Linux Mint 12 to Blend GNOMEs 2 & 3
dartttt writes "Linux Mint 12 'Lisa' will come with its own customized desktop and it will be based on Gnome 3. The core desktop will be based on a series of Gnome Shell extensions called 'MGSE' (Mint Gnome Shell Extensions) that will provide a layer on top of Gnome 3. MGSE also includes additional extensions such as a media player indicator, and multiple enhancements to Gnome 3. Thus Linux Mint 12 will be more like a hybrid desktop balancing traditional desktop and new modern technologies."
I didn't see any mention of "blending" gnome 2 into the new version. As far as I can tell, it will be a customized version of gnome 3, and gnome 2 will not be installed at all.
will this be available up stream for oh say Ubuntu or will i have to switch distro? perhaps there could even be a unity variant.
---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
Why don't they just fork the GNOME project into small and large form factors? That might be a misnomer - its more like close and far displays, because you would probably like a Gnome 3 style interface when you are 10 - 15' away from the screen. Hopefully the devs working on Unity and Gnome realize that end users just want customization. Nothing wrong with introducing start menu search and OSX style docks but let the user decide how they want their desktop configured, because you never know what they want. I use XFCE right now, but the lack of a built in global application search drives me insane, and the inability to get a Windows 7 / Unity esque task bar where I can pin applications rather than have duplicate quick launch / active windows buttons is a feature I miss. The inability to drag / drop apps to a panel is also extremely cumbersome. Then again, you can't really complain about all of the X desktop environments because you could just go fork the project and fix them yourselves if you didn't like something.
Goatse. Don't click
looks pretty cool. I'll be ditching ubuntu on all our production servers for linux mint.
I will be moving desktops as soon as this comes out. This is the best thing about Gnome 3/Shell it's so configurable as it's written in Javascript. Needs to be as I want my normal desktop back.
Srsly, it's a stale gag
the year of the Linux HYBRID Desktop !
This links to goatse
Goatse
I herd you like linux on the desktop, so I put an unprecedented number of dubiously thought out desktops on your linux.
Unfortunately, that makes about as much sense as the current state of gnome and gnome-derived desktops...
Gnome 3 is shiny, elegant and modern looking. It’s a sleek desktop but it comes with a few problems:
[...] So with this in mind, Gnome 3 in Linux Mint 12 needs to let you interact with your computer in two different ways: the traditional way, and the new way, and it’s up to you to decide which way you want to use.
For this, we developed “MGSE” (Mint Gnome Shell Extensions), which is a desktop layer on top of Gnome 3 that makes it possible for you to use Gnome 3 in a traditional way. You can disable all components within MGSE to get a pure Gnome 3 experience, or you can enable all of them to get a Gnome 3 desktop that is similar to what you’ve been using before. Of course you can also pick and only enable the components you like to design your own desktop.
The main features in MGSE are:
This post contains no rudeness or derision of any kind. All arguments are friendly. Terms and exclusions may apply.
So pretty much all I use a GUI for is having multiple terminal windows open at once and being able to have access to a non-masochistic web browser. For this, I need a clean and lightweight UI. GNOME 3 works just fine in that regard. Other than "because it's different", why does everyone hate it?
Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
I've been slowly switching to Linux Mint on my machines and I've found some pretty annoying bugs with the Gnome version of Mint that I didn't find in Ubuntu or Debian. It seems to me that the Mint devs may have already done too many customizations to the desktop. In some cases, I've moved to LXDE because it's more stable.
So, we'll see how this turns out, but there has to be a healthy community of devs around MGSE to deal with all the problems that will no doubt arise...as Gnome 3 begins to drift further away from the Gnome 2.x codebase, MGSE is gonna need to do more heavy lifting to keep everything working smoothly.
Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
Goatse warning.
You only altered your nick by a character and posted the same message and link?.. I expect more from trolls. At least change up the wording or something. This is sheer laziness.
