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		<title>OSNews: </title>
		<link>http://www.osnews.com/story/6822/Application_Suggestions_for_Gnome_3_0</link>
		<description>Exploring the Future of Computing</description>
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			<title>Some good apps</title>
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			<description>Totem, Gthumb,and Rhythmbox should definitely make it in GNOME 3.0 I also think that GNOME 3.0 should switch to Qt 4 jk.<br />
<br />
But,s eriously, Eugenia, do you think you can provide a few more UI suggestions for KDE. I think the developers already know most good KDE apps that should be included or the poor/redundant ones that need to be removed. For example Kedit which is redundant but cannot be removed because it has one or two features which kate does not yet. Anyway, Kedit should be removed by KDE 4.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:25:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>RE:  Some good apps</title>
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			<description>Can you please stop asking me the same thing on gnome stories over and over? If you want to discuss something off topic, please email me and you will have my full attention.<br />
<br />
And no, I can't offer more UI suggestions to KDE because:<br />
1. most of their devs never listen<br />
2. I don't care, I am not using KDE anymore, I have given up a year ago</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:27:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>Id personally like to see...</title>
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			<description>-a modified file selector. The new one is OK but I still cant open hidden folders.<br />
<br />
-better network integration into nautilus. Its gotton alot better in 2.6<br />
<br />
-a gnome equalivlant to kcontrol<br />
<br />
-intergrate totem into nautilus<br />
<br />
-MORE APPLETS!!! I cant get enough applets <img src="/images/emo/grin.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
-better performance from gnome-terminal and gedit<br />
<br />
Anyone know if dashboard might make an appearance in 3.0?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:36:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: Id personally like to see...</title>
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			<description>Actually, you are kinda late. You are talking about &quot;gnome system&quot; feature requests, while this article is about &quot;user applications&quot;. <img src="/images/emo/wink.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
Your comment should have being placed into my older article, the &quot;Gnome wishlist&quot;: <a href="http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=5361" rel="nofollow">http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=5361</a><br />
<br />
&gt;-intergrate totem into nautilus <br />
<br />
That would be a mistake. However, there is already a Totem plugin for Nautilus that lets you view still movie thumbnails inside Nautilus (not play them though). Do you have installed that plugin?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:41:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>My Wishlist for Gnome 3.0</title>
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			<description>Here goes my list:<br />
<br />
1. A good P2P client like what KDE has in apollon. Need one integrated with GNOME.<br />
<br />
2. A good integrated Bit torrent client. I don't want to have java installed just to use limewire (P2P) and azureus (BT).<br />
<br />
3. A good IM client that also allows me to send files while chatting. Gaim does not let me do this at present.<br />
<br />
4. A good easy to use photo album generator. Yes I am a camera junkie and like to post my photos on my private site for my family and friends to see.<br />
<br />
5. An easy to use help file creator similar to Robohelp. Yes, I am a Technical Writer by profession.<br />
<br />
That's all folks. I am happy with GNOME 2.6 on Gentoo but will be more happy if I see the applications I have listed above.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:41:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>What is a DE ?</title>
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			<description>A Desktop Environment is an environment under which applications run. It does not have to include those applications you mention. The view that Gnome should come with many of the applciations you mention show that for you a DE is just like Windows. Why grouping everything together and create a mess just like Windows ? Why also kill innovation by bundling application into a DE ?<br />
<br />
Let GNOME focus on being a DE. Let people develop applications. Whether those apps run under GNOME or another DE is not important. I run KDE as desktop, with apps using several look &amp; feel: KDE, GNOME, X, Java, etc.<br />
<br />
I prefer quality applications, even with a slight diffeent look, rather than one blob of a lesser quality.<br />
<br />
Your article shows a Windows mentality. GNOME being a UNIX-based system, it must keep a UNIX philosophy: small is beautiful, focus on doing one thing right, and be modular. See Raymond's book if you do not know UNIX's philosophy and please do not try to impose Window's philosophy in a UNIX world.<br />
<br />
Your article also shows a tendency to divide the Linux DE world. Many of the applications you list and say should be part of GNOME, either alreay exist as independent applications running perfectly under GNOME, or as applications using QT for instance. So why reinvent the wheel and not reuse the good things that for example are already bundled with KDE and work so well under GNOME ? <br />
<br />
GNOME is a Desktop Environment. Period.<br />
<br />
This article is tendentious as it aims to divide the Lunix world at a large, fueling the Desktop Environment war, and trying to impose the Windows philosophy in the UNIX Open Source community.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:41:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>Eugenia</title>
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			<description>My KDE comment was there but there are always KDE comments on GNOME stories and vice versa, I still had some suggestions for GNOME.<br />
<br />
Also, DE's developers are very responsive, for example the usability study that was published which outlined clearly what things need to be improved was immediately embraced. Now the menu is better split up and the toolbars have started being cleaned up. <br />
<br />
I don't care if you use KDE or not, I was just asking you to give some suggestions to the project. Also, if you &quot;gave up&quot; on it say why so people can improve it and of course I'm sure you are not so close minded that your current decision is going to remain the same forever. Hopefully you will, if your suggestions are addressed reconsider, so by making your suggestions known, perhaps filing bug reports and wishes you are helping both desktops get to their goal faster.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:46:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>RE: RE: Id personally like to see...</title>
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			<description>System features, eh? Oh well someone else proably brought some of those points up. <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
Do you have installed that plugin?<br />
I can see the thumbnail, I was kinda hoping for an embedded preview. Like in Windows 2k/XP.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:47:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>RE:  What is a DE ? </title>
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			<description>And your comment is nasty and unfair and you don't understand that Gnome and KDE are not simple window managers anymore, they are both frameworks and environments It comes a time that these DEs become big and mature and more is required off them.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
You see DEs as you described above. I don't.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
I see Gnome as a framework and collection of software with apps that are TESTED to work together with each other. This is what gives VALUE to the DE in the eyes of the OEM: the full solution. The ability to have a system that you &quot;plug n play&quot; on your product and have all basic apps and other frameworks already in place.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
I see XFce as a DE in YOUR definition (being a pure DE). But I see KDE and Gnome being more like in my definition. 4-5 years they were just DEs as well, but times change and OEM providers need this pre-QA'ed, full solution. It adds value to Gnome/KDE.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
I always see things from the business/user point of view (both the OEM and Gnome side). You see it from the point of view of a geek.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
I see and want evolution on how things work or should work and you just want nothing to change. It's as simple as that.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:48:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>Agreed, but...</title>
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			<description>I agree with most of the above, however this seems more like a wishlist for Gnome 2.10 rather than 3.0.<br />
<br />
Take a look at the difference between 1.4 and 2.0 and compare it to the difference between 2.0 and 2.2.  Gnome 1.4 is a completely different animal than the 2.x series.  Granted, that was an intentional rewrite, but the fact remains that major version numbers represent major changes, and minor version numbers are evolutionary, like the addition of new apps.<br />
<br />
For Gnome 3.0 we need to stop thinking about how Gnome needs a media player and a photo manager...these have already been solved.  Rhythmbox is slated for 2.8, as is Totem and Evolution, and if it's not slated for inclusion in the platform, at least these apps exist (like Gaim...just about all Gnome users run Gaim, though it's not supported).  There is no shortage of quality applications for linux, and the situation just keeps getting better and better.  So if that's what we don't think about, then what DO we think about?<br />
<br />
Major enhancements.  Core technologies.  I was hoping to see the community standardize on a managed environment for 3.0 (be it mono or parrot or to a lesser extent, java) but the issue seems to be at a standstill with everyone content to straddle the fence.  This goes hand-in-hand with a really kick-ass, easily-accessible development framework.  A full SVG desktop with next-generation functionality in GTK (OSX and Longhorn aren't sitting still on the eye-candy improvements...GTK has to evolve to incorporate some really cool stuff that makes use of accelerated hardware as that seems to be the way things are going these days).  Some fruits of this proposed mozilla-gnome alliance, hopefully resulting in XUL bindings for GTK.  Inclusion of gnome-volume-manager to finally put Gnome on par with WinXP and OSX in this department.  Verify that Seth really is still working on Storage and see what can't be done about plugging it in to Gnome.  A new kickass menu with a real menu editor.  The list goes on and on and on.<br />
<br />
So please, don't request applications to be included.  Yes they should be included, and they will be included, but the more pressing issue at hand is &quot;what do we want the next major instantiation of Gnome to be?&quot;</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:50:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title> RE: What is a DE ?</title>
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			<description>It's both.  A DE should provide a straightforward mechanism for interprocess communication and a solution for session management and integration.  It should also provide a set of applications that are known to work reliably based on the framework it has laid out.<br />
<br />
Really the two philosophies should be split into two different areas of Gnome: core system and applications teams.  Not sure if that's the way it's done already (I'm afraid I don't know much about the internal structure of the team), but it would make a lot of sense for these two areas to be handled separately and have the teams work together to provide one another with what they need.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:55:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>PhotoOrganizer vs. ImageViewer</title>
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			<description>Eugenia please don't mix PhotoOrganizer and ImageViewer that are two different typs of programs.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:58:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>Eugenia</title>
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			<description>If I could report abuse for calling my opinion &quot;nasty&quot;, I would. But apparently common users can't do that against your posts, which is very unfortunate :-(<br />
<br />
Also it seems that for you the DE is the platform. It is not. Linux is the platform Eugenia. The DE is integrated into a layered approach, and yes can be see as a framework, but it runs on a wider framework called Linux.<br />
<br />
Accept you can be wrong sometimes Eugenia :-)</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>Gtk# apps finding their way onto people's systems</title>
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			<description>I expect to see a *lot* of apps in Gtk# finding their way into   a few of these areas. F-Spot, blam! (nicely usable RSS aggregator, given it's age), MonoDevelop, etc are all showing lots of promise, and proving how useful mono is in rapidly/easily developing applications. I'm hoping that people's fears about this &quot;evil MS tech&quot; won't blind them to a nice new language and set of bindings.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>RE: Eugenia</title>
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			<description>&gt;If I could report abuse for calling my opinion &quot;nasty&quot;,<br />
<br />
Your comment WAS nasty in the way it was written. It didn't read like a disagreement, it read like an attack. And so I replied accordingly.<br />
<br />
&gt;Accept you can be wrong sometimes Eugenia :-) <br />
<br />
Why? I am not wrong on this one. I accept that XFce is a DE in the *traditional* meaning. Gnome/KDE are not and they should not be. Not anymore.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:02:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>Eugenia</title>
