GNOME 2.0 Desktop Beta 3 Released 179
damiam writes "GNOME 2.0 Desktop Beta 3 has been released. Changes include new versions of Nautilus, Yelp, and the control center, as well as bugfixes all around. Download it from gnome.org or one of the mirrors." Jeff Waugh adds: "The possibility of a complete beer freeze at GUADEC has inspired another kickarse release of the GNOME 2.0 Desktop. It's awesome stuff, definitely worth trying out. You should find GARNOME handy if there are no packages available for your distro."
The name of the release (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The name of the release (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The name of the release (Score:4, Informative)
Re:The name of the release (Score:2, Funny)
That's an accurate translation, but I think the point is that it sounds nice - all the 'll's (which are pronounced 'y'). Also, perhaps a joke on Pygmallian's "The rain in spain"...
Re:The name of the release (Score:2)
Re:The name of the release (Score:1)
Re:The name of the release (Score:1, Redundant)
Something along those lines... only taken 2 semesters of espanol.
La Lluvia = to Rain, raining
En Sevilla = In Seville (city in spain)
es = is
una maravilla = Marvel, marvelous
Re:The name of the release (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The name of the release (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The name of the release (Score:2)
"The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain"
Re:The name of the release (Score:2)
Re:The name of the release (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The name of the release (Score:1)
The point of the phrase (in the musical) was to teach this girl (was her name liza dolittle?) to speak "proper english" instead of cockney. This Professor Henry Higgins guy had made a bet that he could turn a street urchin into a "fair lady" of society, and one of the things he had to do was change the way she was speaking.
Ms Dolittle had to say the phrase again, and again, and again... until she pronounced it right. It was very frustrating, and the next song in the musical was along the lines of "I'm going to kill Henry Higgins."
So the title could refer to the sheer repetitiveness of releases, or all the (boring) work it took to get it right. And I think there's a developer conference in spain, too.
If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:1)
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:2)
How is that not entirely true? I was responsing to the article where it suggests using compiling Garnome to install the latest GNOME beta, and suggesting compiling GNOME into packages (or both the source and binary packages). Compiling Garnome on Sparc64 will take a similar amount of time than compiling it into packages, and will provide a stable set of install metadata which can be used to install other packages on top of your GNOME, which seems likely.
I fail to understand how my post was in any way a troll.
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:1)
Compiling Garnome on Sparc64 will take a similar amount of time than compiling it into packages
Do you know this for sure? Have you tried to compile Gnome on Sparc64 yourself? If it was so easy to compile Gnome onto a Solaris box, then why are their so many Solaris questions in the Gnome mailinglists?
I've compiled Gnome (but not GarGnome) on RH7.2 , and it was pretty easy. Very few problems. I tried the same thing on my Solaris8 box, and probably spent 4 hours compiling, recompiling and re-recompiling, and another 4 hours searching for packages which were required but not included with the Gnome source.
Solaris is less supported then other *nixs, and therefore has more problems. This applies to the source as well as the distributed binaries.
Heading towards Gnome2.0 , hopefully Sun will kick in some more resources to the development process, and compilation will be less of an issue.
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:2)
No I did not. If the moderator thought that, they didn't read what I wrote, which implied that if someone had the tchnical knowledge to compile source, then compiling packages was well within their abilities.
"Compiling Garnome on Sparc64 will take a similar amount of time than compiling it into packages"
Do you know this for sure? Have you tried to compile Gnome on Sparc64 yourself?
No. I have compiled other source applications into Solaris packages before. I see no reason why compiling Gnome would be any different. Feel free to provide me with one.
If it was so easy to compile Gnome onto a Solaris box
I never said it was easy to compile Gnome on a Solaris box.
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:1)
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:1)
You, me and Sun Microsystems, baby!
But honestly, I agree with you. I'm running Gnome on my Sparc5/Solaris8 box. I tried installing Gnome from Source, and I spent about 8 hours trying to fufil dependancies.
Finally I broke down and installed Ximian Gnome, which works, but is still sometimes a nightmare to maintain. Red-carpet breaks every other release, gnome-terminal won't work now (font problems)... it can be very frustrating.
configure (Score:1)
I don't really believe that. With configure scripts, compiling is really easy. I am very incompetent, but I can compile GNOME from sources (not from GARNOME). Still, I've never managed to create binary packages for any distro (even though I've tried).