Hey, look! It's Bono's brother.
gnome-tweak-tool, despite being well out of the way, still offers very little in the way of customization.
customization requires people to put on a developer hat and write 'extensions'.
Despite all this time no one has restored 'search by window title' functionality (there is one, but it doesn't interact with the window preview view, which is still well behind the state of KDE or compiz). We also still don't have a 'preview all windows belonging to a single app' despite the lengths of having a 'dock' group windows together that provides an intuitive trigger for such a behavior (this behavior is in KDE and compiz).
I honestly would not mind the experience given a rich set of themes and those two particular behaviors added. On the flipside, I do know many people consider the overhead of the graphical strategy to be too much, and being told an even more resource intensive software OpenGL rendering engine is going to be the answer is just putting salt in the wound.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
has everyone suddenly started using the desktop in a weird and wonderful way? i just use a menu to launch applications, and keep track of what's open in a taskbar. what was so wrong with that?
Again with the goatse? We get it guy, you're edgy and cool because you're ten years late to a meme.
Hey, look! It's Bono's brother.
That links to goatse. Don't click! If you actually want to see what it looks like, check out the blog post.
>>>>>>>> WARNING!!!!!!
As a warning to all, the link in the above post is disgusting and shocking. It pretty much ruined my day.
WARNING !!!!!
My habit of opening new pages in tabs that don't focus immediately has saved me this time. Thanks for the warning!
I ditched Fedora when they introduced Gnome 3 as it simply does not run properly on two screens
and switched to Linux Mint.
I use my laptop's screen and an external monitor configured as separate X servers. This setup works
perfectly with Gnome 2 and is totally useless with Gnome 3.
So, anyone know if the next Linux Mint will support this?
i did not like kde-4.x when it was released and still dont like it, i dont like gnome-3.x either, if it was not for lightweight window managers like IceWM, Openbox, DWM & etc... i would abandon any enthusiasm i had left for computers
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
Stop posting "What can possibly go wrong?" on all articles that has anything to do with biotechnology. This is an article that deserves that tag if any.
Mint and its devs have had a bit of thought, and unlike some others I could mention actually have a core idea on what to give users. But then Mint has for quite a long time been a very good distro specifically for end users. And frankly, Linux needs at least one to be so.
So, in the next round of new Distro updates, Mint will again top the distrowatch charts, and deservedly so. The other distro's need to start taking note, becasue they think they are leading and others will follow. In truth, Mint is leading because Mint's process and view on users is ballpark correct, and many of distro's are off target.
As for Ubuntu and Unity. Well. Not much to be said there. They need to learn the lesson but seem to be determined to drop themselves down the distrowatch chart.
We`re all equal
I actually see that the way Mint is now is how Ubuntu was when it was just beginning to gain in popularity. Give Mint time and eventually they will take the #1 spot from Ubuntu. I only hope that the Mint team doesn't eventually stop listening to users the way Canonical did.
I'd rather have Tom Dickson tell us whether GNOME 2 and 3 blend or not...
"I'm not anti-anything, I'm anti-everything, it fits better." - Sole
Can I just say that, despite all the Gnome/ Unity bickering, it's nice to occasionally see Linux distro stories in Slashdot again and to read comments by users who use and embrace open source software at least occasionally (whatever their desktop preference). :)
Just wait till the Gnome developers change the gnome-shell API that causes Mint's extension to break in a thousand pieces. You know it's going to happen because most of the core Gnome coders are arrogant assholes and won't tolerate an end-run around their design decisions.
I actually see that the way Mint is now is how Ubuntu was when it was just beginning to gain in popularity. Give Mint time and eventually they will take the #1 spot from Ubuntu. I only hope that the Mint team doesn't eventually stop listening to users the way Canonical did.
