Nautilus 1.0.5 Release 223
mz001b writes: "Proof that just because a company goes out of business does not mean that their open source software goes with them -- Nautilus 1.0.5 has been release. See the LinuxToday notice."
"In my opinion, Richard Stallman wouldn't recognise terrorism if it came up and bit him on his Internet." -- Ross M. Greenberg
great! (Score:1, Funny)
Re:great! (Score:1)
Anyway...
http://rox.sourceforge.net/
Enough said.
Re:great! (Score:1)
Re:great! (Score:1)
So does Gentoo, but I thought command line was the ultimate solution...
Anyway, I'm running X11 with WindowMaker, Nautilus, Mozilla and XEmacs just fine all the time and I still have a couple of megabytes of physical memory left! And it runs really smoothly! Cool, huh?
...but note that this is a P!!!-600MHz with 256 megs memory. Yep, if my old P166 would have any disk space left I would be really eager to install Nautilus there and see it crawl =)
One really good point to advertize (Score:2)
It shows consumers that open source projects are not tied to the success of their parent companies. This is extremely important when it comes to the ASP businesses. My message to them is: escrow your code or open it up if you want my business. I want to make sure that if an ASP I contract with goes under, I still maintian access to MY data.
Re:great! (Score:1)
Perhaps I'll actually be able to run it now (Score:3, Interesting)
Trouble is, the last couple of times I tried to run Gnome, Nautilus would appear to lock up completely for 30+ seconds at a time.
I don't know why and haven't been interested enough in Gnome to find out why yet. I'll probably give it another try now though, see if it works yet.
Re:Perhaps I'll actually be able to run it now (Score:4, Interesting)
Either make esd work right or disable it and nautilus will become very responsive.
I'm tracking debian unstable and i've found it to be acceptibly fast for everyday use on my rather average machine (p3/450) and it has a whole bunch of neat features that I keep discovering
Re:Perhaps I'll actually be able to run it now (Score:1)
Federico
changes (Score:5, Informative)
Re:changes (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm serious here. I've never used Nautilus. What features does it have that Konqueror doesn't? How do they compare in speed now that all these optimizations have been made?
more interactivity (Score:2, Interesting)
At least that's how it worked with redhat 6.2. Now I have 7.1 and the latest official Ximian desktop and that don't work anymore for some reason. Perhaps a Redhat 7.2/ and a NEW Ximian Gnome would suffice.
If I can get that working with
Re:more interactivity (Score:2, Informative)
Just enable sound previews (View->Preview->Sound Files)
Any other examples ?
Rik
Re:more interactivity (Score:1, Troll)
Just a crapload of really cool eyecandy. It comes at a beefy performance cost though, but it can be used on even old and slow stuff.. i just wouldn't recommend it.
Re:more interactivity (Score:1)
Re:more interactivity (Score:3, Informative)
(Incidentally, I don't know if this breaks anything else, so proceed at your own peril)
After a couple of minutes digging, I found out that in KDE Menu -> Preferences -> File Browsing -> File Associations, Ogg was listed as an Application, rather than an Audio mimetype I have read reasons why this is, but the upshot is that they did not preview. To make it preview, I changed it to an audio mimetype.
Just thought I'd pass the knowledge on
Re:changes (Score:5, Insightful)
features-> konqueror is a bit better, it has some neat features such the embedded terminal frame. Although Nautilus can be used as a web browser, I think that Konqueror does a much better job at it. Also, Konqueror thumbnails more filetypes, afaik, and has a customizable toolbar. I think that the only (relativly) minor features that Nautilus has and Konqueror doesn't is the labeling of files (I don't use that feature), and the zooming of views up to 400% (of course, no one in their right mind would use that).
speed-> konqueror wins against Nautilus 1.0.4, hopefully this new release will have speed improvements (from what I hear, it doesn't). Comparing
eye candy-> I think nautilus wins slightly here. Konqueror 2.2.1 really caught up, but there are small pieces of eye candy missing such as the neat (but slow) selection of Nautilus, and imho, the border in image previews in Nautilus looks nicer than in Konqueror. Perhaps the Konqueror developers can do something like that? (If it decreases performance in any way, DON'T).
So, IMHO, if you are using KDE, use Konqueror. If you are using GNOME, use Nautilus (or GMC).
