAWD what a stupid idea.

  199. Perhaps the right idea for the wrong reasons by Vyse+of+Arcadia · · Score: 1

    My two cents! I've been using KDE4's lovely netbook interface fairly extensively for a couple of months now, and I've grown to love it. Although minimize and maximize both still exists, at least, their importance is greatly diminished. All windows are maximized by default, and minimization is accomplished with smart hiding. I.e., if I click the activity with which I launch applications in the activity switcher in the panel, all windows get hidden.

    This is only annoying (and easily remedied at that) once in a blue moon, when I'm trying to drag and drop between applications. Otherwise, it makes sense and is exactly what I want. One application has all of my focus at a time, which is exactly what I do on other desktop environments anyway. Everything else is just an alt+tab away.

    I believe this is a tentative step in the right direction, but Gnome is going about it all wrong. Features in flux shouldn't be removed for removal's sake (which is what seems to have happened,) but de-emphasized by other smart design chioces.

  200. Next up by Mystery00 · · Score: 2

    "Next up we're removing the top border completely, you don't get to move your windows around the desktop, we will decide where your windows are going to be. You might not like it at first, but trust us, this will allow for a consistent level of quality as to how the windows are positioned and take up less space! Damn we're brilliant. What's that? Year of the Linux? Maybe next century when our potential users no longer need monitors or a keyboard and mouse. Then we can decide what gets downloaded into their brains!"

    --
    "we've got trenchcoats and bad attitudes" - John Constantine, HellBlazer
    1. Re:Next up by pavon · · Score: 1

      Actually, for a while I did run TWM with no titlebar, and tied the windows key to all the standard actions. It worked pretty well actually, as the entire window was the click target rather than just a little button.

      Windows-LeftClick => move
      Windows-DoubleClick => maximize
      Windows-MiddleClick => minimize (or pin, I forget).
      Windows-RightClick => resize (could also be done grabbing the edge)
      Windows-NumPad X => Goto desktop X
      Windows-Arrow Key => Move to adjacent desktop

  201. s/IceWM/WindowMaker/ , but yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In my case, it's WindowMaker, a wm whose design goal was to emulate the 20+ year old NeXT desktop (NeXTStep), and which hasn't seen an upstream change since 2005. Oddly, it fits my working habits very, very well.

    I'm not trying to change your mind about IceWM (or anyone's about their preferred WM/desktop), but agree strongly: the basic problems of desktop and windows management were identified and solved a long time ago. There's some minor tweaking which can be done (dynamically resizeable displays mostly). There are some interesting variants (tabbed/tiled window managers). The rest is mostly annoying.

    The whole compiz thing is interesting but not IMO particularly useful, though I suppose my mind could be changed on that.

  202. Use workspaces... by r6144 · · Score: 1

    As a GNOME 2 user who grew up with WindowMaker, I like to open 10 workspaces with hotkeys to switch between them, and each workspace hosts a kind of application. Minimization is thus never useful to me; the number of windows on each workspace is usually small enough that Alt+Tab works acceptably. (Although last week I did end up having 30 xpdf and oowriter windows in one workspace plus a terminal window running screen with 26 sub-windows...)

    I don't know how well GNOME 3 will support this habit; I once tried Compiz, but did not find an easy way to set all the necessary hotkeys, so I switched back to Metacity.

  203. Seconded! by quixote9 · · Score: 1

    And where do these turkeys get off, telling me how to work? They should be making it easy for me to work *my* way -- it's called customizability -- and not coming up with some stupid touchy design for somebody else's box and telling me to wear it on mine.

  204. Although I didnot really click the max/min button by dove-young · · Score: 1

    Although I did not really click the max/min button anyway, 'Cause I find that the keyboard shortcut is more friendly. But I still hope that there are enough customize methods left for the users. Everybody is difference , that is why free software and open source make sense.

  205. Re:So many people complaining every time GUI's cha by KClaisse · · Score: 1

    The first type also has the option of becoming the second type when nobody listens.

  206. Solution for those who can't do without.. by crutchy · · Score: 1

    ...either don't upgrade or create a gnome fork that retains maximize/minimize buttons. alternatively you could band together and kep bitching till the maintainers can't take it anymore and include them as an option just to shut you up. there will no doubt be this options still anyway... accessible through gconf or some other obscure method.

