The release freeze of Gnome 2.4 is imminent, so an intrepid Gnome user takes a look at what’s in 2.4 and how it differs from 2.3.
What’s Coming Up in GNOME 2.4
130 Comments
> Still sucks.
Sucking in what way? Can you describe it more precisly? What are your complaints and why? Come on people, just saying “it sucks” doesn’t help.
And before you suggest a Win32-style file dialog, read this first: http://digilander.libero.it/chiediloapippo/Engineering/iarchitect/f…
They need to seriously fix Nautilus, it’s way too bloated and slow.
Anybody tried any of the alternative file managers? Any of them any good?
GNOME does not look at all more professional, instead it looks less professional it’s missing so many essential things, I don’t know how anyone can call it more professional.
For example I can’t even apply permissions to an entire folder and all of its contetnts. This sir eally annoying sinc eI had some files I got from Windows and I would have to click each one and change permission from root to user. In KOnqueror, I simply checked a box in the permissions dialog that said something like “Apply changes to subdirectories and files” than voila.
Besides KDE is so much more scriptable, consistent and powerful. Also, you can make KDE look anyway you want, unlike GNOME which won’t let you even put a colorscheme without editing configuration files.
IMO, GNOME doesen’t even look better than KDE. For example here is a KDE 3.1.3 desktop I LIKE:
http://www.kde-look.org/content/preview.php?file=7397-1.png
http://www.kde-look.org/content/preview.php?file=7397-2.png
http://www.kde-look.org/content/preview.php?file=7397-3.png
http://www.kde-look.org/content/files/7397-brushed2.png
Really, if anyone took the time to explore KDE they would discover it is far better than GNOME. GNOME is kind of like comparing IE to Mozilla except the bloated part ;p
You’re wrong. Edit->Preferences->Show hidden and backup files
@bytes256:
Then use Konqueror. There’s nothing stopping you from using Konqueror, or any other KDE app, in GNOME.
I love GNOME, but I don’t use Nautilus. Ever. Then again, I don’t use Konqueror either. I’m partial to the command line. Then I can change properties any way I want. That KDE desktop really does look nice, but I like gtk better than QT(don’t ask me why, I just do). I stopped using KDE when Keramik became the default style. I really dislike Keramik, but maybe that’s just me.
Enough with the rant. I thought I should point out that GNOME really needs a good way to make menus and panels transparent. Something that isn’t a GNOME problem is of course that we need transparent windows! Come on XFree86 guys!
Sucking in what way? Can you describe it more precisly? What are your complaints and why? Come on people, just saying “it sucks” doesn’t help.
And before you suggest a Win32-style file dialog, read this first:
Why does it matter if Keramik became the default, the HiColor style is still there if you like it better.
Ppl, one thing is file selector, the other is file manager( konq, nautlis, etc). And I still think I can’t see hidden files’n’folders in File Selector (atleast in Gnome 2.2).
> Errrm, thats about Windows 95. Things have changed a hell of a lot since then…
They added a back button and a shortcut pane, and that’s pretty much it. The fundamental problem with the file list is still there,
that’s the same reason I use KDE. I like things simple I don’t like to give myself extra work editing configuration files or switching desktops to get teh basic things I want such as applying permissions to subdirectories and files.
Nah, I tried KDE, to much options that I didn’t wanted, with GNOME a never edit anything and the options are visible and not hiden with other options.
GNOME is for me.
I think the areticle should have said how it differs from 2.2, not 2.3, because 2.3 is the development version that shall become 2.4.
I find the options quite hidden, even showing hidden file stakes many more clicks than in KDE.
We’re nor all brain dead and illiterate why would it matter if there are a lot of options as long as they are organized well and intuitive.
I guess your really lucky to require so little from your desktop, if you never had to edit anything in GNOME.
Anyway, CVS in KDE is better in usabiltiy. I urge everyone to give 3.2 a try when its out and from a KDE distro like SuSE or Mandrake not RH’s half baked KDE.
Alex, i think you already made your point. Thing is, the news is “What’s Coming Up in GNOME 2.4”, there’s no “KDE” in that sentence, see? So let’s talk about Gnome.
Anyway… does anybody know if there’ll be multiple-rooted (and customizable) trees in the new Nautilus?
Victor.
Anyway… does anybody know if there’ll be multiple-rooted (and customizable) trees in the new Nautilus?
Certainly, I believe one of the screenshots actually has the multirooted thing.
Take a look at the Velocity File Manager. Its meant to be a Nautilus-like File Mananager, but fast. Its pretty nice, and I believe it has that feature.
http://velocity.sourceforge.net/index.php?page=1
Gnome is a desktop that aims to counter whatever the lunix zealots consider to be the #1 threat to linux. So, Gnome was founded in facing the “threat” of the QPL to Linux. Then it became all about facing off the “threat” of CORBA. Nw, it is all about facing the “threat” of .NET to linux. GNOME has no clear vision of its own. GNOME is an entirely reactive project, with no beliefs and ideals of its own, founded in jealousy and hatred of superior technologies and based on technological bigotry.
Dude…have you ever tried Gnome? It’s freakin REFINED. No clear vision of its own? There’s a link off its main page explaining exactly what it hopes to accomplish. At first, yes it was created to counter the threat of QT in KDE, and that’s reflected in the earlier versions. They seemed very “hacked together” (sound familiar?). Gnome 2 was a complete rewrite with a single goal in mind: simplicity and usability. The team now has HIG specifications which it holds in high regard, more than I can say for KDE. Also, the entire desktop is extremely well thought out and planned carefully. What will the text editor be? GEdit, over GVim or any other gtk-based text editor, for a bunch of reasons. The alternative of course would be to throw in every text editor that applied for a spot in the main distribution. I mean, every app has its place, but THREE editors? I need one for a scratchpad and perhaps for viewing code, and if I actually need to write something I’ll use and IDE or a word processor. Another example is pretty evident in the klipper utility. There are precious few people who have ever done a lot with the klipper applet, and that’s mainly because the damn thing’s too complicated! There’s no reason why a clipboard utility should have a prefs list like that. Things like the clipboard should be totally transparent to the user.