Re:changes (Score:2)
Re:changes (Score:1)
Re:changes (Score:2)
Re:changes (Score:1)
2. Terminal in a frame is very useful. Can't do a operation using the file manager? Just press a key to show a terminal frame and type it in! Really fast and efficient.
3. I think that Konqueror as a web browser is one of best features that it has. In modern GUI desktops, this integration is very important. Nautilus is missing it.
4. Actually, it does. It thumbnails things like
Re:changes (Score:1, Informative)
Smart cookies just use galeon for the web
Re:changes (Score:2, Insightful)
2. It _is_ different. Doing things from the same app is a very nice feature and helps efficiency.
3. I hate to point it out, but browser integration was probably one of the best (and first) innovations that Microsoft really did. Others had the idea to do this before Microsoft did (like Apple with OpenDoc and Cyberdog), but Microsoft was the first to really implement it well. Either way, it really has caught on. As the market share of Netscape went down, this has become a more and more important feature in modern environments. Gradually, "applications" are becoming less important, and what you do with them (the idea of the "document"), is becoming more important. The computer, after all, is a tool. Thus, intregration is best. All in all, taking the best ideas from different operating systems is very good, and I'm disappointed that Eazel chose not to implement this in Nautilus!
Re:changes (Score:1)
As for browser/file manager integration, the idea is that not only should the same program be able to manage files, but also show documents (wether it be on a network or not). This is called network transparency, and is something is found in KDE more than any other environment I can think of (except perhaps the fact that it's also possible in MacOSX, but KDE did it with 1.x).
Re:changes (Score:1)
Re:changes (Score:3)
Re:changes (Score:5, Informative)
I'm not sure why a KDE user would use Nautilus instead of Konqueror (though perhaps they might just like it)? But my guess is that these changes in Nautilus weren't so much because they really thought a bunch of KDE users would want to run it, but for standards compliance. KDE and GNOME are supposed to meet certain standards [freedesktop.org] for compatability; most of the KDE-related changes in Nautilus seem to be in order to meet these, especially the extended window manager hints spec.
Is it usable yet? (Score:4, Informative)
Performance, if you ask me, has to be their #1 priority. There may be fewer bugs, but bugs in software I don't use due to bad performance doesn't affect me any. I have a 1.4Ghz/512MB system and it remains significantly too slow for me to use productively.
I can't help but think of Mozilla about this time last year. It was horridly slow. And the typical tune on slashdot was something like "Mozilla is so slow it's useless garbage! They should scrap it all and start over." And now the tune has changed, and the general opinion about Mozilla is very positive. Given that, maybe in a year or two Nautilus will pick up in performance and reach a state of usability. I hope, anyway!
I can't say myself if Nautilus is really much slower because I haven't used it myself. If anyone has used it, can you post your observations here?
Cheers,
Jason.
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:1)
Seems like Nautilus is GNOME's club foot.
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:2)
IIRC Monsieur Cox was saying something about loading a font 4700 times. Hmmm.
Dave
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:1)
<best Mozilla developer voice>
If your computer can't load 4700 fonts per mouse event, that's *your* problem, not Nautilus's. Nautilus is just MORE POWERFUL than Konqueror, and needs a MORE POWERFUL computer--take a walk outside your trailer park, throw away your fuckin' C64 and get with the times. I'd like to see this uninformed luser "Cocks" you mentioned shut his kiddie yap and write some code. !!!
</best Mozilla developer voice>
OT: OSS profiling tools (Score:1, Interesting)
I understand Quanitify originated as a *nix product... it also costs over a thousand bucks. Are there any OSS tools that match TrueTime, Quantify, etc. for usability and features?
Similarly, are there any OSS tools that correspond to BoundsChecker (NuMega) or Purify (Rational)? I'm aware of ElectricFence and other utilities that are primarily geared towards memory management issues; I'm wondering if there are any more comprehensive tools available.
(No, this is not a troll, and yes, I do know how to usee Google, thank you. I've got a genuine interest in the topic, and thought I'd be lazy about it for once and ask people for recommendations before doing my own research.)
Re:OT: OSS profiling tools (Score:1)
Re:OT: OSS profiling tools (Score:2)
At least, that's how I seem to remember it.
