Slashdot Mirror


GNOME 3.10 Released

kthreadd writes "Version 3.10 of the GNOME software collection has been released. New in this release is improved support for Wayland, the upcoming X replacement. The system status menus have been consolidated into one single menu. Many of the applications in GNOME now features header bars instead of title bars, which merges the titlebar and toolbar into a single element and allows applications to offer more dynamic user interfaces. GNOME now also includes an application for searching, browsing and installing applications called Software. Several other new applications have also been added to GNOME including Music, Photos, Notes and Maps."

128 of 218 comments (clear)

  1. Software by geek · · Score: 5, Funny

    "GNOME now also includes an application for searching, browsing and installing applications called Software"

    I had to read that like 4 or 5 times before it clicked that the name of the application is "Software"

    1. Re:Software by Mike+Frett · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While I don't really like Gnome 3, that new Software Center looks nice and clean. Not bad.

    2. Re:Software by magic+maverick+ · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And they call their browser "Web". Yeah, I've got some troubles with accessing the web. What browser am I using? Eh, it says Web. Yeah, Web... No not Firefox, Web.
      Or searching for how to do something or fix something...

      This is actually a stupid thing, calling their software after generic terms related to the function. Epiphany is a much better web browser name than Web. Synaptic is a much better name for a software install than Software. Etc. Next they'll be re-badging Abiword as Word Processor.

      (I am using a Gnome 3 as I type this. I understand later versions (like 3.8) are better. But I mostly cope with this version, because Ubuntu 12.04 actually works for now, and I don't want to break shit by upgrading.)

      --
      HELP MY ACCOUNT HAS BEEN HACKED BY AN ILLIBERAL ART STUDENT SET TO DESTROY THE INTERWEBZ!
    3. Re:Software by foxx1337 · · Score: 2

      I can already see myself googling around "Files crashing", "Software command line", "troubleshoot Disks" and finding immediately what I was looking for. These guys with Gnome really mean business. I bet their names are something like "Dude Johnson", "Nobody Smith", "Programmer Williams", "Name Thorne" or "Guy Pearce" (ok, not the last one).

    4. Re:Software by hobarrera · · Score: 1

      If you give software names, users get confused, so they just stuck with Software.

    5. Re:Software by u99119 · · Score: 5, Funny

      And Gnome 3.10 should be called Graphical User Interface

    6. Re:Software by Gavagai80 · · Score: 2

      Well it is due for a rename since it's not exactly an Object Model Environment anymore, but let's call it "Desktop". As a bonus, the market share of linux on Desktop PCs will skyrocket.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    7. Re:Software by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2
      Graphical User Interface

      POS is probably nearer the mark. I am busy migrating our machines to LXDE.

      If you use text menus, only literate people can use the computer. If you use Icons, only illiterates can use it.

      (IME people who use an app less than once in a couple month are unlikely to recognise most icons. Some people use an app only once a year, but have done for 20 years*. Changing the icon annually is a disaster for the support team. Also note than when you mobile had piss-poor resolution and only had a few apps, a screen full of icons worked well. Now you might have 1920x1280 resolution and over 100 apps, hierarchical text menus are a far better solution. (Read: Unity is a leap backwards into the dark)

      *Computers are not new technology - I have been using Unix since 1978! (you know about lawns)

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    8. Re:Software by polyp2000 · · Score: 1

      Are you for real or just being sarcastic ?

      --
      Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
    9. Re:Software by basecastula+ · · Score: 1

      Sunday, Folsom street fair in San Fransisco. Leather and BDSM fest. Seven blocks of debauchery.

    10. Re:Software by TractorBarry · · Score: 2

      Gnome is definitely a POS. Not sure if I'm referring to the same acronym you are though :)

      --
      Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
    11. Re:Software by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      No help, since "Gnome" is called "Graphical User Interface" now :P

    12. Re:Software by afranke · · Score: 1

      Why wouldn't you search for "GNOME Files crashing" (or GNOME Software, GNOME Disks, and so on)?

    13. Re:Software by DickBreath · · Score: 2

      If Gnome has a word processor they should call it Word.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    14. Re:Software by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Next GNOME is going politically correct as Magical Little Person.

    15. Re:Software by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

      May the Almighty have mercy.

      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    16. Re:Software by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      May the Almighty have mercy.

      ... And a bucket of lube...

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
  2. MATE RULES! by quonsar · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Gnome 3 is not for me.

    1. Re:MATE RULES! by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 5, Funny

      "True, Gnome is targeting 99 % of all users."

      How bad of a shot do you have to be to target 99% of everything out there and still miss?

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    2. Re:MATE RULES! by squiggleslash · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Curious to know people's thoughts on this: how necessary are projects like MATE now that GNOME 3 has a supported-in-the-long-term "Classic" mode?

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    3. Re:MATE RULES! by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 5, Interesting

      now that GNOME 3 has a supported-in-the-long-term "Classic" mode?

      The Gnome developers have a long history of throwing out features and behavior based on a whim. Why would anyone believe that "classic mode" is going to receive long-term support?

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    4. Re:MATE RULES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Wow, you're so rude! As a woman, I find that "edgy" and attractive.

    5. Re:MATE RULES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Because RHEL7 is going to use it as the default desktop environment, and Red Hat is the biggest paying contributor to Gnome.

    6. Re:MATE RULES! by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      I guess that depends on how 'classic' the classic mode is. Does it offer the same flexibility offered by gnome2/mate, or is it just a look-a-like?

    7. Re:MATE RULES! by Skiron · · Score: 2

      ~$ locate 1990's

      ~$which 1990's
      1990's is found in Atari ST an old Spectrum48k that somehow kept going

    8. Re:MATE RULES! by Chemisor · · Score: 3, Funny

      When you are a gnome, you have to aim high to avoid shooting people in their feet.

    9. Re:MATE RULES! by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Because RHEL7 is going to use it as the default desktop environment, and Red Hat is the biggest paying contributor to Gnome.

      So you think the people who paid for Gnome 3 so Linux admins could have a tablet interface on their servers are going to maintain YAGUI?

    10. Re:MATE RULES! by Kjella · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand, they're using shot guns and rock salt shells. It won't cause serious trauma if you turn and run, but it will cause painful stinging injuries and serve as a warning. The recidivism rate is low.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    11. Re:MATE RULES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      I recently converted from gnome 3.4 fallback to gnome 3.8.

      I found it the most annoying pos to try and work with, until I started adding extensions to get back little bits of what I consider core functionality. Kudos to the gnome peeps for making it very easy to download/enable/disable various addons now. The only problem? Twenty fuckin extensions are required to get back those options I want, or to remove shit thats being forced down my throat. Then guess what...extensions often collide and interoperate strangely. Then you have 'mega extensions' that come with one small thing you want and twenty other features you give not a shit about, and, one of those other twenty things collides with another plugin you use.

      Then you have the lockscreen. Maybe gnome devs don't use it, but I do, and locking and unlocking / resuming from screen off take anywhere from 30-60 seconds!?!?!?!?! The whole time you're like what in the fuckin fuck is going on.

      Want to suspend? No you don't apparently. You only turn off your computer completely or reboot in gnome.

      Want to try and use up more than a small portion of the top bar? Ok we'll start chopping the fuckin clock short so you can't read it AND clicking on the (now shortened) clock/calendary display to bring up the calendar pane? No clock on it, awesome. Not to mention it taking 2-5 seconds to pop up the stupid calendar pane.

      So much in gnome 3 feels sluggish during operation, even if its just a ~100ms delay, that I feel like my i7 with 32gig of ram is from the early 00's.

      Once middle click paste goes away gnome can go fuck themselves, but I'm sure by then they'll have removed more small things I didn't know I found vital---or forcefully prevent some current extensions from working anyways. /rant over

    12. Re:MATE RULES! by Zedrick · · Score: 2

      The question is, how necessary are projects like GNOME now that Mate and Cinnamon exists? Gnome decided it was a good idea to suck, it's a wonder they still have any users. Why would we give Gnome another chance?

    13. Re:MATE RULES! by madcat_sun · · Score: 1

      Indeed Mate is what it should be the latest 2.x branch instead of drop it, and gnome was released in spring 1999. Greetings

    14. Re:MATE RULES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Long-term classic mode? That's a laugh. It's gonna go away soon after RHEL 7 is released. They only brought it back because Red Hat knew that gnome-shell sucked (it still does, but slightly less than before) and it's customers would have complained loudly over being forced to use it. A decision, btw, which should convince any doubters that Gnome serves Red Hat's interests at the expense of everone else.

    15. Re: MATE RULES! by jd2112 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like they are doing everything they can to emulate Microsoft.

      --
      Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
    16. Re:MATE RULES! by gumpish · · Score: 2

      I can't understand why someone would put up with so much garbage when perfectly viable alternatives exist. Do DEs really have brand loyalty?

    17. Re:MATE RULES! by strikethree · · Score: 2

      Oddly enough, I just installed Cinnamon and Mate yesterday. KDE is too buggy and I refuse to use Gnome (but I have tried it). All of the older window managers that I recall really seem stale now: E16, FVWM, Blackbox, etc. I tested out E17 excitedly but it is way too buggy. I have been using WindowMaker and it mostly works but still feels ... limited.

      So I edit xinitrc to add the mate startup, exec mate_desktop or somesuch because I want to try it first since I am thinking I will likely go to Cinnamon. I execute startx... and not quite orgasmic, but god it felt GOOD. I quickly went in and started to try and tweak some things to make it more like I want it and still see evidence of previous damage by the Gnome devs but holy crap it felt good!

      Classic mode has to compete with Mate. Mate does not have to compete with Classic mode. Mate is winning and judging by the Gnome devs past actions, Gnome will never really be able to compete. Gnome is dead to me.

      I really should try Cinnamon but I doubt that I will. Mate feels THAT good. Just wow. So very nice.
       

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    18. Re:MATE RULES! by kthreadd · · Score: 2

      RHEL is not just for servers, there's a desktop and a workstation flavour that is supposed to be used on desktops and laptops.

    19. Re:MATE RULES! by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      And what happens if you don't have 3D? (remote use, VM, ill-supported hardware). Well on Atom dual-core you can have llvmpipe, so I guess you will have 100% CPU spikes to draw 2D windows in OpenGL. Well done.

    20. Re:MATE RULES! by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      GNOME itself is irrelevant, but it can damage other DEs and apps because they're in charge of GTK3, and they can cause more work to Cinnamon devs (more stuff to fork) if they fuck with the backends.
      Unity uses Gnome3 stuff too, did they fork some stuff I don't know (I never ran Unity barring once on Ubuntu 11.04, and it's not like I can try it in a VM because of the 3D). If they still use straight Nautilus, further feature removals in Nautilus can damage Unity.

      So I read the stories about GNOME like this one, because they maintain lots of stuff they're responsible for breaking or not breaking, and I like reading a few GNOME-related flamewars.

    21. Re:MATE RULES! by Hypotensive · · Score: 1

      The only problem? Twenty fuckin extensions are required to get back those options I want, or to remove shit thats being forced down my throat. Then guess what...extensions often collide and interoperate strangely.

      QFT. Although, it is actually pretty hard to make a Gnome Shell extension that interoperates correctly, because there is fuck all documentation. Actually, there is a whole load of C documentation, but C is about the only language that you can't write the extension in, despite the fact that all the base libraries like glib and gtk are written in C.

      And then someone had the bright idea to make all the extensions run in the same thread as the main desktop drawing/painting thread, so if you have one extension that gets itself stuck on something it will hang your entire X11 session. Brilliant.

    22. Re:MATE RULES! by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2
      Do DEs really have brand loyalty?

      To some extent, yes. If you have maintained the same machine for years with all your environment highly optimised, you vaguely imagine migrating to an altogether different DE is going to be more painful that trying to re-jig the latest POS into simething manageable. However, this time the Gnome team have gone too far. After using gnome-fallback-shell for a bit, and now evaluating several alternatives, it is LXDE for us.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    23. Re:MATE RULES! by basecastula+ · · Score: 1

      Oh mod points, I always use them on the wrong comments. Damn beer.

    24. Re:MATE RULES! by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Well, a number of reasons spring to mind. The most obvious is that GNOME felt it necessary to create GNOME Classic in the first place, which was introduced as soon as it became clear that the end of GNOME Fallback was a major problem that was forcing people to leave GNOME.

      There is a reason GNOME Classic exists. It wasn't created in isolation, it wasn't created as a third party project by some developer with an itch, it addresses a very real problem that the direction GNOME was heading in is simply unsustainable and virtually nobody likes it.

      What good does it do to the GNOME project to spend time developing GNOME Classic and then throw it away afterwards?

      Right now it's clear that no post-desktop UI is viable for PCs running GNU/Linux. Virtually nobody is using GNOME Shell. Ubuntu is actually losing users because Unity just doesn't cut it. Other DEs such as KDE have, after flirting with the concept of post-desktopism, though not actually making major steps to implement it, have steered clear.

      And now, to the extent to which GNOME 3 is used, it's by the remaining Ubuntu users who use it with Unity instead of GNOME Shell, or who use it in fallback mode.

      GNOME's developers have shown that they understand this by developing GNOME Classic. They'd have to suddenly forget they know this to then throw it out.

      So no, to you, and to the AC who keeps insisting that RedHat demanded it for RHEL 7 but will suddenly switch to GNOME Shell for RHEL 8 because look over there pretty colors, I just don't buy the "It's a trap" argument. At this stage, it seems infinitely more likely that GNOME Shell will slowly (not immediately, it'd be too humiliating to suddenly drop years of work that so much has ridden on) lose GNOME's focus. If it survives as GNOME's primary focus, it'll be purely because the tablet-PC convergance that Microsoft is currently pushing becomes a thing. And maybe that'll happen, but even Microsoft wasn't stupid enough to ditch the desktop entirely.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    25. Re:MATE RULES! by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

      It's not another GUI, it's just some extensions to GNOME. So there isn't a lot of extra stuff. But it at least provides a path to the new interface. Every time someone who mentions tablet interface when referring to GNOME 3 I know that it is not someone who has tried GNOME in any serious way. You've judged it by screenshots and so I find it difficult to take this criticism seriously.

    26. Re:MATE RULES! by unixisc · · Score: 1

      MATE will be the default desktop on GhostBSD starting from the next rev - other DEs that they will offer will be LXDE and XFCE

    27. Re:MATE RULES! by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

      You should file a bug.

    28. Re:MATE RULES! by madcat_sun · · Score: 1

      @Presumably your "Mates" are people who have no idea what they are talking about@. haha I like it bro, because perhaps its true =p by the way , if you read correctly I was supporting your point. And if you dont care about gnome/mate its ok. its healty to take what you need/like, not what others think you need/like. See ya!

    29. Re:MATE RULES! by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      Oh. I totally apologize! I couldn't make sense of your sentence and thought you were some kind of crazy Brit or Australian calling the AC your new good buddy! I actually forgot completely that there was a fork of Gnome 2 called Mate ;-)

      I'm a bit embarrassed, but I have to say that Shakespeare himself couldn't have written a better comedy of errors! Cheers!

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    30. Re:MATE RULES! by madcat_sun · · Score: 1

      @I'm a bit embarrassed, but I have to say that Shakespeare himself couldn't have written a better comedy of errors! @ Thanks bro, Its a compliment to me!!!! Take care!!! =)

    31. Re:MATE RULES! by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      No, I meant relatively.

    32. Re:MATE RULES! by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Well, any sane WM would use X11's software blitter if there's no hw acceleration available.

    33. Re:MATE RULES! by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Nah, the butthurt assholes are the ones crying over linus' use of 'fuck you' in place of passive aggressive, stuffy language. Most linux users are a lot more hardened than that.

  3. New Applications by lavamind · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Several other new applications have also been added to GNOME including Music, Photos, Notes and Maps.

    Is it just me, or is GNOME picking a completely new default multimedia applications every other release or so? Why can't they run with something for a few years, for a change?

    1. Re:New Applications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      With every iteration of each Linux flavor, it gets harder and harder to install XMMS.

      And I mean the late 90's XMMS that just works, not the completely different and unusable client-server XMMS2. Or any of the other multimedia disasters that attempt to deliver every imaginable feature - except a basic equalizer and an MP3 codec.

    2. Re:New Applications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You could use one of the various XMMS-like players made with more recent stuff than GTK1 out there.

      Like Audacious (gtk3) or qmmp (Qt).

    3. Re:New Applications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not to sound like a smart ass, but you really shouldn't be using XMMS anymore. They split up into "fancy" folk who created XMMS2 and "traditional" people who created Audacious. I'm using Audacious right now with one of the XMMS skins, it just has newer codecs and more advanced features, and works way better with modern systems.

    4. Re:New Applications by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      qmmp is not my stuff but I can recommend Audacious (gtk2 GUI) or Deadbeef (like Audacious gtk3, but properly working)

    5. Re:New Applications by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      fun yes but the support for the actual music is a bit sad, if you had a heteregeneous collection.
      A friend insisted on XMMS, so I installed it on squeeze, semi-manually, it was a throwback to not being able to play .wma, .mpc or even .flac. Damn you if you dare having accented characters, spaces, russian letters or any "illegal characters" in filenames or ID3. Maybe you can add plug-ins after hunting and building them. The issues allowed us to let it go without too much grief.

    6. Re:New Applications by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Partial credit for guessing "rocK", it's actually Amarok. Which also became popular, did a major redesign, was forked by people who liked the old way better, and only recently is starting to be as useful as the original version again. The main difference from the GNOME history is that eventually Amarok realized they should reconsider their older version's features, instead of just continuing to ignore community feedback forever.

  4. If I wanted a Mac I'd buy one by intermodal · · Score: 2

    Integrating everything one way that powers on high say it should be done isn't why I run Linux.

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  5. M.E.H. by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 3, Informative

    Gnome and KDE went through similar histories. The maintainers (for some unkown reason) decided they had to radically change their product - just as Ubuntu decided to introduce a totally new gui a few years ago. The verdict with Gnome is almost universal - the new Gnome (Gnome 3, which you have with Centos 6, unfortunately) stinks and isn't getting any better. Nevertheless, those who offer Gnome - e.g., Redhat, SUSE, others - offer only the latest version. Redhat has made it the default. Their motto is "just get used to it". But there is one hugely positive development: Mint decided to fork the old Gnome, Gnome 2. Mint offers 2 versions of Gnome 2: the Cinamon gui and the Mate gui (pronounced matey, a type of tea). I have no experience with Cinamon but love Mate. I am using it on my main computer. I noticed recently that Fedora also offers a Mate variant. My guess is that eventually most of the distros will; they will offer their main gui, whatever it is, plus Mate, XFCE, LXDE, etc. I am guessing that Gnome 3 will eventually go away.

    KDE4 is like Gnome 3 but actually improved as it developed. One of its peculiarities is that it offers 5 (I think) different ways of laying out and using the desktop. One of them - called Folder View - makes it quite similar to the discontinued KDE3. I have instances of folder view KDE4 in my PCLinuxOS and Mepis setups, and like it. Be aware, however, that KDE3, like Gnome 2, has been forked. If you go to the Trinity Linux website you will find that there are people who have rejiggered Debian, Ubuntu, and PCLOS with the KDE3 gui. In fact, one of my partitions is running Debian Wheezy with KDE3. One of the best things about KDE4 is the Dolphin file manager which I have imported into all of my non-KDE setups. It is far, far superior to every other file manager, including the old Konqueror, which Trinity KDE3 still has.

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    1. Re:M.E.H. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nevertheless, those who offer Gnome - e.g., Redhat, SUSE, others - offer only the latest version. Redhat has made it the default..

      TBF, RHEL 6 uses Gnome2 still and RHEL 7 will use Gnome3 in classic mode.

    2. Re:M.E.H. by geek · · Score: 5, Informative

      the new Gnome (Gnome 3, which you have with Centos 6, unfortunately)

      Centos 6 is using gnome 2 still. Not sure wtf you are on about.

      Their motto is "just get used to it".

      That's GNOME's position. Red Hat will direct you to other DE's if GNOME 3 isnt your cup of tea.

      But there is one hugely positive development: Mint decided to fork the old Gnome, Gnome 2.

      Again, wtf are you on about? Mint didn't fork GNOME 2. They forked GNOME 3 and created a new DE based on GTK3. The GNOME 2 fork is called Mate and is independent of Linux Mint.

      Seriously, no one is going to take you seriously if you can't even get the basics straight.

    3. Re:M.E.H. by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 5, Funny

      KDE4 is like Gnome 3 but actually improved as it developed.

      Of course. To put it anatomically, KDE 4.0 had its heart in the right place, even if its other innards were completely jumbled. The problem with Gnome Shell, on the other hand, is that it has its head up its ass.

    4. Re:M.E.H. by shipofgold · · Score: 1

      Their motto is "just get used to it".

      I did get used to it, and now I find I like it...With the extensions.gnome.org set of extensions, I find that I can customize it to my liking, and get back some of the old things I like, while keeping a lot of the new.

      FWIW, I am sticking with GNOME3, and I am guessing I am not the only one.

    5. Re:M.E.H. by Nimey · · Score: 5, Funny

      Seriously, no one is going to take you seriously if you can't even get the basics straight.

      You must be new here.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    6. Re:M.E.H. by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      I did get used to it, and now I find I like it...With the extensions.gnome.org set of extensions, I find that I can customize it to my liking, and get back some of the old things I like, while keeping a lot of the new.

      So you, you know, 'got used to it', by rewriting it with extensions.

      FWIW, I am sticking with GNOME3, and I am guessing I am not the only one.

      So, what do you when you're put in front of someone else's Gnome 3 machine, which doesn't have your magic 'makes it not suck' extensions installed?

      Or when the next release breaks all your extensions?

    7. Re:M.E.H. by Arker · · Score: 2

      "Of course. To put it anatomically, KDE 4.0 had its heart in the right place, even if its other innards were completely jumbled. The problem with Gnome Shell, on the other hand, is that it has its head up its ass."

      Aptly put. Sad to say, though, as a result of the excessive attention paid to these projects and their anatomical difficulties, the state of the UI on Gnu/Linux and related systems has arguably degraded. The only consolation is that competing options from MS and Apple have seen the same thing happening. In their case it is clear why they are doing this - they degrade one platform in a bid to gain control of a different market. Monopoly rents being what they are I suspect this is a rational business decision.

      It's hard to see any similar motivation for GNOME, which once upon a time was supposed to be about software liberation.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    8. Re:M.E.H. by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 1

      Has it really degraded? Thanks to Gnome Shell we now have Cinnamon. It's better than Gnome 2 ever was and is making its way to other distributions. Coupled with KDE 4.10 (when properly configured to avoid some pesky bugs), I'd say we still have two good options in the "full Linux DE" field.

    9. Re:M.E.H. by shipofgold · · Score: 1

      So, what do you when you're put in front of someone else's Gnome 3 machine, which doesn't have your magic 'makes it not suck' extensions installed?

      Same thing I do when end up in front of someones Mac which I am not used to....or in front of someone's "themed" Firefox which doesn't have all my bookmarks...or someone else's Windows box that doesn't have all the applications I am used to. I figure it out with the tools I have at hand.

      GNOME3 works for me, and I am not the only one who likes it.

      If you don't like it, by all means find something you do like....but you will need a better argument than "what do you do when you encounter something different".

    10. Re:M.E.H. by 0123456 · · Score: 1, Troll

      GNOME3 works for me, and I am not the only one who likes it.

      GNOME3 doesn't work for you, or you wouldn't have to rewrite it to make it usable.

    11. Re:M.E.H. by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity, why do you like Dolphin? I've always found it irritatingly limiting and use konqueror instead.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    12. Re:M.E.H. by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      it's my curiosity too: Dolphin is any useful outside KDE?

    13. Re:M.E.H. by kevmeister · · Score: 1

      Again, wtf are you on about? Mint didn't fork GNOME 2. They forked GNOME 3 and created a new DE based on GTK3. The GNOME 2 fork is called Mate and is independent of Linux Mint.

      Seriously, no one is going to take you seriously if you can't even get the basics straight.

      Lots of pot calling the kettle black. Mint has two DEs, GTK3 (but not really a Gnome3 fork) based Cinnamon, and Gnome2 fork MATE. While Cinnamon is GTK 3 based and certainly uses Gnome 3 code, it has very little similarity to Gnome3, retaining the configurability of Gnome2 rather then shoving someone's idea of how you should work down your throat.

      --
      Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer, Retired
    14. Re:M.E.H. by doti · · Score: 1

      It's not that I can't get used and customize it so I can like and use it.

      It's that I'm not into (and don't have the time to) customizing my desktop *again*. Not only I had Gnome2 already customized, but it required very little customization, as the defaults are mostly ok.

      Thanks MATE!

      --
      factor 966971: 966971
    15. Re:M.E.H. by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Ooh, can we do car analogies next? GNOME3 routes the exhaust pipe into the ventilation system based on the fact that it's a superior design for a bike.

  6. FVWM by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

    Does the new Gnome have a FVWM mode, so I can use it without going postal?

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
  7. Looking forward to GNOME 3.11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Gnome for Workgroups!

  8. So let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I should rush to install Gnome 3.10 because... erm... I get a wayland "experiment", I get new weather forecasts where "tomorrow night" comes before "tomorrow afternoon", I get a panel which shows me all sorts of crap when I just want to change the volume, and I get a cheap icon of a Leica camera with the logo changed to "Like".

    Oh, and I get a confusing mishmash of window decorations for different applications, just so that they can offer me a close button "even when the window is unmaximized". AND I can get automatic geolocation rubbish messing with my clock and reporting my location continuously.

    Wow. Where do I sign up?

    1. Re:So let me get this straight... by dyingtolive · · Score: 2

      ...b-but, you get to set your lock screen wallpaper now! The GNOME developers are allowing unchecked and rampant levels of freedom never before seen (in GNOME 3).

      Seriously, you know you're fucked up when you're touting something that's existed since Windows 98 is getting touted as a feature: https://help.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/3.10/more-core-ux.html.en

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    2. Re:So let me get this straight... by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      I heard Gnome 4 will just be a black screen, because non-black pixels confuse users. Gnome 4.1 may include an option to select the color for the screen.

    3. Re:So let me get this straight... by tyrione · · Score: 1

      ...b-but, you get to set your lock screen wallpaper now! The GNOME developers are allowing unchecked and rampant levels of freedom never before seen (in GNOME 3). Seriously, you know you're fucked up when you're touting something that's existed since Windows 98 is getting touted as a feature: https://help.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/3.10/more-core-ux.html.en

      Seriously, what's fucked is Qt moving to WebKit Blink and GNOME wisely sticking to WebKit 2 means 2 sets of WebKit running around seeing as most of us have both DE on Linux/FreeBSD [KDE 4.10.x/GNOME 3.8.x Debian].

  9. Re:Remember, faggots... by larry+bagina · · Score: 1, Funny

    GNU/Linuxth? That'sth sthoooo lastht week.

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  10. Gnome 3.10 looks good! by thule · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I understand some of the complaints. It get it. But, wow, Gnome is looking really good! It will be interesting to see how this new menu layout works. So far I haven't had any complaints in Gnome 3. I've been using Gnome everyday since it was initially released in the RedHat/Fedora distros. I've had more complaints with the bumps in the road with Fedora over the years than Gnome itself.

    1. Re:Gnome 3.10 looks good! by thule · · Score: 2

      I'm a Linux systems admin... specifically the hot word these days is "DevOps". I code Ruby/Chef all day. So I flip desktops from web/terminals/email/irc all day. A lot of terminal/ssh stuff. A lot of editing files. I run about 3-5 KVM machines on my desktop box for testing (using virt-manager).

    2. Re:Gnome 3.10 looks good! by jcupitt65 · · Score: 1

      Gnome-shell is very customizable, you can use tweak tool to turn off dynamic workspaces and turn on files-on-desktop, for example. A range of nice extensions are available too.

      After only a modest amount of tinkering I have a very fast, functional, attractive desktop.

    3. Re:Gnome 3.10 looks good! by kermidge · · Score: 1

      Try to find a decent weather app that will display barometer reading AND which direction it's moving. Children today don't even know what a fucking barometer is or why it's not just useful but important to knowing about condition and forecast. Pilots know - or used to, ditto sailors. Anyone who's ever done their own short-range forecast knows. Anyone who's ever had their own weather station at least has the inkling.

      Given wind direction and glass, you're well over halfway towards next day's weather. Couple that with cloud observation, where you can watch the fronts, you'll do as well as the local weatherman - who these days likely as not is not a meteorologist anyway. Add in a regional weather map and jet-stream info, you can forecast short-range local about as well as NOAA.

  11. Re:so why ... by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 2

    So in your alternate universe Mark Shuttleworth has a relationship with Gnome that is not only "friendly", but he actually has a say in what they do? Because in this universe, none of that is true.

    --
    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  12. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Then fuck off and don't bother commenting on a thread you care nothing about. Every time Gnome Shell is mentioned on Slashdot swathes of you haters come in and say how you will stick with Gnome 2 or it's more loyal successor and then continue to visit every Gnome Shell thread to post more hate comments, it's Open Source for a fucking reason, you aren't being forced to use it there are alternatives, and there are are forks from gnome 2, I don't go into MATE threads and say how i hate that incredibly aged paradigm.... so FUCK OFF and don't come back unless you actually care about Gnome 3.

  13. Please skip the next version by Imagix · · Score: 2

    Please skip making a 3.11 version... just to avoid another flood of ".. for Workgroups" jokes.

    1. Re:Please skip the next version by KugelKurt · · Score: 1

      Please skip making a 3.11 version... just to avoid another flood of ".. for Workgroups" jokes.

      Uneven version numbers are development releases. It's never been any different in Gnome.

  14. Sadface.jpg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    WinAmp (except for an awkward period) still looks like it did fourteen years ago, and it's still whipping llama asses.

    I'll pour a 40 out for my dead homie, XMMS - it was truly a worthy counterpart.

  15. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by epyT-R · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I realize it's passe in today's society to value fact, reason, and truth over feelings, impulse, and consensus, but it's still ok for people to state their opinions, whether they're using the product or not. Criticism should not be silenced for the sake of feelings. Frankly, gnome is just a collection of current design trends that are questionable at best, and that is the reason you see the commentary. The problem is bigger than gnome itself.

    1. too much wasted space. I didn't buy a high res monitor just to have a giant tablet.
    2. sparsely populated dialogs. I suppose this relates to #1, but still.. Why do we need 4000 extra dialogs to move through remedial tasks like changing backgrounds and color schemes?
    3. hidden or nonexistent advanced tweaking. Again, a trend that makes living with computing frustrating. In this age, the user is assumed not suited to define his own workflow and layout, so we're all stuck with assumptions made by 'designers' who 'went to school for design', who never actually did anything else with their computers other than run photoshop...maximized fullscreen of course. To get what I want, I now have to manage a litany of patches against libgnome et al, or if I'm running windows 7, I have to hack up shellstyle.dll using a resource editor, and don't even get me started on windows 8. Why? This is not progress.

    The problem boils down to placing aesthetics above functionality. This might work sorta ok for limited use devices, but not desktop machines used for complex workflows.

  16. Re:Remember, faggots... by epyT-R · · Score: 1

    I thought that was the apple user stereotype. The linux nerd archetype is just a fat, ugly, basement dweller, usually with lots of body hair. Get your stereotypes straight!

  17. Re:so why ... by 0123456 · · Score: 2

    Because the Xorg developers say that the code base is rotten and that this is the right thing to do.

    Aren't the X.org developers the ones writing Wayland?

    You'd think that no-one would trust developers who say 'this software we developed is awful, but the next version will be the best thing evah!'

    Oh, hang on, that's been Microsoft's strategy with every Windows release in the last twenty years.

  18. I hope this will actually work on my tablet... by the+0x · · Score: 1

    I have a Samsung T700, and i've been trying out SO many UI's, seeing if one will actually work. So far no luck. It mainly comes down to the on-screen keyboard. If all these UI's are being designed for more of a tablet feel, it's a shame they haven't focused some effort on getting the on-screen keyboard right. I'm hoping 3.10 will have made some improvements...

  19. Gnome developers just don't get it nor ever will. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The constant state of flux and capricious addition of rather dubious and unneeded features while removing popular ones doesn't really make for a great desktop. It's just a fast way to piss everyone off as they move on to better things.

    Cliche as it may be, I've used Gnome Shell up to version 3.6.. I've test driven 3.8 and 3.10 and quite frankly it's bad enough my linux desktop wants to upgrade every 6 months and break everything but now my desktop environment just adds another pitfall of upgrading and being hit with massive amounts of change.

    I would like a stable DE that refines itself but doesn't constantly strive to redefine itself every time I apt-get upgrade.

  20. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by rahimi.nv · · Score: 1

    WMII , its development is not active anymore , you should switch to awesome or i3

  21. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by jcdr · · Score: 1

    Not really seeing much in the way of objective facts in your opinion piece.

    The problem boils down to placing aesthetics above functionality

    I guess that depends on what you mean by functional.

    For me it mean working with a grid of 8*8 virtual desktops, with up to about 100 windows, and very fast way to switch between them. In work on a lot of projects and I never close my session so I can simply find a particular project exactly as it was last time I touched it. A project can take many desktops alone to fit all the required information (specification, search, edit, git, compilation, targets console, monitoring, chat, schematics, PCB, etc...)

    Frankly, gnome is just a collection of current design trends that are questionable at best, and that is the reason you see the commentary.

    So was Gnome 2 [...]

    Last Gnome revision 2 was a climax for my workflow. Rock stable, and easy to configure to match my needs. Gnome 3 (and Unity by the way) is just a failed experiment that try to reinvent everything by simply denying decade of desktop usability work. It's a childish approach that was based from the beginning on the false idea that Gnome 2 was too complicated and also based on the even more false concept that nobody use a computer to do things more complex that what you can basically already do on a mobile phone.

    Last Gnome 2 revision was the best desktop ever for professional use. It achieved the prodigious goal to be very simple for the beginners and very powerful for the most advanced users. It take literally a decade of work to produce last Gnome 2 with a lot of peoples involved on it. There all make very goods decisions to address the largest audience as possible. But this excluded the small audience of those that think that everyone must uses a gaming interface to just start a web browser in full screen like Gnome 3 do.

    The Gnome project is now mismanaged by a team of blind revisionists that trashed a decade of good work. And the hegemony continue today with the lunch of "Software" that will only present and install applications coded by the same team of extremists. After having trashed the desktop concept there now try to trash the distribution concept. How a such catastrophe have taken place ?

  22. You can never make anyone happy. by WebCowboy · · Score: 4, Informative

    You know, I remember, many years ago now, an article that got posted on /. about usability of the Linux desktop for casual/beginner/"regualr people" users. GNOME and KDE were examined. At the time Gnome 2.x was fairly new.

    One of the prominent complaints (one that got MSFT and AAPL fanbois gloating) was how people struggled with the exotic names for everyday applications.

    So...you have to click this GIMP thingy to edit pictures? To go ont he web you need to clock "Konqueror" or "Galeon" (the latter of which morphed into "Epiphany"--so much more clear what it does eh?). To burn a CD I need "Brasero", etc.

    The user had to rely on icons--sometimes they were not so useful either.

    So the GNOME people have finally done something about it and name the app that helps you install software "Software", and call the web browser "web" instead of "Epihpany"...makes sense considering the feedback right? Well, now they are being mocked by experienced users for the unimaginative names. It's not like a computer literate person can't figure out what "WEB" does (oh gee, that must be the GNOME web browser...well isn't that more boring than Epiphany, but I guess now Aunt Martha will know how to get on the web).