Re:configure (Score:2)
Fair enough - at least you've been a whole lot more civil than most of the replies.
With configure scripts, compiling is really easy. I am very incompetent, but I can compile GNOME from sources (not from GARNOME). Still, I've never managed to create binary packages for any distro (even though I've tried).
Keep trying - I'm not that skilled myself but creating packages is well within my reach. RPM (the standard Linux packaging system) has macros to handle any GNU autoconf/automake application, so most of what you have to do will be filling in specfiles.
I reckon there's a good chance you might not have found the right docs (because there's a lot of poor ones out there). Try freshrpms.net or IBM Developerworks for good packaging tutorials.
Heh, heh...he wrote "package" in bold... (Score:1)
Heh, heh...he didn't read the post he replied to (Score:2)
Ahem...
"As well as not breaking your system, and ensuring a uninform install, uninstall / query process for all your software, your work is repeatable for other users and generally other distributions."
Who am I distributing it to?
Besides the abovementioned benefits, if you were a social, community minded sort of fellow (which I suggest from the subject line of your post you are not) then you might wish to help other users of your OS / distribution by distributing source / binary packages.
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:1)
Re:If there are no packages for your distro... (Score:2)
Sure. Visit freshrpms.net, rpm.org, or IBM developerworks for a couple of excellent tutorials on packaging.
Feel free to email me if you'd like to assist rather than talk shit.
I would, but you just insulted me, so now I rather wouldn't. People who abuse others like that give Linux a bad name.
GARNOME . . . (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:GARNOME . . . (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, GAR is in itself a sort of packaging system, so the GARNOME tree is only as good as the dependencies it provides. You'll still have to install all of the other software.
GAR was designed originally with the idea that slackware users could just "make install" to upgrade to a newer tree of packages, but that was before I discovered that backing up your data and installing Debian was much quicker.
That said, GAR's main purpose is to build the complete filesystem tree for the LNX-BBC [lnx-bbc.org] CD-ROM image. Ultimately we hope to have a complete GNU system packaged within it.
Re:GARNOME . . . (Score:3, Interesting)
I did this on Debian unstable, so ymmv depending on your distro. I apt-getted the necessary packages as listed on the garnome page. (Forgot to get flex, but someone pointed that out to me on the irc channel).
There was a small bug in
After I got the tarball, I just did a "make install" and it installed the gnome2 distro right in my home directory. I haven't used anything with GAR before, but this package is definately a welcome addition to my box.
Gnome2 impressions - Nautilus is f*cking FAST. Real fast. As in, I will finally use it. Kudos to the hackers that improved this thing.
The fonts - very nice, look good. It even used my ms ttf fonts that I had previously installed. I don't know if that was intentional or something that "just happened".
The bad - not too many apps ported yet, but I'm sure that will change.
I usually wait for packages for major things like desktops and the such, but garnome really really makes it easy. The guys in #garnome on irc.gnome.org are really helpful too.
Re:GARNOME . . . (Score:1)
Nautilus, gnome-terminal, and a great many other (but not all) apps segfault.
It's not the Nautilus/gnome-session segfault bug listed in the GARNOME FAQ, either, because I don't have any "Xftcache" files.
Damn.
Screenshots! (Score:5, Informative)
Here you go: http://developer.gnome.org/dotplan/images/ [gnome.org]
Re:Screenshots! (Score:3, Insightful)
Btw, what you can't see on the screenshots that some screen updates have been undergone a major overhaul in gtk2. For example take gtop, the process monitor. With gtk1.x it would flicker so much you can't use it. (Basicly the whole screen is redrawn each refresh, and u can watch the redraw
With gtk2 this is MUCH better, i guess due to double buffering. you only see the numbers change
Re:Screenshots! (Score:1)
And the Crux and gtk-engines package are already on Gnome CVS
Re:Screenshots! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Screenshots! (Score:3, Insightful)
And we all know a windowing environment isn't "good" unless the look and feel changes with every release, right?