Re:OT: OSS profiling tools (Score:4, Informative)
Or you can use the old "ctrl-c" profiling method: run the program in a debugger, and stop it at random times with ctrl-c. Each time, make a note of which function you interrupted. If one function shows up a lot, then optimizing it is probably your best bet for improving performance.
I prefer gprof. =-)
-Paul Komarek
Re:OT: OSS profiling tools (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.mozilla.org/performance/eazel.html (eazel profilers that mozilla guys use)
http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/
of the three, I believe that jprof and oprofile work on the same principle, only oprofile is system-wide and comes with a kernel module.
for debugging, there are tons of malloc replacements (which may or may not require recompilation) besides electricfence. Obviously, I have no idea what other things boundschecker or purify can do, but I'm sure there must be a tool for most pieces of functionality that these programs provide (but not necessarily all at once).
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:4, Interesting)
I really like using Nautilus to organize my files. I've changed the icons and backgrounds of all of the subdirectories of my home directory to suit my fancy. Certainly this is just fluff, but I like to personalize everything. I use the emblems to mark MP3s that I get from Morpheus. Rather than just deleting low quality MP3s I mark them as being bad and keep them until I find a good replacement. I may eventually write a program that generates a random playlist for my MP3 player, giving songs with a certain emblems higher or lower chances of being picked (I want to listen to my favorite songs more often, but I would like to have others thrown in for variety).
There's still some work to be done though. Sometimes the sidebar tabs die for no reason. The music view crashing also needs to be fixed. If these two things are fixed then I will have no problems with Nautilus.
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:1)
Maybe I should change majors.
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:4, Insightful)
A year ago - heck, even as little as 6 months ago! - Mozilla was sluggish to terrible. The only reason people were using it was because it did a much better job out the gate of handling fonts and images. But the reason for that was simple, and oft-stated by the Mozilla folks.
Debugging code.
Mozilla was still new enough and untried enough that every build they did had debugging code all over the place, so that when the Lizard died, they could get an accurate autopsy right away. And they hadn't even BOTHERED with speed optimizations. As they steadily creep closer to 1.0 - and this is really only since they hit
Nautilus, on the other hand, is a shipped product. Sure, no program is ever really ready, it just gets released; that doesn't change the fact that the debug code should be out and the speed optimizations should be in.
If I had to take a guess, I'd imagine that the performance hits Nautilus takes are from trying to be too user-friendly while maintaining a Kitchen-sink toolset.
IANACoder, but that's one of the reasons I don't bother with Nautilus.
Well, that and the fact that Xterm works just fine for my file manager. =)
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:2)
I think one reason why nautilus can be unresponsive is the way disk i/o is handled. They attempted to layer the disk handling, so normal functions in the application can't read files directly. There are special request-callback routines that run as their own thread which are required to access file systems. This helps make it easier to deal with different file systems, different platforms, remote file systems, and to make things (like ftp) appear as file systems even if they technically aren't. But, by abstracting a layer, and having the layer be autonomous, things get trickier. Sometimes, designs that encouraged optimal normal behavior produced atrocious worst-case behavior, and sometimes, fixes to address worst-case behavior impacted normal behavior.
So, I think your assumptions are incorrect. Its user-friendly aspects are not impacting its performance as much as some of the nuts-and-bolts infrastructure, but these are getting worked out as well. Hopefully, we'll start seeing more of the document views appearing in the next months (like pdf, ps, targz,
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:5, Informative)
BUT:
A lot of those not happy with the speed of Nautilus were in fact experiencing some speed-bugs that have been cleared out. So while Nautilus is now overrall a bit slower than 1.0.4, the horrible worst-case behaviour is now much smoother.
Speed is indeed a high priority with the Nautilus-team, but there is always something more important: reliability.
Nautilus 1.0.5 is now in a very usable and reliable state. For most people it should actually be fast enough, but some may still find it on the slow side.
On a 1.4GHz/512MB system it is already very fast. On my 800MHz/256MB system, things work like this:
Staring Nautilus: 7.5 seconds
Opening the first window from blank desktop: 3 secondsOpening second window: 2 seconds
Changing directories: 0.2 - 3.5 seconds (on average around 0.5)*
* The 3.5 seconds is worst case (a directory with ~900 pictures to display pregenerated thumbnails for). Thumbnailing in itself is a seperate thread and async.