The point is that KDE just feels awkward. A million different menu items to choose from, and apps that appear to have buttons strewn about wherever they feel is needed, prefs dialogues that go on for pages and pages without any real sort of organization, and a general feel of clutter and business. The difference between Gnome and KDE is like the difference between http://coaster.sf.net/ and http://www.nme.com/ (note: completely different content). Yes, both of them accomplish what needs doing…the information is there on the web. But one site presents it in a clear and organized fashion, and the other throws everything but the kitchen sink at you and hopes to god you can figure things out. I think I know which one I’ll opt for.
I find the options quite hidden, even showing hidden file stakes many more clicks than in KDE.
edit-preferences->show hidden files
How hard is that?
but why do people insist on making any article about Gnome or KDE a religous battle about which is better? This is an article about Gnome and the new features added to it, where does KDE enter the picture? I could care less which people prefer I would like to hear some intelligent comments about the features or maybe fetures still missing in Gnome. Why Gnome? Because that is what the article is about!
I like Gnome personally, particularly Dropline Gnome for Slack. The only reason I moved away from Gnome is they did not have any clean ability to add context sensitive key bindings and menu options.
Its because to many folks, it is a religion, not a hobby. The rest of the world uses Windows, and Linux users whine about Microsoft, fiddle with config files, recompile their kernels, and read Slashdot all day. Oh and argue about trivialities.
Before KDE first started, I was really excited, but found that it was too slow to be usable on my computer. I didn’t really like the aestetic either. So I used GNOME, which was basicly just a panel. It did look a bit better. In the end I used blackbox because I didn’t want to throw away screen real estate and clock cycles on stuff I’m not using. My school replaced CDE with KDE 2, I still found it ugly, slow, and not very useful.
I got a faster computer and installed KDE 3 and found it fast enough, looking a lot better and having some useful features. I also installed GNOME and found that it was lacking, so promptly deleted it. KDE 3 is an integrated whole, everything works together and fits in with the environment. Viewers plug into Konquorer, as does kget. KDE knows about your printing system, etc…
A few days ago I decided to try GNOME again and I have been using it for these last few days. I have to say I like the speed. I dont really use a filemanager, so the fact that GNOME isn’t very integrated doesn’t matter much. But I find that GNOME is just a bunch of applications that don’t know too much about each other. They don’t work together. There are even some pre-gtk2 apps that really don’t fit in. Honestly, gnome is still just a panel + filemanager. That is not really such a bad thing if you don’t use the other stuff anyway.
Here is what I really wanted to say. I want to be able to switch between KDE and GNOME, use several web browsers etc… Things like bookmarks, cookies, generic preferences are things that should be common and shared between them. I want the time that I spend entering people into my addressbook to be available to applications in KDE and GNOME. I think it is time for both desktops to start agreeing to share common data. Don’t put this data in a .gnome or .kde menu. These pieces of info should be in a .cookies .bookmarks directory to reflect the idea that they are user data, that can be used by any application that needs them, be that lynx or konquorer.
“Dude…have you ever tried Gnome? It’s freakin REFINED. No clear vision of its own? There’s a link off its main page explaining exactly what it hopes to accomplish. At first, yes it was created to counter the threat of QT in KDE, and that’s reflected in the earlier versions. They seemed very “hacked together” (sound familiar?). Gnome 2 was a complete rewrite with a single goal in mind: simplicity and usability. The team now has HIG specifications which it holds in high regard, more than I can say for KDE. Also, the entire desktop is extremely well thought out and planned carefully. What will the text editor be? GEdit, over GVim or any other gtk-based text editor, for a bunch of reasons. The alternative of course would be to throw in every text editor that applied for a spot in the main distribution. I mean, every app has its place, but THREE editors? I need one for a scratchpad and perhaps for viewing code, and if I actually need to write something I’ll use and IDE or a word processor. Another example is pretty evident in the klipper utility. There are precious few people who have ever done a lot with the klipper applet, and that’s mainly because the damn thing’s too complicated! There’s no reason why a clipboard utility should have a prefs list like that. Things like the clipboard should be totally transparent to the user.
The point is that KDE just feels awkward. A million different menu items to choose from, and apps that appear to have buttons strewn about wherever they feel is needed, prefs dialogues that go on for pages and pages without any real sort of organization, and a general feel of clutter and business. The difference between Gnome and KDE is like the difference between http://coaster.sf.net/ and http://www.nme.com/ (note: completely different content). Yes, both of them accomplish what needs doing…the information is there on the web. But one site presents it in a clear and organized fashion, and the other throws everything but the kitchen sink at you and hopes to god you can figure things out. I think I know which one I’ll opt for.”
What the author probably meant was that GNOME never seems to have a clear personality, it keeps changing and changing its main goal. Kind of like a child which one day wants to be a fireman and amybe tells his teacher and his friends that and than the next day he wants to be a cop.
Yes, GNOME 2 has two goals simplicity and usability, that’s true. But, GNOME compromised a lot of features which were important and would not confuse anyone but the most braindead of users for the sake of simplicity, when in reality those features could just have been implemented in a better way. KDE on the other hand understands the needs of its users and tries to adress everyone’s needs not just Joe Stupid’s in the process it becomes far more powerful, however that does not mean less usable if the feautres are implemented poorly and KDE has some which are implemented poorly. The clock beign an example, but that was being worke don before the remark of a GNOME developer.