    By the way--"WEB" is just Epiphany renamed--the GNOM browser. Firefox/Iceweasel or Chromium still appear with their respective names/icons, so you can relax unlessyou are among the 1% of GNOME users who just use the GNOME Web browser and nothing else.

    (As I type this I use GNOME 3.8 from Debian unstable and experimental packages--'tis a great improvement over 3.4 and earlier that so many still use or base their first impressions on--hopefully 3.10 will be packaged for Debian in due time--pwehaps a couple weeks before 3.12 comes out ;-)

    1. Re:You can never make anyone happy. by magic+maverick+ · · Score: 3, Informative

      What's wrong with Epiphany Web Browser then? But to call the software simply "Web" is crazy. The idiots who went on, and still go on about, names being hard, are just idiots. When I look for GIMP, in my menu I get GIMP Image Editor. Whoa, so hard to work out what that does! What does Powerpoint do? What does FrameMaker do? What did ClarisWorks do?

      And, you didn't address the point that by using generic names, it makes it much much harder to search for information about the software.

      --
      HELP MY ACCOUNT HAS BEEN HACKED BY AN ILLIBERAL ART STUDENT SET TO DESTROY THE INTERWEBZ!
    2. Re:You can never make anyone happy. by jez9999 · · Score: 2

      so you can relax unlessyou are among the 1% of GNOME users who just use the GNOME Web browser and nothing else

      How can half a user use a web browser?

    3. Re:You can never make anyone happy. by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      by using generic names, it makes it much much harder to search for information about the software.

      Nice hint! it's a big problem.

    4. Re:You can never make anyone happy. by ultranova · · Score: 1

      So the GNOME people have finally done something about it and name the app that helps you install software "Software", and call the web browser "web" instead of "Epihpany"...makes sense considering the feedback right?

      Ubuntu has a video editor called "lives". It's completely useless, because it crashes constantly. Why? I have no idea; googling either "lives crashes" or "lives problem" gets nothing useful, since "lives" is such a common word.

      So no, renaming Epiphany into Web doesn't make sense. Renaming it to "Epiphany Web Browser" would. That way the name both makes it clear what the thing does and contains enough entropy in the form of a non-common word to allow searching for help in case of problems.

      You have to consider the consequences too, not just feedback.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  23. Sorry I agree with parent by WebCowboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But I *DO* repect your opinion. You don't like GNOME, that is fine. You've stated reasons why you don't like GNOME. That is great. That is on topic, even if I don't entirely agree (though GNOME 3 *does* have room for improvement).

    That said, "GNOME 3 sucks I use MATE" and then going on to expound about how wonderfully traditional MATE is is OFF TOPIC. The article is about the release of GNOME 3. Unless you are going to make some observation about GNOME 3 beyond a one line "sucks" comment then said comment is very deservedly modded into oblivion.

    We've heard it all before. It is a broken record, it is a dead horse that people just can't stop beating. If you must be critical be constructive and be a bit specific about what needs improvement. We do NOT need to hear "GNOME 3 sucks". That is less than useless. Go away and let *intelligent* critics have some input (I would even put up with Torvalds or DeRaadt style profanity laden rants so long as they have meaningful point to them).

  24. So... by sanitycrumbling · · Score: 1

    they made it even weirder? Great.

  25. You're doing something wrong I think by WebCowboy · · Score: 1

    On my PC running GNOME 3.8 resuming from lock screen is instantaneous. You have something wrong with your system.

    I suspend by closing my laptop lid--not tried any other way but that works.

    I have a sandy-bridge qaud core i7 with 16 gigs ram...pretty good spec but not what as good as you have and I can tell you there is no lag to speak of. Boots fast, everything responds instantly. And that is running my Radeon card on LOW POWER (slow) profile mode. Are you sure you have it installed right? Video driver issues maybe? Something hoging CPU?

    How much crap do you have in you top bar if your clock is cut off. Your calendar takes 2-5 seconds to come up? WTF? Mine comes up in MILLIseconds.

    Either you are BSing us all or you have wider system issues. This is NOT what I've seen with GNOME3. Even a several-years-old single Core 2 desktop with Intel 4500 integrated graphics and far less RAM I have can do better at it!

    1. Re:You're doing something wrong I think by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      lol, if you want to suspend on gnome3 on a desktop, you need to buy or make yourself a "virtual lid" you connect on USB and close, I guess.

      Is it mandatory sleep on closed lid? Or was that a macintosh thing. I think I once read about it. Of course suspend on closing the lid can be completely undesireable (what about the downloads, file shares, music, movie playback..)

    2. Re:You're doing something wrong I think by jcupitt65 · · Score: 1

      There's a "suspend" item, on the top-right menu, same place as always.

      You can configure what you want to happen on lid close in the power settings (press the win key, type "pow", press return).

  26. Re: so why ... by crazyaxemaniac · · Score: 2

    To be fair to the Wayland developers they are trying to make a protocol that is optimized for today's needs. X11 can be shoehorned into having some of the same functions but things are harder to implement and often have additional overhead in X11 that does not exist with Wayland.

    The project leader for Wayland has argued that many things about X cannot be fixed without major protocol changes. The Wayland model is so radically different they cannot justify calling it X12 or X13.

  27. (not all) New Applications by WebCowboy · · Score: 3, Informative

    There is some confusion about what is a GNOME-based application and what is part of the GNOME environment itself.

    For example Shotwell is a third-party GNOME based application. It has never been part of the GNOME project--not a GNOME component. Rather, it has merely been the most commonly used app for photo management and viewing as packaged by distributions. Shotwell supplanted F-Spot becaus the latter was built with .NET/Mono and many had concerns about potential MSFT-interference.

    GNOME did not have final say on either F-Spot OR Shotwell given they weren't GNOME desktop components--just apps designed to work on GNOME. Until now there WAS no official default app. Now there is:: GNOME Photos.

