Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 15th Jul 2009 21:38 UTC
Permalink for comment 373527
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Member since:
2005-07-07
What (Linux) miss is integration between applications and between application and web services. In Gnome, all applications are different and sometime inconsistent (configs dialog is a good example). Mix OpenOffice with Pidgin, Gimp, Cinelerra and Inkscape, do you get any consistency?
lol and.... wtf? OpenOffice is not Gnome... It uses own toolkit. Cinelerra... Again... not gnome, it is Motif I think. Inkscape... I agree, but that is Inkscape fault and not gnomes, Inkscape simply doesn't follow gnome HIG... Inkscape is not part of gnome. Pidgin is the only software you actually guessed right, yes... it is gnome and it behaves like gnome. Gimp is gtk, but still I find its behaviour more or less gnome hig like,
I use Abiword/Gnumeric instead of OO.o, epiphany instead of firefox (firefox is actually the first thing that flies off my computers since webkit), after that my desktop is really consistant
Of course, most reader here are true alternative OS geeks, for many of us, mainly the veterans, we can deal with semi working incoherent applications by using many apps to do a single jobs instead of only one. Many of us like that (including me) and see of this way of doing things is part of true power users methods, but if we think about it, most of you will agree with me that it does not make that much sense in itself, we just give sense to it.
lol, guess veterans prefer best tool over coherent desktop. as you said you don't use desktop, you use random software.
Mac OS 10 is boring, but it is because the experience is so straightforward that we just don't notice it, not because it is bad. Linux miss this reality, and if we want the "years of Linux on the desktop" to even happen, projects have to communication en put emphasis on interface and work flow standardization.
Again, start using pure gnome or pure kde before talking about standardization.
But with OSX being boring, with that I agree, but not so much boring as counterproductive for ppl used to optimize their environment.
And what I miss from my gnome desktop? Nothing really. I have to install gnome-do and gnome global menu (second only on my single monitor setups) otherwise I'm more or less covered with my own applications (yes... I write what I need)