Re:Screenshots! (Score:2)
Re:Screenshots! (Score:1)
Weeks? (Score:1)
$ cd themes/gnome ../sawfish /usr/share/sawfish/0.30/themes
$ tar zxvf gnome-theme-ball.tar.gz
$ cd
$ tar zxvf sawfish-theme-ball.tar.gz
$ su
# cp *.tar.gz
# exit
$ gnomecc
Then I select the themes I want and off I go. Takes about two minutes. Of course, that's because I've got a collection of my favorite GTK and Sawfish themes (and wallpapers too actually) that I just keep lying around in tarballs for whenever I need them, but I always figured that was a sensible thing to do...
And with that said, GNOME 1.4 by default was a heck of a lot prettier than 1.2; that ugly old default GTK theme just needs to be buried and forgotten. And I don't know what 2.0 will look like by default, but I imagine it won't be too bad.
Re:Screenshots! (Score:1)
Re:Screenshots! (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.gnome.org/~jamin/screenshots/beta3/ [gnome.org]
question (Score:3, Insightful)
What are the main differences between Gnome and KDE?
I use KDE because it seems a lot more natural for me, with a lot more tools to change stuff around with. I go over to Gnome sometimes, and I wonder what difference there is between KDE and Gnome. They look the same, they have a similar 'feel'.. I personally don't see the difference.
(note; this is not a troll, this is something I am legitimately wondering about)
Re:question (Score:1)
Re:question (Score:3, Interesting)
Enlightenment is one of my favourite window managers it's really unfortunate that it hasn't made any progress for a long time (can't wait for 17.0 though).
Obligatory Apple comment: I really must admit my all time favourite UI is Aqua.
Re:question (Score:1)
Re:question (Score:3, Informative)
KDE is based in C++
Gnome is based in C
both have language bindings for other languages but they still are partial to the language they are based in.
other wise there really isn't much diffrence. Not even a vi vs. emacs diffrent. More like a vim vs elvis type thing.
They feed off each other to improve them selves, and do quite a good job of it.
just my 2cents
Re:question (Score:1)
KDE is faster and cleaner, GNOME is prettier and has better apps.
Re:question (Score:1)
http://www.linuxandmain.com/tech/xibre
Re:question (Score:1)
In fact, unless GNOME2 will get some optimizations in this area, KDE3 will need less memory after prelink finally becomes available.
Re:question (Score:2, Interesting)
Evolution and Sylpheed > KMail
Abiword > KWord
Gnumeric > KSpread
KDevelop > Anjuta
GNOME 3, KDE 1.
Re:question (Score:3, Informative)
A desktop environment (or "DE") is more than just a window manager, it is the integration of applications. Before DE's, most X applications had their own individual look and feel, did not interact very much with other applications, and there was very little code sharing. KDE sought to solve this, by building a group of libraries (now known as kdelibs) for all desktop apps to utilize. Before KDE, there was CDE, but it was not nearly as ambitious. KDE was to be the ultimate unix desktop. GNOME came around about a year later, as a result of the GNU folks unhappy with the Qt license (KDE uses the C++ Qt library as a foundation). Now Qt is GPL, but back then it was not. This leaves us today with two desktop environment efforts.
From a user (or UI) standpoint, there is very little difference between the two. You'll find that most of the differences are internal. GNOME uses CORBA and Bonobo to integrate applications, while KDE uses DCOP and KParts.
In my opinion (note: I am a KDE user), KDE is more stable and complete because it is based around a featureful and commercialized foundation toolkit: Qt. This means that the KDE team can focus soley on the DE, while a dedicated company, Trolltech, works on their foundation. GNOME, on the other hand, uses (and maintains) gtk as a foundation toolkit, an offshoot of the GIMP. This is a tremendous effort on the part of the GNOME folks, because they have to develop both the foundation toolkit _and_ DE. gtk1 is not on par with Qt, and I don't think gtk2 will be either (Qt just simply has way too many years over gtk), but perhaps someday...
Anyhow, I say just choose the one you feel most comfortable with. They both have a large selection of applications, and excited userbases. I don't think one will ever win over the other, but maybe they will slowly merge together in some respects. I use KDE because I like the look/feel/behavior, as well as the programming style and organization. Also, DCOP from the commandline is just too cool.
Re:GNOME 2.0 -vs- KDE 3.0 (Score:2)
Re:GNOME 2.0 -vs- KDE 3.0 (Score:2, Insightful)
Nautilus's is now almost as fast as Windows Explorer.
I expect more optimizations in the upcoming releases.
And no, Nautilus doesn't require Mozilla.
