Gnome 2.10 Released 526
Mad_Rain writes "The new version of Gnome (you know, the desktop of many Linux users?) has just been released. You can even try it out with a LiveCD (bittorrent link). There is a video player and CD-ripping utility included, and the all-important new splash screen!"
The complete release notes... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The complete release notes... (Score:2)
Re:One question springs to mind... (Score:3, Informative)
In my experience it's the memory use, mostly. I have an old 500MHz Celeron box with a gig of RAM, and GNOME runs pretty snappily on it. On the shiny new 3GHz P4 laptop with 256M, though, it's a lot slower and mostly that seems to be because it swaps like nobody's business.
Screenshots (Score:4, Funny)
It's only a matter of time.
Re:Screenshots (Score:3, Insightful)
Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:5, Funny)
2.10
2.8
2.6
2.4
2.2
2.0
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:2)
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:4, Informative)
FYI: 2.10==2.1 when 2.10 is a decimal. If it's a version number, 2.10!=2.1. Well, at least depending on your numbering convention. Some people treat version numbers like decimals, but many do not. Gnome (and Apple, and the Linux kernel), use a whole number point-release system (my terminology, made up on the spot). So how that works is, when you want to divide releases, you put a point (not a decimal) and at another whole number. Therefore, 2.6.1 falls under version 2.6, as does 2.6.7. 2.6.10 comes directly after and is an upgrade on 2.6.9 in the same way that 2.6.7 comes after 2.6.6.
So 10.0 comes way after 1.0, 10.10 comes a while after 10.1, 10.10.10 comes a few patches after 10.1.1. If we wanted to further sub-divide, 10.10.10.10 would come directly after 10.10.10.9. (but that would look too much like an IP address, so maybe that's why nobody divides that far, but instead seem to label releases "r1" or "rc1" or "beta" or whatever. I could go on, but hopefully you get the idea.
Also FYI, in both gnome and the linux kernel, there's another thing to know about their versioning scheme: even and odd numbered 0.x releases should probably not be thought of as upgrades on each other. I thought that might have been the source of confusion, seeing as the list 2.2, 2.4, 2.6, 2.8, 2.10 skips the odd .x releases. The reason for that is, odd .x releases are development branches, and not everything in the 2.9 branch automatically goes into the 2.10 branch. Only the new features that are stable and ready make it. Some things might be dropped, and other things might be carried over to the 2.11 branch for further work.
Now, I know a lot of what I've just written is well known to a lot of people here, but part of my confusion (thinking I was missing something) came from assuming that this was common knowledge, which I guess maybe it isn't. Or was the OP trying to be funny?
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:2)
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:2)
The thing is that, as a versioning system, it's perfectly legitimate.
Only as an ordinary number is there a problem, such as on that chart. (0.2 after 2.8 should be 3.0, not 2.10 -- that's 2.1, which is halfway between 2.0 and 2.2)
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:3, Funny)
i) 10 has a higher value than 8;
ii)
iii) 2.8 +
iv) 2.8 +
Of course, in the case of some unforunate releases, the addition of an even extention to an even extention results in an odd extention of a lower value, such as in some of the latest Mandrake releases. Those suckers should've been knocked back to version 4.15 or something.
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:3, Funny)
Eek! 2-10 = -8!
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:3, Funny)
It's probably as good an analogy as anyone else in this thread thinks up :P
Re:Speaking of the new splash screen (Score:2)
gimp.org did it again -- if you have a page with 252 big pieces of graphics, you need to check the Referrer against slashdot.org...
GNOME 2.10 (Score:3, Funny)
Re:GNOME 2.10 (Score:2)
Re:GNOME 2.10 (Score:3, Informative)
Hoary (Score:5, Informative)
just do an apt-get update and then an apt-get dist-upgrade
Re:Hoary (Score:4, Informative)
Future viability in question? (Score:3, Insightful)
I suppose it's another example of form over function, but there you go. Hopefully Enlightenment comes out soon.
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:4, Informative)
That having been said, I use KDE.
