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posted by LaminatorX on Friday February 21 2014, @07:45AM   Printer-friendly
from the Gnomes-for-Theo dept.

joekiser writes:

"Antoine Jacoutot has given a status update for GNOME users of OpenBSD, including a short video. The GNOME release has been updated to 3.10.2, and auto-mounting of devices is now supported through a new helper program, toad. Now is a great time for desktop users to test the upcoming OpenBSD release. The ports tree was recently locked for stability testing ahead of the 5.5 release, meaning that recent -CURRENT builds are very close to what will be released in May. Antoine also addresses the upcoming issues non-Linux systems face with GNOME, such as the upcoming hard dependency on systemd."

[ED Note: I ran an OpenBSD router box years ago when tinkering about with an old PII with four NICs seemed worthwhile. The OS lived up to it's rep, but it never occurred to me to use it for a desktop system. Are any Soylentils using OpenBSD for a GNOME-based workstation?]

 
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  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by bobintetley on Friday February 21 2014, @10:30AM

    by bobintetley (1273) on Friday February 21 2014, @10:30AM (#4204)

    Why is everyone so down on GNOME? Do the people bashing it actually use it or just dislike it on principle?

    I posted this in a previous thread, but I'm just curious. I really like the direction the GNOME team are taking with it and I find it a much more productive desktop to work with than GNOME 2 ever was. I get that they alienated a chunk of their existing userbase by changing things so drastically and I guess the early versions were a bit fragile and featureless but that was poor release management by distros trying to adopt it before it was ready.

    Do desktops really have to keep copying Windows 95 forever? There are desktop environments to suit everyone, if you don't like GNOME then fine, go with XFCE, Flux, E, KDE, whatever, but stop moaning about it. I think the GNOME guys are doing a great job.

    (disclaimer, I'm not a GNOME developer and have no affiliation with them. I'm a full time free software developer and I use GNOME3 all day, every day).

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  • (Score: 1) by No Respect on Friday February 21 2014, @11:08AM

    by No Respect (991) on Friday February 21 2014, @11:08AM (#4222)

    Meh. Give me the old OS/2 Presentation Manager over any of this stuff any day. That goes for Windows XP/7/8, Gnome and KDE. Any and all versions of the latter two.

  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by toastedlynx on Friday February 21 2014, @11:14AM

    by toastedlynx (2267) on Friday February 21 2014, @11:14AM (#4228)

    To be honest, yes, I personally dislike GNOME on principle. To me, I cannot get behind supporting a GUI that decides to scrap everything and try again every few years.

    Though I can't speak for anyone else, another possibility for people disliking GNOME 3 is the fact it's a major reason for most of the big distros making SystemD the default and in many cases only init system, taking away those plain text logs so dearly loved and generally going against philosophies users of *NIX systems love.

    You have a point, though. Linux and open source land is good for it's choice. The end-user should be free to choose whatever he/she/they wish. Perhaps that's another reason people dislike GNOME 3 and the SystemD it increasingly depends on. Their existence ends up reducing choice for the rest of us since all the distros wish to be up-to-date.

    This story's about OpenBSD though. In the case of OpenBSD, I can't really understand how GNOME 3 is relevant or even wanted. Your point remains valid though. What makes open source great is the freedom of choice. What also makes it great is the community's feelings can and often does change the shape and direction of projects, too.

    • (Score: 2, Interesting) by bobintetley on Friday February 21 2014, @01:42PM

      by bobintetley (1273) on Friday February 21 2014, @01:42PM (#4282)

      I don't feel too strongly about systemd.

      I've only read a little and it seems to solve some security and other problems inherent with the old sysv init. It also seems to allow logging earlier in the boot process and uses the standard syslog, so why wouldn't it still produce text logs? Moving to declarative, config based scripts seems like (ostensibly) a good idea since all distros end up with their own libraries of bash functions to try and standardise init scripts anyway.

      I'll reserve judgement on systemd until I've played with it a little and read more, but in general I think progress is to be encouraged!

      You're right though, OpenBSD seems like an odd choice to use for a desktop given the distribution's niche - I'm surprised they even bother packaging X for it :)

    • (Score: 1) by Foobar Bazbot on Saturday February 22 2014, @05:23AM

      by Foobar Bazbot (37) on Saturday February 22 2014, @05:23AM (#4698) Journal

      To be honest, yes, I personally dislike GNOME on principle. To me, I cannot get behind supporting a GUI that decides to scrap everything and try again every few years.
      Is that you, jwz? [jwz.org]

  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by joekiser on Friday February 21 2014, @11:23AM

    by joekiser (1837) on Friday February 21 2014, @11:23AM (#4236)

    I have bashed Gnome 3 in the past, but it took about two days of actually giving it a fair shot before it became the preferred desktop on my 12" Thinkpad. Like KDE, it needs tweaking initially to get working to my tastes. I use Tweak Tool to configure things that aren't available in the default settings, like the size of the titlebar, fonts, and font DPI. I add on things like Weather, Caffeine, and the drop down Terminal emulator (accessible by pressing the key above the Tab key), as well as an add on to remove the stupid animations. Switching applications is great, and using a taskbar seems antiquated.