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			<description>It's a criticism of the article Eugenia.<br />
I think this is what this board is about, to comment on articles.<br />
<br />
Is it forbidden to have a different opinion than yours?<br />
Will those who disagree with you be called &quot;nasty&quot; ?<br />
<br />
Your response was the attack Eugenia, sorry you can't see that.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:07:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>GnomeOffice and GnomeStudio</title>
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			<description>I think Gnome needs a real GnomeOffice, the think that is called GnomeOffice are just some apps but they don't play together.<br />
<br />
And I think Gnome needs somethink like &quot;Gnome Graphics Suite&quot; or &quot;Gnome Studio&quot; where the graphic oriented apps worke nicely together.<br />
<br />
With <br />
- the main Programms:<br />
GIMP<br />
Inkscape or Sodipodi<br />
VIPS<br />
<br />
- and the tools:<br />
autotrace.sf.net/potrace.sf.net frontend<br />
SANE frontend<br />
gphoto frontend<br />
hugin - Panorama Tools GUI<br />
Image viewer (gqview)<br />
Image organizer (gThumbs/F-Spot)</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:09:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>My wishlist...</title>
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			<description>This is a nice list, but this could be done within the 2.x framework. The features I would like to see for 3.0 are:<br />
- Multiple programming language support (C++,Java, Mono and others)<br />
- Storage<br />
- HAL<br />
- (The best) Support for mobile devices.<br />
- Gnome 2.x applications must work on Gnome 3.x<br />
- ZeroInstall from Rox<br />
<br />
And gnome 3.0 shouldn't be done in a hurry. Continue the 2.x cycle and when the features for 3.0 are ready, release it. People don't care if the release number becomes: 2.12 or something. What they want is a Gnome that is productive.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:13:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>RE: Omega (IP: ---.plus.com)</title>
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			<description>You blasted Eugenia with &quot;This article is tendentious as it aims to divide the Lunix world at a large, fueling the Desktop Environment war, and trying to impose the Windows philosophy in the UNIX Open Source community.&quot;<br />
<br />
Your statement is utterly ridiculous.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:17:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>Ronald</title>
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			<description>I explained and justified why I think that &quot;This article is tendentious as it aims to divide the Lunix world at a large, fueling the Desktop Environment war, and trying to impose the Windows philosophy in the UNIX Open Source community.&quot; <br />
<br />
Please explain why you think it is an &quot;utterly ridiculous&quot; view of this article :-)</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:21:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>My take</title>
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			<description>Some of these are reiterated from the article, but that's only because they're really important.<br />
<br />
1) Get Gnome to use alsa or jack (which in turn would use alsa), then get totem and rhythmbox to build against gstreamer.  Solve the media issues by providing a solid framework.  This is what gstreamer is supposed to do, unfortunately it's really confusing with so many ./configure options and not a lot of documentation.<br />
<br />
Getting them to work embedded in mozilla/epiphany is another biggie.<br />
<br />
Oh, by the way, work is underway to abstract the mozilla rendering engine (gecko) so building a full mozilla won't be needed for epiphany.  Not only that, but apps that use gtkhtml like yelp and evolution can just start using gecko <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
2) Get GnuCash ported.  This would be the crown jewel of the Gnome desktop, IMO.<br />
<br />
3) Ditch all transparency hacks like nautilus select icons, transparent panel, etc.  Make way for true alpha-transparency <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
4) Add right click menu for entries in the main menu, so that you can create new shortcuts and move them around.  This is especially important with the new spatial nautilus, which has no address bar.  I have to open up a folder, type 'CTRL-L,' then type &quot;Applications:///&quot; in order to add shortcuts to the menu.  How usable is that, Eugenia ;P<br />
<br />
5) While I'm on gnome-panel, make more changes happen automatically without a restart.  New users will think they need to restart X (I open a terminal, killall -q gnome-panel).  Aside from menu changes not updating automatically, I changed some settings in gconf-editor which didn't go into effect until I restarted Gnome completely.<br />
<br />
6) Integrate hardware detection via HAL/DBUS <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /></description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:21:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>More Personal management tools</title>
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			<description>I would like to see a better and much integrated &quot;sticky notes&quot; program which will be much enhanced than what it is right now. I would prefer it can be emailed and saved in several open source formats. I think also they will to be less on memory foot print and offer other services like integration with your email client, personal management tools and other applications easily. Plugins can be easily made for that too. <br />
I have not checked out GNOME 2.6 so dont blame if some of these features are there in that too. <br />
<br />
I plan to embark myself in the development of such tools soon under MONO once I get acquainted with C#.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:21:00 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Omega</title>
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			<description>Omega, you are driving the dicussion completely off topic, please STOP it. You replied, I replied, LEAVE IT AT THAT.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:24:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>Presentation program!</title>
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			<description>I have to have a presentation program, capable of reading Powerpoint files, as part of the office suite.  Criawips made a silent release recently, so I'm hopeful ...<br />
<br />
I already have Evolution, Abiword, and Gnumeric -- Criawips (or an alternative) is a necessary piece of the pie.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:25:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Oh, and ...</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>... Python should be an official binding -- no excuses.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:27:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>...</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>We really have to dump XMMS. Its the only app I can think of with gtk 1.x dependencies.<br />
<br />
Beep [<a href="http://beepmp.sourceforge.net/" rel="nofollow">http://beepmp.sourceforge.net/</a>] is pretty nice(included in dropline gnome) but is still unstable.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:31:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>Programming languages</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>This is mostly being solved by the Programming Bindings platform for Gnome. Which should continue to develop, and add more languages to the list. <br />
<br />
But can I make a java class and call it from c# without getting a headache? Making it something like:<br />
<br />
Java:<br />
package foo;<br />
<br />
class useless{}<br />
<br />
c#<br />
Using foo.useless;<br />
<br />
etc.<br />
<br />
And no I dont want it to be CLI or bytecode only.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:33:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>My HO</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>A new software map (a GNOME apps page) seems more important so that people interested in a coherent look are able to get an easy overview of all those optional apps available. This is also interesting for developers to decide where some more work is needed.<br />
<br />
All these apps might differ in GNOME integration or HIG'nification right now but its the users choice and the projects developers attitude may change in future.<br />
<br />
This way, the GNOME project might be able to propose a seperate package for all major application areas, for example Office, Multimedia, Internet, Science, etc., in the near future.<br />
<br />
As a sidenote: The divide of the Linux DE world is already happening due to users vote, IMHO. Having a bunch of different file selection dialogs within your desktop (for example) is irretating and un-productive.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 06:55:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>Encourage new devs!</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>What we need the most, is a new IDE and an MSDN type API document system. IMO that should be number 1 on the list. It's still far too uphill for new developers.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 07:13:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>DarwinPorts syncronizing</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>A little off-topic... but I'd like to report that in DarwinPorts have been recently committed many Gnome 2.6 ports ( <a href="http://darwinports.opendarwin.org/ports/?by=cat&amp;substr=gnome" rel="nofollow">http://darwinports.opendarwin.org/ports/?by=cat&amp;substr=gnome</a>  ): GNumeric, Abiword, GIMP, Inkscape and the other mature applications are, in my opinion, the real valid point of GNOME and their integration in Mac OS X Desktop (through X11 Xnest) is really enjoyble.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 07:15:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>Re: software map</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>There is a apps.gnome.org project going on. The page is somewhere out there and looks pretty good. Quite a few applications are still missing, though, but this should be easy to fix now that the setup is there. <br />
<br />
@ThanatosNL<br />
<br />
Here stuff in menus etc are instantly updated with help from fam. And I can also right click in menus and add/remove items. Dragging stuff around doesn't work, though. <br />
<br />
I really liked this list as well as a lot from the previous one. Though I would like to think of this being doable within the 2.X cycle, at least parts of it should be. <br />
<br />
One thing that bothers me is when using QT based applications, they feel so much out of place. This should be improved. Even though the needs those currently fill will be fulfilled by Gnome apps in time, there may well be some great application using QT that won't fit in. <br />
<br />
Hopefully the work done on Suse/Ximian will lead to better integration. <br />
<br />
And I don't see how you can stand the default look. There are others out there that are simple and look so much better.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 07:17:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>All of you forget one thing</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>There is going to be a GNOME 2.10, 2.12 even. 3.0 will likely be somewhat incompatible with 2.x (ABI/API incompatible perhaps?). And no, it won't be like 1.x -&gt; 2.x. That was a complete rewrite.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 07:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>Gtk icons</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I know this has little to do with application suggestions, but I really want to be able to change the gtk icons from within the theme manager. <br />
<br />
There is nothing wrong with a theme having a default set of icons, as long as I can override this in an easy way.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 07:31:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>DEs should stop bundling too much</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Thing is, KDE and Gnome both have guidelines for how applications should be (look, feel, behave). The Gnome HIG is pretty good and with more refinement, devs should be able to create any of those applications listed (and more) with good integration with the target DEs. This will give us a more level playing field and allow different apps of the same class to 'compete'. If you bundle apps with the DE distribution, it becomes more painful to switch apps.<br />
<br />
The upside of doing that, of course, is that you 'encourage' people to not reinvent the wheel. But is this necessarily a bad thing? Sometimes a bundled app is not good enough but because of faulty design, it's not easy to fix properly. But it's still part of the bundle!<br />
<br />
Really, it should be left to the user to choose apps that they want. Not everyone will want the apps that Eugenia wants, for example and I don't think they should be forced to download and install those apps - and all because it was bundled into the DE distribution.<br />
<br />
I think it was a good idea for KDE and KOffice to be separate projects. KOffice still is very integrated with KDE, though. This separation makes the individual projects more flexible and nimble - they don't have to wait on each other as much. You only need to agree to HIG and API and it should all jive. What if an app needs another app for a certain function? A good example is KDE's Ark. It will function with the generic archivers (most unices will have tar and gzip) but when you try to process, say, a .zip file and you don't have zip on your system, Ark will say so. Then, all you need to do to get the functionality is the install zip - and presto, Ark works with zip files.<br />
<br />
Isn't this how we want things to work? The DE sets the standards, HIGs and APIs and projects that want to target these can subscribe to them. The only time you don't want this, is if you want to limit competition. (M$?)<br />
<br />
A further example, the CD burning thing on Gnome. The point is any CD burning app should be able to integrate with nautilus! The user can then set the default. Not all app developers will place the same importance to the same list of features.<br />
<br />
This level playing field and choice is what we should keep. Let the linux distros decide the exact bundle they want - and the distro user can still choose to install another app instead later on and still have the same degree of integation. Compare: Windows comes with IE. We can still install Mozilla. But can we remove IE? No. That sucks.<br />