Klipper is very easy to use, I don’t see your problem with it. Complicated is an awfully vague word. Yes, its configurable and I think that’s a good thing, I can specify how many entries to remember etc. but you never have to in GNOME I never can, I find that worse. Options alone are a good thing, options that are not sensible or impemented in a usable way are bad.
I hope it’s not the classic GNOME arguement: “It was a nightmare, I went into the Control Center and there were all these features that I could set to make my applications behave and look how I want and oh my god there were so many choices, I know I chose to go to the control center, but its so big and scary even though it has a search feature and help and it organized! It should be empty that way I can’t get confused!”
If menu items bother you why not just install a basic KDE without all the extra applications or why not open Kmenu (unlike GNOME there is a good menu editor, but I forgot you don’t want to edit menus that would give you options, ways to change your desktop!) and just delete whatever you don’t understand? LOL, you can even enable descriptions next to apps how dumbed down do you need it to be.
How about giving actual examples of applications in KDE that have preferences that go on for pages and pages and also why its not organized and easy to change just what you want. Remember the preferences only appear if you make them appear!
Ey !
Where i can find the author’s article wallpaper?
It’s really cool !! “Think Linux” 🙂
Here:
http://www.sadeem.net/wp/linux.jpg
Victor.
I always liked the “beginner”, “advanced”, “expert” kind of concept for configuration of apps, where options are hidden/exposed based on the users choice. To be honest I never really paid attention to whether an app is KDE or Gnome before so I am not sure who uses it. VideoLan is the only example that comes to mind.
the only thing I don’t like about KDE is that they don’t have any decent themes. Take a look at art.gnome.org or themes.org and then take a look at kde-look.org or themedepot.org and see if you can spot which DE has more customizability. I can’t stand the default themes for KDE and I have yet to see a nicely rendered OSX theme or a OSX Icon set. I know not everyone is a fan of the Mac themes on linux… but I love em!
I’m actually more of a KDE user, and I honestly can’t imagine switching any time soon, but Gnome sure is great software that gets better and better. What a great open source project! I’m glad it’s around.
“They added a back button and a shortcut pane, and that’s pretty much it. The fundamental problem with the file list is still there,”
I dont know when it was added, but you can ask the explorer to show you the entire path where you are ( in win2000 and XP, I don’t know for the others ). So basically, all the argument of the site is kind of deprecated now.
Funny to see that people have to bash windows even when one speaks about gnome…
A desktop is for getting work done. If you want to fall in love with a particular DE and denigrate the work of others – well go ahead waste your time.
For the rest of us unless the data is easy to move around we stay with what works. Contacts, appointments, emails, bookmarks, documents, spreadsheets and every other form of data comes first then the eye candy.
If you can’t just swap between KDE, Gnome etc and continue working then you’re just locked in to an app or DE.
I’m like many others who need (and will continue to need) to use a combination of Gnome/KDE and other apps. It would be nice if the user and their data would be the focus, rather than the senseless war over widget preferences.
Best regards to all developers for their efforts
rob
I use Windowmaker with gedit, grip, ksirc, xterm, Firebird, Rox, sylpheed, whatever is light and easy to use; and certainly will give it a shot to Epiphany.
In a world where most people use PIIs and are grateful for it, who cares about GNOME vs KDE?
Why not use the best of those two?
These are the apps I use on the Gnome platform: Nautilus, Epiphany, Gaim, Evolution, Totem, X-Chat, Gedit/Gvim. That’s about it, and these tools do everything I need. I know that there are equivalents on the KDE platform (Except nothing is up to par with Gaim) but Gnome keeps things simple and elegant.
I find the options quite hidden, even showing hidden file stakes many more clicks than in KDE.
edit-preferences->show hidden files
How hard is that?
At least I have to play with those hidden config and other files quite often. In my opinion, things like that could be made a bit easier & faster in Gnome, at least for power users. For example, how about adding an option like “more options” or “expert mode” to Nautilus preferences where you could choose to have more “bloat” àla KDE in your menus if you so want… The default setting could still be as it is. At least I find it frustrating that I have to go all the way all the time: edit preferences -> show hidden files and vice versa. When, for example, in ROX I can do it by just a single press of a button eac time.
People who have talked here about the good usability guidelines of Gnome and bloated menus of KDE are basically right. But sometimes it feels that the Gnome developers – when trying to make things easy for everyone – forget the needs of power users a bit. KDE developers seem to be quite pragmatistic: features are added when someone needs and develops them. The result is sometimes bloated, but not so bad overall. KDE is more mature desktop environment than Gnome, though Gnome is getting better and better all the time too.
Anyway, especially many power users often want to have those many options they might need available as fast as possible. I hope the Gnome developers don’t totally forget such needs either when trying to design a simple and clear GUI.
I hope Gnome dies.
You forgot to say why ! … , unless you are an empty person trying to flame with no arguments….
Choice is a valuable thing for the strategist~, it leaves the battle opened till the end.
I always liked the “beginner”, “advanced”, “expert” kind of concept for configuration of apps, where options are hidden/exposed based on the users choice.
I, for once, never liked that ! and it costed me 1 day to figure out why I couldn’t change a particular aspect on FreeBSD’s Gnome2. Errrr … no such thing on kde to annoy you.
___________
I find me using Gnome2 more than KDE now unless I have to do some pretty heavy cut and paste (I mean heavy like a 10 KBytes long html page) or highlighting text/script (I know gedit will have highlighting now, good on which case I will change to KDE.
