Gnome 1.1.4 Released 116
sheldie wrote to us to say that those wild and wacky Gnome guys have released Gnome-core/gnome-applets 1.1.4. As we've said before, they are currently in a feature-freeze, working towards 1.2. Of course, I do think that the best part of 1.1.4 is the name: "Ponies for Sale!" does a great job of drawing it all together. *grin*
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:2)
Re:Open source ponies ??? (Score:1)
and has looked much more polished in general.
i dunno, I kind of like the icons, but to each their own. You should try this release, I've been
using 1.1.3 for as long as it's been out, and i've
had zero problems as well as zero down time.
RPMs available here! (Score:2)
Your Milage May Vary.... be sure to grab a copy of gdk-pixbuf, too! Enjoy!
Re:I'm not a retard (Score:1)
In summary, if you haven't already got October Gnome, get that. Then get gdk-pixbuf and install it. Then gnome-core and gnome-applets. It's easier with the rpms because rpm -e is a godsend if things go wrong.
I have been running the 1.1.x gnome-core/applets and haven't crashed them effectively yet. The old bugbear of the crashed panel is now gone, because it has started itself back up after I crashed it (I was trying to: I was curious) without that wretched "You already have a panel running" message.
There should be some reasonably up to date information in the FAQ: if it doesn't work, tell the FAQ folks so they can _fix_ it!
Finally, don't confuse "latest release" with CVS. The stable CVS stuff is stable. Parts of the HEAD branch, notoriously, are not, and this frequently includes gnome-libs, which is a fairly fundamental part :) If you just want to try the new bits, forget CVS and go for the 1.1.x releases, and throw in as many bugs as possible into the bug-tracker. I've had a lot of mine getting fixed very fast recently. (Thanks guys, I do notice it)
Two Choices (Score:2)
But that's neither here nor there.
"BSD and System-V" - trivial. They're just two variants of the same system.
"VI[M] and Emacs" - what about "classic" vi and elvis and vile? What about XEmacs? What about joe and jed? What about xedit, kwrite, and gnotepad?
"RedHat and Debian" - Hah! Redhat may be the current marketing winner, but no one has any clear title to number two. But this is a topic on Gnome, and Gnome runs on a lot more than Linux! So don't forget BSDs or the commercial unices...
"Gnome/GTK and KDE/Qt" - Okay, you got one. But it's only a temporary win. Considering how quickly these desktops came on the scene, it's very plausible that one or both could be shoved aside with next year's entry. Just think of the possibilities inherent in an "Enlightenment Widget Kit", or if GNUstep decides to suddenly take off!
The point is, when you try to divide up the world into halves, you're always going to fail.
Re:GNOME has its strengths (Score:1)
It's the same with desktops. Some people find Gnome clunky and others can't figure out KDE. Ask a Mac user about Windows and you will learn just how "not easy" that is. So if some journalist doesn't get Gnome, too bad. The Gnome authors should read what he found wrong with it and ask for details if necessary then incorporate the best of his ideas.
That's the tough thing about end user apps. To develop them with quality you have to listen to a lot of people who really can't code draw or write decent documentation.
Re:Debian Packages (Score:1)
$ rpm -ta gnome-core-1.1.4.tar.gz
then use alien if you want
It consistantly works perfectly for me.
And GNOME has its weaknesses (Score:1)
The number one weakness of GNOME is its numbering sy system.
The numbers are all thrown about with nobody know which one to follow. Sometimes we see mentions of GNOME 1.1.0, then we have GNOME 1.1.2, and now GNOME 1.1.4, and GNOME 1.2.
But let us not forget about another slashdot article about the desktop environment for GNOME 2.0.
My only wish is that the GNOME people will once and for all stop throwing all those confusing numbers out because many users are having a lot of trouble keeping up which one is which.
Thanks in advance for your cooperation.
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:1)
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:1)
Re:other windowers often overlooked (Score:1)
So far, only KDE, GNOME and DFM do that, and DFM does not look half as good.
Re:Standardization of window managers (Score:1)
AFAIK, the "Unix guys" did get their act together, sort of. It's called Motif and CDE. Unfortunately, said Unix guys also made Motif and CDE proprietary, so they only became standard on proprietary Unices.
