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GNOME 3 Is Soon Turning Five Years Old: How Are You Liking It?

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  • prodigy_
    replied
    Gnome 3 is hopelessly terrible in every way and it was obvious even before the initial release. Instead of ditching it and dedicating their time to something more useful they've spent five years on adding more trash to this huge ball of garbage. Are we supposed to cheer and applaud?

    Leave a comment:


  • YYYY
    replied
    For me Gnome3 is the most intuitive, logical and beautiful Desktop EVER

    My only fear is that they might ever change the philosophy because once you are used to the candy you get addicted.

    I install it everywhere, from the most addicted Windows.. users to almost illiterate elder (literally!). And they ALL love it!

    Thanks for the superior Gnome3 !

    Leave a comment:


  • damonlynch
    replied
    As a Unity desktop user I rely on Gnome 3 applications all the time. I give my congratulations to the Gnome devs! They have done some very impressive work.

    I must admit I get frustrated when I see proprietary windows applications using LGPLed Gnome technologies like GIO, simply because I have to wonder what they're giving back to the community.

    Leave a comment:


  • keivan
    replied
    I was not a huge fan of Gnome 2. Gnome 3 was unbearable. I like ubuntu unity, kde 4, xfce, and lxde. Unity and Kde 4 were my primary desktops before I ditch Linux desktop for good as my primary desktop. kde 4 needed a lot of administration on gentoo, so I moved to lxde. I can't say I'm happy with lxde. I try to limit my Linux work in as much as possible, because it wasts my valuable time for administration.
    Last edited by keivan; 18 January 2016, 02:08 AM.

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  • halo9en
    replied
    I didn't like Gnome 2 and really hated the focus on tablets in Gnome 3 (e.g. notifications in 3.14+), but of all the desktop environments and window managers I've tried (and I've tried them ALL) it's still the only working, "real" DE. Yes, there's KDE but I never liked the fact that GTK applications don't really blend with the QT framework.

    Leave a comment:


  • zuxun
    replied
    I was a gnome 2 user, when gnome 3 was released it was the reason i went to kde.

    Because it didn't have buttons to switch between programs i was unable to like it.

    It had a menu to switch between programs. This doesn't allow fast switching like i am used to.

    I too hate gnome 3.
    Last edited by zuxun; 17 January 2016, 11:45 PM.

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  • anderpants
    replied
    Originally posted by wagaf View Post
    WHY would they add an additional step to access the most used feature on a desktop : switching to another window.

    I kinda like GNOME 3 except for this. I use Ubuntu Unity because at least I can switch to the window I want in a single click. I do it so many times a day that two successive actions is too much. Every single commercial OS I ever known since Windows 95 has a directly accessible task bar or dock, for a good reason.

    Just a visible dock/taskbar with open windows, and a good search feature. Beyond that, it honesty just has to be classy.
    I never understood this either. GNOME3 is unusable in my opinion. I have tried over and over to get used to it and make it a usable full time desktop but every time I try, the settings you have to tweak are different, don't work, or are in different places.

    Leave a comment:


  • boxie
    replied
    I have not used Gnome 3 enough to form a solid opinion. It did get in the way of me doing things a little - but it has been a while since I have tried it.

    I have been using Cinnamon for the last couple of years and have been relatively happy - with time the rough edges have become more and more smooth.

    Leave a comment:


  • emblemparade
    replied
    I admire the GNOME project in general. It's a combination of lots of very good and even world-class apps, with a terrific platform underneath: GTK+3 is very solid and modern, supporting HiDPI and Wayland (and I much prefer C over Qt's C++, thank you), while the Vala language shows real innovation that has proved immensely productive. It's also shown tremendous restraint in terms of its design/interface language, keeping things simple, while constantly refining the message.

    But the GNOME 3 shell has been a thorn in my side! I really liked it at first, and was excited by all the plugins and themes that could let me modify almost any aspect of it, but then every single point release broke my plugins and broke my themes and forced me to relearn things. I even though to write plugins on my own, but realized how frustrating it would be to keep having to fix them every few months when a new point release came out.

    I'm likewise frustrated by how hard it is to get the latest GNOME 3 releases on Ubuntu. If you stick to an Ubuntu LTS release, you will not be able to get the latest and greatest GNOME 3, even with PPAs.

    So, GNOME 3 has a lot of promise, but I'm waiting for the platform to stabilize. (We had the same issue early on with Firefox, with new releases breaking add-ons, until that problem has mostly disappeared.)

    Until then, like others here, I find Xfce to be the perfect desktop. I do have to tweak it a bit to suit my needs, but at least I can. My only issue with it right now is that it doesn't have proper HiDPI support. I hope Xfce finishes migrating to GTK+3 and gets in line with the rest of the goodies.

    Leave a comment:


  • Delgarde
    replied
    Originally posted by Daktyl198 View Post

    Just want to point out here that GTK originally stood for "GIMP Tool Kit" and was created by the developers of GIMP, for GIMP. It would still exist if Gnome didn't.
    Probably not, actually. Yes, Gtk would have been created back in the distant past. But if it had remained the Gimp Toolkit and not been adopted by Gnome as the toolkit for an entire desktop, it's unlikely that it would still be around today.

    Leave a comment:

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