I use my favorite window manager 50% of the time (IceWMM with motif look). Just my preference. I also think that KDE is not bloated at all ! It just gives you the power that’s all.
The new file browser will be *very* welcomed, a little slow in time,
it will save many clicks and boring time to get to the directory you want (it would ben very good if it remembered the last directory you were on, like in win32
I’ve tried both and honestly, the only thing I really like about g2 is the system clock. Yes, that’s right, the clock. I love the way it looks and allows you to set the date next to it, etc. If I had to introduce someone to linux I might start them off on linux, but would urge them to move over to KDE soon after. I like g2’s general feel, but as someone else said earlier, it feels like a bunch of disconnected apps running, not something that functions as a “whole”. I’ve also noticed a lot of devs use g2, while most average linux users seem to prefer KDE. In summary, g2 is nice and solid, but seems intent on navel gazing while KDE makes strides toward the future.
“edit-preferences->show hidden files
How hard is that? ”
It’s harder than simply View->Show Hidden Files
KDE ROxorz! And 3.2 will eXPecially rock! It will have been in the making for nine months at least and there are so many awesome things going in it!
BTW: I actually think the opposite, there are better themes for KDE than GNOME. ThinKeramik, Alloy, Elmo 3, Fusion X, dotNet, Mandrake Galaxy, QtCurve and High Performance Liquid are all awesome themes!
I also like KDE-LOok’s dynamic nature, I can vote on content, submit content, post on their forums, comment and much more. It really is a communtiy!
FWIW, it’s probably not that hard to write a nautilus script using zenity that does recursive permissions. I don’t know if zenity can do checkboxes, but a text field for input like “a+r” wouldn’t be bad.
the apps in gnome “know about each other” if you don’t like the file selector then just keep a nautilus open on another desktop. when you want to open a text file for editing just open gedit then drag the file onto it. easy. i just found out lately about this with totem (gnome movie player) i had the playlist open and i accidentally dragged a movie onto it and it added it to the playlist! cool 8) kde just seems gaudy and frilly with all the options, also the themes are just eyesores, unless you’re a child who like the fisher-price/candy cane look. i like the laid back themes like mist or ximian’s industrial.
finally, i really love gnome apps, i think they are peerless in linux.
pan > knode! no contest!
totem > kde has no decent media players installed by default, if it does, i couldn’t find ’em ;] at least none that would play .ogm’s
evolution > kmail
gaim > kopete – gaim is sexy.
nautilus rules, don’t smack me but i like media, images, movies and nautilus makes thumbnails of any media file so i can identify movies quickly.
k have fun
I am a KDE user. I feel it is more mature and easier to use than GNOME, just my preference. Gnome 2.4 does look very cool though. Hopefully 2.4 will be “cool” and then 2.6 will be as good as kde.
Thanks mega, it works. But how should avarage user know that. It’s like hidden feature. There are no tooltips or labels.
“Take a look at the Velocity File Manager. Its meant to be a Nautilus-like File Mananager, but fast. Its pretty nice, and I believe it has that feature.
http://velocity.sourceforge.net/index.php?page=1“
Looks promising! I didn’t manage to download source code, though. The server is not responding (the files themselves are not on sf.net). Well, I dl’ed Mandrake .rpm and .srpm from fr2.rpmfind.net, but I’m not sure they will install on my machine (though I’m using ALT Linux which used to be a Mandrake clone).
If anybody has source, could you please mail it to me: Artem Vakhitov <[email protected]>. That “Artem Vakhitov” part is necessary (or the mail will be rejected).
KDE just seems bloated and full of TOO MANY features.
Seen the latest CVS? The menus for a lot of things are shorter now, especially those contextual menus.
Besides, what does “bloat” have to do with “consistency”. Sorry, if I don’t get your logic. GNOME is way way way not consistent. It may be moving that way, but very few apps follow their HIG to the word. By comparison, if there is a common feature for KDE, you can expect it at the same place. It is not that KDE have better UI designers, they see the value of keeping everything the same.
Consistency also have to do with how different is one version from another. UI-wise, the jump from GNOME 1.x to GNOME 2.x is far far bigger than the jump of KDE 1.x to KDE 2.x and certain bigger by extreme proportions in relative to the jump from KDE 2.x and KDE 3.x There is consistency between releases. If you are used to an old version – get a new version and the learning curve would be smaller by comparison with GNOME.
There are many areas I consider GNOME better than KDE. GNOME have a better default presentation, although if you see my desktop (don’t feel like rebooting to take a screenie) on KDE, it looks much better than any GNOME customization as well as their default look. In other words, it wouldn’t take KDE much time to change their default look, by comparison with the GNOME team.
But back to your argument, consistency – KDE wins hands down, if you follow the dictionary defination of consistency. Which one have the better default UI? Sad to say, GNOME. But as with most Linux users, if you find it too hard to customized, frankly, you should be using something else besides Linux. Hopefully one day there would be a distributor like Ximian, but meanwhile, even Lycoris, Xandros and Lindow’s version of KDE is much better than GNOME default.
GNOME was started in the US of A. One of the co-founders may be Mexican, but he was living (and still living) in the great republic when he started GNOME. KDE was co-founded by someone in Germany, but also got a lot of early involvement by Americans.
Talk with Dobey on irc.gimp.org. Go to him, and ask him straight what he thinks. If he denies it I will put a chatlog quote on here.
Talk with Dobey on irc.gimp.org. Go to him, and ask him straight what he thinks. If he denies it I will put a chatlog quote on here.
First, Dobey is not “Various XIMIAN employers”. Second, I won’t go to IRC to lose some time to talk to someone who *might* be who you say he is.