Mint's gain in popularity probably had a lot more to do with the fact that it bundled proprietary software, non-free drivers, etc. by default, since it was basically Ubuntu with different themes in the beginning. Now, I expect them to gain from Ubuntu's shift to Unity and (possibly) every other major distro's commitment to Gnome 3's new interface. So we'll see, but it really doesn't matter much...Debian-based systems are all good and very customizable, it's good to just have such a huge and healthy ecosystem.
Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
No, Mint userbase jumped over 40% because of Canonical's poorly designed UI
Skip the backwards, get on to KDE
Flamebait? No, not necessarily.
See "Sabayon 7 Review / Overview Kde +Gnome" at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RyBsUrxxEYk
> In some cases, I've moved to LXDE because it's more stable.
LXDE is a great option for a more traditional desktop. It is fast, light, and works very well. It may not be as pretty as Gnome 3, and it may lack some of the "social integration" of KDE 4, but it gets the job done. I use it on a number of light systems and in all my VMs.
Well... untested Debian Squeeze that needs to be debugged from scratch.
Why don't we quit mucking around and just go back to Debian? I finally figured that out.
Periodically we seem to see a movement of, "I learned a new language and now we should rewrite everything using it!" It seems related to the second-system effect.
Since 1993, I've noticed this on Linux happen during peaks in the hype curves for C++, Perl, Python, Guile Scheme, Java, and now Javascript. If we count programming frameworks as languages, there are many more instances including the original GTK objects. Some of these started in the Unix or Linux space, while others started outside and spread in. In my view, Java is the worst of the worst, in terms of trying to rewrite everything non-Java as if it is curing the world's ills.
How do you know that isn't the default Mint 12 screensaver?
What is the obsession with Windows 95 being the gold standard on which all desktop environments need to be based???
I for one really like Gnome 3 because it is finally no longer a Windows 95 clone like Gnome 2. I'm sorry to people whose first computer used Windows 95 or any of the other Windows 95 based desktops (like Windows 98, 2000, XP, Vista, 7, KDE or Gnome 2.x), folks there are other ways to use a computer.
So, Mint took Gnome 3, and made it look like Windows 95 again, freaking great!.
What happens when you combine brownies (Gnome 2) with dog poop (Gnome 3)? You don't want to touch the result. Even if the brownie has just a little dog poop in it, it's still got dog poop in it.
The only sane way to deal with this situation is to migrate off of Gnome 3 (and Unity, which I don't use, but seems to be just as bad).
The problem is, for Gnome, that as long as KDE works (and I love it so far), I won't go back.
I haven't upgraded my Ubuntu 11.04 to 11.10 because I like my GNOME Desktop the way it's been, not whatever this new thing is. But I don't want to miss the rest of the upgrades. Is there a way to keep the old style Desktop, but complete the rest of the upgrade?
And what about on my old machines that run Intel motherboard integrated graphics (82854G/GL), that often break with Ubuntu upgrades for at least a few weeks until xorg-intel patches are released? No, I don't want to buy new machines that otherwise do their job exactly the way they should, especially not to suit a "$free" OS.
--
make install -not war
No, Mint userbase jumped over 40% because of Canonical's poorly designed UI
Sure, but that's a recent development. Mint was already at the top of DistroWatch, for example, before that.
Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
What if one doesn't like any Gnome @ all? Does Mint offer the choice of other desktops - GNUSTEP, KDE, XCFE, et al? Or is one out of luck w/ the first, and have to go to Kubuntu/Xubuntu or look for another distro that supports these?
No, no, no. Don't want. That roaring sound you hear is all the Mint users installing LMDE, or Debian, itself, or some KDE distro like SUSE
> Linux Mint 12 to Blend GNOMEs 2 & 3
It's alive... it's alive!
IT'S ALIVE!
