GNOME 3.24 Released (softpedia.com)
prisoninmate quotes a report from Softpedia: GNOME 3.24 just finished its six-month development cycle, and it's now the most advanced stable version of the modern and popular desktop environment used by default in numerous GNU/Linux distributions. It was developed since October 2016 under the GNOME 3.23.x umbrella, during which it received numerous improvements. Prominent new features of the GNOME 3.24 desktop environment include a Night Light functionality that promises to automatically shift the colors of your display to the warmer end of the spectrum after sunset, and a brand-new GNOME Control Center with redesigned Users, Keyboard and Mouse, Online Accounts, Bluetooth, and Printer panels. As for the GNOME apps, we can mention that the Nautilus file manager now lets users browse files as root (system administrator), GNOME Photos imitates Darktable's exposure and blacks adjustment tool, GNOME Music comes with ownCloud integration and lets you edit tags, and GNOME Calendar finally brings the Week view. New apps like GNOME Recipes are also part of this release. The full release notes can be viewed here. Softpedia notes in conclusion: "As mentioned before, it will take at least a couple of weeks for the new GNOME 3.24 packages to land on the stable repositories of your favorite distro, which means that you'll most probably be able to upgrade from GNOME 3.22 when the first point release, GNOME 3.24.1, is out on April 12, 2017."
Said no one, ever.
It is left as an exercise for the reader to make a sarcastic quip about systemd.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Can you actually still do anything, or have all useful features been removed?
Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
Use MATE. It's cool and useful.
"advanced stable version of the modern and popular" and funny, gnome is funny as well. Get over it.
I used to be a diehard Gnome 2 fan, but I won't touch it with a ten-foot pole. A great example of the Gnome 3.X debacle is gedit. It used to be one of the best GUI editors in Linux. Now it's completely worthless, prone to crashes, can't correctly display text on large files, and generally unusable.
I love deterministic code, it should either do something or not. If I want my colors shifted I just install redshift. That not modern enough?
Please use and support MATE:
http://mate-desktop.org/
on the stable repositories of my favorite distros and I can't tell you how relaxing that is. I'll leave it for the redhat derivative.
It's an act of courage to remove features everyone uses and doesn't think about, and then to tell those people with a straight face that it's an improvement. No, really. You can't have any vestigial shred of fear in you to do that.
By a mile, the best thing about Gnome is that you do not have to use it.
Same old story every single time Gnome is mentioned. Gnome 3 is here- get the hell over it. There is still MATE if you're wanting Gnome 2.
I preferred Gnome 2.x to KDE but when Gnome 3.0 came out, I jumped ship because they took a usable desktop and redesigned it for tablets and then tried to push it to desktop users. I chose something more lightweight and isn't ensnared in Systemd: LXQt. I use Linux so I don't have to put up with people's bullshit, not so I have to put up with the bullshit of different people.
I see no reason why anyone should use Gnome anymore.
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
Last time I used it, the only way to modify the taskbars was to use a friggin' web browser, using a combination of an external website (and if that's down, you're SOL) and a browser plugin.
Have they recognized how utterly stupid that is yet, or is that still the functionality for desktop users?
You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
WindowMaker (plus thunar if file manager features are needed. DockApps more than cover the other 'DE' needs), E17, LXDE, XFCE in that order are my preferred environments now. The first of those since Slackware 3.x in the mid 90s.
While there have been changes in the years since, many of those original window managers and desktop environments still provide the basic features for the 'non-media' productive user. And about the only 'new' feature I've seen that could be useful (but also is a memory/cpu hog, which is why it wasn't implemented sooner...) is thumbnails in the file manager for easily skimming through otherwise ambiguously named image/video files looking for the right ones for whatever activity you need them for.)
Other than that, most of the changes made for Linux DEs in the past 10+ years have been bloat or eyecandy, and just as often the cause of rendering or stability bugs on an otherwise productive system platform.