    I can see where people using large monitors would hate it. Gnome 3 out of the box is geared towards small screens like laptops and touch-screen devices. It almost certainly requires the Windows key to be productive, which my Model M at the desktop does not have. Still, the Gnome 3 approach focused on stability and speed first, and incrementally adding new features with each release; this is in contrast to the KDE 4.0 fiasco which is still prone to crashing after all these years if you resize a panel the wrong way.

    --
    Debt is the currency of slaves.
    • (Score: 1) by kbahey on Sunday February 23 2014, @03:34AM

      by kbahey (1147) on Sunday February 23 2014, @03:34AM (#5061) Homepage

      I have never used Gnome as my desktop. Always used KDE, and was happy with 3.5. After KDE 4.0 was released, Kubuntu's initial KDE releases (the non-LTS ones) were a complete disaster. I almost considered moving away from KDE, be it Gnome (shudder!) or XFCE. However, the next release fixed the issues, and I have been on KDE ever since.

      If KDE screws up again, I am moving to XFCE or LXDE or something lightweight.

      Yakuake on KDE pops up a terminal when you hit a certain hot key.

  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by chromas on Friday February 21 2014, @11:35AM

    by chromas (34) Subscriber Badge on Friday February 21 2014, @11:35AM (#4242) Journal

    Do the people bashing it actually use it or just dislike it on principle?

    Bitching is fun.

    A lot of people jumped ship when Gnome decided to take a ß on its users and turn the desktop environment everyone was comfortable with into something else. And it wasn't even sudden; Gnome's been slowly ßing over the last few years, telling their audience that settings are confusing and the defaults are perfect anyway.

    Do desktops really have to keep copying Windows 95 forever?

    No but you can't just roll the dice and expect something good to come out.

    if you don't like GNOME then fine

    But they did like it. Then it became something else. Imagine if Windows or TechTV just suddenly dropped everything and just became something entirely different.

    • (Score: 1) by bugamn on Friday February 21 2014, @12:51PM

      by bugamn (1017) on Friday February 21 2014, @12:51PM (#4268)

      Is that an Eszett [wikipedia.org] representing an beta? Does this also mean that Soylent supports UTF8?

      *After a preview test* No, it doesn't.

      • (Score: 1) by Foobar Bazbot on Saturday February 22 2014, @05:10AM

        by Foobar Bazbot (37) on Saturday February 22 2014, @05:10AM (#4696) Journal

        SN does support UTF8. However, various bits (lameness filter, preview, "Code" or "Extrans" modes) don't work or don't work well with it (yet). While I haven't tried it much myself, I've heard less reports of problems when inserting html entities than directly inserting the UTF8 character.

        I'm posting this in "Plain Old Text" mode, and inserting a &#946; here: β <--- did it work? (preview says yes)

        And inserting the character itself here: β <--- and did this work? (preview says no)

        (Both those, if they come through right, will be actual betas, not eszetts. The whole point of unicode is so we don't have the limitations that led to using one glyph to represent eszett and beta...)

    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by bobintetley on Friday February 21 2014, @01:47PM

      by bobintetley (1273) on Friday February 21 2014, @01:47PM (#4286)

      If a userbase are comfortable with a project, then it should never change?

      I'm not arguing that either way, it's a difficult question to answer. My feeling is that projects with minimal change tend to stagnate, users drift off to the new shiny (which can be both a good and a bad thing) and the project loses relevancy.

      The GNOME team did keep the "classic" mode, that basically allows you to use a desktop that looks and works like GNOME2, but with GTK3 etc, however I'm not sure whether that was an option earlier on and it doesn't seemed to have appeased the folks who claim they still want GNOME2 anyway.

      • (Score: 3, Interesting) by efitton on Friday February 21 2014, @03:58PM

        by efitton (1077) on Friday February 21 2014, @03:58PM (#4382) Homepage

        The GNOME team did not have "classic" mode for years until Mate and Cinnamon ate their lunch. My understanding is that "classic" is not fully functional or compatible compared to GNOME 2. For example, they moved the clock back to the default spot of GNOME 2 but did NOT allow users to move the clock. They missed the point with classic.

        I think there is a huge difference between stagnation and wholesale changes. I also think GNOME did themselves no favors by keeping the name. They went from a proven full featured desktop to an experimental desktop but did kept the same name. Changing the direction of a project while keeping the name and expecting the same treatment, including being the default DE shipped by distributions, will certainly bring resentment.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 23 2014, @07:24AM

          by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 23 2014, @07:24AM (#5109)

          I don't think Classic was about MATE or Cinnamon. I think it was something that Red Hat's customers demanded. Red Hat compelled Gnome to develop a Classic desktop lest they lose business.

  • (Score: 1) by pjbgravely on Friday February 21 2014, @02:01PM

    by pjbgravely (1681) <pjbgravelyNO@SPAMyahoo.com> on Friday February 21 2014, @02:01PM (#4290) Homepage
    I loved Gnome 2, but Gnome 3 refuses to work correctly with more than 1 screen ( I currently use 4) so it is completely useless to me. I also see that they removed functionality in nautilus. The only thing still going for it is nautilus scripts.
    • (Score: 1) by bobintetley on Friday February 21 2014, @02:09PM

      by bobintetley (1273) on Friday February 21 2014, @02:09PM (#4299)

      4 monitors!

      You probably already know about it, but there are some GNOME3 extensions that improve multi-monitor support and allow a top panel per monitor and other things (I have a 3 monitor setup).

      • (Score: 2, Informative) by pjbgravely on Friday February 21 2014, @02:42PM

        by pjbgravely (1681) <pjbgravelyNO@SPAMyahoo.com> on Friday February 21 2014, @02:42PM (#4325) Homepage
        No, I searched for help with multi-monitor in Gnome3 and found nothing. When I start gnome, I don't even get a mouse pointer, just an X on the other screens. I have recently tried enlightenment, and it looks nice but on one screen everything is inadvisable. Maybe I am cursed. running debian sid.
  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by GeminiDomino on Friday February 21 2014, @02:48PM

    by GeminiDomino (661) on Friday February 21 2014, @02:48PM (#4331)

    Why is everyone so down on GNOME? Do the people bashing it actually use it or just dislike it on principle?

    Cleverly subtle, the false dichotomy was almost easy to miss. It's also completely possible to try it, realize that it's a steaming pile, and move to something else, like you say later.

    The GNOME project has a long history of "our way or the highway" and combined that, in GNOME 3, with change for the sake of change and the snake oil that is "UX." The abomination that resulted spent a week getting in my way before I decided to wipe it and install Xubuntu (and the GNOME crap is creeping into that one now, too. Might be time to switch to Mint)

    --
    "We've been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of our culture"
  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by mechanicjay on Friday February 21 2014, @04:08PM

    by mechanicjay (7) <reversethis-{gro ... a} {yajcinahcem}> on Friday February 21 2014, @04:08PM (#4391) Homepage Journal

    I was a Gnome guy all the way until Gnome 3. I tried, I really did. I gave it an honest 2 weeks, and never even started to feel comfortable in it. Then I tried KDE4 for a couple week, which I actually liked better, but was pretty heavy for some of the older hardware I was running. I've settled on XFCE4 at this point. It's lightweight, customizable enough and it doesn't get in the way.

    --
    My VMS box beat up your Windows box.
  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by everdred on Friday February 21 2014, @04:47PM

    by everdred (110) on Friday February 21 2014, @04:47PM (#4412) Journal

    >Why is everyone so down on GNOME? Do the people bashing it actually use it or just dislike it on principle?

    I used Gnome 3 as my primary desktop for a couple of months last summer before switching back to XFCE in abject frustration. The main problem is that Gnome 3 lacks basic functionality, requiring third-party extensions to recreate basic desktop functionality.

    I'm not talking about KDE-style 'every-feature-ever' completeness. I really really liked Gnome 2, which should signal that I'm not an old-school Gnome hater. I watch the progress of the MATE project with hopeful optimism.

    I spent countless hours wrangling these problematic extensions as they conflicted with one another, very often crashing and causing Gnome to disable all of them at once, leaving me to try to figure out which ones I had enabled right before the crash. (Here's my extension list from when I last used Gnome 3: http://imgur.com/a/U44Hb [imgur.com]. If you're wondering why it's split into two screenshots, Gnome does not let the user resize that particular window.)

    A secondary problem with the extension system reminds me of one of the most annoying things about Firefox: updating the program causes incompatibilities with extensions. Hobbyist extension developers are always a step behind the development of the main environment, and because of the 'core should be small; everything should be a extension' philosophy, functionality can go missing for days or weeks after a major update.

    The final straw for me was a day I needed to shut my laptop lid while on battery power and not have the system suspend. Of course there's an extension. Of course it doesn't work anymore. Of course there's a bug open. Of course the Gnome developers removed the functionality that used to allow this to work.

    The word we're looking for here is "clusterfuck."