  207. Everybody relax. by nine932038 · · Score: 1

    Seriously, reading Slashdot on this article is like reading Facebook after a major UI change. it's just post after post of whining and crying about how things are changing, and the old way was better, and how come they had to go change stuff. Wah, wah, wah.

    Sure, it was heavy-handed, and sure, it was unilateral. But you know what? Maybe it'll turn out to be good. And if it isn't, no one's making you use Gnome 3. Go to KDE or Enlightenment or any of the other MANY MANY MANY desktop environments. Isn't this sort of gamble exactly what the Bazaar is meant for?

  208. Who's this for? by Compaqt · · Score: 2

    One of the problems with the Weird Innovation Syndrome afflicting GNOME and Ubuntu, and the reason for the intensive reaction from the community, is that there hardly ever a coherent reason for the changes.

    Take the dropping of min/max buttons: Who is this for? For advanced users? Were they hobbled by existence of the buttons?

    Or is it for newbs? Well, how is a noob supposed to know (and have memorized) the keyboard combinations? It used to be that the keyboard combos were nicely listed in the window control menu accessible by a button on the left top corner, but, conveniently, they're dropping that too.

    What happened to discoverability, and allowing users to have simple, easy, direct methods of operation instead of forcing them to become power users from the outset and fiddling with mouse gestures?

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    1. Re:Who's this for? by Knuckles · · Score: 1

      Apple's touch interfaces showed that experienced users and total noobs alike can take very easily to gestures. I think that everyone has kind of given up on the traditional desktop computer, Linux will never outgrow a few percent of users there, whatever we do. Ubuntu and Gnome clearly aim for device classes of the future with less entrenched competition, and if you read the design docs by the Gnome and Ubuntu folks you would not write stuff like "there is no coherent reason", since actually is well laid out. Whether it's well executed and communicated is another matter.

      --
      "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
    2. Re:Who's this for? by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Well, for touch devices, sure. And it's highly natural.

      For a normal desktop with a mouse? Less so.

      Part of the problem seems to be how Gno-buntu seem to want to force one paradigm for all computing devices, small and big.

      For me, the fact of GNOME finally relenting after years of lecturing users on the spatial file browser seems a cautionary tale.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    3. Re:Who's this for? by Knuckles · · Score: 1

      I appreciate your point, but see it less gloomy. For example, the maximize button in metacity allowed to maximize in all dimensions (left click), vertically (middle click), or horizontally (right click). Now you can do similar things by drag to top (maximize), and drag to the left and right screen borders to tile. I don't see the former as more intuitive than the latter in a mouse-driven environment. In fact I think that the principle of dragging has more potential to be extended to richer interactions while keeping the basic metaphor predictable and simple, something that I think would have been difficult to achieve by the older method. The window placement keyboard shortcuts are already more varied than they ever were in metacity (http://askubuntu.com/questions/28086/keyboard-shortcuts-in-unity)

      --
      "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
    4. Re:Who's this for? by AigariusDebian · · Score: 1

      BTW: you can try the Gnome 3 way now - just double click the window title bar to maximize and to 'minimize' click the middle mouse button on the title bar. Instead of minimizing the window will be sent to the back to the visual stack, which is what you want anyway most of the time. Yes, the discoverability suffers a bit, but the usability, especially for touch interfaces, skyrockets.

  209. i was going to buy an alienware pc by Oriumpor · · Score: 1

    and in a startling turn of events i'll be buying an apple. gnome is my interface of choice, but if the future of the ui is braindead i'm going to aqua.

  210. What is GNOME? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've heard of windows and mac os, but what is this gnome?

  211. Open OS by sparrowcz3 · · Score: 1

    C'mon guys, we are on an open OS, if it sucks, we can switch to XFCE or LXDE :) Not KDE because thats where is imho the new GNOME 3 heading towards... and we know we don't want that :)

  212. You're an idiot. by Otis_INF · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but I can't put it in another way. Here's why:

    Option1: LEFT Click a button.
    Option2: Right-click on title bar, then LEFT click option in context menu
    Option3: Press ALT-F9

    Which one is easier, option1, with 1 left click, or option 2 which forces you to fiddle with a menu and right-clicking? You say: option 2. Sorry... what?