Only the Mozilla Bonobo component requires Mozilla, but you are not required to install that component and can use GtkHTML instead.
Mozilla has also become a lot faster the last few months, speed is more than acceptable on my computer, so I don't see what's the problem about depending on Mozilla.
Re:GNOME 2.0 -vs- KDE 3.0 (Score:1)
Re:GNOME 2.0 -vs- KDE 3.0 (Score:1)
Re:Fonts... (Score:1)
Re:Fonts... (Score:1)
Re:Fonts... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Fonts... (Score:5, Informative)
Funny, I'm looking at it from my Titanium PowerBook G4 as well, and I see nothing wrong with most of the fonts in the screenshots. Some people picked what I would consider ugly fonts in some screenshots, but that's their right. OSX, in comparison, for better or worse, gives people very little choice.
I see plenty wrong with your attitude, however. Apple has only been able to spend that much time and money on graphic design because they got much of the nitty-gritty work done for them by open source folks. If it weren't for open source, OSX wouldn't be here and Apple would likely be out of business soon.
And maybe Apple should spend some time on their own font rendering as well, because, frankly, Apple's anti-aliasing on PowerBooks sucks.
I just have trouble believing that in the year 2002 you guys still don't have nice hinted fonts shipping and in-use by default with X.
In part, that's Apple's fault, actually. Their software patents on the particular hinting methods used in TrueType have held back the development of open source renderers for TrueType.
And X11 actually has had good hinting technology for years, but because Apple and Microsoft managed to push their own, new, proprietary font standards, the X11 folks had to start from scratch.
So, be nice. Apple has plenty of bad history to make up for with the open source community, and they need all the help they can get.
Re:Fonts... (Score:2)
I agree with you about his attitude, and of course agree that Apple got a huge free head start from FreeBSD. But I disagree that Apple would be sunk without Open Source. Without BSD and thus NeXT Step, Apple would have continued talks with Be, Inc. and Mac users would be running a next generation Be OS. Sure, Apple would have had to pay $400 million because they wouldn't have had an alternative. But $400 mil wouldn't have sunk Apple. BSD wasn't their only option.
Re:Fonts... (Score:2)
Re:Fonts... (Score:2)
However, I agree with you that this is the time to be nice, and I honestly am greatful that Gnome is taking its first steps towards good anti-aliasing and nice-looking fonts.
Re:Fonts... (Score:3, Informative)
That's an absolutely ridiculous statement. There were hinted outline fonts available before TrueType even came along; we didn't need Apple or Microsoft to create the TrueType format. And TrueType fonts are a huge pain to create in the first place.
Some standard would have come along no matter what. This particular standard happens to come with patent strings attached, and that's not particularly nice.
Re:Fonts... (Score:2, Informative)
And as far as printing goes, I installed CUPS on my laptop running Debian Unstable at work 2 days ago and it was the easier setup ive came across. good quality printing to the hp laserjet on a Windows 98 computer. no wonder Apple has licensed to use CUPS for printing.
Re:Fonts... (Score:2)
Well, as I said, there are some desktops that are misconfigured. This particular problem is, ironically, the same problem that many OSX fonts have (although not quite as pronounced).
The main mistake there is to turn on anti-aliasing for small fonts. Anything smaller than 12 pixels should probably not be anti-aliased.
If linux is to really move ahead on the desktop, it needs a standard set of high quality fonts and a standard printing system that all linux distros use and support.
Maybe you want that, but why the hell would I want that? X11 has excellent, hand-designed bitmapped fonts that display more nicely than anything on Windows or MacOS. Since I use TeX, it makes no difference to me that those fonts don't print out nicely. Similarly, there is not single printing system that works everywhere. Microsoft and Apple have tried, and they have failed.
I hate this "eveybody must work just the way I like it" attitude. There are Linux distributions that use scalable, anti-aliased fonts by default and have picked a "standard" printing system. And there are other Linux distributions that have other priorities. If you can't deal with the choice, go use Windows.
Re:Fonts... (Score:1)
Re:Fonts... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Fonts... (Score:2)
Re:Fonts... (Score:1)
metatheme is the gnome answer to that. Its a theme that setups everything from gtk+, nautilus, sawfish and xmms.