And last, you can put the chatlog here if you wish. But it can be a fake, or he could have said things that don’t match what he actually thinks.
So, your claims still seem pretty weak. If you wanna keep trolling about gnome, go on. Not like you’re very credible at that.
Dekkard, stop playing the GNOME Task Force here. Do you fear I could be right or why don’t you simply go and ask him to confirm it in person ? Now that my chatlog may be faked how else would I be able to convince you ?
Dekkard, stop playing the GNOME Task Force here.
Same for you, the anti-gnome brigade.
Now that my chatlog may be faked how else would I be able to convince you ?
You don’t need to say “X said Y about gnome”. You just need to explain, with FACTS, why you think that’s true. If you can’t, better leave it.
> Various XIMIAN employees already mentioned that GNOME in it’s
> current state is more or less total clusterf**k.
I can just imagine it:
Interviewer: Ximian Desktop has made a few changes to GNOMElib, are there any others that you have in mind for XD 2.1?
Miguel: Well, yes we have re-written the file selector dialog, hacked together a new GTK theme and window decorators, re-organised the menu structure and added an update utility (Red Carpet).
Interviewer: How do you believe the current events with Novell will impact on the future of your committment to GNOME?
GNOME has and for the foreseeable future will be the backbone of our business. Given the current state of GNOME which can only be described as clusterf**k (IMHO), we will certainly be making a lot more of these changes, possible even a fork.
Interviewer: Thanks for speaking with us, Miguel.
Miguel: You’re welcome
See, It’s no secret. There is dobey, miguel, me and probably a handful others who develop on GNOME who think the same. It’s just a matter to sit down on the butt and talk with all kinds of developers on their own. Simply spent some time talking with them privately and you understand what they think.
It’s no secret but all you do is giving the people the chance to explain and not task force and bear their opinion just before they got the chance to talk about it. By comming up with all kind of task forced counter arguments only to be safe he turns into a troll. At the end listening to people may help to make GNOME become a better product after all. We shouldn’t lie here and claim GNOME to be the best Desktop. It’s definately not (yet).
See, It’s no secret. There is dobey, miguel, me and probably a handful others who develop on GNOME who think the same. It’s just a matter to sit down on the butt and talk with all kinds of developers on their own. Simply spent some time talking with them privately and you understand what they think.
Hello? I asked for facts. There’re none in that post.
And really, Miguel saying it’s a clusterf**k would be something ))
It’s no secret but all you do is giving the people the chance to explain and not task force and bear their opinion just before they got the chance to talk about it.
Did you read my post? I just gave you a chance. You didn’t use it. Game Over.
We shouldn’t lie here and claim GNOME to be the best Desktop. It’s definately not (yet).
When did I say that? I don’t care if Gnome is not perfect neither the best. Just explain why you think it’s structure is a clusterf**k.
And I couldn’t read anymore. What the heck is wrong with you people? Must trolls attack each other each and every time there is a post about either one of the desktop platforms? If you don’t like the file selector in GNOME, post it on bugzilla or #gnome. If you think KDE is bloated, don’t use it, or better, complain in #kde, or their bug system. If all you are going to do is state your preference, don’t bother. Or if you really must do so, do so politely. All those “KDE/GNOME SUCKS KTHNXBAI!” style comments do not help anyone, least of all yourself. You just look stupid. You make your DE of choice look childish too. Fools. OSNews is nice, but trolls are a pain. Hell, comments on slashdot are easier to read.
Dekkard, explaining something to you would be simply a waste of time and at the end you don’t understand it anyways or use it only to troll around even more. There is a fact that ‘Various Ximian Employees (even their CTO)’ and me think of it being a clusterfuck. Describing the terminology ‘clusterfuck’ would be a long and cumbersome proecess because we all have different opinions about it.
And the way you ask for it and the way you TASK FORCE GNOME (hell please dear god, don’t let one wrong word come on it) gives me the impression that your intentions aren’t honourable at all. It doesn’t matter what I write, no matter how much I would explain to you, you would use it against me only to TROLL and FLAME. Take the statement as it is. Miguel , Dobey and Me (and various others) know why we call it a clusterfuck. People can’t play together, code is not properly maintained, help is not wanted, people following different directions rather than one, people who can’t be convinced to work nicely and aesthetically and so on. Yes it’s opensource, what a dumb excuse to not work nicely.
Maybe Dobey or Miguel would show up here explaining why THEY think GNOME is a clusterfuck. I bet you value their statements higher than mine.
Dekkard, explaining something to you would be simply a waste of time and at the end you don’t understand it anyways or use it only to troll around even more.
Suuuure. (*cough* no facts *cough*) ))
And the way you ask for it and the way you TASK FORCE GNOME (hell please dear god, don’t let one wrong word come on it) gives me the impression that your intentions aren’t honourable at all.
Yeah, you’re one to talk. At least I don’t go around trolling about some open source project.
Take the statement as it is. Miguel , Dobey and Me (and various others) know why we call it a clusterfuck.
Then explain. Oh, wait, you can’t. Cause you’re just trolling
People can’t play together, code is not properly maintained, help is not wanted, people following different directions rather than one, people who can’t be convinced to work nicely and aesthetically and so on. Yes it’s opensource, what a dumb excuse to not work nicely.
So you have a problem with some gnome developers, and go around trolling to get some relief to your tormented mind. Sad.
Maybe Dobey or Miguel would show up here explaining why THEY think GNOME is a clusterfuck. I bet you value their statements higher than mine.