<br />
Do we want this on linux/BSD?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 08:03:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>Help system</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Hi.<br />
<br />
Most interesting article... Anyway, what I think Gnome lacks is a good help system. Or does anyone use it at all? I recently browsed through the help system in my Gentoo Gnome 2.6 system and I was struck by the lack of documentation in the help system.<br />
<br />
As we expect people to migrate from other platforms to Linux and perhaps to the Gnome GUI, it must have a very extensive and high quality help system with plenty of information to aid the user. Integration with other Gnome apps into the help system also would centralize the help system. Selecting help from the main Application menu would display all the help available, and selecting help from the app would move the user directly into the help section for that specific app. Perhaps a troubleshooting navigation system too integrated into the help system would give the user a better help section experience.<br />
<br />
Anyhow, that is just my 2 cents <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
<br />
/nexim</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 08:08:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>@Ronald</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>&gt;You blasted Eugenia with &quot;This article is tendentious as it <br />
&gt;aims to divide the Lunix world at a large, fueling the <br />
&gt;Desktop Environment war, and trying to impose the Windows <br />
&gt;philosophy in the UNIX Open Source community.&quot;<br />
<br />
&gt;Your statement is utterly ridiculous.<br />
<br />
I think its not, Gnome is a window file manager you can look that up on the Gnome website. Its also a framework for other applications. Why should everything be intergraded into Gnome?<br />
A financial suite? why? you can download it yourself or choose to install it with the distro you use. I rather ahve a lightweight fm wich i can extend to my wishes but not because some person thinks its necessary to put in a p2p client of finacial suit per default.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 08:11:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>It's time for something more revolutionary rather than evolutionary</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Gnome applications should be separated from the constraint of the host operating system. Gnome applications should not depend on what package format, file layout or hardware architecture the host operating system is running under.<br />
<br />
The next DE, whether it be KDE or Gnome should follow what mozilla-firefox is doing. Provide a cross platform base (mozilla-firefox) in windows, Linux, *bsd, etc... and allow users to download and install whatever apps (extensions) they choose to install.  The apps should only rely on the base(i.e. Gnome KDE) without worrying about the underlying host operating system (SuSe, Windows, FreeBSD, OS X). This will eliminate the common installation problem that users face when they deal with open source software.<br />
<br />
In order for this idea to succeed, the Gnome team must provide an IDE that not only can compile code but also create an a Gnome specific package that any user can install.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 08:30:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>Gnome</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>&quot;The GNOME project provides two things: The GNOME desktop environment, an intuitive and attractive desktop for end-users, users, and the GNOME development platform, an extensive framework for building applications that integrate into the rest of the desktop.&quot;<br />
<br />
I would be all up for a Gnome-application-pack and/or Gnome-application-support-pack that provides all of the different applications mentioned in the article and the different comments above, while the second pack would provide all the items that help applications integrate easily into Gnome.<br />
<br />
I do believe Gnome should keep to the above quoted outcomes and be separate from the &quot;install everything by default&quot; mentality.<br />
<br />
Just my 2cents.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 08:30:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>RE: What is a DE ?</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Omega, I agree with you. <br />
<br />
Eugenia: I disagree. The open source community should not try to reinvent the wheel, but eg. try to integrate KDE/QT applications into Gnome, so they look and feel like they are Gnome applications. <br />
<br />
There are too many resources needed to make 2 different Instant Messaging apps (one for KDE and one for Gnome). I think the community should focus more on standards - like the ones at freedesktop.org - and less on reinventing the wheel.<br />
<br />
For instance: I really like the KDE app Kile (for LaTeX). Should I make my own Gnome app, just copying all the features from Kile ?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 08:31:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>From the Release Manager</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Note that none of these things are at all related to &quot;GNOME 3.0&quot;, and the sane ones at least are almost certain to happen before we have a major number change. There are *no* plans at all for GNOME 3.0 apart from knowing that we will break API/ABI compatibility (and even then, it will probably just involve removal of APIs deprecated during the 2.x series).<br />
<br />
This would be more appropriately titled as, &quot;My Wishlist for GNOME&quot;, without invoking the dreamy, totally abstract &quot;GNOME 3.0&quot;. :-)</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 08:48:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>PocketPC</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Just to say that syncing a pocketpc device is possible.<br />
See :<br />
<a href="http://synce.sf.net/" rel="nofollow">http://synce.sf.net/</a><br />
<br />
I sync my ppc everyday with evolution (using multisync) over wifi and it works great. I can also browse my files, install apps etc..</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 09:14:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>RE: Help system</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Most interesting article... Anyway, what I think Gnome lacks is a good help system. Or does anyone use it at all? I recently browsed through the help system in my Gentoo Gnome 2.6 system and I was struck by the lack of documentation in the help system.<br />
<br />
There are problems with the help system, and with a lot of the documentation, and there are people working hard to fix those problems.  As with any free software project, it will get done faster if you help. <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
I'm curious exactly what problems you have with it.  We can't very well fix problems we aren't aware of.  We rely heavily on feedback from users.  Unfortunately, the type of people who run betas and submit bugs are generally not the type of people who often read help manuals.<br />
<br />
As we expect people to migrate from other platforms to Linux and perhaps to the Gnome GUI, it must have a very extensive and high quality help system with plenty of information to aid the user. Integration with other Gnome apps into the help system also would centralize the help system.<br />
<br />
The help system is already very centralized.  There's also an effort underway to develop a new system on freedesktop.org that will be shared by KDE, GNOME, and any other desktop that chooses to use it.<br />
<br />
Selecting help from the main Application menu would display all the help available, and selecting help from the app would move the user directly into the help section for that specific app.<br />
<br />
This already happens, to a point.  What's mostly needed is a more topic-oriented organization of the help files, which will allow applications to point to specific topics, depending on what you're doing.<br />
<br />
Perhaps a troubleshooting navigation system too integrated into the help system would give the user a better help section experience.<br />
<br />
Certainly.  There are a lot of cool things we could be doing.  And most of it requires a good deal of infstructure work.  It's not the most popular thing to hack on.  If you like doing this sort of thing, you should join in.  We like new contributors. <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /></description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 09:16:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>Multimedia</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>IMHO we need a good media framework, not only for GNOME, but also for all other apps, Gstreamer, Mplayer and jack are the best candidates, the best solution should be a fusion of them.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 09:30:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>@Bas</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description><i>A financial suite? why? you can download it yourself or choose to install it with the distro you use. I rather ahve a lightweight fm wich i can extend to my wishes but not because some person thinks its necessary to put in a p2p client of finacial suit per default.</i><br />
<br />
I agree. Not even Windows integrates MS Money, Visual Studio, or Office. Even Smaller apps like Picture It! or MS Reader aren't included (heh, yet for some reason Windows Movie Maker is. Go figure). I know financial software is popular, but not <i>that</i> popular.<br />
<br />
Yet I do think a Browser/Media Player/Image Viewer/etc., should be included/integrated. Apps like that are there to &quot;view&quot; a vast amount of content.<br />
They're &quot;neccesary&quot;, at least in most cases. For the most part, GNOME has it covered I think, except with rich/media playing.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 09:57:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>@Me</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description><i>Not even Windows integrates MS Money, Visual Studio, or Office. Even Smaller apps like Picture It! or MS Reader aren't included (heh, yet for some reason Windows Movie Maker is. Go figure).</i><br />
<br />
Uhh..Before someone misinteprets that as saying &quot;because MS doesn't do it, Gnome shouldn't&quot;, it's not what I meant. I'm just saying that there's &quot;popular apps&quot;, and then there's &quot;necessary&quot; apps -- usually viewers of some sort.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 10:01:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>eugenia the untouchable</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>this will get moderated down instantly but damn you are full of shit at times eugenia.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 10:31:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>Modem Dialer</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Just a quick note on modem dialer, does Gnome really need that ?<br />
Modt modern distros ship such a toole ,e.g. redhat-config-network<br />
which makes it a nobrainer to configure network devices including a modem.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 10:59:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>eug the tiran</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>&gt;Accept you can be wrong sometimes Eugenia :-)<br />
<br />
Why? I am not wrong on this one.<br />
<br />
&gt;&gt; you just made a complete fool out of yourself</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 11:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Just a comment to the old one</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description><a href="http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=5361" rel="nofollow">http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=5361</a><br />
&quot;Gnome needs to enter the 21st century and create a new theme and also modify GTK+ to support new features that take theming to the next level. I am not talking about yet another mediocre theme like most on art.gnome.org, but something &quot;wow,&quot; something that can draw new users like a magnet and be clean and professional at the same time. First impressions do count and looks too. Unfortunately.&quot;<br />
<br />
Gnome has always looked better than the window managers I've actually use, so did it matter? no.<br />
<br />
However I use kde now and like it =), and yes, it's possible to make it look good aswell.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 11:16:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>RE: Programming languages, RE: Devs, New: Infrastructure</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>This is mostly being solved by the Programming Bindings platform for Gnome. Which should continue to develop, and add more languages to the list.<br />
<br />
But can I make a java class and call it from c# without getting a headache? Making it something like:<br />
<br />
Java:<br />
package foo;<br />
<br />
class useless{}<br />
<br />
c#<br />
Using foo.useless;<br />
<br />
etc.<br />
<br />
And no I dont want it to be CLI or bytecode only.<br />
<br />
This is possible, but you can't have your cake and eat it too.  There's a tool called ILKVM(sic?) that converts your bytecode to CLI.  I don't know what you mean by you don't want it to be CLI or bytecode only.  It has to compile down to some common bytecode.<br />
<br />
RE: devs<br />
<br />
Gnome really does need a first class IDE.  Anjuta isn't there yet, but to be fair Kdevelop was started in 1998(IIRC) and took nearly 6 years and a complete rewrite to be usable.  Monodevelop could possibly fullfill this role if people implement parsers and some other plugin work for other languages.<br />
<br />
I tend to agree with the poster that said the DE is not about apps.  Sure, having a official media player, IM app is cool, but pretty much orthogonal to Gnome 3.0 as a system.  IMO, it's much more important to work as hard as possible on issues like dbus/HAl, maybe an official runtime, for the Gnome 3.0 system then worry about apps that can do their own thing without really worrying about infrastructure issues.  Please core Gnome people, I know Mono is not politically-correct, but if it turns out that if it's officially Royalty Free, make that the official runtime.  If not then use Java.  This statement by Havoc Pennington does not look promising.  &quot;In the meantime though, to me it looks increasingly like we need to go down the road of Python, XPCOM/UNO, GObject introspection, and other half measures;&quot;<br />