Actually, if Motif weren't proprietary, the GTK probably wouldn't exist, since (AFAIK) it was created to remove the GIMP's dependance on Motif. (The really early versions of the Gimp were Motif-based.) GNOME probably wouldn't have existed, either, certainly not in its current form.
Re:enlightenment (offtopic) (Score:1)
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:1)
I believe that Marx said that his philosophy would only be applicable after capitalism/industrialism had reached its peak (and it sure wansn't in Russia). Maybe in this little slice of a rapidly growing economy, that time may be near!
--
Re:Humor in Linux (Score:1)
http://www.gnome.org/screenshots/19991230-julia
lots of other examples in linux, as you said
WHAT flamefest? (Score:1)
--
This is a good point (Score:1)
Eventually, my hard disk gets all trashed up and I don't really know the proper way to go about cleaning it up.
Is there a how-to that tells directories where certain things are located, the proper (or suggested) places to put things, a typical uninstall procedure, etc? If not, it would be really handy.
I realize that not all apps are the same, but there are surely some basic rules. There are only so many directories where things end up. I've found some of them by doing an install, finding out the new program wasn't in my path, and then:
cd
find -name "myprogram"
Not a good way to do it, but it works. I've never attempted to uninstall anything except VMWare, and I only tried it because I saw that it had an uninstall script.
--
Where are they in general? heh... (Score:1)
Note: I did try out alien, I have used it before but didn't know how well dependencies translated, needless to say Im impressed.
Bonobos --> bananas (Score:2)
Re:GNOME, interface bloat, and S L O W Linux GUI's (Score:1)
Re:Standardization of window managers (Score:3)
You're forgetting two big roadblocks for your scheme. First, where are the API Police going to get the authority to enforce your rule? If you remember, Redhat tried to standardize on Gnome and inadvertently spun off Mandrake in the process. Second, Open Source is more than just Linux (why do you guys keep forgetting this!). Both Gnome and KDE run on *every* Unix system, both free and proprietary. If you managed to get your way and mandated a standard Linux API, you would end up locking out non-Linux source code. An application that currently runs on every unix-like system would end up working only on Linux, or on every other unix but Linux.
Re:enlightenment (offtopic) (Score:1)
--Ben
Re:Where are they in general? heh... (Score:1)
--
Political anologies? (Score:1)
I think I prefer evolutionary. Open Source/Free Software is Darwinism personified. Microsoft plays the part of social heathcare.
Microsoft represents all those people that should have been weeded out long ago, but for being crutched-up by the best marketting science man has developed have gone on to live a long, annoying life. "That which does not kill us makes us stronger."
I'm not quite sure where Gnome fits here, maybe as a speckle-breasted warbler, or something?
Please note I resisted the temptation to bring Keyesian economics into the discussion.:)
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:2)
Not to mention that "political" and "economic" systems are not really seperable, nor do they ever really exist in "pure" forms, but these kinds of comparisons always assume that to be the case.
The whole thing is like dunking women in tubs of water to prove whether or not they are witches; it does not really matter if they are witches or not, and, the chosen method for proving the goodness or badness of the aledged witch does not actually indicate whether or not she is a witch. In short, it's just a pretext for drowning a woman people don't like.
The issue if "GPL == Socialism" is of the same nature.
Re:WHAT flamefest? (Score:1)
Re:RPMs available here! (Score:1)
Re:RPMs available here! (Score:1)
Sorry, moderators. [There goes some more karma
Re:[OT] sucking ass (Score:1)
Debian as "number two" (Score:2)
> marketing winner, but no one has any clear title
> to number two.
There are at least three distributions which are based upon Debian. One of them, Corel Linux, has been aimed squarely at the desktop market, and has the marketing machinery of a fairly large software company behind it. Whilst I agree that there's no clear "number two" distribution, Debian is shaping up to be the biggest "metadistribution".
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:1)
Marx was a bit naive. He extrapolated how bad capitalism could get, and figured out that people couldn't live with that so there would/should be revolution. All sorts of doomsday people do the same thing.
What usually happens is that people see the problems before they get out of hand. Then policy changes - gradually. Trade unions took care of the "easily replaceable" workers. Others specialiced and became well-paid.
GNOME has its strengths (Score:2)
Choice is good. That's why Windows sucks
Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities ... (Score:2)
And plenty of minorities. You always have choice. And then you have major standards behind two. E.g.,:
They are the majority, with plenty of minorities. This may not be the best way, but the best way we know of.