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:4, Interesting)
KDE pisses me off with how cluttered the icons in the applications look. There appears to be little spacing between icons. It makes for a crammed, cluttered looking appearance.
Gnome pisses me off because its menu editing is so friggin' stupid. FWIW FC3 dropped the Gnome menue editor because it was too buggy.
I like both. However I lean towards Gnome because it's cleaner, and more polished.
If I want performance, I'll use XFce
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2)
For most people, it's simply a matter of what they started using first. That being said, I started with KDE, and switched over to GNOME years ago for the cleaner and more simple interface.
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2)
I like the Bluecurve theme in Gnome. It's useable, looks nice (not like a kid's toy like Windows XP), and is simple enough not to be distracting. It doesn't seem to be totally complete - a few files,
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2)
So, yeah, the answer is no.
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2, Informative)
"My buddies think that KDE is better than Gnome" is moderated Informative? My faith in the public moderation system just dropped a notch.
they usually say that they think [KDE]'s crisper [than gnome] and the look is more consistent across applications.
Crisper? More consistent? Consistent in that everything starts with a K, perhaps. Consistencies fall apart after that. Gnome is designed around the principals of c
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2)
I don't mind a healthy debate on the issues, but I think ad homonem attacks on the character of the Linux community might be taking things a little far.
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:5, Interesting)
But I still wasn't as happy with the KDE desktop as I had been with Windows XP, so I figured I'd give Gnome a shot. After all, it had things like Beagle and Dashboard that sounded pretty cool. Plus, Hula and several other new applications were all being announced for Gnome. But I found that for a new user, there wasn't the same consistency to the Gnome experience as there was with KDE. Lots of things seemed (to me) to work differently from app to app. Changing settings could be done lots of different ways, it wasn't always clear what the preferred method of doing something was (true for the file manager, getting help, etc).
Consistency issues aside, my biggest difficulty with each of the desktops was that there wasn't an easy way to install new software. I use Debian, and apt-get is great, but half the time after choosing to install something new I couldn't find it by looking through the menus. I never even tried installing something that didn't have a Debian package, but can imagine it would have been pretty evil. I realize that the LSB and freedesktop.org are working to improve this situation, but at the moment Windows is worlds ahead with its simple software installations.
So in the end I went back to Windows XP for my desktop; I'm comfortable with it, it is stable (I've had fewer crashes/lockups with XP than I did with either Gnome or KDE), and I'm smart enough to be able to deal with the spyware & viruses. I still use Linux on my web server, and will try the Linux desktops again in the future, but for now I'll go with the evil empire simply because I like the product better. True, had I spent more time learning to use the Linux desktops I might have eventually preferred one of them, but for now the comfort factor just wasn't high enough to make me feel it was worth investing the effort.
Hula Hype (Score:4, Insightful)
Hula has absolutely nothing specific to GNOME.
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2, Insightful)
KDE is geared more towards power users who tweak for fun, Gnome is geared towards people who'll probably never change their settings (IMHO with much more sensible and aesthetically pleasing defaults for the thunderhing horde).
I consider myself a power user also, who used to spend tons of time tweaking KDE. It's a matter of preference (before this degenrates into
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:5, Insightful)
I always give Gnome due dilligence for each release. Each time a new version comes out I test it out for one full week and see how it works for me. Since the release of 2.0 I have always gone back to KDE for this reason:
[on #gnome on irc.freenode.net]
Me: Where is feature X? It seems like I ought to be able to do X but I can't seem to find it.
Dev/Zealot A1: Yea we think that's a good idea but we haven't gotten to it yet.
or
Dev/Zealot A2: Well, X is too complicated so we did Y. You must use Y. X is not implemented.
As with other releases I will try 2.10 out and see how it's progressed but here's a list of show stoppers in previous versions:
* Inability to edit or affect the panel menus in an intuitive way (somewhat addressed through the addition of applications:/// which was hard to find)
* Inability to hold down the mouse button (drag through) while navigating the menus. The thinking was accessibility related. A click event occurs after some arbitrary criteria has been met that convinces Gnome that the user really wanted to click and just didn't know to let go of the mouse button and then click again. Very annoying.