Re:Fonts... (Score:1)
How about: "My Apple iMac came standard with nice, hinted fonts and a breast implant-like case! And it cost hundreds more than your custom-built Athlon 2100+ XP that quad boots four operating systems!"
Precompiled binaries/RPMs for Mandrake? (Score:2)
1) Precompiled binaries made from a Garnome (if it's not too giant)
2) RPMs that will coexist nicely with Gnome 1.4
3) Instructions on how to get Gnome 2 from the Mandrake cooker (yes, it's there) but avoiding the conflicts with gnome 1.4 (and without removing Gnome 1.4)
Asking the user to require 1.1Gbs of build space seems rather excessive! Even the "206Mbs once installed" seems large
Re:Precompiled binaries/RPMs for Mandrake? (Score:3, Informative)
Additionally, the GNOME 2.0 Desktop *replaces* the GNOME 1.4 desktop components, so most RPMs will not "coexist nicely".
Pink Martini (Score:2)
Re:Pink Martini (Score:2)
Donde estas, donde estas, Yolanda?
sourcegasm (Score:1)
Nautilus progress (Score:1, Flamebait)
Can you install it in Debian yet? (Score:2)
Has anyone made an apolitical comparison with KDE? (Score:2)
featureless in comparison to KDE3rc3. I'm
quite willing to switch over to Gnome, if
it becomes a better productivity environment,
and consumes less resources, but I'm concerned
that until someone who is willing and able to
leave their dull axes in the closet for a while
can make a comprehensive feature and performance
comparison, both Gnome and KDE users alike will
have little practical choice but to continue in
their current environment.
Therefore, I ask: Can anyone recommend a
reasonably thorough and objective comparison of
Gnome 2 and KDE 3?
At this point I'm sick of pretty (Score:2)
Re:My experiences with Windows XP Professional (Score:1, Funny)
Re:My experiences with Windows XP Professional (Score:1)
Re:My experiences with Windows XP Professional (Score:1, Offtopic)
An SMP mailing list, CVS branch, and information page [openbsd.org] do exist, though.
Re:Wide page! -- USE OPERA (Score:1, Offtopic)
its more standards compliant
its way way faster
you cat turn off images/new images on teh fly
you can disable popups on the fly
it does email
it doesn't muck around with MSHTML
its safer than IE
and thats just what I can think of off the top of my head
Re:Wide page! -- USE OPERA (Score:1, Offtopic)
Flash works
Crossover plugin works (quicktime et al)
99.9% of all sites work.
That other
Very easy and intuiitive system for defining your custom document settings, you just pick a tag, and tell it what font you want, i.e. H1=whatever H2=whatever PRE=whatever.
It's cheap.
If it crashes, it saves your place 90% of the time, and you don't have to search for the pages again.
Cookie handling is nice, with white and black lists on server or domain, and also it flushes all cookies on exit by default, unless you explicitely said that cookie could stick around.
Major Con:
Printing doesn't work. Ever. I have never gotten printing to work on Red Hat Linux with Opera. Come on guys, it couldn't be that hard to fix.
Pure FUD. (Score:1, Offtopic)
In case you didn't know, Opera will only send information voluntarily. Opera doesn't harvest anything. You can set up your ad preferences to receive targeted ads, but these are disabled by default. The user actually has to enter information manually, and the information cannot be traced back to the user. In addition to this, Opera has run user surveys to find out who their users are. Cydoor have simply picked this information up from Opera's web pages.
Not only that, but Opera doesn't contain a single line of Cydoor code. The ad module is 100% written by Opera's own developers, and the only thing the ad module does is to download ads. It even sends and receives information from the ad servers in plain text, so anyone can look at what is being transmitted.
But that's not all. Cydoor no longer produce spyware. There is a myth online which never seems to die, and that is that Cydoor are into spyware. They did spy on their users at one point, but not anymore [cexx.org].
Your lies about Opera are, frankly, disgusting. You can even see what Opera writes about this and read exactly what the ad module in Opera actually does [opera.com]. But you don't care about facts, do you?
Gnome+Opera is a great combination, despite Opera using Qt!
Re:gnome is so unoriginal (Score:1)
Re:gnome is so unoriginal (Score:2)
graspee
Re:Who cares? (Score:1)
Re:Who cares? (Score:1)
Beer Freeze! (Score:1)
If you can't take the foam and ice, the waiting for it to thaw is hell when it's the last you've got!