PS: Why Gnome when LXDE is so light? ;-)
IIRC, LXDE was the desktop that wouldn't recognize a left-handed mouse. I.e., it had an option to set it as left handed, but the option didn't do anything. This had been a know bug for over a year. ... possibly over 2 years. I'm just not sure it was LXDE...It was one of the desktops I was trying after Debian Testing ruined the Gnome2 GUI. Currently I'm using Debian stable, and am unsatisfied with ALL of the alternatives to Gnome2, though Pearson is getting close to releasing a KDE3.x. KDE3 was better than Gnome2. Both are better than KDE4. And KDE4 is better than Gnome3. For my use case, KDE3 was nearly optimal.
All of the alternatives being pushed seem inferior to the ones that were being pushed a couple of years ago. (Well, to be honest at that time I only considered KDE3 and Gnome2.) I suspect that it's the race to grab the phone market, but that's no excuse to cripple the desktop environment.
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
Why are so many people still running Windows XP? Yea, Vista was a disaster, but Win7 is actually decent. But people don't want to move. The reason is that they are tired of having to re-learn how to do things each time a new user interface comes out. Why do open-source GUI people copy from Apple and Windows? Because they are trying to make the user experience in their desktop OS likable for that audience. BUT, they are PISSING OFF the same people that got used to the old Linux/Unix way of doing things. One of the problems is the self-selection of 'improvements' by the GUI developers, who are people who want to make things 'better' ('Kamtrya!'). The rest of us are more concerned with getting tasks done, and don't want to be bothered with the learning curve. Customization ability is fine, but the default behavior should be that of Tradition, with an option to set things back to 'traditional' in any customization.
I don't care about rounded corners, opacity, and lots of screen candy. What I was is speed, reliability, consistency and the ability to change text size/layout within a window, and also to have windows maintain their aspect ratio as the default behavior when appropriate. I also like the idea of being able to focus on a background window. I'd like an 'unclose' option to bail me out when I accidentally close a window, but I know that's difficult to do properly. But please, just focus on the speed, reliability, and consistency.
Canonical wasn't listening to the Linux users of the time when it started. It recruited a new group of users and created its own niches. My guess is you started with Canonical
There is no such thing as an ordered view of all installed (gui) programs in G3.
This is a giant step backwards. F##k GNOME3.
WE want configurability. I don't like the default gnome2 layout, i alway change it to my needs. But with fallback mode, everything is rigid. Fallback mode is an animated screenshot wanting to be gnome 2. F##k fallback mode.
I could also launch programs by writing their name in a terminal window.
That's not what i want. I simply want my menus and left click bask, as many many users. WE HATE UNITY & GNOME 3. We (it seems a lot of G2 users are like me) will switch to the best alternative available, be it MATE, MGSE, or XFCE.
aaaaaaa
Seems like Mint with KDE is dead?
>> or wait for the official GNOME Shell Extensions website to go up
That's a problem. In fact, you try to say Gnome 3 was pushed down the user's throat with a broken interface because gnome made that broken interface default but will perhaps one time provide some alternative ?
Just crazy. I work with my computer. I don't play with the gui just because it is beautiful, or because it looks like macos, whatever. I WORK WITH IT. I cannot accept (as many other people) an update that just gives me an alpha version of a shiny interface with no alternative. This makes me lose a lot of time(and money). that's the reason why i changed from MS office to openoffice when the broken interface of MS was forced on users. The same reason will make me abandon gnome if there is no viable (gnome2 grade) alternative to the actual broken gui.
aaaaaaa
I agree with you. I use Knoppix quite a bit and have really enjoyed it there. But then again I rarely want much more than a window manager. I actually suspect Gnome 3 would be fine for me.
