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Gnome Removed From Slackware

Posted by Zonk on Sun Mar 27, 2005 09:47 PM
from the quite-large dept.
Anonymous Coward writes "After long consideration, Pat Volkerding has removed GNOME from Slackware. Pat mentions in the -current ChangeLog that GNOME takes a lot of time to package, so this move should allow more time to be spent on the rest of Slackware." From the changelog: "Please do not incorrectly interpret any of this as a slight against GNOME itself, which (although it does usually need to be fixed and polished beyond the way it ships from upstream more so than, say, KDE or XFce) is a decent desktop choice."
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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:48PM (#12063178)
    Please do not incorrectly interpret any of this as a slight against your sister heself, who (although she does usually need to be fixed up and polished beyond the way she ships from upstream more so than, say, Bob's sister or John's sister) is a decent girlfriend choice."
  • by inflex (123318) on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:49PM (#12063182)
    I can think of this piece of news being bought up at least 6 months ago and everyone moving over to using replacements like Dropline GNOME etc.
  • KDE 3.4 (Score:4, Interesting)

    by LittleLebowskiUrbanA (619114) on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:50PM (#12063191) Homepage Journal
    Gnome has been dropped and KDE 3.4 added? Wow. That says a lot in itself about the current state of the 2 leading Desktop Environments in Linux...particularly in a conservative --not--bleeding freaking--edge distro like Slack.
    • Re:KDE 3.4 (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 28 2005, @12:31AM (#12063945)
      They're dropping KDE as well. This GUI thing has all been a mistake that's gone on long enough.
      • Re:KDE 3.4 (Score:5, Informative)

        by Fnord (1756) <joe@sadusk.com> on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:15PM (#12063356) Homepage
        Do a google search for xorg and sub-pixel rendering. Cleartype is not a microsoft exclusive thing.
      • Re:KDE 3.4 (Score:4, Funny)

        by BorgCopyeditor (590345) on Sunday March 27 2005, @11:55PM (#12063823)
        Yes! Then every damn program could be uselessly and unpronouncably prefixed with "KG".

        New slogan:

        KGOffice: how did you want to pronounce me today?
        • by mshurpik (198339) on Monday March 28 2005, @12:05AM (#12063856)
          I have news for you, people who know how to make things work go into construction, not programming. People go into programming because they want to dick around.

          I happen to like Gnome, but then again, I also liked Unix windowmanagers circa 1995. They do X and they do multiple desktops, two things that were always a hassle on Windows. Other than that, Gnome is still waiting for a third compelling application. It's just a prettier version of TWM, or FVWM, or whatever you were using way back when the internet was born.

        • by NanoGator (522640) on Monday March 28 2005, @12:31AM (#12063944) Homepage Journal
          " 32-bit icons and font smoothing are candy things."

          Font smoothing is more than eye candy, it's more like eye-pillows.

          (note: I pretty much agree with the rest of your point, I'm just feeling nitpicky today.)
        • by Coryoth (254751) on Monday March 28 2005, @12:26AM (#12063923) Homepage Journal
          The "choice" obsessed people would beat them down. They want every OSS effort to be splintered and fragmented, so that I have to install and load two entire desktop environments just to be able to run each other's apps.

          The solution is quite simple: don't run the other DEs apps. Or actually pay for an OS - be it Windows, MacOS X, or something else altogether. No one is forcing you to use Linux/*BSD. If it sucks, by all means, stop using it.

          The "Linux Desktop" is no some vast concerted effort, it is a hodge podge of whatever people are willing to contribute. As long as people are free to code whatever interests them there will always be splintering. If you don't like that, buy a system where there are enforced standards of what is acceptable.

          Jedidiah.
            • Define progress. (Score:4, Insightful)

              by jotaeleemeese (303437) on Monday March 28 2005, @06:26AM (#12064946) Homepage Journal
              I see lack of choice (i.e, Windows, MacOS) as lack of progress.

              I see freedom to choose amongst many alternative as progress.

              The original poster was right. You don;t like what you see then get what you need or contribute towards what you would like to see (whining does not count as a contribution, hunting bugs, participating in development forums, adopting one application and helping to steer it in the correct direction, etc is what is needed. People whining for Windows or MacOS like functionality just don't understand the philosophy of Linux and GPLed software...).
        • by gosand (234100) on Monday March 28 2005, @10:02AM (#12065803) Homepage
          Now, linux-heads love choice and more power to them for that. BUT such up-front confusion with linux is not the way to win over the general public.

          Your entire argument is based on the opinion that winning over the general public is somehow the "goal" of Linux.

          Think about it for a second.

          Now think about it for another.

