Gnome Shell not so bad...
I really don't understand why people hate gnome shell so much. After a week or so of using it I realized that it supports power users just as well as noobs... When used properly, it just stays out of the way, and lets you focus on using your computer to work, play, or whatever. I used to spend hours configuring each new version of gnome, kde, xfce, etc. to provide easy access to the launchers that I needed, setting up themes, panels, etc. With gnome shell I feel that this is unnecessary (OK, and difficult to some extent), since virtually every piece of functionality is easily accessible via the keyboard.
Almost every complaint regarding Gnome Shell is (in some form or another) that it is not Gnome 2. Well, it isn't. Like any radically new user interface, it takes a little time to get used to. Instead of figuring out how to do the things that were possible in Gnome 2, figure out how to use your computer to do the things that it was intended for. The desktop environment is really there to allow this, and if you are spending too much time using it then it was probably not well designed in the first place. Give it a chance, let yourself like it, and I think that you will.
I really don't understand why people hate gnome shell so much. After a week or so of using it I realized that it supports power users just as well as noobs... When used properly, it just stays out of the way, and lets you focus on using your computer to work, play, or whatever. I used to spend hours configuring each new version of gnome, kde, xfce, etc. to provide easy access to the launchers that I needed, setting up themes, panels, etc. With gnome shell I feel that this is unnecessary (OK, and difficult to some extent), since virtually every piece of functionality is easily accessible via the keyboard.
Almost every complaint regarding Gnome Shell is (in some form or another) that it is not Gnome 2. Well, it isn't. Like any radically new user interface, it takes a little time to get used to. Instead of figuring out how to do the things that were possible in Gnome 2, figure out how to use your computer to do the things that it was intended for. The desktop environment is really there to allow this, and if you are spending too much time using it then it was probably not well designed in the first place. Give it a chance, let yourself like it, and I think that you will.
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