Canonical wasn't listening to the Linux users of the time when it started. It recruited a new group of users and created its own niches. My guess is you started with Canonical
Actually no, I didn't start with Ubuntu. Nice attempt to make yourself sound intelligent with a sweeping generalization, although you really do come off as elitist. When I said "listen to users" I meant that they addressed the issues that prevented most people from doing day to day tasks on a Linux distro with minimal hassle. I like tweaking an OS and using the command line as much as the next guy, but when I've got stuff to do, I like to get it done quickly and only focus on the task at hand. I like being able to install an OS on any random desktop or laptop and have most of the important bits reasonably work. I've played around with Ubuntu for quite a while, but only switched my main OS to that when I felt it was reliable enough (8.04) to use it for that purpose. Before that, I've played with Mandrake, and even used Suse through part of university until playing around with Ubuntu.
Love it or hate it, there's a reason why Ubuntu is still on the top spot. If you don't like it, you don't have to use it, and you definitely don't have to condescend anyone who does. And as much as I hate Unity, I definitely won't insult anyone who chooses to use it, especially if it works for them. Those insults are better left to the companies and developers that alienate their main userbase.
Ubuntu's gain in popularity probably had a lot more to do with the fact that it bundled proprietary software, non-free drivers, etc. by default, since it was basically Debian with different themes in the beginning.
FTFY
I think Mint and Ubuntu are gaining popularity in very much the same way. JMHO. And yes, a large and healthy ecosystem is a very good thing!
Ubuntu's gain in popularity probably had a lot more to do with the fact that it bundled proprietary software, non-free drivers, etc. by default, since it was basically Debian with different themes in the beginning.
FTFY
I think Mint and Ubuntu are gaining popularity in very much the same way. JMHO. And yes, a large and healthy ecosystem is a very good thing!
You're right, but Ubuntu doesn't give access to those non-free repositories by default.
Will my paid developer get commit rights to GNOME's source control? For an edit war, reverting changes as they occur?
GNOME developer's essentially forked their own project while unjustly keeping the name, web site, and so on. The "new" MATE project is the real GNOME. Nobody would be pissed if the GNOME 3 developers had gone off and started some new project -- call it PHOME maybe -- for phones.
Probably the same reason most everyone else knows too: that exact url has been circulating around for months.
Then do it and shut the fuck up. Nobody gives a shit about you retards. You don't pay for development nor do you actually write any code so you have absolutely no say in the matter. At least the Mint team has the balls to write some trivial JavaScript instead of just crying into every comment box they can find. You're a fucking loser and your overall computing experience is apparently entirely dependent on the charity of others.
Really no less confusing than the OSX way of managing windows.
This is probably my biggest complaint about OSX. Seriously, WTF? If you open one copy, you get a tiny dot on the dock to tell you. If you somehow manage to open another copy, I guess with the command line if you can find it, you'll get a **second** icon on the dock. You don't get a second dot, you get a second icon. WTF!!! The interface is conceptually confused, inappropriately muddling the "can be started" and "is a running instance" concepts. It's like not knowing the difference between a class and an object, or between a file type and a file.
This is also one of the yucky things about the OLPC XO's Sugar, but at least there is a good excuse: they don't always have enough RAM to run the first copy of an app, so you'd best forget about wanting to run more than one app at the same time.
I have an Atheros wifi chip. Ubuntu 11.04 had broken the support for it. Luckily it was patched few months after the release. Fast forward to Mint 11. They used the same buggy kernel as in Ubuntu 11.04, without integrating any fixes - even though releasing nearly half a year later...
Never again Mint..
I lost too many hours tweaking config files for twm, ctwm, vtwm, and fvwm. Dragging icons to configure that layout it nice. Restarting the window manager to test a config file is not nice. Having the window manager die because of some typo in the config file is not nice.
That said, my needs are simple. I don't even want a file manager.
I want a taskbar on an otherwise empty (adjustable solid color) screen. I want a start menu that gets updated as I install/remove packages, ideally without restart but I'll settle for restarting. I want a 24-hour digital clock. I want a desktop switcher. I want a launcher button for 100% genuine xterm, not some defective (but pretty) imposter.
I want rounded window border corners, both top and bottom. I want window borders that clearly change to indicate the active window. I want focus-follows-mouse. I don't want any sort of see-through transparency bullshit making things harder to read.