<br />
Half-measures?  This is just a recipe for disaster that will most likely haunt Gnome for years and years to come.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 11:16:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Consistency with KDE</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>My main wish for GNOME is that it's UI guidelines are blended with KDE's, so that apps written for either DE have a consistent feel. That would effectively double the number of apps you can run in either environment without turning them into an inconsistent mess. <br />
<br />
That on it's own would go a long way towards making Linux as pleasant to use as Windows. At the moment neither DE has all the apps I need, the inconsistent GUI you get when mixing KDE and GNOME apps is one of the main reasons I really hate using Linux.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 11:17:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>@Andrew D</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>It won't get moderated down instantly because Eugenia is on the west coast of the US so won't be up for hours <img src="/images/emo/wink.gif" alt=";)" /></description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 11:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: Consistency with KDE</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>There are some efforts under way to make that happen. Take a look at gtk-qt for example.<br />
<a href="http://www.kde-look.org/content/show.php?content=9714" rel="nofollow">http://www.kde-look.org/content/show.php?content=9714</a> <br />
<a href="http://www.kde-look.org/content/show.php?content=11264" rel="nofollow">http://www.kde-look.org/content/show.php?content=11264</a> <br />
<br />
or OpenOffice with the KDE Native Widget Framework:<br />
<a href="http://dot.kde.org/1082652256/" rel="nofollow">http://dot.kde.org/1082652256/</a></description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 12:03:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Rather not</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>1.) Why would OEMs prefer a &quot;complete&quot; desktop with applications? Wouldn't OEMs rather take distributions?<br />
If it's just about making other people's life easier for deciding which applications to use, then GNOME should have a &quot;prefered applications&quot; list, I don't see the point of adding the applications to the desktop project just for this...<br />
<br />
2.) The fact that Mono won't be in the core plattform project is a huge reason IMO not to add all applications to the desktop project. For example I'm not a fan of Rhythmbox as part of the desktop, when Rhythmbox isn't really integrated anyway and there is a very nice alternative based on Gtk#.<br />
<br />
I really don't see any good reason to add every useful application to the desktop project. Surely the fact that finished desktop products should ship with those applications is not a good reason alone. I find it rather gross that an article like this is written without even acknowledging that many people in the GNOME project do not share this kind of thinking. If they would, we'd probably have Galeon in the desktop a long time ago and then replaced with Epiphany later (for example). I'm not sure if GNOME would have been better off with that philosophy.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 12:44:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Mono hassle</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I don't really understand this one. C# is free am I right? Some libs provided by Microsos aren't, but we don't use them to develop Gnome apps, are we? If there are some wonderful apps written in Gtk# I would certainly not hesitate with their integration into a future Gnome.<br />
<br />
And the Python thing: It is not included in Gnome, but it is included in every distro I would think of. So what's the point?<br />
<br />
Voluntary developpers should not be limited with tools they should or shouldn't use. They will not code their apps in languages they don't like. Why throw their work away?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 13:14:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Re:Re: programming languages</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Ive heard of lkvm before, but my idea is different. Just imagine: compile a java class in windows(with j2sdk) and use it in c# on linux! So what I want is: a shared backend for the frameworks, and perhaps also for other languages. There is already a product for this on the market: <a href="http://www.jnbridge.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.jnbridge.com/</a>. It would just be awesome to have something like that for the Gnome platform...</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 13:20:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Including best of breed intergrated apps into Gnome</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I agree that including best-of-breed applications into Gnome, as long as they comply with the HIG and play nice, is a good thing.  However, I do not like KDE's approach where they include too much.  Gnome does not need three text editors for example.  One application for each of the tasks they wish to integrate is sufficient.<br />
<br />
I hope that some of these applications do make it into Gnome, but in the process of doing so, I hope they do not hamper Gnome's simplicity or its elegant usability.<br />
<br />
I also hope that Gnome remains manageable as a project, and the inclusion of these applications does not hamper its development and growth.  In my view, Gnome is becoming the most advanced and most usable GUI on the earth, period.  Let us hope it stays on that path.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 14:15:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>How about another intentional rewrite?</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>This time with soap instead of corba.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 14:18:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>ALSA</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>This article really disappointed me, I agreed with almost none of the points in it. The point that really got my blood boiling though was the ALSA remark. Why should gnome focus exclusively on this Linux-only technology ? Gnome is NOT linux only, people use it on Solaris, FreeBSD, etc and these platforms still use OSS!<br />
I thought this was the entire point of the Gstreamer framework BTW, putting an abstraction layer between apps and backends like OSS and ALSA.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 14:43:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Gnome (and linux itself) needs a new way of build and install and managing apps</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I think that along with these aplications, gnome, as a plataform, needs better development tools. Mono will be an advance.<br />
Excess of dependencies mades install linux (kde/gnome) apps a really terrible pain. The way Mac OS X does it's really interesting... We need something like that (and not a dependencie hell, with rpm), working in any distro.<br />
CD Writer. Well, the best is K3b. Gnome needs something full featured like that.<br />
F-spot - would be really good if it was integrated in Gnome (yes, I know, it is a mono app, and I'd like to see gnome 3 built on mono).<br />
A new Control Center (what's about Eugenia design it?) :-)<br />
A ssh gui client, similar to SSHClient for Windows Workstations. The one from www.sshtools.com is good, but not as good as one native and full integrated client would be (it's a java app).<br />
Build Epiphany without any dependencies of Mozilla.<br />
A Chat/IM client that suport audio/video/file transfers and fully integrated with the environment (like evolution address book).<br />
A really good midia player, with plugins to my web browser and fully integrated with my system.<br />
A better file manager, like Path Finder.<br />
A samba Browser, like smb4k (nautilus is not that good with this task).</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 14:48:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: Chris Dunphy </title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I think you are being a touch unfair there, Chris. The situation with Kate/KWrite is in transition, because of internationalisation efforts. There will be two final editors though, KWrite for notepad/wordpad work, and Kate for programmers to edit code with. Presently, there are issues with right to left language support, which is why three are required.<br />
<br />
In terms of other KDE applications that get frequently bundled, there are only single applications for classes:<br />
Kopete - IM<br />
KMail - E-mail<br />
KNode - Newsreader<br />
Konqi (FM) - File management<br />
Konqi - Web browsing<br />
Kdevelop - IDE<br />
K3B - CD burning<br />
<br />
As you can see, the KDE project includes applications typically one per area of endeavour. There are some cases where transitions between applications (for example, when discussing audio/video players) make it essential to package two applications until a situation is resolved, but by and large, there is just one.<br />
<br />
Where Eugenia is running along the edge of corrrectness, is when you consider that while a number of applications (such as Kate) are in the KDE Base package, others are typically farmed off to other packages. When there is a KDE release, the core packages get updated, but not always the non-core ones, and those, similarly can follow their own release schedules, like KDE PIM is, right now. <br />
<br />
Because of the separation of elements in this way, it is possible for distributions to pick and choose the packages they install, and the applications. The KDE project says &quot;These are KDE-based applications that we think are the best in their field for KDE... Give them a try if you like.&quot;. Eugenia would prefer to see GNOME as a bundled, inseperable package with all applications and everything bound in. The truth is, GNOME as a project is, and always has been a GTK-based panel, system manager and set of frameworks for applications. Applications themselves are GTK applications, and they happen to all look the same under GNOME, but that doesn't mean that they are part of GNOME. In KDE terms, everything is tightly coupled due to component reuse and inheritance, including structures, frameworks, messaging systems, etc. But with GNOME, they are very loosly coupled. There are plenty of GTK applications fulfilling Eugenia's needs out there, but she wants to bind it together in a way that disagrees with the core philosophy of coding GNOME and GTK applications.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title> Gnome (and linux itself) needs a new way of build and install and managing apps</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Just get a distribution such as Mandrake or Debian! They solved Dependancy hell YEARS AGO!</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:01:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Think I'll just post about windows</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Everytime there is a windows/MacOS/any other OS article everyone just posts about Liunux/KDE/Gnome<br />
<br />
 So what the hell might as well keep with tradition and just post about windows when Linux comes up. <br />
<br />
 Gnome is like KDE, its missing all the good features that Windows already has. No easy application installation or removal. Waring factions over with UI should be the standard. <br />
<br />
 blah blah blah blah...</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:38:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Re:Re: programming languages</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Nautilus what's the difference between what you're suggesting and what mono provides?  From what I can see you're suggesting a common format that .NET and Java can both be translated to.  IMHO this is a silly idea, as now there is not just one level of abstraction between the bytecode and the processor, but TWO!<br />
<br />
IKVM is essentially a java bytecode loader into the mono environment.  It makes your java code run within the mono framework.  What more could you ask for??</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:39:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: Gnome (and linux itself) needs a new way of build and install and managing a</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>You're right with the headline.<br />
Gnome needs something similar to Konstruct.<br />
I know there are some things (cvsgnome, garnome, etc) but they don't work.<br />
You know, distributions like Suse don't support Gnome and it's difficult to try a new version without pre-build binaries or without an easy to use compile-script.<br />
A better solution would be distribution-independent binaries of course.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:40:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>@Dawnrider</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>What's this about &quot;core philosophy&quot;? Take a look at the GNOME Desktop and Developer Platform dependency trees some time. It is not at all what you've described. :-)</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:42:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>@gnomicus</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Konstruct was based on an early version of GARNOME! If GARNOME has not worked for you, ask for help. You can also use jhbuild if you want to build from CVS.<br />
<br />
SuSE does support GNOME, although in current versions it is not so great. That is changing now that the Ximian desktop team are part of SuSE. :-) The <a href="http://www.usr-local-bin.org/" rel="nofollow">http://www.usr-local-bin.org/</a> project provides polished, recent versions of GNOME for current SuSE systems, too.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:47:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>@MoronPeeCeeUsr</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>&quot;Gnome is like KDE, its missing all the good features that Windows already has. No easy application installation or removal.&quot;<br />
<br />
Ok, I think I'm just going to become the official OSNews Linux package management myth buster.<br />
<br />
Repeat after me: package management is better on Linux than it is on Windows, so stop pretending it isn't (or stop using Redhat!)<br />
<br />