This is with all the Bells and Whistles on.
Re:Is it usable yet? (Score:1)
Usability amounts to more than just performance. It has to do with GUI design, taking the user's conceptual model of the computer into account etc. To see what the GNOME Usability Project [gnome.org]'s proposals for Nautilus are, please visit Nautilus GNOME 2 must-fix list [gnome.org].
Re:Its slow because you use a IDE harddrive you du (Score:1)
Re:Its slow because you use a IDE harddrive you du (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a joke, right?
You've posted at least three times that people complaining about Nautilus' speed (or lack thereof) should ditch their IDE drives and go to SCSI.
You might want to jump a little, I'm gonna throw some basic logic at you.
If the Windows file manager runs as fast on IDE as Nautilus does on SCSI, you can make two conclusions: (1) SCSI is not any faster than IDE, and Nautilus is just slower than the Windows FM. (2) SCSI is faster than IDE, and Nautilus is a lot slower than the Windows FM.
Either way, you're not helping your case.
While we're on the subject, you might want to consider that if only one device on the controller is speaking, SCSI has no real advantage over IDE. That means for most desktop systems, which only have one hard drive, IDE is perfectly sufficient and a hell of a lot cheaper. Do your own research: here's the first link [acc.umu.se] I found at google on the subject.
So drop your ridiculous SCSI fetish and recognize that Nautilus is just slow (even according to your own damned post).
Re:Its slow because you use a IDE harddrive you du (Score:1)
Except automatic background bad sector location and mapping out.
(just to pointlessly fan the flames)
Re:Its slow because you use a IDE harddrive you du (Score:1, Troll)
does in IDE mode when running on SCSI.
This is a joke, right?
I do not believe he would have written
it that way unless he meant for it to be serious.
I believe you are anti-scsi. It may be because
you are still using a 286, or maybe you are
jealous that he has scsi and that you don't.
Either way, he has his own preferrences, and
you have yours. Get off his case.
You've posted at least three times that people
complaining about Nautilus' speed (or lack thereof)
should ditch their IDE drives and go to SCSI.
Perhaps this guy prefers scsi, and you don't.
Or perhaps he is making a valid point. IDE is
only so many wires, and scsi has so many more.
Plus with the ability to put up to 15 drives
on there, you can find someones old 500 meg
scsi drive that they will give you, and give
yourself another page file or some other use
for it, without saying "You know, I can't really use
that drive, I already have 4 drives hooked up
to my eide controller", assuming that you do
not use raid. I believe you may be in love with eide,
or even ide, because you may not yet have the
capabilities of eide. Who knows?
You might want to jump a little, I'm
gonna throw some basic logic at you.
AHHH..
If the Windows file manager runs as fast
on IDE as Nautilus does on SCSI, you can make
two conclusions: (1) SCSI is not any faster
than IDE, and Nautilus is just slower than the
Windows FM. (2) SCSI is faster than IDE, and
Nautilus is a lot slower than the Windows FM.
SCSI IS FASTER THAN IDE AND EIDE!!! Any A+
certified technician can tell you this. Even my
little 13 year old brother can tell you this.
Let me call him in here, I will tell you what he and
I talked about...
Hi brother.
Hi
Which is faster EIDE, or SCSI
SCSI is
So you see, it would be of great advantage to know more
than my 13 year old brother does.
Either way, you're not helping your case.
While we're on the subject, you might want to
consider that if only one device on the
controller is speaking, SCSI has no real
advantage over IDE. That means for most desktop
systems, which only have one hard drive, IDE is
perfectly sufficient and a hell of a lot
cheaper. Do your own research: here's the first
link [acc.umu.se] I found at google on the subject.
I would assume that if you have scsi, you have more
than one drive connected. So this argument is way
down the tubes already. Ha.
So drop your ridiculous SCSI fetish and recognize
that Nautilus is just slow (even according to your
own damned post).
If you were to put it on a decent processor,
and by decent, I mean anything over 486 dx2, you
would probably be doing better. Hmm.... or maybe
you just don't know how to set it up. Who knows?