    Oh, of course, minimizing isn't used, right, you should move the window to another workspace by using... right-click, and then left click option in context menu. One LEFT click is easy, it's deterministic and it's well known.

    In windows I use 2 monitors and ultramon. It adds (!) 2 buttons to every window bar: one for moving the window to the other monitor and one for maximizing the window across two monitors. No offense to you, but they are very very easy and add usability to using window objects on a desktop.

    --
    Never underestimate the relief of true separation of Religion and State.
    1. Re:You're an idiot. by Laebshade · · Score: 1

      It's easy enough to call people names.

      I like the changes, you don't. It may take more work (one more click, a little more mouse movement), but I like the fact that, to me, moving windows to different workspaces offers better window management than minimizing.

  213. Gnome is a drone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gnome is lame, no comparison to KDE, It's the fisher price of user environments and tools.

  214. GNOME does the DUMBEST shit by cfalcon · · Score: 1

    Do you remember when they took away the ability to have a fucking URL bar? You couldn't browse your own fucking disk.

    Now this. Why the FUCK would I not want to minimize? What I need to generate like 16 fucking desktops every time I want a blank one?

    The real question is, why? And the answer is, as usual, that they are full of themselves. As per normal, there won't be some actual fucking GUI to fix the GUI, you'll have to at MINIMUM edit an oddly named text file, but much more likely you'll have to set some bizarro-world setting. Just one more fucking thing to undo about your new Linux distroes.

    Piece of shit devs.

  215. Perception vs. reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This post sums up how many people think about Linux very well indeed, and it's such a shame. That perception isn't helped when people see posts like this.

    I think the first paragraph sums it up nicely - an insulting jibe about the way 'nix-ers all (obviously) feel themselves to be massively superior. It's not fair, and it's not helpful. It is true though, that they (we're) mostly a bunch of geeks, and that probably has quite a lot to do with the way UE has been neglected for such a long time.

    Points 1 and 3 (hardware compatibility is poor, and display config is difficult) are very, very true. Or rather, they were, 8-10 years ago. (Maybe a little more recently in the case of more libre-happy distributions, which are mainly the domain of enthusiasts anyway). Nearly all modern hardware is compatible with nearly all modern versions of linux - something that's made a great deal of progress in the last few years, admittedly. There is more to be done, but the myth that getting a new box up and running under linux is a slog is just that - a myth, from a bygone era. And display settings are now just as easy as Windows ;-) (In fact, the configuration box I have looks suspiciously similar...)

    On point 2, it's worth noting that the likes of Ubuntu Software Centre, along with extensive (really, quite huge) repositories put e.g. Apple App Store to shame - and I'm not really sure what you're talking about in the case of Windows. Whilst it's true that, for a new developer, the art of "making an installer" seems pretty obscure, I think this is actually just because we've had our expectations set so that we assume there's more to it than there is - expectations set mostly by Windows where you'd never dream of putting a new program on your computer without first running some MSI file. It's worth noting that all you need to do to install Firefox is unzip it somewhere, and hey presto! It's done!

    I won't argue with 3b and 4, because I think it's pretty fair to say that Linux is rooted deep in Geek Culture, and that probably does put a lot of people off - but it's not about to change any time soon.

    On point 5 though, I would say that maybe this is a good thing. When I download software from a repository, I can be pretty certain that it's well tested, trusted, and open-source. What does that mean to me? That means that I'm not just running some 3rd party's binaries and preying to myself that my anti-virus will catch it if there's something bad. It means I don't think it's going to crash my computer. And it means that I can read that reviews of the software, and know what I'm downloading before I do.

    I think it'd be worth you downloading the latest version of Ubuntu and giving it a whirl. You might be pleasantly surprised by the overall user experience. Sure, it's not an iPad, but it's a lot more polished than I think you expect - and with the emergence of Unity and Gnome 3, that's going to get a whole lot better very quickly.