          Personally, I don't want it to become mainstream, or the OS of the general public. The general public is a bunch of morons who destroy the fun and life in everything it collectively touches. Disney is what the public wants. NASCAR is what the public wants. Windows is what the public wants.

          Now I have known people, that I respect, that like each of these things. But as a whole, these things cater to the lowest common denominator. In my opinion, Linux is above that. And you can't say it is elitest, because *it* isn't a thing with someone behind the wheel steering it in any one direction. It is more like evolution than a lab experiment. In all honesty, I think it is a beautiful thing, and I don't want it to be degraded to the point where it is on the public desktop. If someone or a company can put it there, so be it. But hopefully if that happens it won't drag "Linux" down with it.

          One of the problems with Linux is that there is too much choice.

          I know I quoted you out of sequence, so forgive me. But choice is EXACTLY what got Linux where it is today. I can agree that it is daunting, even for me, to choose. But I would rather have the choice. I was on the same distro for about 5 years, which is like millenia in distro time. By the time I decided to upgrade, the choices were staggering! I tried one, then another, then settled on my third choice. There are still things that I don't like about the one I chose (or should I say that I like better about the ones I didn't), but I made a good choice. Linux is evolving, constantly, and is improving. I have been using it since RedHat5.1, and Unix before that. There are some tools that I use today that I used the first day I logged in. And I still learn about new tools today - some brand new, some that have been there since day 1. It is awesome, and I love it. There are 50 ways to do the same thing, some more elegant than others, some brute force. I write scripts all the time that perform actions like taking photos, resizing them to 3 standard sizes, making thumbnails, and creating HTML around them so people can view them on a web page. There are packages that can do this, there are hundreds of ways via shell scripts, different languages, etc. But I did it my way. Is my way the best way? There is no best way. My way works, and it is mine. THAT is why I like Linux. I think it is better to offer choice. Everyone can choose, but everyone doesn't have to choose the same thing.

  • Ironic... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Bytal (594494) on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:50PM (#12063192) Homepage
    How ironic, seeing that Gnome tries to be the simplest and easiest to use full-featured desktop on Linux. I guess easy to use doesn't mean easy to package.
    • Re:Ironic... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Ogerman (136333) on Sunday March 27 2005, @11:16PM (#12063669)
      Having done the whole "Linux from scratch" thing as a learning experience, I can tell you that building a complete Gnome installation takes at around 3-5x longer than KDE and is much more difficult. This was 4-5 years ago, but the situation has gotten worse from casual observation of the Debian packaging.

      One of the biggest differences between KDE and Gnome is that KDE's use of the Qt library dramatically cuts down on dependancies. Gnome requires use of dozens of libraries to match the functionality of Qt and this complicates the build process.

      Frankly, from a developer perspective, I don't think Gtk/Gnome libs have quite kept up with Qt in terms of overall quality and I'm not sure how they can be expected to. Qt is heavily supported commercially. There are people being paid full time to add features, improve performance, and write top quality API docs. Gnome expends much effort maintaining its own libraries. It's a shame that KDE and Gnome do not both use Qt. It would eliminate almost all of the compatibility issues, save memory on hybrid desktops, and allow them to compete on things that really matter like UI design. (where there are legitimate arguments on both sides) But, unfortunately, Qt began it's life as a less-than-Free piece of code. As a result, the Gnome folks rightly avoided it. But then they continued their own efforts even after Qt went GPL.. Now there's even a GPL full version for Windows, so the cross-platform argument is totally shot.

      FWIW, I'm not trying to bash Gnome, but I do think there is some re-evaluation in order. Competition is good, but wheel re-inventing is usually not.
      • by ultrabot (200914) on Monday March 28 2005, @04:19AM (#12064706)
        It's a shame that KDE and Gnome do not both use Qt. It would eliminate almost all of the compatibility issues, save memory on hybrid desktops, and allow them to compete on things that really matter like UI design."

        It would also eliminate the option of creating closed source applications without paying thousands of euros for Qt licenses (or at least apps that fit the general UI look and feel).

        Not in million years. Companies don't want to be that dependent on Trolltech.

        This comes from a KDE user (KDE 3.4 is a gem). But I'm also a developer, and I don't see Qt as *strategically* viable route to bring Linux desktop forward.

        (For those that don't know, Gtk is LGPL which is more free than GPL, which is the license Qt uses).
        • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 28 2005, @05:26AM (#12064844)
          yada yada yada. If you are developing closed source commercial applications the licensing cost of qt is like a speck of dust in the universe. If you really think these euros is too much, all it tells is that either you have no idea what it costs to have people employed, or that you are a cheap bastard that want first class tool for nothing.
      • Re:Ironic... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Bytal (594494) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:05PM (#12063287) Homepage
        Irony - when something happens that is the opposite of what is expected. Gnome is easy to use and so the expectation is that it is also easy to build. The irony here is that it is not actually easy to build. That seems like a correct use of the word ironic.
      • Re:Ironic... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Neon Spiral Injector (21234) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:22PM (#12063395) Homepage
        Are you building and 'make install'ing, or building .tgz package files? GNOME 'make install's fine. But doesn't obey the DESTDIR envar, so making stand-alone packages is very difficult. (No, setting --prefix= does not work, because that path gets hard coded into various places.)
  • That is ok (Score:3, Insightful)

    by thundercatslair (809424) on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:52PM (#12063198)
    Because you can always easily install dropline gnome [dropline.net].
      • by zborgerd (871324) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {dregrobz}> on Sunday March 27 2005, @11:26PM (#12063715) Homepage
        I must admit that the post in the changelog was a bit disheartening. I realize that we cannot make everyone happy, but there are some legitimate benefits to the things that are dubbed as "intrusive" by some. For instance, we are going to include an evdev patch in X11 that several users have asked for. There are little touches like this that you don't always see in Slackware, and we believe that they provide a better desktop experience for most users.

        That said, in spite of the fact that I am one of many that works on Dropline GNOME, I'm very pleased to see that there are other alternatives for everyone. Each GNOME desktop for Slackware offers a unique experience and helps provide choices for Slackers (which has always been the mission of Dropline GNOME in the first place).

        We will be releasing Dropline GNOME 2.10 within a few days. Currently, it is being BETA tested, but things are progressing well. It will be our first release that is built totally from the ground up, since we (the development team) took the project over from Todd back in Novemeber. We're really proud of our work.

        In addition, I'd like to pay my respects to the other Slackware GNOME teams out there. Freerock (of GNOME.SlackBuild) frequents our IRC channel, and has been very kind in sharing some of his experiences with GNOME 2.10's (many) quirks. He's a very nice guy, and has a quality GNOME desktop. I've also visited the GWARE room on Freenode, and have found that they are also nice guys as well. They're also developing a quality desktop.
  • To bad (Score:3, Funny)

    by md10md (828419) on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:53PM (#12063203)
    I was looking forward to Gnome 2.10 in Slack. Wanted to see how he'd do it.
  • WHAT?!?!?! (Score:4, Funny)

    by null etc. (524767) on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:54PM (#12063215)
    Man, that's so screwed up! I just bought my mom the Platinum edition Slackware collection so she could use Gnome. Now that it's going to be removed, I'm gonna switch back to Windows 98 ME.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:56PM (#12063224)
    Bunch of slackers.
  • Wow... just wow (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Lisandro (799651) on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:56PM (#12063229)
    I think this happened a while ago (months?), but that Slackware, which is still a major, well thought out distribution, decides to drop GNOME support just like that is major news. Dropline GNOME and other community support projects for Slack exists, so it's not Slackware users will need to part with GNOME. But still, a slap in the face to the GNOME crew. I wonder what they have to say about it.

    Anway, i found interesting that Pat mentions XFCE as a "fixed an polished" desktop. It's great, and while i'd hate to see GNOME loose popularity, at this time XFCE 4.2 is a better GNOME than GNOME itself.
    • Re:Wow... just wow (Score:5, Interesting)

      by pavera (320634) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:24PM (#12063411) Journal
      I'm gonna give an amen to that. I moved to Xfce I think in Fedora Core 2 when it was included as a standard desktop option, and i haven't looked back. It is fast, easy to use, small, powerful, I've got gnome and kde libs on my machines to run kde and gnome apps, but I love Xfce all the power of gnome or kde, loads in less than 5 seconds (as opposed to 30+ for either kde or gnome) and uses much less ram. All in all I really like it.
    • Re:Wow... just wow (Score:5, Interesting)

      by InodoroPereyra (514794) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:35PM (#12063483)
      Anway, i found interesting that Pat mentions XFCE as a "fixed an polished" desktop. It's great, and while i'd hate to see GNOME loose popularity, at this time XFCE 4.2 is a better GNOME than GNOME itself.
      I second this. XFCE is as fast as GNOME used to be, its interface is as simple as GNOME is today, and in general it feels more cleanly designed, and it doesn't seem less powerfull. If you like GNOME and you still haven't done so, give XFCE a try. You may find it pretty useful.
  • by LittleLebowskiUrbanA (619114) on Sunday March 27 2005, @09:57PM (#12063235) Homepage Journal
    you can hear Eugenia yelling "I told you so, Gnome developers!"
  • LFS (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Bios_Hakr (68586) <xptical AT gmail DOT com> on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:05PM (#12063290) Homepage
    Before you all go freaking out, let me suggest something.

    Build Linux From Scratch. Then try adding some common desktops. KDE is quite easy to add to LFS. Gnome is an absolute bear to add.

    At one point, I had a printout of all the deps for Gnome. It was a huge spiderweb of tangles that had to be decoded and followed exactly to get Gnome to build.

    Anyway, Gnome is lots of work.
  • slow your roll fools (Score:5, Informative)

    by Stalyn (662) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:09PM (#12063308) Homepage Journal
    I suspect the main reason behind this is the popularity of Dropline GNOME [dropline.net].

    "Dropline GNOME is a version of the GNOME Desktop that has been tweaked for Slackware Linux systems. It is available in Slackware's standard .tgz package format, in addition to the usual source code. The current release is based off of the latest GNOME 2 distribution from the GNOME Project."

    Why not let Dropline do all the work... so don't fret slackware users you still have GNOME. Just not being packaged by Slackware officially.
  • A few subtle hints (Score:5, Insightful)

    by OverflowingBitBucket (464177) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:10PM (#12063318) Homepage Journal
    Sounds like a way of saying that they aren't terribly happy with the GNOME releases but don't want to start a big fight over it. Read the comments in the ChangeLog; when justifying the decision they hint repeatedly at the problems. I suspect they wanted to say a lot more than they did. ;)

    This does open the door for third-parties to tidy up the GNOME releases and provide a drop-in package for the distro though. Perhaps one of them will become strong enough to make it back in the door again.
  • hear hear (Score:5, Insightful)

    by grepMeister (37303) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:20PM (#12063386) Homepage
    why on earth is GNOME so RIDICULOUSLY difficult to compile by hand? yes, it's a big and complicated project. so is kde. kde comes in packages: libraries, base, etc.

    last time I tried -- admittedly a VERY long time ago -- compiling gnome without the benefit of something like portage was a days-long dependency hunt. dependencies of FINAL releases were often still in CVS only. ick.

    if you think that's what computing should be all about, you have WAY too much time on your hands.
  • by Doc Ruby (173196) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:22PM (#12063400) Homepage Journal
    "Including GNOME is too hard"? Putting the "slack" in "Slackware".

    Maybe this will pressure GNOME to become more installable. I find it worth the effort, but we'd all be better off if it were easier. Including GNOME, whose user/developer base would expand.
  • The right decision (Score:5, Insightful)

    by stox (131684) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:59PM (#12063603) Homepage
    Which would you rather have?

    1) A distribution that includes everything. Of course this means that the team's resources are spread too far, producing an inferior product.

    2) A distribution that provides a subset, but is a solid foundation upon which others can reliably add functionality.

    I'll take quality over quantity, thank you!
  • thank you (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dermusikman (540176) on Sunday March 27 2005, @11:01PM (#12063609) Homepage
    i'm glad to see it go. it's always been a big waste of burned disk space when all i want to do is upgrade the latest core packages and recompile everything else that linuxpackages.net doesn't have a binary for.
    and while we're on the topic of cutting out unnecessary GNOME fat... GTK developers: please stop depending on GNOME-specific packages!! when i want a cute little program for a slim little purpose to run on my less mainstream enlightenment setup, i *don't* want to install an entire DE that i never use!! please write programs independant of GNOME *and* KDE. both Qt and Gtk are perfectly fine libraries by themselves, without the additional bloat!
  • by xutopia (469129) on Sunday March 27 2005, @11:08PM (#12063639) Homepage
    This doesn't mean the end of Gnome on Slackware! Dropline Gnome is so popular on Slack that Pat doesn't see the need to support gnome anymore. Anyways if you look at other now very popular distros [distrowatch.com] you'll see that many only support just one Desktop Environment. Why should Pat bother because his Gnome version was always overwritten by something more current anyways (see dropline-gnome).

    I don't see what the big deal is. If other distros can become so popular without supporting everything and build a very strong community around that streamlining concept I don't see what is wrong with Slack doing the same thing. Pat is making the right decision in only supporting one DE.

    PS: yes I know some religious Gnome fan boy will come and try to comment on my post and say that I'm just a KDE fan spewing his views. Except I'm a gnome fan too.

    • Weren't Sun and HP supposed to help with this stuff and let Gnome catch up?