The reason this poster probably has trouble adding and removing software is because he uses Redhat or some related RPM-based distro, which uses the same kind of system Windows uses.  Installers are wrapped up into compressed files, shit is thrown all over your system, and you are left with the task of cleaning up the mess.<br />
<br />
In Debian and Gentoo, with their respective dpkg and emerge systems, dependencies for programs are handled, and installation and removal is MUCH easier than it is in Windows.<br />
<br />
Personally, on my Windows box, when I have to remove a program I have to do: &quot;Start-&gt;Settings-&gt;Control Panel-&gt;Add/Remove Programs.&quot;<br />
<br />
Then I wait approximately 60 seconds while Microsoft queries its own registry to compile the program list.<br />
<br />
Then I click &quot;remove&quot; and have to watch progress bars and occasional complaints that my *.isu files don't exist, or what have you.<br />
<br />
On my debian box, when I want to get rid of balsa, for example, I just do:<br />
<br />
apt-get remove balsa<br />
<br />
And whammo, it's gone.<br />
<br />
Doesn't get much easier than that.<br />
<br />
Plus, if I want to install balsa again, I just do<br />
<br />
apt-get install balsa.<br />
<br />
And whammo, I have it back.  How would I reinstall Thunderbird in Windows after removing it?  Oh yea, I'd go to www.mozilla.org, download a thunderbird binary install, run the setup program and then it'd be installed.<br />
<br />
So, what was that, Linux lacks good software installation/removal, you say?  Oh yea, that's right--THAT'S PURE FUD.<br />
<br />
Argh, when will people learn.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:48:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Worthless arguments</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>To waste valuable computer resources on behemoths such as Gnome and KDE is foolish; to waste time arguing aabout it double-foolish.<br />
<br />
Window managers rule! viva icewm!</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 15:52:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: gnomicus </title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>That´s the point. Distribution-independent binaries. We need that to gnome and to any other linux app. We need an international standard to build linux distros, maybe dictated by OSDL. As I said before, the way it´s done in MacOS X is one of the best/easiest ways of doing that.<br />
Like Eugenia, I see linux/gnome/kde as a product, from a corporate/user point of view, not as a geek toy.<br />
We need address these things to compete with Windows in corporate environments.<br />
And more, we need a standard plataform, not a lot of peaces put together. We need an integrated environment, from the base system (kernel), to x server and the desktop environment.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>@tyr</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Gnome is NOT linux only, people use it on Solaris, FreeBSD, etc and these platforms still use OSS!<br />
I thought this was the entire point of the Gstreamer framework BTW, putting an abstraction layer between apps and backends like OSS and ALSA.<br />
<br />
Jack would be a better cross-platform choice.  It's really high quality.<br />
<br />
About gstreamer, gstreamer is only used for multimedia apps.  You still need esd to play sounds.  Eugenia (correct me if I'm wrong) was talking about, for instance, the sound that plays when you start up Gnome.  What would be nice is to have Jack replace esd, and have gstreamer just use jack.  Getting audio to work with Gnome right now takes work--I have audio fully functional (i.e. gnome sounds play for wm events throu esd) but volume control doesn't work.  It's because I use devfs.  I don't use devfsd to clutter up my /dev dir, because I use devfs to clean up /dev in the first place...I ought to just try udev <img src="/images/emo/wink.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
From the Jack webpage:<br />
<br />
JACK was designed from the ground up for professional audio work, and its design focuses on two key areas: synchronous execution of all clients, and low latency operation.<br />
<br />
Ever notice how out of sync esd can be?  Solved <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /></description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>@Joerlei</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>&quot;Like Eugenia, I see linux/gnome/kde as a product, from a corporate/user point of view, not as a geek toy.&quot;<br />
<br />
Then you ought to be able to grok why what you're proposing is a phenomenally difficult thing to achieve... It's not going to happen in the short/medium term, so please get used to it and be happy with our success anyway. :-)</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:12:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>@pixelmonkey</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>The question is: Why do we need to deal with dependencies? In my point of view, dependencies must not exist. The most used libraries must be on the distro. If you build some app and that app needs extra libs, put it together with your package. That´s simple like that. About Debian and Gentoo: They are not targeting corporate/home users, but they are geek tools/toys (no ofense here).<br />
Now, look at how easy is to install/remove apps in MacOS X and in Windows. That´s is like it must be. If not, linux will always be a server OS/geek toy. If I had the money, my desktop would be a Mac and not linux because of these issues.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:12:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Encourage new developers</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I agree 100% with the guy who said the way to go is encouraging new developers, and to do that, Gnome must have a good IDE (MonoDevelop is heading on that direction) and a good MSDN-like website (which as far as i know, it doesn't exist yet).<br />
<br />
Victor.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:13:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>@Jeff Waugh</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Yes, I know. It would happen just if someone with the money and structure takes the work and build it by himself. Well, it´s not a good idea to do that today, unless you do like Apple: build the OS and the hardware. Your money (return) will come from selling hardware and extra apps for your OS.<br />
Maybe Novell will do something about that, but I don´t believe they has the need resorces to do that. By the way, they are a Network/server comphany.<br />
It can be done, yes,it can be. And I think that it will not be done by the community, but for some corporate with the resorces (and intere$t) to do what must be done.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>@Vitor</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Good apps are built with good tools. MonoDevelop looks promising but there are a lot of people out there that wants a visual tool (rad and case tools).<br />
There is need to improve the toolkits too. That´s time to have standards, stoping to break thinks all the time (just look at glibc, for one small example). There are a lot of issues to solve.<br />
One issue with Gnome is that it was not designed to be a desktop plataform. Why not to stop doing a lot of small things and sit down, design the APIs, the entire desktop as it must be and then work to build it with high quality?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:25:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>@Joerlei P. Lima</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>The question is: Why do we need to deal with dependencies? In my point of view, dependencies must not exist. The most used libraries must be on the distro. If you build some app and that app needs extra libs, put it together with your package. That´s simple like that.<br />
<br />
Simple, yeah, but recursive dependency handling is a better solution because by nature it will mean smaller binaries, which translates to faster load times, more disk space, less shared code among binaries, and faster updates.  With most libraries (think OpenSSL for an exception), you don't have to recomplie software built against them when you update them.<br />
<br />
The FLOSS world of software moves fast--we need advanced frontends to package managers (like portage is to ebuilds, apt is to dpk and rpm, prt-get is to pkgtools, slapt-get is to .tgz, etc) to keep up.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:29:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>@Joerlei</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>GNOME includes a developer platform to build applications with. If we threw it away, sat down and &quot;designed it just right&quot;, we wouldn't have any software to ship. Incremental improvement is a very important part of the process.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:51:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>@ThanatosNL </title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>I think that is ok that the base OS has some dependencies. But, for the apps, that kind of apps that you go to any store and buy, lets say, an photo manager, an music organizer, well, evolution, it's necessary that it's easy to install, without any &quot;external&quot; dependencies. When you will update it, well, download just a single package and it's done. The way it's done today is really painfull. I have to donwload dozens of files instead of one single .dmg file, for example. The way it's done today don't save any disk space and give me a lot of headaches to get a simple app working/updated. And, no, ebuilds, apt, urpmi and others are not a solution if you are out of the geek world.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 16:58:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Specific Needs</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Wow, this guy wants some stuff that he may not see for a while.  Some of this stuff is pretty specific.  I see the video editing want, because cameras are becoming more and more popular.<br />
The video messaging only sort of works on proprietary messengers....  Most of the problems are networking and protocols though (firewalls and such).</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 17:09:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>why everybody wants to blew away gtk1 aps ?</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>is that so hard to provide some .h wrappers for gtk1.x series and one or two .so in order to recompile without retouching any line or code or even running them without recompiling ?<br />
<br />
list of gtk1.x  apps I can't live without :<br />
<br />
xmms<br />
lopster<br />
xmule<br />
gtktalog<br />
gcombust<br />
grip<br />
cantus <br />
<br />
and there's more and more...<br />
<br />
every 3 years, desktop leaders folks want us to change every one of our habits because it's good for us....<br />
I've read in joelonsoftware.com that microsoft spend a lot of money in order to achieve backward compabilities, it's normal, in real life it's called respect to the user who sticked for 3 years into a desktop, who buy distro, soft and who is not able to still run them once he changed his distro.....</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 18:14:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: djame</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>What's the problem with just running GTK 1.x and GTK 2.x apps side-by-side? You're perfectly capable of running both sets of libraries concurrently.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 18:28:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>k3b alternative? no!</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I don't like your &quot;I still have to use K3B&quot; Eugenia. IMHO gnome should focus in make a better integration of kde and gnome, like the KDE guys are doing with openoffice. K3B is good enought, integrate it in gnome...</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 18:38:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>@djame</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Unfortunately, between GTK+ 1.x and 2.x, it was indeed too hard. However, we have committed to API/ABI stability throughout the 2.x series and (despite Eugenia's creative article headers) we have NO plans for an API/ABI-breaking 3.x release - it is unlikely to happen for a while. The big 1.x to 2.x break was done so that we would have a better opportunity to maintain stability for a longer time.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 18:40:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: pepe</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>I don't like your &quot;I still have to use K3B&quot; Eugenia. IMHO gnome should focus in make a better integration of kde and gnome, like the KDE guys are doing with openoffice. K3B is good enought, integrate it in gnome..<br />
<br />
Actually that is a very valid point.  I use K3B in Gnome as well.  In reality, if you can get GTK+ and QT based linux apps to interact as well as possible, everyone will win.<br />
<br />
While I prefer Gnome overall, there are some really awesome KDE based apps that I use regularly.<br />
<br />
Hopefully freedesktop.org, and maybe Novell, will help facilitate this kind of &quot;win/win&quot; interoperability.  Sure Gnome and KDE can still compete to win, but they can create an atmosphere of co-operation too, to take the Linux desktop to the next level.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 18:50:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>why Jack and not MAS ? </title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>why Jack and not MAS ?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 18:50:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Re: Gnome (and linux itself) needs a new way of build and install and managing a</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>good points!<br />
<br />
&quot;i think that along with these aplications, gnome, as a plataform, needs better development tools. Mono will be an advance.&quot;<br />
<br />
correct. hope the legal (if there really are those) issues can be solved<br />
<br />
&quot;Excess of dependencies mades install linux (kde/gnome) apps a really terrible pain. The way Mac OS X does it's really interesting... We need something like that (and not a dependencie hell, with rpm), working in any distro.&quot;<br />
<br />
for anything else than the core packages - autopackage.org <br />
<br />
...<br />
&quot;A new Control Center (what's about Eugenia design it?) :-)&quot;<br />
<br />
definitly! <br />
but because the distributions also are adding tools which are not part of default gnome, it needs to be modular!<br />