Proprietary software is like socialism, with Microsoft the epitome as communism. One choice, and we punish you if you try to choose otherwise.
Me? I'm a Gnome wennie (then again, I'm a RedHat-baised wennie too ;-).
-- Bryan "TheBS" Smith
Open source ponies ??? (Score:1)
I really can't wait until they release the stable 1.2 !!
GNOME is really better to use than e.g. the windows GUI, I especially love the large launchers on the panel.
but.... are the ponies open source
---
The GNOME vs KDE DTD.. (Score:3)
<?xml version = "1.0">
<!DOCTYPE = GnomeversusKDE [
<!ELEMENT Flame (KDESucks | GNOMESucks)>
<!ENTITY KDESucks "KDE Sucks!, GNOME Rules">
<!ENTITY GNOMESucks "GNOME Sucks!, KDE Rules">
]>
A Brief History of Names (Score:2)
1.0.0 GNOME
1.0.50 October GNOME
Cool-named unstable releases:
1.1.1 Beantown
1.1.2 Curse of the Bambino
1.1.3 Tasty Yellow Banana
1.1.4 Ponies for Sale
Let's just hope there's space for one more 1.1.x before 1.2 arrives!
Re:GNOME has its strengths (Score:1)
Well, I admit that it is pretty easy to go between GNOME and KDE. I have only used KDE a handful of times but it was not a unpleasant experience.
I do not see what is so difficult to understand about GNOME but some people just do not understand it. I read a article [linuxnewbie.org] the other day by some one named Dru Lee Parsec who does not understand GNOME at all but understands KDE. I really should be writing articles because the loonies they have writing the articles never understand.
I am afraid that people are going to start complaining again that /. favors the GPL and GNOME and BLAH BLAH BLAH.
Re:Mister, would you please help my pony? (Score:1)
You sound like James Brown.
NY Times article about Eazel & GNOME 2.0 (Score:4)
HERE [nytimes.com]
The article explains that a bunch of old Apple/Mac programmers are more or less incharge of interface for GNOME 2.0 (as far as the file manager and back processes of the file manager) and that HelixCode is incharge of the internal "plumbing." It also said that HelixCode is really looking to put together a office suite.
Humor in Linux (Score:2)
Linux doesn't take itself too seriously. (As in the people who create for it.) I mean we have these hilarious codenames for GNOME releases, and there's other items like the "Most Doomed" List, which if I recall is a list of programmers whose programs have the most bugs. Fantastic sense of humor.
I guess this is a good example of the ethic behind Linux compared to Windows. While amusing codenames are entertaining, I think as an investor I'd find it hard to invest in a company that was offering. Microsoft Windows 2000: Large Unfriendly Bear or the like. (Though the codename I just mentioned would be a good codename for Microsoft.)
Of course ethically I couldn't invest in MS anyway, but that's another story...
Keep up the humor guys!
Re:But there's an important choice we don't have (Score:1)
Standardization of window managers (Score:2)
Re:I'm not a retard (Score:1)
Re:This is a good point (Score:1)
43rd Law of Computing: Anything that can go wr
oh shit (Score:1)
enlightenment (offtopic) (Score:2)
E [enlightenment.org] is customizable in the way that emacs is. You know there's a way to do it, but damned if you know where/how to change it.
E is quick, but it's lacking in some serious respects. Namely in the themes arena. I'm not talking about the lack of themes (good lord! there's a lot), but the way themes are managed. If I want to change the color of my titlebar, I don't want to have open up some huge theme hunt around for the one line and change it from "SlateBlue" to "Salmon" or whatever. What E (and all themeable WMs in general) is a WYSIWYG theme editor, on the level of Windows's Contol_Panel|Display. Just a nice place where I can click on a title bar and say "make this putrid green" and WHALLA! It's done.
I also would like to have looks and feels seperated like how they are in Afterstep [afterstep.org]. (Which has config files that are pretty easy to understand). (In all honesty I haven't divulged down into the depths of E themes, just far enough to say, "This is too involved for such a trivial task. Fuck it.", so this may actually be the case in E, but if it is, it's not as obvious as it is in AS.)