      Technically speaking, they have been. However, the scuttlebutt out of the Sun team is that the GNOME developers are not entirely appreciative of the help and tend to shove back. While this may or may not be true, I'm afraid that the whole "Spatial Natilus" debacle didn't do much for the GNOME team's reputation.
        • by coaxial (28297) on Monday March 28 2005, @06:51AM (#12065010) Homepage
          Or their morale probably. I wish Sun would do another HIG. The developers need more unbaised feedback. All they are likely to hear on Slashdot is the vocal minority.

          The GNOME heirachy needs to be walloped with a clue stick when it comes to useability. Before the Sun usability GNOME suffered from the Tyrany of Choice. Too many almost identical apps all with similar names. The clock applets were my favorite, "clock", "another clock", "clock with mail check", "jbc clock", etc. Sun came back and said, "You have too many choices." Havoc et al. took away from this, "Choice is bad" and systematically removed almost every preference in GNOME. They didn't have to go from one extreme to the other. Now you're stuck using undocumented gconf keys to change things, even though gconf-editor plainly says "don't use this to change preferences". Nice.

          The other problem with GNOME is the whole culture of "Let's rewrite everything!" The file chooser has changed almost 6 times since GNOME started. Entire architectures are tossed overboard without much second thought. Damn. It's like it's being developed by a bunch of ADD teenagers trying to show how 1337 they are.

          But yes, GNOME needs another usability study.

          I use Gnome, with e16, and I like it very much but I'm not likely to say anything about it until I have something to bitch about.

          I'll give you something. The filechooser. "Nah. No one will ever want to type in a filename when they can simply click 15 times!" (Yes, I know MacOSX 10.2+ introduced this. I'll simply recount the wisdom of Obi-Wan, "Who's the more foolish? The fool or the one who follows him?"
    • by Rahga (13479) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:06PM (#12063291) Homepage Journal
      Hey... 1998 called, and it wants that troll back.

    • Re:The Gnome way (Score:5, Informative)

      by donscarletti (569232) on Sunday March 27 2005, @10:10PM (#12063319)
      What a dumb troll. The giveaway is "more mature languages like VC++ and Java", since VC++ is not a language, it's an IDE/compiler and Java is a lot newer, fast changing and generally less mature than C.

      Anyway. Gnome and GTK+ are very object oriented, they use classes, virtual member functions and polymorphism right to their cores. Also, skinning in GTK+ is a simple matter of loading a config file.

      • Re:The Gnome way (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 28 2005, @01:25AM (#12064188)
        As others have pointed out, there's nothing object oriented about your code. And, of course, if that were C++, and pretending that a C++ version of the gtk header exists, you could do this:

        void callback(button& b) {
        cout << "click\n";
        }
        int main() {
        init();
        window my_window(200, 200, "title");
        signal_connect(my_window, destroy, main_quit, 0);

        button my_button("label");
        signal_connect(my_button, click, callback);

        container_add(my_window, my_button);
        widget_show_all(my_window);

        gtk_main();
        // return 0 is implicit from main in C++
        }

        Now look how this C++ version is 10 times easier to understand. Plus it can do many more things. The callback function can be typesafe, for instance, and doesn't need a given signature - it could be a functor, or return a value (which is presumably ignored). This is possible due to templates. C++ is better than C, period.
      • by Screaming Lunatic (526975) on Monday March 28 2005, @12:49AM (#12064033) Homepage
        But still, of those two, i have to agree with Pat: at this point in time, KDE is just a better desktop.

        Clearly, you and Pat don't agree. The article summary clearly states that Pat doesn't think there is anything major wrong with GNOME the desktop, it is the packaging of GNOME that is difficult.

        Geez. Not only aren't we reading the articles, we aren't even reading the summaries anymore.

        -- KDE user and summary reader.

    • by aav (117550) on Monday March 28 2005, @12:56AM (#12064068)
      Well, I'll do my bitching about the moderators first: where the hell are your brains if you considered the parent post insightful ? It's just a brainless statement that doesn't even rely on facts. It's much like saying that "the Windows GUI relies on libraries all written by Microsoft" so GNOME is better because it doesn't.

      The truth is that the KDE libraries are not all clumped together into KDE libs. They have never been. In version 1.0 KDE libs might have been larger than the others, but that was five years ago. Things have evolved a little bit and the KDE libraries are actually very modular.

      So, Gnome is not more difficult to compile because there are a lot of different people work on it. Hell, there are more people working on KDE and the results are much better. The problem with GNOME is that it's poorly coordinated and it's way too dominated by ideological issues (we have to write it in C comes to mind, even if it was unrelated).

      As about your statement that programs that need some KDE feature exclusively are KDE programs: bollocks! You don't have a clue about the structure of KDE or how to link a program. Unless you need to write the program as a DCOP client, you don't need other any part of KDE except for what you link in your program.