Quite honestly, I do not even want to attempt to
set up nautilus, but I have heard great things
about it. You are just jealous of the guy
because he knows more than you do. Either that,
or you just posted because you felt like it. If
you could keep this down to a smaller amount,
then it would probably be better for the
servers.
Re:Its slow because you use a IDE harddrive you du (Score:1)
If the Windows file manager runs as fast on IDE as Nautilus does on SCSI, you can make two conclusions: (1) SCSI is not any faster than IDE, and Nautilus is just slower than the Windows FM. (2) SCSI is faster than IDE, and Nautilus is a lot slower than the Windows FM.
Is that what you call logic?
I do not see any sane way that from the premise "the Windows file manager runs as fast on IDE as Nautlius does on SCSI" that you could possibly conclude "SCSI is not any faster than IDE, and Nautlius is just slower than the Windows FM". If SCSI is no faster than IDE and Nautlius is slower than the Windows FM then logically you would expect Nautilus to run slower on IDE than the Windows FM does on IDE, which is incompatible with your opening premise.
Your second alternative conclusion is a valid possibility given the premise though.
Re:Its slow because you use a IDE harddrive you du (Score:1)
Meant to say "...slower on SCSI than the Windows FM does on IDE", obviously.
Re:Its slow because you use a IDE harddrive you du (Score:1)
So now you have the premise: Nautilus on SCSI and Windows' FM on IDE are equally fast, while Nautilus is slower on IDE than Windows' FM on IDE.
Now, if SCSI is not faster than IDE, then the hardware difference is not a defining factor of the software's performance. Therefore, there must be some reason other than the IDE/SCSI difference for Nautilus running slower than the Windows FM on IDE while the performance remains equal with Nautilus/SCSI and Windows/IDE. Your best case scenario, then, is that Nautilus and Windows' FM perform equally well, and the Windows FM does not in any case run more slowly than Nautilus. Therefore, you can reasonably conclude that Nautilus is generally slower than the Windows FM. This is my first of two possible conclusions.
Better?
seems like (Score:1, Interesting)
Screen Shots? (Score:2)
Re:Screenshots (Score:1)
I love GNOME, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps I'm alone... I love GNOME, but I really don't care for Nautilus. In fact, I sort of have a strong distaste for it. But I have to give Andy and company from Eazel credit for taking a risk and for following their dreams. They've made a product that's loved by many... just not me.
Re:I love GNOME, but... (Score:1)
Re:I love GNOME, but... (Score:1)
Nonetheless is has cool icons i do use for some other programs
Federico
Re: (Score:1)
Naming (Score:2)
(Or Etzel which is German for Edsel... == Attila, BTW.)
Ditch Nautilus? (Score:3, Insightful)
I really think that some people should really extend GMC for some of the features Nautilus implements, such as file previews, and make GMC the default again!
Dependencies from hell (Score:2)
Hell from dependencies (Score:1)
Long live pkg_add -r!
Back to sleep......
Re:Dependencies from hell (Score:5, Insightful)
I know that I will get flamed for this, but that is why I use Debian GNU/Linux. Figuring out dependencies stops becoming my job.
apt-get update
apt-get install nautilus
Done.
Re:Dependencies from hell (Score:1)
The apt package was ported to RPM distribs [rpmfind.net] months ago...
Next?
Re:Dependencies from hell (Score:4, Informative)
Your point? Are you trying to say that apt is no reason to use debian now that it's been ported to rpm based distros? Now apt rocks, but what sets debian apart from the others[1] in my eyes is the debian policy. Nothing's perfect, but when I install a debian package I have a pretty good idea of what it's going to do and where it's going to install. Some examples are /usr/share/doc/package for every package, every package giving a menu entry
to the debian menu system and therefore automatically appearing in the window
manager menus, and a strict following of fhs (maybe not strict but at least
consitent across packages[2]).
Apt only reaches its full potential when it can be used with confidence, and I can definitely use apt with confidence on my debian box[2]
I'm not dissing other distros. I'm simply stating that in my own experience I feel a confidence with debian that I did not feel with the other distros I've tried. So if one feels safe using apt on debian then apt is most definitely a reason to use debian.
[1] Back in my distro experimenting days, I tried RedHat 5.2, Caldera ?.?, Suse ?.?, RedHat 6.? and debian slink (2.1?). I feel safest installing debian packages and haven't tried another distro since (for better or worse).
