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GNOME 3.2 Released

supersloshy writes "Today marks the release of the latest edition of the GNOME Desktop for Linux-based operating systems. There are numerous fixes and improvements in this release such as smaller title bars (for small screens), the integration of GNOME Contacts and GNOME Documents for easy data management, web application integration, many more configurable settings, and other updates such as a more unified appearance and better chat integration."

3 of 205 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Where the Hell is panel decoupled from shell? by DShard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Gnome is a tablet environment. Without the touch.

  2. Re:For those of us who prefer a video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sweet! For so long, I've suffered the inconvenience of clicking once on the taskbar. Now that tedious click is replaced by the much simpler (hold ALT)-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab [fuck, I missed it, keep going] -tab-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab-tab(release ALT). This makes my life so much easier. What pure unadulterated genius. Thank you, oh GUIcrafters of Gnome. Your legendary names shall ring down the halls of history for all time.

  3. Re:Go away, geezers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    o it's developed entirely in the open without a single corporate overlord

    What is Red Hat again?

    o it's trying out bleeding-edge design concepts instead of rehashing old interfaces and patterns

    So you like being treated like a Guinea Pig??

    o it's successfully targeting non-geek users AND proving quite usable for technical users.

    non-geeks already have choosen the apple or microsoft way, because these have something gnome 3.2 still doesn't have: IT WORKS and the desktop IS INVISIBLE (Read: designed to help you, not get in your way)

    KDE fails the non-geek user test - it's both obtuse and verbose.

    True

    XFCE is like a crappy, featureless GNOME 2/Windows mashup with a hint of SharpE.

    Is minimalist, true, but at least you look at this and you already know where to go from it.

    GNOME 2 is like a weird Windows/OS X mashup - functional, but nothing new there.

    And that's was their beauty: It was _FUNCTIONAL_, and at the same time, well balanced for non-geeks users.

    Unity is slick and crufty at the same time (quite the feat), and its direction is dictated by Canonical.

    But is still more functional than gnome-shell and quite clear for non-geeks users. Probably is what gnome shell should 've been instead of the crap nowadays is.

    Blackbox, Fvwm et al aren't desktop environments.

    They are, but they are minimalist and require the user be a true geek to configure them to the user liking.

    All you people criticizing GNOME 3 are doing exactly what your parents did when you tried to get them to use Linux years ago - holding on to what you know, fighting change, refusing to let old habits die or to see the good in a *different* way of working.

    When the 9X% of your users says something is wrong, then something must be wrong... The problem is that the Gnome guys aren't known to hear anyone that don't praise their viewpoint of things. Kinda Ulrich Dreppers but more polite.

    The GNOME team is actually trying something new, and that seems rare in the open source world. With the amount of vitriol being thrown at GNOME's developers, it's not really surprising that we seem doomed to keep cloning commercial software so that we can have it for free or tweak it for our piddling little edge-case requirements.

    Then again, is not something _NEW_ they are doing, what these guys are trying to do is pushing the "smartphone" paradigm onto PC's. That is. Their ideas are not new: they were invented some years ago and introduced with the iphone. The problem is that our PC's aren't I-devices, but i think they don't want to hear that.

    Turn in your geek cards, old dudes, from someone who was using Linux way back in the days of Slackware 4.

    So you're and oldfag huh? well... I'm not that old, but at least i know the difference between a phone, a computer and a console.... I think that's way more than the gnome guys know about these nowadays... and maybe neither you, given what you wrote.