The other feature I'd like to see introduced is more control over icons in E. 1. I'd like to be able to have icons uniconify to where they were iconified from, not always the active screen. 2. I wish the icons wouldn't constantly resort themselves. It gets damn confusing. (I icononify and uniconify alot. I can keep track of what's what if the icons would just stay put.) Finally I'd like to beable to turn that damn icon box off. I REALLY don't like icon boxes; they're too confining (which is coincifently why I don't like taskbars/lists and CDE style button-based pagers). I websurf in a VERY atypical fashion. As I read a page I open interesting links in a new window and continue to read the original page. I then group relavent icons together. For instance when I read
SSS
CCC
11
2
(where S = story, C = comments, # = newslink)
I can only work this way if icons go to the root window and can be moved anywhere I want. (forcing icons to stay in an icon corral on the root window is not acceptable. Infact it's just wierd.)
Because of these short commings I'm going to start playing with sawmill [sourceforge.net].
Re:Standardization of window managers (Score:1)
Re:Standardization of window managers (Score:1)
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:2)
Re:Standardization of window managers (Score:2)
The real beauty of Free Software is that no one is in charge. No one is able to pin it down and make it conform. Not Redhat, not SuSE. Not even GNU. Not even Linus. One can only be in charge of their own property, and when thousands come together and share their property with each other in a grand potlatch, they'll brook no king.
The capitalism of today is broken: see Gnome! (Score:2)
Open Souce operates like a brain (Score:1)
But the OSS world cannot operate like a company : it is too wide and too diverse. I like to think that is is operating like a brain, where different clusters of neurons develop different thoughts, often alternative and in competition.
On the long run, it's all for the best (I hope).
Anyway, I read that GNOME and KDE are working on a common Window Manager interface. This is a start. Next thing, a common MIME library (pleeese)?
Re:Standardization of window managers (Score:1)
Re:But there's an important choice we don't have (Score:1)
I'd really like answered: why do you want more compilers? Or, in other words: what do you hope to find that's different?
`cc' commands aren't really like `desktop' software, where you can completely change the UI, and be able to say, `I like this better because it has a friendlier UI'--mainly because it breaks compatibility with every other compiler and makefile and configure script in a big way.
Hm. If a different set of command-line arguments is all you want, it shouldn't be too hard to write a front end (just for when the user is manually using gcc) that converts from user-specific command-line-style to a native gcc command-line.
Having that said, the only other aspects of compilers that I can think of are the languages that they support, the platforms that they compile to and the quality of the output that they produce; in the first and second cases, it's really not so necessary to write an entirely new compiler-system, because you can write a front-end `compiler' for the C-compiler, or a back-end, or even just the assembler component. Hm.
I'm assuming that the AC was referring to the whole compilation system--the preprocessor, the compiler, the assembler, the linker..., rather than just the compiler....
Anyway, to the last point: performance:
Wanting a better-performing compiler is valid, regardless of how good GCC is (always try to make things better, eh?), but that really doesn't seem like a reason for maintaining two compilers--is the justification `some people want a low-quality compiler and some want a high-quality compiler'?
Actually..., that may be a good point (I rather like having a slow system to test things on, just because it makes differences in the qualities of algorithms so evident), but still not one that warrants two different compilers, because the compiler takes optimisation switches.
There might be specific types of algorithms or code-segments that one compiler is better at compiling, and so one could say `I use X when compiling type-x code, and I use Y when compiler type-y code', but, since we have the ability to do so, I'd still argue that it's better to fold all of the goodness into something like GCC.
Then, there are, of course... rewrites of GCC (ie: 1, 2).
Re:RPMs available here! (Score:1)
Re:Standardization of window managers (Score:2)
How can you go from mentioning the positive that Windows has four APIs (you forgot Qt) to the negative that Linux has too many with just two?
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:1)
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:3)
Proprietary software is like socialism, with Microsoft the epitome as communism.
Au contraire... mon frere. I would call Microsloth more of a facist dictator, forcing everyone to adopt their corrupt regime - or else (drag finger across neck). Socialism/Capitalism are economic systems, democracy is a governing system. Sweden implements both, and does a fairly decent job of it.
Open source is more like socialism. In a co-operative system, everyone is equal, contributes labor to an organized cause, and everyone is entitled to equal benefits. Sound familiar? There is nothing inherently wrong with socialism - the problem with the large, failed implementations that we were facing during the cold war, were the tactics they used strong-arm tactics to keep their members in line. One drawback to co-operation is the lack of competition - which is the redeeming quality to capitalism.