* No window snapping
* Non-existance of KIO-slaves equivalent (ability to open and work with files on arbitrary network resources) -- very useful
* Gnome terminal lacking ability to rename tabs by interacting with the tab (can be done through menu option somewhere)
* Gedit lacking features as compared with KEdit
* Epiphany / Galeon (which is it now?) not as feature complete as Firefox
* Until recently, the Gnome file open dialog box was a nightmare. It still has some problems, though. Many of its features are hidden in shortcut keys that one would only know existed if one scoured the Gnome manuals.
A lot of people bitch about spacial Nautilus but I don't think that's nearly important as some other basic needed features (window snapping). I can modify the way my brain works with a particular computer paradigm if I think it might be more sensible but I cannot do without features that increase my productivity.
So here's to hoping.
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2)
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:3, Insightful)
Agreed.
* Inability to hold down the mouse button (drag through) while navigating the menus. The thinking was accessibility related. A click event occurs after some arbitrary criteria has been met that convinces Gnome that the user really wanted to click and just didn't know to let go of the mouse button and then click again. Very annoying.
I'm not sure ab
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not sure about this being a problem. I just now tried it on this Gnome 2.8 system and it doesn't seem to generate an action until the mouse button is released. I can click
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:5, Informative)
Shift+Drag
Many? As far as I know it's only the location dialog . I can't think of a good way to show it without clutering the dialog. At least it does not have the horizontal-scrolling-through-files "feature"...
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2)
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:5, Funny)
I never pay attention to my calendar so come that fateful day I go "HOLY CRAP! FINALLY!" and tell atleast 6 people.
Then my world crashes around me.
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2)
Re:Future viability in question? (Score:2)
The same Novell which with SUSE employs the most KDE developers paid by a single company?
A BitTorrent link... (Score:4, Funny)
The Gnome Evolution PIM keeps getting better ... (Score:2)
I'm working on a Ruby binding [rubyforge.org] for it that will make the data easier to get at, too... good times.
Nice release (Score:3, Interesting)
My only problem is that the Gnome devs thought it was a good idea not to have a menu editor and no other (easy) way to edit the menus. There will be one in 2.12 afaik, but right now I'm stuck without an easy way to edit my menu and that's annoying.
Anyway, great release and a pleasure to use. Thanks to all those involved.
Re:Nice release (Score:2)
Use kmenuedit.
Menu editing... (Score:2)
Finally... (Score:5, Informative)
Ahh, finally. This was the most annoying thing for the longest time. I actually had to change my password twice because I unintentionally IMed it to someone else. I'm actually surprised that they didn't fix this a long time ago. It was a usability/security nightmare.
Karma Whoring? (Score:5, Informative)
Give the CoralCache [nyud.net] a try. Nice and speedy for me.
Re:Karma Whoring? (Score:2)
Wow (Score:4, Funny)
* The path button is now more obviously a button.
Wow, a button this is
* GNOME 2.10 introduces a new applet for controlling your Modem, integrated with GNOME System Tools.
Words fail me. I'm going to go out and get a modem, just so I can try this!
Finally,
* daily weather forecasts / Get even more weather
This one, I am not so sure of. Geeks don't leave the house! Why couldn't they make an applet that checks how much of their parents money they've spent living in their basements? How about how much more money they need before Scott Bakula will agree to do the next season of Enterprise? THAT would have been helpful.
Re:Wow (Score:2)
As opposed to windows, where buttons can appear as anything from buttons to underlined text to borderless free-form images to completely unmarked text.
* Words fail me. I'm going to go out and get a modem, just so I can try this!
News flash: A significant fraction of people in America, a not-insignificant place in the developed world, still us dial-up internet connections.
Re:Wow (Score:2)
- A new "about box" in GTK+ 2.6!
(I was wondering when this feature would finally arrive!)
- When using keyboard navigation to open the parent folder (Alt-Up), the current folder will be selected!
(yay)
- New background images and patterns!