  216. Similar problem with OS X by randomsearch · · Score: 1

    Having switched to OS X a few months back, I have to say that one of the great advantages of using Ubuntu was the GNOME minimise and maximise functionality: it was so simple, and keeping a desktop tidy was easy.

    I've found with OS X that the screen is quickly cluttered. Minimising a window sends it to a rather strange "minimised windows" area on the right-hand side of the dock, where a window preview rather than the actual application icon is displayed - making it difficult to relocate and quickly filling the dock.

    It seems that the simplicity of Gnome's minimise functionality is being lost here. Which is a shame, as it's a clear win over OS X for me. I always appreciate how simple everything is on my Gnome desktop at work.

    Perhaps they're thinking of a more "modal" interface like iOS (and to a lesser extent, OS X with its window management style), but I'm fairly sure the modal versus multitasking debate has been had before, and multitasking won.

    RS.

  217. Re:How many windows do you have minimized rignt no by justsomebody · · Score: 1

    i always preferred shade instead of minimize, but it is still kinda the same. i also had utter repulsive reaction after trying shell in fedora 14 (old one). even more, i was upset about min/max removal. then i actually tried damn thing and i love it. the only thing that didn't bother me was removing desktop icons. 3 years now, i'm doing that my self as i hate unorganized clutter which desktop files bring.

    with dynamic workspaces.. it somehow really works without minimizing and smart maximizing with mouse works much better than maximize ever did. i'd suggest you try it, there is a live cd on gnome3 and see.

    btw. you can still minimize with keyboard shortcut or right title menu

    --
    Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
  218. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by justsomebody · · Score: 1

    lol, your comment just shows you never used linux. working out of the box? windows? LOOOOOOOL, one word... drivers. i won't say that about mac as it comes with dedicated drivers for its hardware, but there is still software which can't be easily installed in one move. but still, my linux installation finishes 1 minute after dvd is ejected. including all software i need for my work, i actually spent 10 minutes to make one rpm which specifies dependencies (aka. all software i need). install that and everything installs.

    why not delegating? good luck using two different toolkits in your software. ever tried that before?

    --
    Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
  219. Hope detroit dosn't find out about this. by pcjunky · · Score: 1

    If the auto industry were adopt this then every 10 years or so we would have our driving controls changed.

    "That steering wheel clutters the drivers space too much We decided to replace it with a much smaller joystick. Gets rid of the gas pedal too. Want to speed up or slow down. All this can be done with the joystick. Just push forward to accelerate and pull back to slow down. Brakes? now a trigger on the stick. Just think you feet won't have to do anything now!"

    In the real world these things don't change because what we have works. A totally unnecessary change if you ask me. I don't mind making the UI more artful if you don't compromise it's functionality doing it, which this clearly does. Minimize and Maximize are so common a task in any windowing system that they deserve a one click solution, which the three buttons provide. Making the user do more work (mouse movements, more clicks) is a very bad idea.

     

  220. I never minimize anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just switch to a different (virtual) desktop when I run out of space.

  221. Option/feature removal has been going on since v2 by strredwolf · · Score: 1

    First, half the features in Gnome 1.x go in Gnome 2. Then the steady removal of options and features. Now they're *)!@#( with the window features that are standard on all windowing systems in the major OS's?!?

    I'm glad I already moved onto KDE. I couldn't hack Gnome Option/feature Removal Syndrome (GOFRS).

    --

    --
    # Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
    $Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
  222. All joking aside... by mkozusnik · · Score: 0

    I switched from KDE to Gnome when KDE tried to make their UI look windows-like. Besides the stability I gain with Linux, I use it because of the simplicity of the UI. I have grown to like Gnome 2. When I see the screenshots of Gnome 3, it makes me want for another UI. I don't want an windows or apple clone. I need a desktop that I can use comfortably for work-related tasks. I don't want or need fluff. I'm sure I'm not alone. We don't use Gnome because it's pretty, we use it because it's comfortable and simple. I'll try it in a VM here in a few minutes, but I can almost guarantee that I'll be switching to another UI shortly. I would also like to hear from the creators of Ubuntu on this one. If Gnome 3 will become the de facto desktop, and Ubuntu sees many of their users switching to another Distro, how long will it be before they give us what we want back?