It shouldn't need to be said, but... NO NOISES!
GUI config is sadly needed for the network, since modern Linux does some convoluted disaster involving D-BUS and udev and other weird shit. Probably the same is true of modern audio, since some ass couldn't leave audio working simply and sanely like it was 15 years ago.
Ubuntu's unity also does this. I **never** want to maximize a window. The closest thing I ever do is to have a video player go full screen, but that is a weird special case because it also hides the controls.
Demon.
You made statements about history of what Canonical was like when it started. Those statements were false. I didn't insult you for using Ubuntu I was condescending if anything regarding your age or how long you've been in the community.
Which isn't listening to users it is designing for user friendliness. In general the existing users of Linux did not want the kinds of changes Canonical was proposing and engaged in. For example they would have wanted an easier install system for Debian not a complete fork of Debian.
Someone mentioned Raskin, here's one of his core principles from Wikipedia:
I'm not so hung up as that. I'd be equally satisfied to kick, punch, or pull his hair out.
If we're on that track, why don't we standardize the ideal user, and certify products for use by standardized users only. This kind of sentiment makes Raskin a pompous ass in my books. If I smack Raskin hard enough, perhaps he'll spend the rest of his life wheeling around in a power chair. I sure hope he gets one of universal design making no concession to his special needs. Sorry buddy, joy stick and blow stick put up their dukes in the OK Corral and the blow stick lost. One control only, you know.
I wonder how many kitchen knives this guy has? Just one, for the single task of cutting? Is peeling just a slightly different cutting task?
Is cut and paste a single task or multiple tasks? Is it the same task when I'm writing source code as when I'm posting on Slashdot? I might use the keyboard in one case and the mouse in the other, the same way I switch chef knives for chopping soft vegetables or hard vegetables (my chef knives have a pronounced wedge profile, which makes them useless on turnip, unless approached as an axe and maul).
In Japan, I bet most people would concede it takes decades to develop precision knife skills across all kitchen tasks. Walk into a high-end sushi kitchen and start randomly upgrading the knives to Gnome 3 and see if you make it out alive. On what I've read, there's more difference between Gnome 2 and Unity than there is between a German and a Japanese chef knife. What's the problem, you stubborn old goats?
While we're at it, just grab some guy's bike from the Tour de France and inform him that his shifter location needs to move before his next race because of some new development in the mountain bike market and, oh, here's your bike back as modified, no charge special occasion, you can thank me after the race.
I didn't particularly like Gnome 2 when I first installed it. It wasn't initially a comfortable garment. Over time with some perseverance, I mastered a desktop configuration and workflow that together are well adapted to what I'm trying to accomplish. There's a substantial amount of personal equity invested in making Gnome 2 home. I still don't like Gnome 2 in particular, I only like what I've managed to make of it.
When you get into developmental psychology, what you learn is that no two human beings are exactly the same. We have very different cognitive approaches, and even a single person will use different cognitive modes from one task to another.
Ebert sums it up nicely modulo s/movie/Raskin's monotony/g:
On my present desktop, my panels have the same pixel size but the right panel is a bit deeper and wider than the other as it is newer and has greater resolution. I use the extra depth on the right screen for my task bar. This is my primary screen, since the left screen suffers more glare from the window beside me. If Unity slams a vertical menu bar onto my desktop, where do I put it? On the left side of my right monitor? Making it pretty much useless to stretch windows across my two screens when I wish to do this? Well, I make one change for that, then it impacts something else I liked, so I make another change for that ...
And for what gain do I sacrifice my many small hard-won accommodations? So that I can become sooner compatible with twenty-something world when I have yet to purchase my first ce
Don't breathe that!
All I can see here is another good, popular distrobution for Linux newbies adopting an obscure desktop enviorment. Sure they might be able to make this work well for them, but look at the equally competent projects who failed at the same attempt!