<br />
&quot;Build Epiphany without any dependencies of Mozilla.&quot;<br />
<br />
mozilla.org is working on that already, seperating gecko from the rest.<br />
<br />
&quot;A Chat/IM client that suport audio/video/file transfers and fully integrated with the environment (like evolution address book).<br />
A really good midia player, with plugins to my web browser and fully integrated with my system.&quot;<br />
<br />
!!!<br />
<br />
&quot;A samba Browser, like smb4k (nautilus is not that good with this task).&quot;<br />
<br />
i read somewhere in a review that samba-shares are now automatically mounted in gnome 2.6 - is this really true? can't really believe it - does it work nicely?<br />
<br />
in general, i wish gnome to become less esoteric and that they are focusing more on fixing/improving stuff than focusing on adding new shiny stuff, or at least 50:50.<br />
<br />
and pls stop changing things which worked well and were heavily used (like the &quot;non-spatial&quot; nautilus and the &quot;extract here...&quot; - option - is still miss it:-((!), shoving it down the users throat!<br />
<br />
ps: my number-one app-wish is a combined web- and filebrowser which windows and kde have for ages! but alas, because it hasn't arrived yet, it is somehow against some gnome-guidelines;-)?...</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 18:56:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Re:Re:Re: programming languages</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>No it's not the same, to be more clear on things, this is what I want in Gnome: <a href="http://www.jnbridge.com/usecase.htm" rel="nofollow">http://www.jnbridge.com/usecase.htm</a>.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 19:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>integration of communication apps</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>&quot;integrating&quot; gaim-vv with gnomemeeting and evolution, also consolidated contact list?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 19:29:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>application &amp;quot;naming convention&amp;quot;</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>one thing i feel that it would make choosing open source software &quot;difficult&quot; is,<br />
its naming (ill-)convention.<br />
<br />
it would be great, if gnome apps will consider changing their names .. into something &quot;predictable&quot;<br />
(once read the name of the app, the user can guess its function).<br />
<br />
i love the way Apple names its applications.<br />
GnomeMeeting, Rhythmbox are also great examples.<br />
<br />
<br />
however, i realize that this is nearly impossible,<br />
every projects are proud of their names<br />
and there are history in those names.<br />
it's just a comment.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 19:48:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>RE Michael David </title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>check out gnome bt.<br />
<br />
its not in the gnome desktop yet.<br />
but its a gnome based client and it feels perfect.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 20:08:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>...</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I want:<br />
<br />
- A toolbar in XCHAT.<br />
<br />
I thing GNOME has plenty of applications I can use but they still need to be refined.<br />
<br />
- A new GTK front end.<br />
- Mono libraries integrated with GNOME.<br />
<br />
- GNOME needs its own software installer (for other program's, not GARNOME).<br />
<br />
- A disk system utils, to resize and format partitions.<br />
<br />
That's all I need.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 20:16:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Any critic or suggestive ediatoralizing by Eugenia simply has lost all...</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>... credibility, since the website site redesign fiasco; although it's nice to see she's back in form to her old prepotent self with the 'i'm never wrong' posts on everyone that has the gaul to exercize his or hers 1st ammendment rights of fredoom of expression.<br />
<br />
Can really anyone who put up such a UI fiasco on a simple website now propose or critique something as complex as an entire OS design? I hardly think not.<br />
<br />
Reading Eugenia's stuff is reading pure fan fic - oh, if only Gnome had all of her personal requests; you see both christians and copernicus were wrong, the earth does not rotate around the sun nor otherwise, it rotates around Eugenia's fantasy world where's alrays wrong (even though she can't simply get a banal website design right 'till the umpteenth attempt.) Not a critique from someone who has the competency or knowledge to critique.<br />
<br />
We all saw what Gnome would look under Eugenia's fantasized and self attributed 'talents' - and unbearable, unreadable 2 column icon fest parasited by countless out of context ads.<br />
<br />
And as the queen of hearts had six decapitations by breakfast time - of those with the audacity to critique your self appointed highness - so will Eugenia now mod down this post, which will proudly enjoin a hundred others pesky enough our easily excitable lady dragon.<br />
<br />
More dragon than lady...</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 23:09:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: Pothead.</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Says the man eating away at precious OSNews bandwidth to make himself heard.<br />
<br />
You've put yourself in quite an interesting position, if you think about it. On one hand, Eugenia or another sane moderator would thrash your post - its entirely off topic.<br />
<br />
On the other hand, were they feeling particularily cruel, they could leave your post up - people with more free time than I do would be inclined to barbeque you for any number things you have said, as the sophmoric historical references are lackluster at best, the equivilent of modern-day &quot;name dropping&quot; to grab someone's attention is a sticker, or the bizarre references to Christians believing the sun does not rotate around the earth, being only a few of your fallacies.<br />
<br />
Its like a win-win scenario, you know, you dig?</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 23:26:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>My Request is Simple</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Make it smaller and faster.  I have no real UI concerns.  I'd like it to be usable on older hardware.</description>
			<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2004 23:34:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>alsa</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>5. Moving fully to ALSA<br />
The volume control and ESD should be fully ported to ALSA. If I didn't had added the OSS emulation on my Arch Linux 2 weeks ago I would get some cryptic messages from Gnome's volume control telling me that some /dev devices don't exist (they didn't).<br />
<br />
- maybe there's people using GNOME that <i>aren't</i> using Linux??</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 00:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>re : Jeff Goldschrafe</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>What's the problem with just running GTK 1.x and GTK 2.x apps side-by-side? You're perfectly capable of running both sets of libraries concurrently.<br />
<br />
Of course I'm capable of running both :<br />
<br />
look at those snaps :<br />
<a href="http://djame.seddah.free.fr/osnews2.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://djame.seddah.free.fr/osnews2.jpg</a><br />
one desktop : 3 fileselectors <br />
and look how ugly they are compared to the one shipped<br />
with ximian gnome1.4 (the theme is eazel-blue)<br />
<a href="http://djame.seddah.free.fr/osnews4.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://djame.seddah.free.fr/osnews4.jpg</a><br />
(and the tab completion is still working, I can't believe I read that it wouldn't be there in the next gtk release)<br />
<br />
look at the default look of xemacs running under gnome<br />
<a href="http://djame.seddah.free.fr/osnews5.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://djame.seddah.free.fr/osnews5.jpg</a><br />
ugly and barely unreadable (the white background)<br />
the classic is better, so I had to tweak my ~/.Xdefaults<br />
to get this look (the grey window at the left)<br />
<a href="http://djame.seddah.free.fr/osnews1.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://djame.seddah.free.fr/osnews1.jpg</a><br />
and now my desktop looks like a patchworks........<br />
<br />
I know that xemacs has nothing to do with gtk, but grbd  (or wathever name the new grdb has in gnome2.4) has....<br />
<br />
you could tell me why I choose such a font (comics sans serif) for my deskk ? it's because I work a lot in front of my monitor and I don't want to be blind trying to read some stuff, that's why my menus are supposed to be bold (helvetica or comics sans serif is great for that)..<br />
<br />
i'm sorry but the transition between gtk1.x and gtk2.x is one of the worst transition between 2 api I've never seen into the all informatic* history. when I think that some has managed to switch between 2 different proc (68000 and ppc) without driving users crazy, I see how long is the road for a linux desktop.....<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Djamé<br />
<br />
<br />
ps : sorry for the french word &quot;informatique&quot;, I don't know the exact translation, it means all the computer science and bizness around that...</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 00:24:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>re : Jeff Waugh</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Unfortunately, between GTK+ 1.x and 2.x, it was indeed too hard. However, we have committed to API/ABI stability throughout the 2.x series and (despite Eugenia's creative article headers) we have NO plans for an API/ABI-breaking 3.x release - it is unlikely to happen for a while. The big 1.x to 2.x break was done so that we would have a better opportunity to maintain stability for a longer time.<br />
<br />
<br />
Except for all this buzz about AA and pango, why do you consider making gtk2.x at least twice slower than gtk1.x is an evolution ?<br />
<br />
for everybody it's hard to learn an api, it's hard to code a good and usefull programm which plans to bypass the alpha stade, once the apps is done, once it has been debugged one zillion time, programmers has to start debugging from scratch, start to learn the subtle variation between the now obsolete one and the woaw-it's cool new function ?<br />
not even mention the switch to a complety new way of thinking between gnome1.x and gnome2.x....<br />
<br />
I don't want to start a new flameware but don't you realize that a more and more apps use wxWindows ? the programmers swore on their blood that the api will be stable and will run under 3 plateforms ? Even cinepaint (aka filmgimp wich is a an advanced fork of gimp) is switching to fltk because gtk is too slow, too bloated and the cost to switching to gtk2.x isn't worth the coast of switching to a complete new api... I presume they'll start to write wrapper and progressivly switch totally....<br />
<br />
<br />
I know that noone is paying gtk devellopers to do it, it's an open source project and they do what they want, and I'm thankfull for that but maybe they should just trying to run their libs with a low end machine (as a 500 mhz and 128 meg of ram, which is enough for almost anything except heavy data processing) and they'll see what the rest of the world is talking about....<br />
the port of gimp itself took almost 2 years and its developper communauty is huge, think about the other smaller group of developpers... they just don't have time to port their apps (ask to cantus's developper or lopster's one) and I doubt they will...<br />
<br />
<br />
thanks for reading and answering anyway<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Djamé</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 00:42:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>@djame</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Performance problems are just bugs that need to be fixed, like any other. It's not like the GTK+ developers are out there blocking optimisation patches. Dive in and give them a hand if you can.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 01:45:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>RE:K3B</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>&quot;Actually that is a very valid point. I use K3B in Gnome as well. In reality, if you can get GTK+ and QT based linux apps to interact as well as possible, everyone will win. &quot;<br />
If KDE apps didn't wanna load half of KDE up it would be nice.....</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 02:38:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
		</item>

		<item>
			<title>...</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Since 2.4 came out, I've found GNOME to be unstable and flakey, terrible software. Sending bug reports doesn't help much as many apps (web browsers and file managers anyone?) tend to be completely replaced every couple of major revisions. <br />
<br />
Combined with the fact that GNOME only exists because the FSF couldn't stand the thought of KDE using the then non-free QT instead of just making a free replacement for QT, just doesn't sit well with me.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 04:45:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>@Kingston</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Major revisions are when the first version number changes, and in the GNOME world that's only happened twice: 0.x to 1.x, and 1.x to 2.x. So, I guess you're talking about our regular 2.x minor releases... but we haven't &quot;completely replaced&quot; major components of the Desktop during our 2.x releases at all. In fact, we've only made additions. Specifically, we've had the same file manager (Nautilus) since 1.4, and we've only had a bundled web browser (Epiphany) since 2.4. No changes.<br />
<br />
Sure, GNOME started as a response to the Qt licensing situation at the time. There was a tough choice between working with GTK+ or cloning Qt. The Harmony project was kicked off to do the Qt clone, but petered out (thankfully Qt is now Free), while GNOME's collaboration with The GIMP and GTK+ was in retrospect, very successful, and continues to this day.<br />
<br />
Would it have been better to follow Trolltech's tail lights by combatively cloning Qt? It would have been a truckload of work, and might have soured relations enough that Qt itself would not eventually be Freed.<br />
