While LXDE is a great environment I still find Xfce much more feature complete and customizable enough to make it work on your own style which makes things faster. I love Xfce panels but LXDE is catching up on this also.
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Originally posted by Delgarde View PostSure, but I think that counts. I doubt there are many lines of code in current Gnome or KDE releases that date back to their first releases either, even if they've never done big-bang rewrites.
I'm more informed about the KDE side than Gnome but there actually quite some bits and pieces that lasted over the years ? code in KWin talking directly to X11 and the session startup script are two frequently cited examples by KDE devs.
Originally posted by Delgarde View PostNow personally, I don't actually like the XFCE desktop much... it's never really suited me. But you've got to give them credit - they don't get the recognition of the bigger desktops, but they've endured and thrived over a long period of time...
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Originally posted by beaverusiv View PostI would say it is fragmentation of resources (developer time, etc). I'm all for choice, but when there is too much and too little differentiation you hurt the community by splitting what are very similar groups smaller than they need to be.
Just a general statement, I barely play with different DEs.
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Originally posted by dee. View PostPeople who care about one project, work on that project because they care about that project. If that project were to somehow disappear, it's not certain at all that the people would then contribute their time to the competing project. It doesn't really matter how many desktops there are, they wouldn't exist if there wasn't at least some kind of user base for them, a group of people who find it suitable for their needs.
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Originally posted by Delgarde View PostNow personally, I don't actually like the XFCE desktop much... it's never really suited me. But you've got to give them credit - they don't get the recognition of the bigger desktops, but they've endured and thrived over a long period of time...
I used to think XFCE was half-assed and redundant, because you can always use Gnome 2 instead - and when LXDE was available, it was (unscientific numbers) 2x smaller/faster than XFCE.
I thought that XFCE was the worst of both worlds. Then I ended up fed up with Mate (Gnome 2's new name), my top panel looked really ugly and a couple issues. LXDE has stagnated too much (some slight uglyness, still no right-clicking to create a shorcut instead a shortcut is a sysadmin task) though it gained more panel applets and the file manager got even better (while largely looking and acting the same)
Now I think XFCE is the best of both worlds (though tabs in the file manager are still in a future version, 4.12) with some qualities of LXDE (lack of a registry, similar way of working with the panels) and Gnome 2/Mate (like Alt-F9/Alt-F10 by default, ability to create shortcuts in panels and start menu, ability to edit the menu without additional software).
I miss LXDE's ctrl-esc to open the menu, and I still use lxterminal lol.
Happy with the LXDE/Razor/Qt move, the environment gets long term security (Qt 5.x will be a living thing for a decade I guess), differentiation and Qt is more present on mobile stuff.
I guess it will work on Mir by the way ; the rationale is Mir can use Android drivers. GNU/linux + Mir + LXDE-Qt seems like something you would want to run on those cheapo knock-off ersatz computers that look like a USB drive and come with Android.
I don't want to do a flamewar about Mir vs Wayland vs X11 ; maybe it can support everything? (it's not like it needs to implement animations and other useless features anyway)
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Originally posted by grok View PostI thought that XFCE was the worst of both worlds.
Originally posted by grok View PostI guess it will work on Mir by the way ; the rationale is Mir can use Android drivers.
As you can read, Canonical even uses the same library for Android compatibility in Mir.
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Originally posted by grok View PostI guess it will work on Mir by the way ; the rationale is Mir can use Android drivers. GNU/linux + Mir + LXDE-Qt seems like something you would want to run on those cheapo knock-off ersatz computers that look like a USB drive and come with Android.
I don't want to do a flamewar about Mir vs Wayland vs X11 ; maybe it can support everything? (it's not like it needs to implement animations and other useless features anyway)
As for the parts actually implemented by LXDE, yeah, they're likely to work, since Canonical said they'll port Qt.
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Alright, I thought Mir was mostly about the same things as Wayland but it's more involved.
Didn't know the "compatibility layer" or whatever it is for Android drivers ran on Wayland too!
And yes I guess you'll be able to run pcmanfm-Qt on Unity Qt, if only you find yourself on that machine and want to quickly install that file manager without messing anything up. Some people run pcmanfm GTK2 on heavy desktops.
I fondly remember a fluxbox + pcmanfm machine too (a public music player PC)
Running LXDE with xfwm4 (Xfce's window manager) can be an option, for minor reasons.
LXDE's on-going GTK2 support can be good for stuff like that, or reversely using Xfce with LXDE's file manager.
Lots of freedom and.. everything plays nice!
I was fed up at Mate for ignoring my command to change the default file manager (despite finding what seemed to be the right thing in the "registry"), and then after settling on using a few shortcuts, being unable to remove "Places" in "Applications Places System".
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