Of course. They at least use their names.
hey osnews crew
don’t let this trolling flood get out of control.
please react with aggresive moderation. Kill off any flamebait, put up a warning above the “post comment” and mod down anybody feeding the trolls or reacting.
it’s getting terrible to have to read through all this crap. I deliberately skip the comments for news that are guaranteed to attract trolls. Kill them off pleaaaze.
I used GNOME 1.0 to 1.4. I used KDE 1.2 and 3.0-3.1
Both of them have advantages and disadvantages! GNOME is coming off a rewrite, so it doesn’t see bloated. Neither did KDE 2.0-2.3, imho. Just wait till GNOME 3.2 or 3.4 (which I guess, would be similiar in version numbers to KDE 3.1/3.2)
over such trivial issues. Heck, why not just throw freedom, USA and communism to the mix and make the forum even more voilitile.
GNOME is built on the Bazzare model where by individual projects work on their individual strengths and an over all body, aka, GNOME, work to bring these projects together in a unified fashion. In otherwords, it reflects very much the GNU/Linux model.
KDE is more the cathedral model where by development occurs more like how a company would. A large unified roadmap is developed and all parts move forward at the same pace. Very much like FreeBSD is developed.
Both development models have their strengths and weaknesses, however, there is no use thrashing out at people who have views different to that of your own.
As for Dekkard (IP: —.cm256.alanpa.supercable.es), sunshine, if you go into #mono @ irc.gimp.org, simply look for miguel, and /whois his name, it will be *.ximian.com. One doesn’t have to be a rocket scientist.
KDE was NOT mentioned in the article at all, but you have a couple of people here who are advocating KDE whenever they here GNOME mentioned, They are trolls, not Dekkard. At least he is posting with his name.
By the way, if this was an article about KDE, and some GNOME ‘advocates’ came and started advocating here, they would be trolls too.
This article is about GNOME 2.3/2.4 so at least stick to critiquing/criticising GNOME 2.3. If you know nothing about GNOME, then shut up. At least try to get a life, and stop going around calling people fags and all, and actually stick to the topic.
First a little off-topic:
It’s a pity that the comment system here doesn’t give tha bility to filter out some of all the noise. Out of the previous 99 comments, maybe 10 have had any real signal in them. The rest are all trolling, flaming, name calling and off topic comments.
The usefulness of OSNews would increase a lot if the comment system would allow some form of moderation and maybe even a way of showing threads so a discussion could be had without having to read through potentially hundreds of irrelevant comments.
On topic:
It is great to see the improvements being made all the time in Gnome. A user-visible change is definitely the speed increase of Nautilus when compared to Gnome 2.2. Opening directories with a lot of files in them is much faster in the 2.3 versions.
The unification of the panel types is great too. Now it is possible to configure the menu panel.
With regards to the file selector issue… My only gripe with the current one is that it doesn’t remember the directory it last opened. That is a real problem. All the other feature requests I don’t care about. I don’t need a button pointing to my desktop, I don’t use my desktop at all. I don’t need a button pointing to my documents, they are most definitely not thrown into a single directory, they are part of the project directories I have. My greatest hope for the new one is that it will remove at least some of the focus away from this (in my opinion) rather non-existing problem.
Someone commented earlier about being able to switch between KDE and GNome and have bookmarks, mail etc shared. Some work is underway already on freedesktop.org about sharing things like this. I am not sure sharing email is easy or even feasible apart from using IMAP. But sharing contact information and similar data _should_ be shared.
Dekkard also trolled during defending GNOME.
It is possible to defend GNOME without telling lies about KDE.
GNOME or KDE is a personal decision, there is no need to convert other people.
and everything else is a cluster@#$@.
PS:
Windows2000 = simple, fast, and not a cluster:>)
Without Eugenia the forums turn into a cluster…
All of the above is offtopic as are some people posts.
On related matters check out the new Redhat artwork for bluecurve. Can you say OSNEW’d. The artwork in the screenshots look so good I am sure the version number will bump up to 10.0 or should I say Redhat X
https://listman.redhat.com/archives/rhl-devel-list/2003-August/msg00…
i have been using the gnome current tarballs from breakmygentoo for a while and the things i like about the new gnome are these
– huge cleanup in dialogs, about boxes etc
– multi tree view in nautilus, it’s just great to finally have it
– speed improvements. though they are not huge, folders load faster, gtk overall feels faster (though not that much)
– nautilus has improved, the nautilus cd-burner is in place (i hope it burns music cd’s in 2.4)
– all gnome components have undergone HIG-ification, which does improve usability a lot. Maybe this doesn’t mean a lot to power users, but to average (and even power users IMO) users knowing what to expect in eg. dialogboxes improves the overall feeling of the system.
– HIGification of the menu: gTali has become Tali etc, this IMO getting rid of gAnything in the menu is a good decision, if you don’t you can add to the discussion in their bugzilla
– my applet-loaded panel configuration hasn’t crashed or leaked memory on me once
– the desktop allows to keep the icons aligned by right clicking on it
– there are some nice new features in various places
Overall:
I don’t feel this gnome release is so much a feature packed release, but it does improve a lot overall on little things that make using it a lot nicer. It’s very hard to name that one killer feature they have added, but there are A LOT of little ones to like.
Just check the changelog to see the extensive list of improvements
…can anyone tell me which iconset the article’s author uses and where I can get it? I simply LOVE it.
Thank you in advance.
Despite that I enjoy Dekkard’s gift of the gab and his style of arguing rendering other-camp-zealots helpless I must incline to the oposite site.
For a few months I was developing GUI applications under linux so as technical merits matter I can understand what it means when somebody says: “Gnome sucks”. Because it really does.