  223. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Malc · · Score: 1

    Dude, I was downloading kernel updates to floppy to take home every other day at the university and updating my slackware install on my DX4-100 longer ago than I wish to admit. I had enough of that shit after a decade. If it's still turning tricks for you, then great, I'm glad you're having fun.

  224. I was indifferent to Gnome vs. KDE before... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    ...but I might become a KDE fan now.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  225. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Malc · · Score: 1

    BTW, I just wiped the original XP install on my old work laptop and installed Windows 7, a Dell M60 from 2004. The only issue I had was a finding an inf hack to allow newer nVidia drivers to enable Aero. Don't talk to me about how much of my live I've wasted on X11.

  226. wow, now i'm glad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that i switched to awesome three days ago.

    these things make me believe that the guys responsible for these "changes" are actually paid by m$ to destroy a project that sort of worked for many years.

  227. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by allo · · Score: 0

    gconf ist horrible. have you looked at the backend? xml, xml-schemas, etc. the frontend windows like registry ... bad enough.

    best config format for most things: .ini Files.

    Windowmanager:
    sawfish was pretty ok. metacity is crap. i haven't tried mutter long enough to say something. But there are a lot of good WMs to choose from, i.e. icewm (without panel), openbox, etc.
    Every one of them is better than metacity. crappy default settings, crappy multi-monitor handling, etc.

  228. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sadly, I may sound like a troll but, a lot of it is basement dweller egotistical bullshit.

    People who barely have control of their lives yield power over a project or over a community tend to make insanely bad decisions, tend to be incredibly egocentric, and tend to believe their opinions are statements from god himself (which they believe themselves to be)

    I run into this a lot online. Opensource development is not immune to this, sadly, the only reason windows and OSX havent made drastic changes is that they have money on the line, and too many drastic changes at once will make people hate you. Microsoft learned this with Vista. Though a good chunk of that was due to the fact the OS hogged up 90% of the system resources just to run on a system of that era.

    I prefer XFCE, you say it doesnt have traction, I say it can have traction.

    To be honest, I think as much as people were giving Ubuntu flak for abandoning the centerpiece to their OS, I think it was for good reason. They cannot rely on a project that makes short sighted, egotistical decisions based on the say of one or two people who see themselves as the final say of what people want, and that people WILL like what THEY like. Gnome started to fall downhill shortly after 2.1

    That's the biggest flaw to opensource projects, once they hit a peak, they start overdeveloping, and all of the little control freaks start inputting their views as to what will make things better, despite what the people actually using the software want.

    Firefox is another great example of this kind of mentality. I started using it all the way back when it was called phoenix. It was unstable, but fast, much faster and reliable than the alternatives (mozilla, the AOL version, and konqueror, and I think something gnome used too) once it hit version 1.5, it was stable, quick, and reliable, and that was the version that ate Microsoft's lunch.

    Then it got popular, then with 2.0 it got overdeveloped. Started adding unnecessary features and bloat while ignoring security problems and long standing bugs.

    Now with 4.0 and a version 5.0 on the horizon (WTF) it's looking like an insane mess. version 3.0 is already bad enough as it stands. Now they're doing a "me too" that IE did with them, and are copying chrome.

    I'm sorry, my web browser should not be using 2 gb of ram with two tabs open, with no addons loaded after being open for a few days. that isnt a feature, that's just terrible coding. 1.5 didnt do that, or at least, if it did, it could be disabled. You cannot fix this issue in 3 nor do the devs have any wishes to do so.

    Now gnome is going that route. oh boy.

    Next they'll create their own 3D renderer, throw out compiz, and it will use up insane amounts of resources, but will be better in their eyes because someone's buddy made it.

    pathetic.

  229. Space. by dangerousbeans · · Score: 0

    From the screenshots you can see they've cleaned up the interface a bit, but they've not actually used any of this space - the menu still hangs below where buttons used to be.

    This has room for improvement. Please copy what Google has done with Chrome and stop being academic.