Where in the capitalist framework do you fit code-reuse? At least in the open source movement, there is a mix of competition with co-operation so that those guiding the path don't get complacent and sloppy. It also helps to be working under the shadow of Microsoft, so that there are constantly critics questioning the quality open source software. This pushes the community to refine until it's bullet-proof... almost.
Programmers unite!
Re:Open source ponies ??? (Score:2)
If you've marked the panel sizeability issue as a "won't fix", PLEASE at least do something about the icons for GMC and the buttons on the panel. "Fungus & Clay" are not pleasant, attractive associations for your onscreen look, but that's what they look like to me. Hint: adding a dingy warm patina of brown-gray to all your icons is not a good strategy for harmonizing an icon set into looking "designed". It's looks more like they were picked out of dumpster. Learn COLOR--the Impressionists put it on top in the mid-19th century and it's here to stay.
(Themeing zealots who want to tell me that your wonderful theme solves all these problems just save your breath.)
my reaction (Score:1)
seriously, i think we need to put some of the important UI designers (rasterman, miguel, etc) on large amounts of lsd and other psychadelic drugs in order to increase their creativity. this should be looked upon as something that _has_ to be done in order to compete in terms of UI with the marijuana-soaked haze in cupertino that produced everything that makes the mac os (and mac os x) good to use.
Of course the downside is we'll probably wind up with enlightemnent 0.18's source code just being the words "NUMBER FOUR. NUMBER FOUR. NUMBER FOUR." over and over.. so maybe we should only let them have it during the design phase or something. i dunno.
Debian Packages (Score:2)
Re:NY Times article about Eazel & GNOME 2.0 (Score:4)
To save people the link-clicking, "...the Ezel team has taken responsibility for the appearance--- the 'look and feel' of the program that serves as the control panel for the Linux operating system--- while the Gnome group will concentrate on the internal plumbing."
HelixCode is first referred to four paragraphs later as working on productivity applications, not infrastructure. (Although the individual hackers working at Helix are still responsible for much of gnome-libs, gnome-core, etc.)
"Did someone say ponies?" (Score:1)
Re:my reaction (Score:2)
Re:Debian Packages (Score:1)
Re:Open source ponies ??? (Score:1)
right-click on panel->Add Applet->Utility->QuickLaunch.
If QuickLaunch isn't on the list, they you probably don't have it. You can get it her e [xoom.com]
QuickLaunch is the best thing since, well GNOME!
Re:Like Democracy, choice yeilds two majorities .. (Score:2)
Hmmm, why is it that no one ever joins GNU, but everyone keeps getting declared a part of it? I remember the day when WindowMaker was adopted. The WindowMaker page had a statement similar to "Apparently, we are now the official window manager of the GNU Project..."
Of commies, socialists, facists, et al. (Score:1)
Re:Mister, would you please help my pony? (Score:1)
blah blah blah
Mr. would you please help my pony... He coughed up snot in the driveway... and his lung's fucked up. dooby doo doo.
go WEEN!
Re:Humor in Linux (Score:2)
Read some of the posts on Slashdot. Half the people here think of Linux as a crusade-of-sorts against the tyrannous oppression from Redmond. This is a community that takes itself too seriously. The programmers themselves aren't so bad, but this peanut gallery here -- Lighten up guys...
-----------
"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Re:my reaction (Score:1)
No, this is Raster we're talking about. It'd have to be "nUBMER FRUO"
Re:A Brief History of Names (Score:2)
1.1.1 Beantown
1.1.2 Curse of the Bambino
1.1.3 Tasty Yellow Banana
1.1.4 Ponies for Sale
Well, the first two start a theme. So I have to ask what ponies and bananas have to do with Boston?
--Jim
I don't care much for GNOME or KDE... (Score:1)
I'm a window maker guy all the way. It looks cool, and it's nice and fast.
Right now though, I'm at work, on NT.
--
other windowers often overlooked (Score:3)
I've been playing with blackbox window manager lately and I think it's great! Very clean, nice menus, and runs kde or gnome apps without breaking a sweat. My problem with gnome and kde is that they are customizable to a point, but no matter what you do, it always looks like gnome. If you want a really good looking and customizable desktop, run enlightenment by itself. Much nicer IMHO. Anyway, I think that there's a lot of great reasons to have multiple window managers, multiple GUI environments etc.