Beeing a windows developer I was used to higher standards at least in some areas(such as Documentation for example). When I was choosing/doing research which linux GUI api should I deploy my application in, numerous “choice-choice-wont-tell-you-I-better-start-new-project-choice-choice” apis” suddenly surfaced. I don’t found _any_ of Gnome apis/libraries appealing(GTK in any version nor any wrapper or whatever). The pure fact gnome is C-based(arcane in 21st century) makes it really strange(and beeing hacked by blabla_new() or delete_blabla() functions makes it even worse). As a matter of fact, there can’t be a good designed GUI underlaying architecture if it is written and it’s api exposed in pure C.
On the other hand, KDE was based on Qt(cute qt 🙂 which was no much of effort to fall in love with. Although Qt has also some bad design decissions(beeing developed by commercial company at least they seem reasonable) like providing it’s own container class library instead of using STL(with say future possibility of wrapper) or _too much_ relaying on signal/slot connection noise it is still very good and most importantly, Object Oriented C++ in/out based library.
For others out there, to make a MS Windows anology:
Gnome api/libraries are equivalent to MFC hell library. Beeing bad from start it’s get slightly better by heavy usage, support from big projects and microoptimalization, adding features, rewritting slightly and such, but it still SUCKS(take MFC libray, there would be _again_(there is 7.0 version as today if you don’t noticed) new improved version in new release of Visual Studio 2004 whidbey! despite it’s archaic design but it will STILL SUCK ALL THE ARSES).
Qt is well thought from the start(by skilled developers I asume) and equals to say latest version(see platform SDK) WTL/COM+ win32 api interfaces and _can_ be possible competitor to even .NET Winform API.
The main problem I had with Qt back then(2002) was poor documentation. Although that might not seem as poor for average linux/unix developer but comming from windows world it’s below-average. I was looking to KDE source codes 40% of time how it’s supposed to work and what are the best practices on using it.
As to user perspective on visual apperance, KDE sucks in and out. I am no longer 13teen years old kid(nothing bad on it though) so I no longer appreciate all that candy colors with rather infantile icon design. It has not really bright widgets possitioning also and so on. And all that Katasthropic name Konventions drives me Krazy(it looks lame actually if you are interested).
So Gnome wins here easily beeing solid and obviously taking inspiration from Apple for it’s slight clean design. Also icons are one class better.
As to applications, I can’t think of a single native KDE killer application which is mainly legacy of past Qt licence I think. Take Mozilla, Open Office, Gimp, Gaim or anyhing you want, I just can run Gnome whole year without touching any of KDE application(actually KOffice was a bad idea but choice my ass). You can’t do opposite running KDE.
But knowing architecture merits, you just have odd feeling when working with Gnome…
Go Gnome!
Yeah, go Gnome!!
GNOME is slowly becoming very professional. Sort out the open/save dialogues and Nautilus (seriously messed up IMO), consider me switched.
Nice to have choice,
Hi,
I really like the new way Gnome is going from 2.2 version: simplicity and consistency are very valuable, but I don’t think they’ll decrease the desktop power, in the medium-long term. So let’s enjoy Gnome!
And I also like Epiphany, but cannot use it at all 🙁 because it lacks control+click opening a new tab in the background – which I always use with Mozilla/Firebird/Konqueror on my ibook. Please, tell me I’m so blind/silly I wasnt’t able to find how to activate it! [perhaps in Gconf?]
Bye,
Guido
When is esound going to disappear? A seperate server process to allow more than one sound to play simultaneously sounds (sorry) really primitive.
Before anyone asks for a new file selector, you can download a better file selector GTK+ 2.2.2 here: http://gnomesupport.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=3635
Gnome, to me, is by for the most professional looking and consistent desktop environment that I have seen for Linux. I’ve used every major WM/DE out there, and if I were to recommend Linux to a business or a new user, Gnome would be what I would set them up with.
KDE just seems bloated and full of TOO MANY features. In addition, it just doesn’t have a solid ‘feel’… hard to explain, but it just feels like it was quickly codec together. Don’t get me wrong, I understand the KDE project is the result of thousands of hours of work, but I still prefer Gnome over KDE.
KDE just seems bloated and full of TOO MANY features. In addition, it just doesn’t have a solid ‘feel’… hard to explain, but it just feels like it was quickly codec together.
I know exactly what you mean.
KDE, loads modules on demand and so just having more feautres won’t make it slower. In fact, most of the feautres in GNOME 2.4 are already in KDE, funny how things go isn’t it.
KDE also is becoming simpler if it is too hard for you now, can’t imagine why, than you should try 3.2 it will be easier to use.
Anyway, I prefer KDE.. GNOME just doesen’t have enough basic features that I consider basic.
Oh… no new file selector?? Come ON! When are they gonna make a new file selector? I mean, everybody’s shouting about that for *years*…
Victor.
KDE has more features than Gnome, sure, but I haven’t really noticed the ones I’ve been missing.
In any case, it’s not that KDE is ‘Hard’ to use because of all the features, but the sheer amount of these ‘features’ contribute to the feel of bloat. Plus, they scare beginner users. One example would be right-clicking on the desktop – you get a myriad of options that 90% of people don’t care about. They probably just want to access the desktop options or arrange icons.
I’m not saying KDE shouldn’t have these features, but they should be in the appropriate place instead of EVERYWHERE. I remember seeing awhile ago in a review that the KDE clock had a massive amount of tabs and options, so many in fact that the KDE team heard the review and decided to ‘pare down’ the clock. How could it even get that way in the first place? I’m sorry but KDE just feels slower and bloated. I understand that it loads modules on demand, but it still FEELS slow and bloated.
i seem to be the only one that cant decide which DE i like best…
Oh… no new file selector?? Come ON! When are they gonna make a new file selector? I mean, everybody’s shouting about that for *years*…
It’s gonna be in gnome 2.6, unless something catastrophic happens to gtk 2.4 development.