  230. openbox by cas2000 · · Score: 1

    i'm a gnome user (in that i use the gnome panel[1] and most of the GUI apps i use are gnome) but i switched to the openbox window manager several years ago because the "standard" gnome window managers metacity and mutter absolutely suck. even worse than the software is the attitude ("design philosophy" if you want to be fancy) behind them - that taking away features is a Good Thing because users are too stupid to understand them and easily confused by choices.

    this latest idiocy is just an extension of the initial practical reason i started using openbox - middle-click and right-click on the maximise button for vertical-only and horizontal-only maximise of a window. IIRC, after some argument a few years ago, the metacity devs agreed to add (or keep, i can't remember) the vert-max and horiz-max features, but refused to enable them via middle- or right- click on the max button....the ONLY way to access them is to manually configure the keyboard bindings to assign a key to them.

    the gnome terminal, actually vte, also has an annoying broken-by-design bug of sending eight up/down arrow keys to the application running in the terminal when the scroll wheel is moved. the devs flat out refuse to acknowledge that this causes problems for programs like mutt and vi, and refuse to fix, and messes up middle-button pasting (because the scroll wheel is usually also the middle button, and it's almost impossible to click it without scrolling it a little at first) - even though several patches have been submitted over the years that the bug has been in the gnome bugzilla. because of this, i use mrxvt rather than gnome terminal - which, of course, has its own bugs but at least the dev doesn't suffer from the Gnome Developer Attitude Problem.

    gnome has a lot of good software, but it also has a lot of rage-inducing idiocy like the above.

    [1] the gnome panel annoys me too - buggy bloated crap. i've looked around for something to replace it with but haven't found one yet.

  231. Never use 'em... by cyrus0101 · · Score: 1

    ALT+SPACE, X

  232. Re:Windows? by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

    Yes, but once you learn it you're going to be faced with the simple reality that your keyboard is not the only one in the world. This has two major consequences: you'll have trouble using others' keyboards, and your keyboard will be a pain for everyone else. Further, like it or not, you will lose productivity during the time you take to learn. Getting used to a new method of doing things is precisely everyone's problem with what GNOME's doing—you're just not being told that your favourite OS/distro/WM combination is now Dvorak-only.

    And to make matters worse, Dvorak hasn't been proven to be an improvement in studies, either, much like this change.

    --
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  233. Blame the display people? by ajdub · · Score: 1

    I really can't help but wonder how much of this insanity is being driven by the display manufacturers who keep squashing vertical space right on out of computer displays.

  234. I'll use KDE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll use KDE

  235. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    your standards of "good shape" seem to be inconsistent... is it a "good" desktop, or a "popular" desktop? because currently, gnome is quite popular, and if you don't like the new gnome, than you'll think that the latest XFCE is pretty good. basically, writing a popular GUI is beyond something that can be accomplished by a community with people with different opinions and tastes, when most of the linux community was drawn to it by its flexibility and customizability. and if there was a rather popular one, you probably wouldn't like it yourself, leading to this funny situation where you say no desktop environments are in good shape, while a number of them actually are

    ps while the windows registry has 10s of 1000s of entries with no descriptions in around 6 compressed / encrypted files, gconf has 100s of entries in separate plain-text xml files, with descriptions on each key... not really the same, and no monkeys necessary

  236. Bad decision by jrtayloriv · · Score: 1

    Forcing a confusing and unexpected MAJOR user interface change on all of your users is not the right way to do things. You should make it optional for a very long time and let people opt in/out of becoming accustomed to it, even if you think you're sure that it's better to not have the min/max buttons.

    What's going to happen if you suddenly force it on people, is that a very large portion of the people who are installing Linux for the first time (and who are already in alien territory) are going to be suddenly presented with an interface where they can't even figure out how to minimize and maximize a window. They don't need more confusion. They need to have the transition from Windows to Linux be as smooth as possible, not cool and different. They need to be able to use their computers.

    What is the benefit of doing this? People that actually care about the min/max buttons can choose to remove them, and people that don't even think about them can continue not even thinking about them, and be able to just use their computer to watch their Sock'em boppers Videos on Youtube without a hassle.

    The default configuration for the most widely used Linux desktop system is not the right place to be pushing a cool new form of user interface.

  237. I don't mind change, but make it configurable by rklrkl · · Score: 2

    By all means change the GNOME UI - drop whatever you want - but please give it as much configurability as possble (even if these are hidden as "advanced options"). Firefox 4 makes the blunder of removing the status bar (which is fine if they want that as a default) but has no way of configuring it back without an extension (bad move). It sounds like GNOME 3 are going the same way - removing stuff and not letting users configure it back.

    Also, make configurability obvious - one late-in-the-day GNOME 2 change was to make GNOME Terminal flash its cursor by default (which I hate because it's very distracting) and then remove the "flashing cursor" option from the preferences of GNOME Terminal! GNOME devs claim it was because they intro'ed a global config option for flashing carets/cursors so where is that config? It's in the *Keyboard* config tool would you believe it - nutty beyond belief.

    BTW, drag to top of screen to maximise is an *appalling* UI decision 'borrowed" from Windows (whenever I'm in Windows, I keep accidentally maximising dragged windows because of this brain-dead default action). Next we'll see the "jump to top or bottom of document if you drift left or right when dragging a vertical scrollbar button" (another disastrous UI feature of Windows that I always get hit by when in Windows).

  238. Is it really so hard... by Dakiraun · · Score: 1

    Whether this change will be good or bad will be for history to judge. What I don't get is when they make changes like this, why is there no provision to still support the old feature as a "classic" or optional feature? Is it really so hard to include that? I use minimize constantly to get a window out of the way when working on stuff. Without it, there's going to be nothing be extreme clutter on my desktop. That means I'll have to switch to a different window manager all because some developer(s) were too lazy to include the option to still have minimize. That's just sad.

  239. Gnome becomes elitist, loses market share by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, did they actually test-drive this with an "average user"?

    1) removal of the Windows List or Dock: while it might assist in helping the operator stay focused on the specific task-at-hand, many of us actually use the computer for its multi-tasking abilities. This change now makes it less efficient for use.

    2) removal of the minimize/maximize buttons: similar problem to #1. I minimize windows all the time so that I can change my focus to another task. Now, instead of a single button to accomplish this, I have to use multiple button clicks and/or keyboard input. Again.....much less efficient unless you are someone who only ever does one thing at a time.

    3) removal of "themes" and customization support: "Do it our way or leave" mentality, which (IMHO) further hints that they didn't really test this with the average user.

    Overall, I see this as a "bad move", which will most likely drive people away from Gnome. Thankfully, many slashdot users have already provided other windows managers i can try out to find Gnome's replacement.
    So, similar to what happened when Red Hat decided to stop coding for the desktop user, I will now find a replacement windows manager to do what I need my "desktop" to do.

  240. this shouldn't really matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    true linux users don't own mice, after all (shortcuts ftw!)

  241. Minimize really is useless by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    You never want to see the things on your desktop?

    If a desktop is such an important thing that people might sometimes want to move stuff out of its way, then people ought to be able to select the desktop window like any other window, and have it come to the front.

    There is no reason for desktop to be a special case. You either want to look at that particular directory in your file manager, or you don't. If you don't want to look at it, close it. If you do want to look at it, open it.

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  242. Right-Click Title Bar by hohokus · · Score: 1

    ..maximize / minimize / etc are still there.

  243. Gnome probably isn't for them.. by tohuvahbohu · · Score: 1

    If anyone would want to convert away from Linux for something trivial like removing a minimize button, maybe Linux isn't for them. I don't even use the button, just the keyboard shortcut. Anyone using this? No. No. Yes. Okay, only a few, let's get rid of it. We're about efficiency here not catering to the least common denominator.

  244. Solution in search of a problem by Bent+Spoke · · Score: 1
    Er, so the horizontal real estate required remains unchanged? (close X and window title is still there)

    I could see this being useful if the change was to dynamically unhide the window bar, since we're all being forced into widescreen displays, but as is, it comes of as a "solution in search of a problem"...

  245. Looks good by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

    Looks good, but then again I've always needed the max and min buttons. It will come down how quick you can adapt.

  246. Steve Jobs runs GNOME? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I knew he "hated buttons" but minimize too? *sigh* Is there anything that the Apple fanboys and Microsoft can't ruin for us? ;)

  247. Give the users the option to put it back by apexwm · · Score: 1

    Hopefully users have the ability to enable the buttons again. I know we want to innovate and come up with new features, but PLEASE please please don't take away something permanently. Give users the choice! Let's not make the same mistakes of Microsoft!!!!!!!

  248. Next to go... by JaydenT · · Score: 1

    ...the mouse pointer.

  249. Re:Gnome always had this problem of bad decisions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I can clarify #5 for him, even though I only started using GNOME around version 1.2 or 1.4 - in that time I've waved a sad goodbye to "we don't prescribe a window manager, the user should feel free to choose anything that works with GNOME" (I used Enlightenment 0.15/16 and WindowMaker off and on at this time) -- followed by the endorsement of Saw[something] (Sawmill, maybe?) which was forked (I think) and renamed Sawfish, which was abandoned for Metacity (which didn't really do anything different as far as I, the end user, could tell - it just meant I had to figure out how to port the Crux and Helix-color themes forward because they didn't work anymore... or wait for somebody else to... I did continue to run Sawfish secretly for a while but abandoned it eventually when GNOME compatibility features started to be implemented in Metacity only.) Compiz had a very rocky start as far as GNOME compatibility, but was eventually adopted and formed some sort of uneasy symbiosis. Now there's Gnome Shell's WM (is "Mutter" the name of the WM or the name of the toolkit only?) and Unity, which looks similar enough to fool you until you actually go to use it.

    I like a lot of the Gnome Shell concept, and it seemed neat when I tried it out a few months ago, but stuff was kind of in flux at that time and I put off switching over entirely. I may or may not use Gnome Shell (if I even have the option without compiling it - it seems to have been removed from the Natty alpha repository recently... I tried Unity and man, it is definitely not as useful as Gnome Shell.) We'll see - I'll probably end up with E17 (or 1.0 or whatever they're going to call it) if I don't become a fan of the final release.

  250. Re:Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given commodore's extreme penny pinching, I'd like to see what 'mistress' he manages to hire at the price he'll pay. (may be more of a 'mister'ess)

  251. Gnome is a dead project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's becoming worst day by day. Instead of fixing Brasero, they make the DE worst.

    It's time KDE takes the lead. BTW Gnome had lost it's motive once the QT toolkit became free.

  252. Introducing "DOCWannabe", lmao! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LMAO! DocHoncho? No, no... it's "DocWannabe"!

    http://developers.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2025178&cid=35442390

    At his "finest" (not): Minus his PHD in Psychiatry, a license to practice it, and lacking years to decades of professsional practice as well, of course (as well as lacking a formal examination in professional environs to administer his "sidewalk surgeon of /, insta-snap 'prognosis/diagnosis'" too!)

    APK

    1. Re:Introducing "DOCWannabe", lmao! by DocHoncho · · Score: 1

      Nobody asked for your opinion troll

      --
      Celebrity worship is a poor substitute for Deity worship and costs more to boot.
  253. Me? Troll?? U trolled 1st, "alzheimer-man" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject-line fool. You trolled me 1st, or is your puny brain that dull that you cannot recall this -> http://developers.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2025178&cid=35442390 ?

    APK

    P.S.=> "Great BIG 'Doc Honcho'" seems to be able to dish-it-out, but he SURELY cannot take it... lol! apk

  254. Re:Windows? by pinkushun · · Score: 1

    Putting this forth as a real consideration, to anyone reading: Who uses those widgets anyway?

    Okay, fair enough, I'm sure many do - from years of habit, muscle memory, and the visual gravitation towards those widgets. Why are these widgets still necessary, though?

    Fitt's law proves that a widget is easier to click, proportional to it's surface area. Given their small size, it explains why I find them cumbersome. I am more likely to:

    - use keyboard shortcuts
    - Alt + Space / Alt + rmb to access the context menu
    - rmb the window drag-bar to access the ctm

    Alt + Space is the most universal, and a great choice when jumping between different OS's and DM's.
    Hey, I don't care if they keep the buttons, I just don't think I'll notice even if they do remove them.

    +1 for speaking your mind not as AC :-D