[2] At least when I used debian stable. It is unfortunate that debian doesn't release more often. But I have plenty of confidence installing from unstable as long as I'm not upgrading libc or perl.
Re:Dependencies from hell (Score:1)
I would think that you need an apt-able set of packages, designed to be fetched that way. And a package manager with features that RPM hasn't.
If you are curious about those thinfgs that makes APT not enough, check here [debian.org].
Re:Dependencies from hell (Score:1)
urpmi.update -a
urpmi nautilus
Slow-NOT! (Score:2, Interesting)
I just want a File manager (Score:1)
And yes I have an older computer a P2 350 with 448 MB of ram ( I'm a RAM junkie, hell it's cheap enough!)everything else I use runs great ok ok well Mozilla isin't the fastest but it works.
slow? (Score:1)
Nautilus vs. Konqueror vs. Windows Explorer (Score:3, Interesting)
all 3 apps were already running, but never visited directory before (so no caching). test done on athlon 800 with 256 mb ram. Everything was set to order by name.
Windows Explorer - loaded new window and loaded files almost instantenously.
Konqueror - open new window was instant.. loading files took about 4 seconds.
Nautilus(icon view) - open new window was instant.. loading files took 28 seconds, 4 more seconds for the GUI to finish layouting.
nautilus (music view) - still loading, has been over 10 mins, gui usable, but the view part isn't (using bonobo?). incomparision, xmms, winamp, and noatun load metadata from mp3s much faster.
looks like nautilus is 32 times slower than Windows Explorer. Much optimization has to be done!
Re:Nautilus vs. Konqueror vs. Windows Explorer (Score:2)
Re:Nautilus vs. Konqueror vs. Windows Explorer (Score:1)
What I hate about Nautilus (and other Linux file managers, for that matter, this ain't just a Nautulus problem) is that it tries to launch files upon clicking them once. Also the automatic thumbnailing of images is annoying, wastes time, and adds garbage to folders (the thumbnail file, indexes, etc...)
Ooh- I know! Let's bring back SID from the old Amiga days! The file manager, that is, not the Commodore 64 sound chip.
Re:Nautilus vs. Konqueror vs. Windows Explorer (Score:2)
I believe this is to get us away from the old double-click paradigm. You won't double-click anywhere in KDE (except maybe in a listview widget like from Licq). If you want to make Konqueror behave more like Windows Explorer, try disabling single-click launch and "change cursor over icons" (that hand thingy). Now if only it were faster..
Re:Nautilus vs. Konqueror vs. Windows Explorer (Score:1)
These scores make absolutely no sense, unless you've stumbled upon some rare bug, and in that case I'm sure the developers would really like a bug-report.
For what its worth... (Score:1)
Gotta use it awhile to appreciate it (Score:3, Interesting)
I especially like the ability to have remote FTP file systems integrated with the file manager alongside local storage, so I can cut a file from local drive and just paste it into an FTP site. Can't wait till they get SMB file shares and other filesystems added to it as well.
Combine this with the bookmarks feature and you have a very efficient way of managing remote and local files transparently. It's worth a few seconds startup time IMHO.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Gotta use it awhile to appreciate it (Score:3, Interesting)
You can already browse SMB shares, but you need to get the gnome-vfs-extra package from somewhere. If you are happy with CVS then get it from the GNOME CVS server, otherwise, have a hunt around for a package for the distro you are using.
One limitation is that to browse stuff you need to enter the username and password into the URI eg.
smb://user:password@sharename
But it's a minor quibble.
I don't use nautilus or need to browse SMB shares so the information is coming from memory having read the nautilus mailing list archives...
another gui fm is pointless (Score:1, Insightful)
This story reminds me of what I have thought for quite some time now... the fact that Linux is never going to succeed on the desktop. There are too many factions at work for it to succeed. There are too many Window Managers. Competition is a good thing, I'm all for it, but we (the people still waiting to use Linux as a desktop OS) don't need 87 different GUI file managers. For the most part the GUI file manager competition is irrelevant anyway, how can anyone compete with "free". Who wins in the end anyway, the file manager with the most what?
Konqueror and GMC both work great. Why not program something worthwhile, like a good game or something? Linux games are severely lacking. Sure, I can play thousands of roms on Linux, and Loki even has some good titles out, but where's my Diablo? or Diablo II? And if you say Wine or VMWare, you lose a testicle! Emulation and virtual this-or-that sucks in the performance realm and you know it!
Re:another gui fm is pointless (Score:1)
Exactly my point, we don't need any more "new and interesting" ideas for gui file managers. There are plenty of file managers out there already, just stick to making those work better and you'll be plenty busy.
The linux desktop (Score:2, Insightful)
There are soo many more important issues for the linux desktop than a SUPER file manager. How about the linux commmunity spend a few years making or copying there OWN GOOD LOOKING FONTS? I can't imagine it could take as long as Gnome has and would truly benefit the community as a whole as opposed to a bloated file manager. The linux community for all their push behind open standards has none when it comes to the linux desktop. Linux hackers do what Feels good and as a result you have a bunch of patch work windows managers that fight with each other and need P500's with 256MB ram to run O.K.
I'm sure I just don't "get it" but it seems to me that simple and stable seem to be the future for Computer desktops, and linux is way off track.
What is the role of nautilus? (Score:3, Insightful)
The playing of sound files by just pointing at them is neat, but doesn't work in 1.0.5 for me (it did in 1.0.4).
I think it is strange that Gnome replaced MC with something that can't even do all the stuff MC did. And as a web broswer it is not up to galeon or mozilla or konqurer. If one wants to be sarcastic one could say that they took two programs, MC and mozilla, integrated them and in the process removed a lot of useful stuff. The eye-candy is impressive for about two minutes, but then what?
Nautilus seems to be stuck in this not-ok-file-manager-not-ok-browser state.
I'm no big fan of KDE but at least konqurer is an ok filemanager and an ok browser. Nautilus is not really usable in any role.
Compare Nautilus to WindowsXP (Score:1)
I have windowsXP and nautilus on my computer, 400mhz pentium, SCSI drive, 256 megs of ram.
Nautilus runs much faster than XP, Gnome runs faster, Enlightenment runs faster in fact windowsXP is the slowest OS i've ever used in my life.
Nautilus is competiting against XP.
Let people who want a good file manager upgrade their hardware, isnt that the point of buying new hardware? to run the most powerful software?
Nautilus. (Score:5, Informative)
I finally made the switch because of the simplicity and cleanliness of Nautilus. I did not like Nautilus 1.0, I felt there were too many taste differences between my way of working and Nautilus way of working.
But the Nautilus hackers were quick to respond to the input of the user community, and by the time Nautilus 1.0.3 came out, they had addressed most of the community issues.
Today people are using Nautilus in really creative ways, and I finally made the switch because of all this creativity. Tuomas has a `magnets' package for his desktop and a set of images to play free-form solitaire on the desktop. Sure, they are just toys, but like that there are hundreds of other things being done with Nautilus.
The core foundation in Nautilus is sound, and a lot of people are doing really creative things. For example someone wrote a "3D" viewer for directories. You can at any point switch your default view into 3D-view inside the window. It is just a Bonobo component, you do not even need to touch the Nautilus code to add these third-party views.
Some other people have been writing Nautilus scripts, and I have been using a few of them. They could use some polish, but for being user-contributed things, they are pretty nice.
I also noticed that the new Windows XP shell incorporated various ideas that were in Nautilus or earlier versions of Nautilus and some others were demoed as concepts by Andy as potential services to consumers.
I would like to extend's Andy's idea of "actions" that are available on the left pane to be more comprehensive as it is on XP.
Other features in Nautilus are its support for SVG-icons. Something that has been overlooked for some time. I did not knew about this until I saw someone's desktop with these huge icons (common used things were huge, others were there just for reference). Those huge icons looked perfect (maybe they were 100x100 size), when I asked I found out that it was the new Tuomas/Jakub set of SVG icons.
Many hackers have been using pictures of themselves as their desktop "home". For example Nat's personal home directory has a `Friends' directory, and each `Friends' folder has a high resolution picture of his friends, where he keeps his information. He has a picture of his car for details about his car. Maybe he can post a screenshot of his desktop so you get an idea.
There are many more creative uses of Nautilus out there, but I have to say that as the product matures, more and more options are available.
