GNOME 3.16 Released
kthreadd writes Version 3.16 of GNOME, the primary desktop environment for GNU/Linux operating systems has been released. Some major new features in this release include a overhauled notification system, an updated design of the calendar drop down and support for overlay scrollbars. Also, the grid view in Files has been improved with bigger thumbnail icons, making the appearance more attractive and the rows easier to read. A video is available which demonstrates the new version.
Works fine here, dimwit.
Perhaps you should actually *read* the uninstall list that Red Carpet provides you before proceding, instead of blindly hitting the 'next' button.
Red-carpet occasionally asks to uninstall certain fundamental programs from your system. If you install RPMS from outside the Ximian fork, Red Carpet may want to uninstall those RPMS & install it's own version (Or sometimes, not install a replacement). These are bugs. Bugs happen.
Vanilla RPMs sometimes have the same problem. I want to install RPM xxx, but this will break a dependancy on RPM yyy. That's always been an issue with RPMs.
I've installed Ximian using their red-carpet installer on Red Hat 7.1 and 7.2 five times (five machines) now and it's worked great every time. PAM wasn't touched, only the Gnome stuff
There are a few dependancy annoyances on RH 7.1 and the new Up2date/RHN from RedHat that I've not figured out, but the 7.2 RH machines are humming along just fine.
As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.
Might I suggest distinguishing between your needs, with desktop environment in one group and package management in another? I suggest choosing Gnome or KDE for the first group and Debian and apt-get for the second group. That way you won't be messing with figuring out dependencies and install/uninstall ordering on your own. *ouch* Not sure what that Red Carpet and Ximian crap is doing for you that Gnome ontop of Debian hasn't been doing for the couple of years.
People are using the API's. Much of the improvements to Gtk+ and GNOME for version 2 involve making the platform and desktop accessible to more users. This includes better internationalization and rendering of text, accessibility (a major project being headed up by Sun Microsystems). This has been a very important emphasis of this release. Other improvement in the configuration system, component model, etc. allow developers to write more powerful applications quicker. And these are being used.
Making the GUI easier for first-time Linux users, which was the whole point of GNOME in the first place, wasnt it?
This has been a major focus of the GNOME Project for GNOME 2 and beyond. Check out the GNOME Usability Project and the GNOME Usability mailing list.
Celebrate the finer things in life
blah, blah, Systemd, blah, blah, KDE, blah, blah...
The GNU project has two desktop environments: GNUstep and GNOME. Of the two, GNOME is the primary one.
For the history: in the late 90s, the KDE desktop was getting popular but it required people to install non-free Qt libraries. Two GNU projects were launched to counter this problem. One was Harmony, which aimed to be a Qt replacement, to allow KDE be run without installing non-free software. The other was GNOME.
Years later, when GNOME was successful, the Qt libraries were released as free software.
There was a third GNU project which aimed to make a graphical desktop, but they decided to first focus on a Scheme scripting engine. This effort produced GNU Guile, but no graphical desktop got made.
I think there was even a fourth project, but I can't think of it right now.
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