<br />
It's funny... the developers of both projects have put all of this behind them - why haven't you?</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 05:08:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>I donno about all this integrated software</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Maybe providing so much applications should be the job of a distribution rather than a DE, but I'd sure like a nice alarm applet, for taking naps or other important times. Am I blind or has nobody taken it up yet?</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 07:37:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>I donno about all this integrated software</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Maybe providing so much applications should be the job of a distribution rather than a DE, but I'd sure like a nice alarm applet, for taking naps or other important times. Am I blind or has nobody taken it up yet?</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 07:37:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>new default theme</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>I too want a new default theme - something like the milk2 theme<br />
<br />
check it out here:<br />
<a href="http://www.users.monornet.hu/linux/index2.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.users.monornet.hu/linux/index2.html</a></description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 07:42:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>It's good </title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>to see people actually working with the project here to set things straight...<br />
<br />
I think Ximian has some good themes. Now, I don't know if they can be used to create a good default, but I think they fill the role of prettiness, usefulness and simplicity pretty well. What more can you ask? <br />
<br />
Also, I think the DE's of today should provide good integration, and if this means that applications are developed specifically for each DE, then so be it. <br />
<br />
It should be possible for applications to &quot;communicate&quot; with the underlying subsystems of the DE's without having to be a part of the core though. <br />
<br />
And KDE apps really do take forever to start from Gnome...</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 07:51:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>RE: alsa</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description><i>- maybe there's people using GNOME that aren't using Linux??</i><br />
<br />
Maybe, but probably not many.<br />
<br />
I believe she wanted ALSA support <i>without</i> ditching the current OSS support. At the moment, you need to enable OSS emulation in ALSA if you want them to work. As ALSA is the future for Linux, they will need to support it sooner or later.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 11:02:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: It's good</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description><i>And KDE apps really do take forever to start from Gnome...</i><br />
<br />
Well, they have to start a good part of the KDE framework, after all. That's the price to pay for integration.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 11:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>RE : Jeff Waugh</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Performance problems are just bugs that need to be fixed, like any other.<br />
Performance problems are bugs which prevents users to use their desktop with conforts and make them feel they're always using beta software in alpha quality in the linux world...<br />
i've always believed that before adding new features, bugs have to be resolved first.<br />
<br />
<br />
 It's not like the GTK+ developers are out there blocking optimisation patches. Dive in and give them a hand if you can.<br />
<br />
I know they're not blocking patch of course, as I said before I have the greatest respect for those guys, I just can't understand why the answer is always &quot;send us a patch or shut up&quot;.<br />
In order to help fixing this bug, I should be able to compile all the gtk version between the 1.x one which was fine and the gtk2.x which was slower and be able to profile every modified function.... It would take month for me to do that because i don't know the code, it would take only weeks to the mainteners of this lib to do it, because he already know what has been modified, by who and for what purpose..<br />
<br />
this kind of anwser just make me feel it's not worth to fill bug reports, tell my opinions and stuff. It's like the only ones allowed to talk are the programmers themselves. <br />
<br />
<br />
Cool......</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 13:46:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Kino</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Thank you for mentioning and considering Kino. We received some good feedback from Eugenia on the 0.7.0 release. In the recently released 0.7.1 many of them were addressed: it did get some HIG loving as well as a much needed FX GUI overhaul. While I like the GNOME HIG, we have actually been taking steps to remove GNOME dependencies. For example, we still use legacy gnome-config and plan to replace it, but not with gconf. On the other hand, it is quite likely we will use gnomecanvas for the multitrack timeline (already in a CVS branch) because we perceive that as a particularly powerful GTK widget.<br />
<br />
However, do not expect a gstreamer port unless it is forked. We are unimpressed with gstreamer progress and feel too much has been codified prior to stabilising and extending such that getting involved now would unnecessarily burden us. We have developed a robust replacement media subsystem over the past five months that will provide multiple format support, multitrack capabilities, and realtime, editable FX. While developed for a different application for which it is complete (broadcast video playout server), it is nearly ready for Kino while being stable and quite comprehensive.<br />
<br />
In summary, we feel free to use whatever technologies we want and unburdened by goals of the GNOME platform.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 15:23:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>this is great!!!</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Quick comment of how articles like these are EXACTLY WHAT IS NEEDED in the open source community and by that i mean FOCUS.  <br />
I currently DO NOT ADMIRE Microsoft the company BUT I do have A LOT OF RESPECT for the company's FOCUS (especially in marketing <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /> .<br />
<br />
They have focus, and there is no reason why the open source community can't be just as focussed in delivering a better alternative desktop OS.  It would spur competition, and friendly competition is always good for the industry.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 16:01:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Sync'ing</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>MultiSync is making pretty good progress. That'll synch up pretty much anything at this point.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://multisync.sf.net" rel="nofollow">http://multisync.sf.net</a><br />
<br />
I don't see what the problem with GnuCash is. I've found it to be an EXTREMELY excellent application.<br />
<br />
I think you under-rate the importance of ALSA support, too, but that's just me.<br />
<br />
Gonvert sounds like a fun project for new coders, too.<br />
<br />
-Erwos</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 16:27:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>patience</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>... because I don't think I have the patience to wait more [...]<br />
<br />
You don't have a choice, do you... What will you do when there is no decent burning software in 3.0? <img src="/images/emo/wink.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
That little converting-program is an excellent idea, though.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 17:12:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>The perfect desktop</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Well, the perfect desktop is coming :-)<br />
<br />
See the url</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 17:40:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>Disagree with requests for bundling application functionality</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I have to strongly disagree with some of the statements regarding creating larger &quot;do it all in one place&quot; applications (eg, Rhythmbox for audio, iradio and ripping, and a kcontrol equiv as one poster suggested).  I greatly prefer (and IMO it is much simpler/more usable) to have multiple &quot;do one job and do it well&quot; applications.  <br />
<br />
Sound Juicer has a very simple UI, there is nothing confusing about having it launched from Rhythmbox and most users wouldnt not even know it was a seperate application.  The same goes for a kcontrol equiv.  A Nautilus view can be (and already is in some setups) used to display launchers for all the GNOME configuration utilities.<br />
<br />
I will also say that the Rhythmbox UI is based upon the iTunes UI which is not very good.  Not to bash Rhythmbox, they have created a very usable application, however it is not by any means the 'ideal' tool for the job, it just happens to be one of the best available (though I personally perfer Muine).<br />
<br />
People tend to request that new applications move in the direction of familiarity, however it is important to understand that Gnome is not striving for familiarity, it is striving for usablity.  Too often is familiarity used as a hack twards usability, which is a doomed effort.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 17:43:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>P2P and CD burning solutions exist</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>While it may need &quot;HIG&quot;'fication, ed2k_gui + the Overnet core works great and has a snazzy little applet. It looks very much at home on my Gnome desktop, and is extremely stable to boot.<br />
<br />
For burning I use the latest Eclipt Roaster (eroaster). The newest version, which I could only find as source (compiles in a super jiffy without hassle on Fedora), works great! I find it even better than K3b for iso creating and burning. You can even drag from both Totem and Rhythmbox. So you create a playlist in Rhythmbox, which is very intuitive and drag it over. Adding a menu-entry to RB to make this happen should be a piece of cake. The only drawback to Eroaster is that it doesn't decode compressed music files on the fly, but that does prevent coasters...look at it as a good time to make a pot of tea <img src="/images/emo/smile.gif" alt=";)" /> <br />
<br />
<a href="http://eclipt.uni-klu.ac.at/eroaster.php" rel="nofollow">http://eclipt.uni-klu.ac.at/eroaster.php</a><br />
<a href="http://ed2k-gtk-gui.sourceforge.net/" rel="nofollow">http://ed2k-gtk-gui.sourceforge.net/</a></description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 20:52:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>keept it small!</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Most Software you mention still exists and is stable and Useful.<br />
You are Right we need a GonomOnCd or someting else.<br />
And a good System needs good Software but GNOME dont needs it out of the Box. We have Distributers like RedHat, SuSE, Debian and much more to do this for us.<br />
If you don't burn CDs why shoud you install a bunrn-app?<br />
<br />
If you dont want to chat, why do you want to use gaim?<br />
Btw: Gaim will be integrated to Gnome and Evolution. Look to the bounty hunt.<br />
<br />
Im not a plugger so i dont want BloGTK installed with GNOME.<br />
<br />
Many People don't needs the Features from Gthumb. I don't need them, but EOG can't display Slideshows - the only feature i want.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 20:59:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>ESD</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>esd-alsa is there.<br />
<br />
However, Solaris and FreeBSD for example -which also use GNOME- do not use ALSA. What do you suggest for that?</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 23:20:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>- GNOME needs its own software installer (for other program's, not GARNOME). </title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Uhm. You just use APT, URMI, YUM, FINK, Ports, Emerge, etc. for that. It comes with your distribution. What is wrong with that? With most distributions, you can use these utilities to search for a (certain) GNOME application.</description>
			<pubDate>Sun, 25 Apr 2004 23:34:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>DEVELOPMENT TOOLS</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>This is a _MUST_ for gnome! GNOME desperately needs a good IDE, GUI builder, et cetera, if they want more people to develop nice applications for them.</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 01:32:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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			<title>Integrated document viewer</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>Make 1 application that can use plugins to view document types like:<br />
- dvi I have to use xdvi under gnome <img src="/images/emo/sad.gif" alt=";)" />  <br />
- pdf<br />
- ps<br />
- doc??<br />
- ...<br />
This application should of course integrate well with Nautilus, like gpdf does.</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 09:09:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>gaim does support other IM protocols next to jabber</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>please read before speaking in public !!</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 09:10:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: Application Suggestions for Gnome</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>You should have listed MythTV and IVTV on page one of your suggestions.</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 13:35:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
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			<title>my wishlist</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>three appz I'd like to have working (with full integration) in Gnome: <br />
<br />
1- a CD/DVD burning ecc. suite as everybody says;<br />
<br />
2- a PRESENTATION software (Agnubis... knock if you're alive!);<br />