The delay is in order not to break compatibility with the previous one, and to make a nice design that will last a lot without a rewrite.
Seriously, I have my reasons for liking Gnome over KDE but this article is about the GNOME 2.4 release. Not some comparison fight over which desktop is better.
KDE has more features for two reasons:
1. It is more mature. It has been around longer. Period.
2. Gnome 2.x was a huge shift in direction and focus.
Finally…
This is no excuse for not having a frickin’ decent fileselector. I use the Ximian patch and other are listed above.
Personally, I just want a damn list view in the file selector so I can sort the entries by size of date.
This is no excuse for Nautilus having no visible feedback when a user clicks on an object on the desktop or doubleclicks a document to open in a Word Procesor for goodness sakes. I just want a visible sign that my doubleclick worked! Maybe I also want a search feature integrated in the browser. (Yes, I know work has started on this in earnest.)
There are other missing features and minor glitches that drive you crazy on gnome and many are easy to work around too.
Still, it is getting so damn close.
No need to start a Gnome vs. KDE thing here.
I know what you mean. I find Gnome and KDE both usable, and have even come to like Xfce.
Really, the only thing that doesen’t really make sense when right clicking on the desktop is the “Bookmarks”.
Which I will report as a bug right now. Everything else makes sense to me and I also started with GNOME on Redhat 8 and found KDE easier to use, having more choices doesen’t confuse me as long as they are sensible and organized correctly.
In fact, I am constantly amazed by the numerous hidden features KDE has. Just now I noticed a new feature while browsing art.gnome.org. Try this out:
Go here for example: http://art.gnome.org/backgrounds/gnome/251.php
Now drag one of the image links such a spng-1280×1024 to your KDE desktop, the desktop will give you these options:
Copy Here
Link Here
Set As Wallpaper
_________________
cancel
One minute, Gnome people are crowing about the “configurability” of Gnome. Then KDE outdoes Gnome in that department, so suddenly KDE is too “bloated” and “scares beginners”, despite being by far the most professional and integrated desktop.
On minute, Gnome people are blastin KDE for having a “non-FSF” licence underpinning it, the next KDE is more FSF that Gnome itself thanks to being entirely GPLed as compared to the LGPL compromise of Gnome (for “practical” reasons that RMS despises) and lo and behold, suddenly the Gnome zealots start blabbing about how the GPL is less free, a complete turnabour from their attitudes before.
There’s a simple fact about Gnome that it does everybody good to understand. Gnome is not a project that aims to provide a good desktop. Gnome is a desktop that aims to counter whatever the lunix zealots consider to be the #1 threat to linux. So, Gnome was founded in facing the “threat” of the QPL to Linux. Then it became all about facing off the “threat” of CORBA. Nw, it is all about facing the “threat” of .NET to linux. GNOME has no clear vision of its own. GNOME is an entirely reactive project, with no beliefs and ideals of its own, founded in jealousy and hatred of superior technologies and based on technological bigotry.
Nobody who is remotely practical about the work he has to do on linux or other OS’s uses GNOME. They use KDE, the choice of the practical man. GNOEM is the choice of the zealot, and inferior technologically (that it is coded by a bunch of lunix zealots can be seen by the phenominal amount of work the freebsd team have to do to make the claptrap run on anything but lunix). GNOME is to be shunned. KDE should be embraced, as an object orientated and far more integrated and sensible paradigm, expertly engineered, by Germans.
I don’t even agree with all taht you said.
GNOME is not a bad desktop, its jsut missinga lot of things, of course that I guess could make it easier to sue if you only use the features it provides, but some of us have higher needs.
Also, KDE jsut started in Germany as GNOME started in Mexico, but both projects have people working on them from all over the world.
Hello, is everyone ignoring my post or something?
Get a new file selector here: http://gnomesupport.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=3635
I mean compared to KDE’s (probably the best file selector on any platform) it’s not so good. The thing I really don’t like about it is that the location bar is not a textbox, so I can’t just copy paste the location, I have to use the arrows argh..
But, there are really quite a few problems with it.
Nw, it is all about facing the “threat” of .NET to linux.
That’s a common fallacy. Mono is not part of gnome, and won’t be unless it gets quite spread in the linux world and it’s necessary.
It’s not much of an improvement though.
Here is a screenshot of my desktop now.
http://www.angelfire.com/ultra/maynard/screenshot.html
GNOME is coming together in a great way. It just seems more serious. I don’t know if its because of the community, but 2.3 is even better. Plus some eal professional quality artwork doesn’t hurt too. More power to them.
That article’s not a bad walkthrough of the new gnome… Very nice work. I’m actually excited about trying it out. I’ve just always been intimidated by installing such a large system myself from hand…
As for the KDE vs GNOME thing: Use whatever you’re comfortable with. Its not that hard… For instance: When I first started using Linux 3 years ago, I was a big KDE fan! Then, about 8 months ago, I needed to start using IceWM (I was setting up Linux on a P200. KDE was just too slow). I kind of fell in love with the simplicity of it all. So, I thought, heck, why not start using Gnome on my main box. I couldn’t do it. There was something missing, and to this day I just can’t put my finger on it. But I loved the artwork.
Then, I fell for ROX. It had the look I wanted, it was fast, simple, and elegant… Everything a geek could want!
Moral: Don’t waste time on silly little DE wars. There’s far too much good beer to be had instead…
Is Nautilus going to have multiple-rooted (and customizable!) trees on Gnome 2.4?
Victor.
Hello, is everyone ignoring my post or something?
Get a new file selector here: