GNOME 3.0 released
GNOME 3.0 released
Posted Apr 6, 2011 21:17 UTC (Wed) by luya (subscriber, #50741)In reply to: GNOME 3.0 released by handock
Parent article: GNOME 3.0 released
Posted Apr 6, 2011 21:32 UTC (Wed)
by handock (guest, #73633)
[Link] (8 responses)
Posted Apr 6, 2011 21:36 UTC (Wed)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link] (6 responses)
or so I understand from watching this train wreck.
Posted Apr 6, 2011 22:34 UTC (Wed)
by ebassi (subscriber, #54855)
[Link] (2 responses)
for those, like you and me, there is a tweak tool, hosted on gnome.org, that allows you to tweak the configuration at your liking. it's easy to hack on, and it doesn't even require installation to try it out. it's called gnome-tweak-tool:
http://git.gnome.org/browse/gnome-tweak-tool
Posted Apr 6, 2011 23:44 UTC (Wed)
by dougsk (guest, #25954)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Apr 11, 2011 2:17 UTC (Mon)
by jospoortvliet (guest, #33164)
[Link]
Posted Apr 8, 2011 4:13 UTC (Fri)
by ThinkRob (guest, #64513)
[Link] (2 responses)
No, the desire to change font settings makes you a normal user. GNOME's misguided notion of what users want is what makes you an "advanced" user.
Posted Dec 30, 2014 3:05 UTC (Tue)
by ThinkRob (guest, #64513)
[Link] (1 responses)
Three and a half years of development can improve a lot of things! :)
Posted Dec 30, 2014 3:19 UTC (Tue)
by bronson (subscriber, #4806)
[Link]
Only 6 years until Gnome's next break-the-world release. :)
Posted Apr 7, 2011 4:56 UTC (Thu)
by bluss (guest, #47454)
[Link]
Posted Apr 6, 2011 21:47 UTC (Wed)
by nyfle (guest, #72967)
[Link] (13 responses)
Posted Apr 6, 2011 22:19 UTC (Wed)
by ebassi (subscriber, #54855)
[Link] (12 responses)
Posted Apr 7, 2011 1:18 UTC (Thu)
by csigler (subscriber, #1224)
[Link] (9 responses)
Yes, THAT'S what we need, a desktop project that responds to user complaints by belittling those users and baiting them to do better.
IMHO, an appropriate and non-belligerent response would be something like, "I hope you'll try using the tweak tool some more and report any bugs or request improvements in our bugzilla; we always welcome patches to improve our work."
Clemmitt
Posted Apr 7, 2011 7:44 UTC (Thu)
by daniels (subscriber, #16193)
[Link] (8 responses)
If people can carry on like that, then why don't they do better? Since it's obvious to everyone how much better their ideas are and only an idiot would think otherwise, and it's really easy to do too.
Turns out a bit of politeness and common courtesy (otherwise known as 'not being rude, abrasive, and generally making yourself unwelcome') goes a long way. Who knew?
Posted Apr 7, 2011 16:14 UTC (Thu)
by csigler (subscriber, #1224)
[Link]
Indeed. Answering user complaints negatively or impolitely is counterproductive. Two wrongs have never and will never make a right. (But three lefts make a right, just one block up....)
Clemmitt
Posted Apr 11, 2011 9:50 UTC (Mon)
by nye (subscriber, #51576)
[Link] (6 responses)
Because they honestly believe that doing nothing *is* doing better.
I can't speak for Gnome 3 as I've not tried it, but there have been several 'upgrades' in the free software world over the last decade which in my opinion would have been improved by simply rolling the clock back 2 years.
It's infuriating when something you're using not only doesn't improve, but gets *actively worse*, and then any complaints are silenced with cries to do better - when all you really wanted was the thing not to be messed with in the first place.
Posted Apr 11, 2011 10:30 UTC (Mon)
by daniels (subscriber, #16193)
[Link] (5 responses)
(Also, 'worse' is obviously subjective -- the people making it, the distributions shipping it, and the userbase of the latter who hasn't revolted and forced them back to the old version clearly don't agree. Try replacing 'the new version is worse' with 'I don't like the new version'.)
Posted Apr 11, 2011 10:40 UTC (Mon)
by jrn (subscriber, #64214)
[Link] (4 responses)
Sometimes people upgrade software because of security bugs or for the sake of compatibility with other (modern) software they use. It's true this isn't about force. Perhaps a more helpful meme should be "if you don't like our release management, why don't you help out with code review" instead of "if you don't like the latest regression, why don't you fix it".
Posted Apr 11, 2011 10:50 UTC (Mon)
by daniels (subscriber, #16193)
[Link] (3 responses)
FWIW, the same arguments were made in the same (if not higher) quantity, with the same volume/force, for GNOME 2.0's release. And also when they switched the button ordering around (anyone remember GARNOME?). Yet here we are today, and GNOME still has a userbase. *shrug*
Posted Apr 11, 2011 19:40 UTC (Mon)
by jrn (subscriber, #64214)
[Link]
Posted Apr 11, 2011 22:06 UTC (Mon)
by jmorris42 (guest, #2203)
[Link] (1 responses)
But that isn't the question. Will GNOME3 do as a the developers believe, bring in new users? I say no.
Because I deal with end users and there is no way in heck my users will ever see GNOME3. The support pain would be unbearable so I ain't going there. When I hit a point where I'm building a system image to push to my patron lab PCs and the choice is GNOME3 or XFCE I'm not going to make GNOME the default anymore, if things don't get a lot better before then I doubt GNOME3 will even get installed.
I might (but can see no reason to) be able to retrain staff to adjust to GNOME3 but the general public? Madness!
Posted Apr 11, 2011 22:34 UTC (Mon)
by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946)
[Link]
I think it too early to say one way or the other but from the feedback we have received so far, it appears that new users like it much better than long time users of GNOME 2 who are just trying it out now. I am not surprised about that.
Posted Apr 7, 2011 12:07 UTC (Thu)
by nyfle (guest, #72967)
[Link] (1 responses)
And FWIW, it wouldn't be easy because I "already have a template"; it would be easy because I've used Gnome for nearly ten years and I can, just as easily, recall the number of "tweaks" and preferences that have been hidden from view and/or removed from this average user's desktop experience.
Posted Apr 11, 2011 2:20 UTC (Mon)
by jospoortvliet (guest, #33164)
[Link]
Or stay on GNOME 2.x, not hard at all - openSUSE 11.4 is just released with GNOME 2.32 and will be maintained for the next 2 years.
GNOME 3.0 released
this release and I have to install an additional
tool to change the most basic font setting?
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> and accomplish that. though *now* it's easy: you already
> have a template.
GNOME 3.0 released
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> (otherwise known as 'not being rude, abrasive, and
> generally making yourself unwelcome') goes a long way.
> Who knew?
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