<br />
3- a DTP (desktop publishing) software (like Scribus but... using gtk/gnome!).</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 14:37:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>CD/DVD burner</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I use xcdroast (<a href="http://www.xcdroast.org" rel="nofollow">http://www.xcdroast.org</a>) for my CD/DVD burning requirements and I find it absolutely awesome.  It's functionality grow all the time and I never have any problems with it.</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 18:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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			<title>Really???</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
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			<description>I'm totally right with you, but, it is so easy to write and say: &quot;Gnome needs more changes in the file selector box, gnome needs a lot more of dock apps&quot;, etc... But none of you are helping us with it... Remeber, Gnome and Linux is not a commercial app where any of you pay for it... We develop inside Gnome cuz WE want something and build something... Have Micro$oft done all your expectatives?...</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 18:04:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>RE: What is a D.E? Omega is correct</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I must say the earlier poster &quot;Omega&quot; is fundamentally correct. &quot;Gnome&quot; should focus on on improving and moving forward the desktop enviroment - and not bother with applications.<br />
I mean, Eugenia, why did you not also add an Office suite? <br />
a printing manager, etc etc. The best gnome app does not need gnome...the Gimp? I use fvwm but can run gimp, abiword, openoffice, etc. Why do I use fvwm?<br />
2 reasons it lean on resources, fast and can be made to look unique. Gnome and KDE are so bloated. I would sue a lot of the functionality that a DE provides, but not at the price imposed by KDE or Gnome.<br />
<br />
If gnome could only provide a solid infrastructure (example look at cocoa) on which to build apps. So Kde has an office suite, and everything including the kitchen sink. And guess what - none of them are really that useable, because it seems to me that those KDE apps developers simply want KDE to have all types of apps. In other words, these are not really applications that fill a need but rather applications that fill a desire..<br />
<br />
Let those developers that have dedicated themselves to and have the expertise, creating applications (like gimp, abiword, Mozila) build them for gnome.<br />
<br />
If you provide an easy / stable / avant garde desktop environment, then app developers will create apps for you. And since they have dedicated time to this, we can see that at least they have functional knowledge than people that start developing for the frist time. That is why all word processoers look like MS Office. But have you noticed that there is NO FOSS app that actually beats MS OFFICE? We don't want clones - we want progress and being different by being better.<br />
I like to hold up two examples of FOSS products and development philosophy as being the best: (1) Mozilla<br />
(2) Slackware.<br />
<br />
For mozilla they have steadily achieved all their stated objectives. Their browser now sets the standards by which all other browsers are measured. And they did it by not looking at how other products look etc.<br />
(2) Slackware maintains its goal of being &quot;Simply the best&quot;. It is rock solid, and does what it is intended to do -it will never include the kitchen sink in its distributions.<br />
<br />
There is so much mediocrity in the FOSS world. Most app are always half-finished. Nothing really works well and for everbody, like an MS product.<br />
<br />
But it need not be this way. Everyone wants to do things just to do things, very few actually want to &quot;create&quot; a well-crafted quality product. So KDE has cd/burner..oops gnome must have one too. Why? <br />
<br />
Not meant to flame - but fish food for thought.<br />
cheers</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 20:03:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>RE. Really ???</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>&quot;I'm totally right with you, but, it is so easy to write and say: &quot;Gnome needs more changes in the file selector box, gnome needs a lot more of dock apps&quot;, etc... But none of you are helping us with it... Remeber, Gnome and Linux is not a commercial app where any of you pay for it... We develop inside Gnome cuz WE want something and build something... Have Micro$oft done all your expectatives?...&quot;<br />
<br />
And that too is part of the problem...<br />
user expectations, often do not jive with those of the developer.<br />
&quot;Kementeus Xtian&quot;, your reaction is correct and understandable. So much good work is being done in the FOSS world, and one wonders why it is not appreciated and recognized as much as it should. The reason is I think there is a disconnect between developer and user.<br />
<br />
I don't know how many times I have started to write an email to the folks at mozilla, gimp, and so many others just to let them know how great their product is, and how much I appreciate their work. I always stop because I felt foolish. But I should have, because the mozilla, gimp ,etc people actually made their product for people like me, and they need to know how it is working for me.<br />
<br />
So how can gnome get its users to participate?<br />
Participate by having a sense of co-ownership in Gnome.<br />
By that I mean, co-ownership of product quality,<br />
direction, and yes also at times help out with testing, documenting , anything else. I am not saying making some fuzzy community, but forming rather a community of pride and spirit that leads to...if a gnome user ends up saying, &quot;this product has problems, is unuseable, etc, etc&quot;, then they have themselves to blame because if they take ownership in gnome's quality then they are actually contributing to its development as well.<br />
<br />
And I still disagree with Eugenia's approach to gnome.<br />
Anyway let me now say this: I do apreciate the whole Gnome DE, even though I do not use it because of bloata and instability, I do use some of its great apps :-)</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 20:54:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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			<title>Modem Internet etc.</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>To focus on a modem dialer program would be utterly wrong. What we need in Gnome is something like Redhat/Fedoras network config tool. That means: Connections like modem,ISDN, ethernet are supported - but also VPN:<br />
 <br />
 * PPTP<br />
 * IPSec<br />
<br />
Everything else (just for modem) is nonsense in my opinion. Gnome should not depend on specific underlying applications like wvdial. I would let Distributions decide how the global configurations are written. Well PPtP could be easily managed for users and is solved very much like dialing in in Windows.<br />
<br />
It would be nice if we could create PPtP connections for users. That would enable Gnome to use Microsoft VPNs (well we allready have PPtP solutions that are GPLed) as an option. The Redhat network config tool sould be part of the gnome-system-tools. And gnome-system-tools should be part of Gnome 3.0!</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2004 22:38:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>bloat</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>As a slackware users I would be happy to have just Gnome +  GTK app's OR KDE + Qt app's to avoid chewing up gig's of HDD space unecessarily.<br />
<br />
I made a list of essential apps &amp; found no decent DVD  burning app for Gnome. Sure I can launch K3b inside Gnome but it is slow &amp; I have to have all that HDD space devoted to a DE I am not using. Strangely GTK apps launch instantly in KDE but not the other way around.<br />
<br />
When I look at the list I can find a Qt app for everything but not the other way around. I kinda like the clean Mac like DE of Gnome but only a die hard unix person could love using it because it lacks features forcing you back to the command line _a lot_.<br />
<br />
Considering Gnome started _before_ KDE, it is looking like Gnome is falling behind more &amp; more.<br />
<br />
So, for me, the practical route is to stick with the more feature rich &amp; app rich KDE &amp; save space on Gnome/Gtk...</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 27 Apr 2004 03:13:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>What about a Tape Backup app?</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I know there are some rudimentary things out there for tar/dump/cpio, but I would like to see a bonafide front end to utilities like mt and mtx (for tape changers) as well as these others.  Even a nicer front end to amanda would be a start.  I really could use such a tool, and I believe I may not be the only one.  The various web interface apps don't give me the control and flexibility I am looking for.</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 27 Apr 2004 10:50:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Stop featuritis</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>Please don't ask for new features till the current ones are fixed and this will only make gnome go Windows way. Why do we have to mimic Windows or Mac OS? Stop gnome from turning stupid. Gnome is for developers by developers so keep it that way. If Gnome doesn't have those nifty user-dumb features, use Windows+cygwin or Mac OS or KDE, leave Gnome alone.</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 27 Apr 2004 18:38:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Ok, heerz my 2 centz...</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>These are my opinions:<br />
<br />
1) Home video editing.  Waste of time / money almost, but would be nice to see it done on Linux.  Still, that's almost a waste of time to me in terms of spending time editing videos about my family instead of spending time with my family.  Therefore, I'm neutral.<br />
2) Instant Messaging.  GAIM works fine -- inject some developers into GAIM and add video abilities.  Still, I don't video, because I don't have time.  I use my machine mainly for working, not playing.<br />
3) CD / DVD Burner: I use K3B.  Half of me thinks &quot;who cares, use K3B&quot; and the other half thinks &quot;I hope Gnome puts out a non-coaster-making cd/dvd burner&quot;.<br />
4) Evolution and peripheral apps.  I say forget evolution.  I use KMail exclusively for the filtering system it has (with SpamAssassin).  I say either clone KMail (or an app with the filters it has) or I'll keep using it.  Sylpheed isn't good enough IMO, neither is Mozilla Mail.  Sorry.<br />
5) Totem.  So?  Encorporate MPlayer and/or Xine -- they work fine.  GMplayer also worked fine, albeit slightly frustrating at times.<br />
6) Rhythmbox.  Yes!  If you encorporate that, I would love it.  Stop bothering trying to make your own.  Get their permission to bring it into the &quot;gnome camp&quot; or something.  It is awesome.  However, I can always use XMMS too.<br />
7) Camera / Image viewing.  This would be a good idea -- still pictures.  Either as an add-on to GIMP (since GIMP is awesome) or as a Nautilus plugin maybe.<br />
8) QuickLounge?<br />
9) News Feed app.  Good idea.  Start minimalistic and add features slowly.  gDesklets have a nice news feed desklet / sensor, but I don't use it normally.  I just point my web browser (Galeon / Mozilla) to CNN or whatever.  I do use newsgroups, but in KNode, because I don't like the others.  This is starting to sound like the microsoft thing with people getting used to KDE and liking only KDE stuff, yet not using Gnome stuff much.  Oh well, it's life.<br />
10) Personal finances.  Why can't people just use a spreadsheet or something?  I think it's sad that people want something to hold their hand.  Still, for calculating how to pay off debt (which is the funny way we need an app like this), it would be useful.  Doesn't GnuCash do this stuff?  I haven't bothered recently ...<br />
11) ALSA.  We should incorporate it, but I don't think it's necessary to move to it.  ESD worked fine so far as I could see, even with KDE and XMMS apps running in Gnome.  What gives?  I mean, the abilities would be nice, with JACK as well, but why totally ignore ESD?<br />
12) Gonverter: an excellent idea.  I'd love to see this and/or help develop it.<br />
13) PDA/Phone Syncing.  I don't care about it, honestly.  The more places I have personal info, the more likely it will be for someone to steal or read it.  But hey, it would be a nice idea, maybe, but I wouldn't care.<br />
14) Blogging.  Never did it, don't care.  It's not really a news feed, more like an opinion feed.  But oh well, if they want it, I guess they can develop it too.<br />
<br />
Conclusion: I use XFCE and Gnome apps, and would prefer to stay in the GTK apps, but alas I must use KDE apps at times.  But to fill those voids, Gnome will have a long way to go, but it can be done.  Just remember, I prefer to use the app I like best, as do most other people.  Oh, and can we encorporate more themes?  I love the Gnome artwork, but the default 2.4 themes sucked.</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 27 Apr 2004 22:52:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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		<item>
			<title>Kind of funny</title>
			<link>http://osnews.com/thread?</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://osnews.com/thread?</guid>
			<description>I find this article kind of funny:<br />
<br />
Eugenia complains about the lack of applications in Gnome, and finds corresponding apps in KDE, but does not want to use them. You know, there's a free nice KDE app for almost all your needs. Why would you not use them? Because they look different? Use Gtk-qt and make all apps look the same.<br />
<br />
Because they use different toolkit? I thought you were burning CD's? K3B does it just fine. Of course someone could copy K3B's functionality to a Gnome app, but what's the point?<br />
<br />
This is just one sad example of doing and wanting duplicate work. Making 7 different CD burning apps just for every Eugenia / toolkit / desktop is a waste of time.<br />
<br />
Tony</description>
			<pubDate>Wed, 28 Apr 2004 06:26:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<author>donotreply@osnews.com (Anonymous)</author>
			<category>Comments</category>
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