But hey what do I know. I have only been using computers since before I could walk, and socializing online since before the modern travesty of 'social media' existed.
Prominent new features of the GNOME 3.24 desktop environment include a Night Light functionality that promises to automatically shift the colors of your display to the warmer end of the spectrum after sunset,
Please tell me you're joking. ....
OMG, you're not joking! Seriously, why is this a thing?
It's an act of courage to remove features everyone uses and doesn't think about, and then to tell those people with a straight face that it's an improvement.
sed s/courage/psychopathy/g
There is a perplexing amount of GNOME hate in the top comments. I'm a very happy user. I've been using Linux almost exclusively in all capacities since about 1999 and have sampled and/or used a lot of desktop environments. GNOME is the best, IMHO.
pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
Is the open file dialog still a steaming pile of hot trash? Compare it to windows or KDE and you'll feel the hate making you focused. Making you stronger...
Did they remove yet more standard features, which to get back, you would need to install some 3rd party extension?
I am more surprised someone modded it up. It has no insight, just offtopic trolling.
...a more austere, all business desktop.
Look at North-Korea. One leader. One lifestyle.
Now look at the western world. Republicans vs. Democrats vs. Greens. Conservatives vs. Liberals vs. a bunch of other flavors. McDonald's vs. Burger King vs. Pizza etc... It's the Organized Kaos of contradicting interests, with followers locked in endless battles over which system is The Best(TM).
Democracy never finding true peace is exactly why it must never stagnate into The One Right Solution.
I pass on your supposed flame war, was just thinking about how much I'd need a Strong Leader...
They know nothing about interface design, all are too young to even have used a computer when the first Macintosh came out, they didn't see Windows 3.1, and so on - they haven't got a clue how to design a good interface.
Look at North-Korea. One leader. One lifestyle.
Look at the TCP/IP. One solution. One standard protocol. There are good examples, and there are shitty examples. North Korea tends to fit into the latter.
Now look at the western world. Republicans vs. Democrats vs. Greens. Conservatives vs. Liberals vs. a bunch of other flavors. McDonald's vs. Burger King vs. Pizza etc... It's the Organized Kaos of contradicting interests, with followers locked in endless battles over which system is The Best(TM).
Democracy never finding true peace is exactly why it must never stagnate into The One Right Solution.
True peace should be viewed and treated as a goal and a positive thing, not a fucking stagnation point.
And my analogy was centered around religious warmongering, which much like the KDE/GNOME/EMACS/BSD/Linux/vi bickering, can be far more pointless and futile than mere politics.
I pass on your supposed flame war, was just thinking about how much I'd need a Strong Leader...
Ever read a rant from the likes of Linus or Theo? We've had plenty of Strong Headed Leaders in this space. The end result is 2017, the Flame Wars rage on, and the Year of the Desktop is a fantasy.
MATE is far better than Gnome 3.
How can you get so much wrong in one short post?
> Look at Microsoft. One browser. One Office suite.
Lots of browsers are used on Windows. I use LibreOffice on Windows.
> Now look at Linux. KDE vs. GNOME
Okay, that is true.
> EMACS vs. vi.
Lots of editors are used with Windows.
> BSD vs. Linux.
BSD is not Linux. It would make as much sense to claim: "MacOS vs. Windows"
> It's the Organized Religion of software, with followers locked in endless battles over which system is The One.
Hardly exclusive to Linux. There is MacOS vs. Windows, Android vs iOS, Firefox vs. Chrome, many competing applications.
> Religion never finding true peace is exactly why Linux has never found the Year of the Desktop.
No. It's all about the apps.
The comparison to Windows was meant to highlight the utter lack of infighting, unlike the Linux community, riddled with "trigger words" such as EMACS, vi, BSD, Linux, GNOME, or KDE, which manage to incite flame wars every time.
Yes, there are many options in Windows, but the overwhelming majority of the user base doesn't give a shit enough to argue endlessly about it.
... but will it blend?