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GNOME GUI Software Upgrades

GNOME 3.4 Preview 144

A couple of days ago, GNOME released the first beta of version 3.4. Designer Allan Day has posted a tour of the major interface changes. Some of them seem good (everything looks shiny and clean), but some of them seem questionable. The big thing to take from this release cycle appears to be improvements to the underlying technology that might help other window managers take advantage of the GNOME 3 infrastructure (leading to a world where hackers, tablet users, and grandma can all get along).

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GNOME 3.4 Preview

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  • Re:ubuntu (Score:0, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 29, 2012 @12:58PM (#39198775)

    This is literally the very first praise I have ever encountered of recent Ubuntu and Unity. Good luck getting the other 99% of the Linux community to agree with you.

    Mark Shuttleworth is not Steve Jobs. He can't make users love something simply by saying it's awesome and paying a few guys like you to post positive reviews.

  • Re:Application menus (Score:3, Informative)

    by wahaa ( 1329567 ) on Wednesday February 29, 2012 @12:58PM (#39198783)
    And this is sad:

    Nope it’s not optional and more and more apps will use it in the future

    (This quote is from a comment in the tour [wordpress.com])

  • Re:Think Different (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 29, 2012 @01:55PM (#39199613)

    Personally I wasn't too convinced, but after using certain extensions [tigress.co.uk], I found it to be on par with gnome 2.

  • Re:Think Different (Score:5, Informative)

    by supersloshy ( 1273442 ) on Wednesday February 29, 2012 @02:01PM (#39199679)

    Here are some reasons from somebody that uses both GNOME 3 and Windows 7 on a daily basis:

    * In Windows, if I want to switch to an application that has multiple windows (like a chat application) and I used Alt+Tab, it only brings up one window and I have to use Alt+Tab multiple times in succession to get all of the windows up. In GNOME 3, application windows are grouped by default so if I switch to my chat window, it also brings up my buddy list. If I want to switch to a specific window only, it lets me do that too with minimal effort.

    * In Windows I feel like the Start menu is hard to navigate properly. Applications are sometimes grouped into folders and some aren't. There are no categories whatsoever. In GNOME 3 I not only get the same, handy "search" function that Windows 7 has, but I also get a much more intelligent application list which groups them by category and sorts them alphabetically without them being shoved into pointless folders.

    * In Windows I feel like my application launchers are a distraction from my work. GNOME 3 helps me stay focused (yes this is an actual problem for me) by keeping the icons on the Activity overview, which is just as easy to open as the Start menu (Windows key).

    * The clock is in the center of the top bar instead of useless white space. This isn't huge but it feels like a much better place for a clock than being shoved in the corner with a tiny font. This way it's larger easier to read from a distance and, since it's white text on black, it's also easier to look at in general.

    * I just love the default theme. It has a lot of unnecessary padding, but it feels silky-smooth and "proper". The applications integrate well with it, too. Windows 7's Aero theme, while nice, feels somewhat pretentious and hacked-together. Also I don't really need glass-like transparency everywhere I look.

    * Chat integration! I used to be a Pidgin fan when it comes to IM, but I tried Empathy and, while it has less features than Pidgin, it has just enough for me and it makes up for the lost features by being extremely simplistic and easy to use. No matter what window I have brought to the forefront, I can quickly respond from the nice little pop-up at the bottom of the screen without switching windows. Changing my availability from the status menu in the upper-right corner is also very nice since I don't have to hunt for a program icon in the "notification tray" or whatever people call it.

    * It creates multiple desktops on-the-fly. I used to be the kind of person who had 4 desktops in a square formation, each for different programs, but with the new Alt+Tab functionality that has become rather outdated to me. In the event that I do need another desktop and I drag an application to another desktop, it makes a new, empty one right below it. My desktops dynamically adapt to my workflow instead of the other way around.

    * I can click the application name in the top bar and close every single window owned by the application instead of hunting them all down.

    * No minimizing ever! While most people rely on minimizing, I find no need to with GNOME 3. The desktop is uncluttered and simple, reducing distractions and removing the need to organize your icons and widgets and whatever else for it. The only times I'd ever feel like minimizing a window are obsoleted. Maximizing is also easier (though less straightforward at first) because, instead of hunting down the maximize button, I can just double-click the title-bar. This leaves more room for the close button in the corner of every window.

    I could go on and on about the little things I love about it but I think I've made my point pretty clear by now. I can still use other desktops just fine but if I could replace them all with GNOME 3, I would in a heartbeat. Honestly the only reason I ever use Windows is for Steam games.

  • Re:Think Different (Score:5, Informative)

    by supersloshy ( 1273442 ) on Wednesday February 29, 2012 @02:08PM (#39199803)

    Oh I almost forgot to add one very, very important detail that really sets it apart: one-click extension support! If you go to extensions.gnome.org [gnome.org] while running GNOME 3, you can click any extension you want, slide an on/off switch, and it's installed! You can change lots of different aspects of GNOME with this, like adding buttons to the User Menu in the corner, removing things you don't need in the UI, making the behavior more like that of GNOME 2 or other desktop environments, and whatever else you can code in javascript. Nearly any major problem you may have with GNOME 3 can be remedied with an extension, and there have been some very comprehensive ones released so far! I only use one extension, the "Alternative Status Menu" one, but I could easily live without it.

  • Re:Think Different (Score:3, Informative)

    by ohnocitizen ( 1951674 ) on Wednesday February 29, 2012 @02:22PM (#39199999)
    Sure. I used to spend time customizing my desktop to work just the way I liked, look just the way I liked, and feel like an extension of my workflow. With Gnome 3's cornucopia of options available to the user, I no longer spend time tweaking my desktop. Its very zen.

Suggest you just sit there and wait till life gets easier.

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