    As such, I expect that GNOME Photos, Music, Notes, Maps, etc. will continue for the long term as the "defaults" as they are new official GNOME components. Furthermore I suspect Shotwell, Rythmbox, etc will continue on as alternatives, likely with some enhanced capabilites, different feature sets, etc. just as WEB (aka epiphany) is the "official" GNOME browser client it is still commonly (or even normally) supplanted by a 3rd party browser.

  28. Drama by 21mhz · · Score: 1

    Curious to know people's thoughts on this: how necessary are projects like MATE now that GNOME 3 has a supported-in-the-long-term "Classic" mode

    Why, there should always be a project that people will loudly "threaten" to switch to every time somebody makes a development commit affecting their favorite workflow habit.

    --
    My exception safety is -fno-exceptions.
  29. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

    Wait 10 years, and Gnome 3 will have reimplemented the options from Gnome 2 in the same way Gnome 2 eventually put back the options they yanked out of Gnome 1. Of course, then they'll start Gnome 4. KDE was guilty of this with KDE 4 too, but at least it was for technical reasons and not HCI.

    --
    This space intentionally left blank
  30. Re:so why ... by Hypotensive · · Score: 1

    You'd think that no-one would trust developers who say 'this software we developed is awful, but the next version will be the best thing evah!'

    2 points:

    1. The vast majority of X11 developers are unlikely to have worked on the original design which happened around 1987.
    2. I would personally trust someone who can admit that they've made a mistake more than someone who covers it up or denies it.
  31. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2

    What is wrong with FVWM95?

    --
    Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  32. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1

    Indeed - lack of respect for the user is a sure sign of product maturity!

    --
    Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  33. GNOME 3.10 Released !!! by TractorBarry · · Score: 1

    Both remaining users are said to slightly care.

    --
    Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
  34. Re: so why ... by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

    I'm not fearing it that much, these days.
    - if your app supports X11, you will still able to run it with ssh -X, whether the host it's on runs Wayland, X or nothing at all.
    An app can conceivably support only X11, only Wayland or both. It's possible the vast majority of stuff you'll run is in the first or 3rd category.
    - if every Wayland window is a dumb pixel buffer and the VNC-like streaming is more integrated rather than bolt-on like now, it becomes trivial to stream only the app and not a whole desktop (Microsoft has supported this too since Windows 2008).

    If the end you can even benefit from the situation, as you can choose between X11 and bitmap streaming on an app-per-app basis and without needing to install and set up additional servers.
    Even streaming 3D accelerated programs might become possible, eventually.

  35. Really bad naming conventions by DeadBeef · · Score: 1

    The mind just boggles at how incredibly futile it is going to be googling for help on an app called 'Software'. I think the gnome guys have gone from mild contempt for the user to rabid hate and fury.

    Amazing.

    --
    I am a lawyer and this constitutes legal advice and I shall indemnify you against any losses arising from taking it.
    1. Re:Really bad naming conventions by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      It turns out that if you search for software help on Google, by the third hit it's already tired of dealing with these bad decisions and suggests you get a Mac instead.

  36. Re:Gnome developers just don't get it nor ever wil by Parker+Lewis · · Score: 1

    We, power desktop users, are in trouble. I strongly agree with you we need refinement, and what we get? Windows 8, KDE 4, Gnome 3. Developers of these desktops are more concerned in "fun to develop" than on refinement (which is boring to them).

  37. If Gnome 3 team design a car, then... by jcdr · · Score: 2

    * You must own a 3D licence to drive it, witch cost you money and time to earn.
    * The instrument panel (because it's ugly to have useful information displayed all the time) will be replaced by a projection on the windshield with information placed everywhere on it as soon a you do an action, hiding the road.
    * And because there is too much informations there, there kill almost all of them as you should known yourself your actual speed (cpu load), energy reserve level (free memory), etc...
    * The commands around the steering wheel (because it's way too complicated for users) will be replaced by a touchpad on the center of the steering wheel: you have to swipe up to the extreme upper left corner to display the possible action catalog on the extreme right of the windshield projected screen and then swipe from the extreme left to the extreme right to select the action like turning on the light. Touchpad is the future, period. Commands are for the elders that can no longer adapt there brain to the modern evolution.
    * The navigation system (virtual desktop map) basically choose a random direction just second before intersection until it find the destination completely by luck. The map data randomly swap towns (desktop) location so you have to manually maintain a translation index in your head. You cannot program more than a few destinations.
    * There is no way to carry something other than a standardized adult on the car. Who would like to have children anyway ? And a car is only there for the joy of driving, so there is absolutely no need to have place for baggage or anything special to transport. Car have is not designed to transport something.
    * The car is only adapted to special roads made for them. Using it with previous generation of roads is completely unsupported can raise unexpected results.
    * All the accessories actually on the market are completely incompatible with this car. You have to use only the accessories provided by the manufacturer, but the catalog is very short and the quality is bad.
    * Sometime it cash for no reason.
    * The manufacturer of the car ignore any complain from there customers, telling to them that there are not using the car the way it was designed to be used.

    1. Re:If Gnome 3 team design a car, then... by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      If the GNOME 3 team designed a car, they'd build a moped and say simpler designs are preferred by walkers.

  38. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

    We are trying to work to change that. We do appreciate the positive post on GNOME. Thank you.

  39. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry I disagree. The new design actually provides a lot more extensibility than you could ever do with GNOME. I think you haven't looked at GNOME 3 deep enough to really understand it. Try using it for a month and try to use it as designed.

  40. Re:THEN GO TO THE MATE THREADS by jcdr · · Score: 1

    While your claim could be technically true, the actual user experience is far below the Gnome 2 level.

  41. !NOME by unixisc · · Score: 1

    Yeah, whenever they dropped the objective of being a Network Object Model Environment, they should have changed the name to something else, be it MATE or whatever.

  42. Network Security by sumonali · · Score: 1

    Can any body tell me whre I can get best support to install all network components: cabling, routers, switches, servers and workstations, LAN, and WAN components for maximum uptime and productivity? Sumon Ali http://jaccarinotech.weebly.com/

  43. It's Fast by shirosenshi · · Score: 1

    Gnome 3 is a faster way to navigate open windows, but I don't see anything ground breaking in this release to make me want to ditch Xfce.