Xfce 4.12 Released
motang writes: After two years of hard work (and much to the dismay of naysayers who worried the project has been abandoned), the Xfce team has announced the release of Xfce 4.12. Highlights include improvements to the window switcher dialog, intelligent hiding of the panel, new wallpaper settings, better multi-monitor support, improved power settings, additions to the file manager, and a revamped task manager. Here is a quick tour, the full changelog, and the download page. I have been running it since Xubuntu 15.04 beta 1 was released two days ago. It is much improved over 4.10, and the new additions are great.
Has everything I want and nothing I don't. So many people seem to want form over function these days and that just results in wasted system resources.
Xfce 4 has been a great desktop environment, but it's now clear that GTK+ is a dead end.
GTK+ is rife with serious problems. The first is that it's affiliated with the GNOME crew. Their grasp of sensible, proper UI design is very suspect, especially after the GNOME 3 disaster. For example, these are the kind of people who took gedit, GNOME's text editor, and changed it from this sensible, usable UI to this hideous, unusable UI. You can even see a screenshot of this shitty UI in the Xfce 4.12 tour! It has, sadly, been infected by this bad UI design.
The portability of GTK+ is, to put it politely, utter rubbish. X11 is the only platform where it isn't a disgrace. It "works" under Windows and OS X, but if by "working" you mean it runs but is generally unusable. I haven't been able to ever get it working properly under OS X. It didn't even get to the point where it showed a UI, the last time I tried it. Inkscape is horrible. GIMP is horrible. Every other GTK+ app I've tried on Windows or OS X has been absolutely horrible.
It will be a lot of work, but they need to port Xfce from GTK+ to Qt. Qt is a much better toolkit. It looks great. It works (and actually works, in that the resulting software is perfectly usable!) pretty much everywhere.
GTK+ had its place in the late 1990s. But we're well past that time now. Qt is the best toolkit to use these days. I truly wish that the Xfce devs would port from GTK+ to Qt, so that we users can use it on Windows and OS X, as well as getting a much better experience under Linux.
Xfce 5 has to be based on Qt.
Working on a VM over Win 8.1. Xfce works like a charm, no unnecessary eye candy plus all the benefits of a Linux environment. Thanks Xfce team for all the hard work!!!!
I've always heard it pronounced like:
EHKS-FEE-SEAS
Running both LMDE XFCE and Xubuntu 14.04 LTE I'll look forward to when this hits the repos. Unfortunately I'll probably have to change Distros to use it as LMDE is changing to using Debian Stable (Jessie) and it probably won't be backported. Similarly for Xubuntu and it probably won't be in Xubuntu LTE until 16.04.
I really ought to change to Arch or something!
That said,I'm pleased it's still being developed. I was worried that it was going to fade away and I'd have to start using Mate, Cinnamon or even Unity.
You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough. - Blake
The woeful file manager has been the weakest point of the non-GNOME/KDE Linux desktop for ever and ever amen, pretty much regardless of which one you're talking about. I'm using lubuntu right now and I can't say I'm in love with the one I get there.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
I spit everytime I say "Xfce". It would be better if they renamed it "XFCE", indicating that we should pronounce each letter individually.
Ex Face (faster than ex ef see ee)
Is XFCE going down the bloat path? ... I'm not trolling here, this is an honest question. To me it looks like they're building a dekstop environment and slowing piling features on. My impression is, that we have enough of those with Gnome, KDE and Enlightenment 17 and perhaps a few others.
Or what is the upside of XFCE? Is it like a "light-weight" KDE or something? And what's with LXDE? Wasn't that the hippest kid on the WM/DE block these days?
BTW, what happened to E17? I remember Enlightenment being the darling-child of WMs in the Linux community. Is it nowadays to difficult to configure and/or install?
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
As a long time XFCE user, I have a little of this concern as well. However, with how XFCE was designed, all these 'improvements' , should be manageable. The problem I guess then, is footprint. If 4.12 starts to feel, heavy, and I don't think it would really be bloat because these 'improvements' don't sound ilke massive code implementations, but I will be looking at pre, and post upgrade memory usage numbers on my systems.
I hope XFCE doesn't go down the path of 'feature creep' , because it's always been to me, a minimalist interface, but not TOO lightweight. I hope it's just in reading all the features that it feels like 'creep' , but I, we'll, only really know once we have it installed.
I am running it now. It is still on Xfce 4.10. Not saying that it isn't possible to install though.
Yeah... If this is really true that highlights include new wallpaper settings after only 2 years of "hard work" than I really must have this!
I think what bloat means is redefined as hardware evolves. Fewer people now have 512MB of ram on their machines than before. Fewer GPU drivers can't deal with super-basic transparency. We have a bit more room for a couple extra daemons or small features. Xfce remains snappy, but not necessarily 1990's ! :-)
... for the good work.
XFCE is light, doesn't get in your way. Yet it is customisable.
I'm looking forward to testing this version.
IMHO it should be the default DE for Debian.
I think this comment is silly but LXDE merged with Razor-Qt and is now creating the lightweight desktop based on Qt. This is pretty good coverage:
Heavy Qt = KDE
Heavy GTK+ = Gnome
Light Qt = LXDE
Light GTK+ = XFCE
There is an OS called Tizen, Enlightenment Foundation Libraries are the core of it. Enlightenment still exists is getting better but its been moving away from just a cool window manager to a full on GUI for its OS.
When really nothing under the hood can be improved, and people still want to polish their code, often times effort inappropriately gets put into the most visible parts of a system in order to make them look better, not work better. It's a self destructive trend that has infected literally every major desktop in existance. They just need someone to say "no, stop, please". Interfaces didn't develop the way they did because they were bad ideas.
I've always been under the impression that all of the 'bloat' is packaged as additional packages in XFCE. At least in my experience, if you install just the minimum of xfce packages, you get no bloat, but also *SHOCK* are completely lacking in any features beyond the basic window management, task bar, and program launcher.
Humans are slow, innaccurate, and brilliant; computers are fast, acurrate, and dumb; together they are unbeatable
From the announcement (bold mine):
Our session manager was updated to use logind and/or upower if available for hibernate/suspend support. For portability and to respect our users' choices, fallback modes were implemented relying on os-specific backends.
Attention freedeskto.org: Commit that to memory, brand it on your foreheads, tattoo it on each other's butt cheeks, whatever it takes!
I am running it as well on Xubuntu 15.04 beta 1. It seems to have all of Xfce 4.12 features, but still says 4.10 in About Xfce. I am sure that will change to reflect that DE version, as after all the beta came out last Thursday and Xfce 4.12 came out yesterday.
GTK GUI and font rendering looks much better than QT and Windows. LibreOffice renders(very sharp, clean looking, and easy on the eyes) awesome under Ubuntu but shit under Windows and KDE plasma(too bright and fuzzy looking causes eye strain). I like xfce for the many skin themes I can use and you can customize the menu the way you want unlike Windows where you are stuck with whatever MS gives you unless you either hack the shell or use a third party application. I'm one of those people who get's eye strain from the Windows 8/8.1/10 flat color rendering and it's almost the same situation under kde plasma 5.
Offline installation of drivers and applications under windows is a breeze but not so much under linux. I hope in the near future there will be a tool(better then aptoncd) to achieve this goal.
Visual Studio(which i have to work with) especially 2013 has become such a bloat that you are not given the option to not install the SQL in the express edition. In 2010 professional and express editions I do have that option. And what's worse is removing(fucking tedious) these applications which in visual studio 2010/2013 it's component after component under the "program and features" same with SQL.
With Linux ISO's 640mb to 1gb you get pretty much everything regular "joe" might need out of the box including reading PDF's but with Windows you, well, you get Windows. Wordpad, notepad, paint are all freaking useless compared to any office suit that comes with any Linux distro. Who the fuck uses paint? what is the point of paint anyway? Fucking MS retards. 3 fucking decades of charging customers $99 - $300 for an OS with shit applications. The only reason MS is #1 is because of the third party support from adobe, autodesk, corel, etc...
MS will never get rid of it's win32(com) legacy which I think is the reason why Windows is 3+GB in size, but, companies do pay $130 - $220+ for developers who know their way around the com(component object model). Windows 8/10 everything plus WinRT but same old crap.
That'd look too similar to the NES emulator FCEUX.
Yes, XFCE is a nice light-weight window manager. Is there a light-weight distro that uses it? Ubuntu wants 5-10GB of disk, even for Xubuntu and Lubuntu. TinyCore can do a graphical environment with maybe 100MB, but is a bit too minimalist for me - I want something that can keep security update working with no more work than apt-get/yum/etc. I need a window manager, browser, shell, and maybe a C compiler or so, and I want something under 0.5 GB so I can keep a few spares on a desktop and spin up lots of cloud instances as well.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
... what is the point of paint anyway?
on windows, printscreen simply puts the capture in the clipboard. You need to ^v it into a graphics program (paint is free!) to view or save.
other than that, the kiddo's like playing with it.
The only reason MS is #1 is because of the third party support from adobe, autodesk, corel, etc...
You might have that mixed a bit.. Microsoft writes an OS to allow Content Providers (adobe, autodesk, corel, etc...) to control what you do with your data (DRM? Region Codes?) - all for a fee, of course. They support each other in draining your (but not mine ;-)) wallets.
I had to back up a friends Win7 user folder on a malware afflicted system the other day. Didn't even try using M.S. tools. I simply booted to a live linux cd (Mint 14 XFCE as it happens), plugged in the usb H.D., & cp -ra /media/mint/Windows/User/$u_name /media/mint/part_1. 4.5 Gb (_lots_ of photos, she's a photographer/painter) in no time at all - with nary a 'permission denied' notice to spoil the experience! ;-)
Personally, I'm looking forward to updating my xfce (been using it literally for years - with lxde before that) & giving 'er a run, so from me -
Thanks, XFCE folks!
See for yourself E19 in action, http://www.voidlinux.eu/download/