Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 6th Apr 2011 17:50 UTC, submitted by Cytor
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RE[3]: Very polished, very nice, but...
by korpenkraxar on Thu 7th Apr 2011 14:20
in reply to "RE[2]: Very polished, very nice, but..."
There is no easy and fast way to see what apps are running.
For those who need it, I think it would be nice to provide the dash (?) or similar panel on the desktop and autohide it using some "intellihide" algorithm. AFAIK, there is already work on such a dock extension:
https://piecesoflint.wordpress.com/2011/04/06/how-to-tweak-gnome-3-t...
If such a solution is inadequate, I would suggest using one of the many fine separate panels available, such as Avant Window Navigator or similar.
Access to menu is slow and absolutely inconvenient - move mouse to corner, then select applications, then try to find your application among all the icons - it is very confusing even computer-literate users.
Nah, it can also be blazing fast. Hit Win/Meta/Mod4 key and you can start typing the name of the application even before you see the search window.
I have very constuctive idea: look at the long list of features removed and implement them all. Here are just few of them, for start:
1. Make panel configurable and movable
2. Bring back all those gnome applets
3. Make things confirurable.
4. Bring back launchers
5. Make normal fallback mode, which really has features of Gnome2, not the same useless interface, but also ugly.
1. Make panel configurable and movable
2. Bring back all those gnome applets
3. Make things confirurable.
4. Bring back launchers
5. Make normal fallback mode, which really has features of Gnome2, not the same useless interface, but also ugly.
Yeah I too wish that those dash icons were launchers that I could right click and configure the commands for. But this is a minor speed bump for me. If these are essential to you, I suggest you stick to Gnome 2 for the foreseeable future. I am sure it will be maintained for a while or perhaps even forked by those who care for it.
RE[3]: Very polished, very nice, but...
by AdamW on Fri 8th Apr 2011 21:49
in reply to "RE[2]: Very polished, very nice, but..."
"Yes, it looks nice, but it is absolutely not functional. It misses a lot of functionality I'm using daily with Gnome 2. There is no easy and fast way to see what apps are running."
Why would you need to? Why does it matter what apps are running? If you need to do something, you switch to the app that does that thing. Does it matter if the app is running at present or not? Do you need to know whether an app is running in order to decide what you want to do next? Then why is this information that's so useful the desktop should waste space to tell you about _all the time_?




Member since:
2006-07-12
Yes, it looks nice, but it is absolutely not functional. It misses a lot of functionality I'm using daily with Gnome 2. There is no easy and fast way to see what apps are running. Access to menu is slow and absolutely inconvenient - move mouse to corner, then select applications, then try to find your application among all the icons - it is very confusing even computer-literate users.
I have very constuctive idea: look at the long list of features removed and implement them all. Here are just few of them, for start:
1. Make panel configurable and movable
2. Bring back all those gnome applets
3. Make things confirurable.
4. Bring back launchers
5. Make normal fallback mode, which really has features of Gnome2, not the same useless interface, but also ugly.