But Nautilus overall makes for a terrific file manager, but it takes some time to get the best out of it.
I still want to see some of Andy's experimental code that allowed live objects to be shown in Nautilus. At some point I saw someone's desktop contain various "web sites" in a folder. Instead of using an RSS feed, various mini-web sites (fully functional) were embedded into a directory. I wish someone could send me a link to this url.
Miguel.
Re:Stop complaiing about speed (Score:1)
Even when it wasn't accessing the disk it was munching CPU time like nothing else. I hope it's improved since 1.0.
That was 1.0!!!!! (Score:1)
I use 1.03 but still you are talking about 1.0!!!!
Geez use the version released in the past 6 months
Re:That was 1.0!!!!! (Score:1)
Nautilus is so slow compared to other file managers on my existing (far faster than average) hardware that it just seems broken, period. First impressions mean a lot and I'm not going to be first in line to try a Nautilus release until I hear something about massive performance increases in the headline.
Re:Stop complaiing about speed (Score:3, Insightful)
Have you tried WindowsXP? (Score:1)
Re:Have you tried WindowsXP? (Score:1)
Re:Stop complaiing about speed (Score:1)
Don't you see something wrong with that?
Re:Stop complaiing about speed (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, the average desktop NEEDS a SCSI RAID controller just to use poorly written code that needs to be compiled on each system.
Take your meds, get a real job supporting a profitable company and then tell me how great it is.
Give some consideration to the reality of supporting applications and systems in a business environment before you post comments that fail to account for sound economic and engineering decision-making principles.
The average user needs a 486 (Score:1)
The average user who just checks their email and surfs the web has no need for a good machine.
Thats why these new computers arent selling.
Force them to buy new machines, computer sales pick up and we have jobs again!
Re:Stop complaiing about speed (Score:2)
You run an extremely powerful fancy GUI on a Pentium 4 1ghz on an IDE slow harddrive?!?!?!?!?!
If the damned program chews up enough memory that it has to eat into swap on any of my systems, it's out the window.
In fact, on the laptop I'm typing this on right now, I have turned off the swap drive. My desktop needs should never need more than 256M of memory, ever.
Yes I understand disk access can be slow but that's what the linux cache is all about. I don't have any trouble with Konqueror, Opera or even that pig of an OS...er...browser, Mozilla. If Nautilus hits the drive more than Moz, it's broken, and no amount of you bitching about my IDE drive is going to speed it up.
Re:n^2? (Score:2)
It's good to use efficient algorithms, but big-O analysis is rarely the only concern with real-world code.
(I haven't read a whit of Nautilus code. I tried it on my parents' -- midrange -- machine several months ago and immediately moved them back to GMC.)
Re:n^2? (Score:2)
I get the impression that you think n^2 strictly refers to sorting algorithms or something. n^2 can refer to a measure of any algorithm's efficiency, and from what I can see in the change log, this case has nothing to do with sorting. [FYI, this may also be written in Big-Oh notation, as in O(n^2) (although note that O(n^2) is not necessarily equivalent to n^2).]
And yes, sometimes n^2 is needed. Sometimes x^n is needed, and sometimes even n! is unavoidable. Maybe you ought to revisit those computer science texts. :)
Jason.
Re:Nautilus is a bloated piece of shit (Score:5, Funny)
And Opera kicks Konquerer's ass. As long as I'm pissing off the eyecandy freaks, I'll piss off the purity zealots too.
Re:Nautilus is a bloated piece of shit (Score:1)
And Opera kicks Konquerer's ass.
I guess you are speaking about rendering speed, right?
Yes, Opera renders simple HTML faster than Konqueror. But it comes at the expense of quality. Opera's DOM/JavaScript is very poor. CSS support is incomplete and somewhat misleading.
Anyway, Opera is very good for *easy* sites, which were designed to run in Netscape 4.75 or even in Netscape 3. You can go to such sites and still get adecuate results.
In contrast, Konq was designed to run on much bigger number of sites, and has excellent CSS2 and adequate DOM support
More info at: www.konqueror.org [konqueror.org]
Re:Hmm... A "Start button" (Score:1)
(yes, it's a flaming troll... live with it)
Re:Hmm... A "Start button" (Score:1)