(that'll go great with the solid color currently on my desktop)
- The location bar now indicates whether the site is secure, and shows its fa
Re:Wow (Score:3, Interesting)
I almost wet myself after seeing how easy it was to configure a printer in JDS (based on GNOME). This was after having been absent from GNOME for quite a while, and it just blew me away. Finally, configuring basic printer functionality is easy in UNIX.
And, now, modems! I think a part of my bald head was caused by configuring modems!
Printers and modems have been the worst part of UNIX for ages. Now that's mostly history!
You're right, Microsoft really does have some competition (sarcasm noted). Seriou
LiveCD (Score:5, Insightful)
That is why we need to keep two desktops around. Whenever either one invents something cool, both get it. (Friendly) compertition seems by far the best form of improving software.
Oh, and why wasn't a garnome link posted?
Re:LiveCD (Score:2)
Re:LiveCD (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, and why wasn't a garnome link posted?
Here's what came out on the garnome list a few hours ago...
GARNOME 2.10.0
... it's, it's ... it's GARNOMEtastic.
==============
(the 'pink fluffy bunny slippers are in my future' release.)
My God, we made it.
Aside from marking the first time a stable GARNOME release has come out on the same day that the GNOME release did -- This release incorporates the full GNOME 2.10 Desktop & Developer Platform, as well as so much extra, new and improved stuff
Th
Gentoo Users (Score:3, Informative)
Still dissapointed with GNOME (Score:2, Insightful)
I cannot open a file like http://www.marcusevans.com.au/pdf/413.pdf [marcusevans.com.au] from any GNOME native application! In this case, I have to save the file on the disk then open it after. I was even more dissapointed when Adobe based their recently released PDF reader for Linux on GTK. This means that this issue lingers. Meanwhile, all that I am dissapointed with in GNOME is a snap and works like a charm in any KDE applcation. What the hell....!
Re:Still dissapointed with GNOME (Score:2)
Re:Still dissapointed with GNOME (Score:5, Insightful)
I just ran "gnome-gv http://www.marcusevans.com.au/pdf/413.pdf" in Gnome 2.8 and it worked fine, just as it's done for ages.
Things I'd like to see from GNOME. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not as glamorous as mating a couple of Bonobos and getting a new SVG Pango baby, but please, for the sake of your users, focus on the fit and finish. What good is a HIG if the average user is put off by all the splinters?
Re:Things I'd like to see from GNOME. (Score:3, Informative)
Check it out sometime!
Still no flashing notification (Score:4, Interesting)
Many a time have I minimised a conversation only to realise after forgetting about it that I have several messages unread
Re:Still no flashing notification (Score:3, Informative)
All we really need now is that the IM program you are using really sets this atom on the window (or else Metacity and the panel will never know what happened).
2.10 is nice but 2.12 is where it's at... (Score:5, Informative)
2.10 has some nice improvements and what one should consider as a release that smooths over some issues. But it's nothing terribly exciting and new. Hopefully 2.12 will be a release that blows people away.
Sticky Notes (Score:3, Interesting)
Still no mail notification for Evolution! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:yes! (Score:3, Funny)
If Gnome started moving in the direction of KDE with Gnome 2.1, Gnome 2.10 must be like Windows
Re:yes! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:yes! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:KDE trolls are coming (Score:5, Funny)
Err, that should be "KDE trolls are koming"!
OK, that's my contribution to the obligatory stupid DE-related comments. I won't throw in a "But I just emerged 2.8!" (even though I just did).
Re:Clearlooks == Everclear (Score:2)
Here you go, troll. [lynucs.org]
By the way, you should really replace the "perfectly good" in your sentence with "good enough" or "WORKSFORME".
Re:yes! (Score:2)
Re:yes! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:yes! (Score:4, Interesting)
And Gnome is so great that programmers have gotten into the habbit of bypassing it and using only GTK. If I install kde-base and kde-libs, at least I can be certain that they'll see plenty of use.
Re:yes! (Score:3, Insightful)
Given that many developers are volunteers, and that many wanted to wait to see it settle down as a widget, I don't think it's unreasonable to give people a little bit of time (like a year or two) to get their apps up to speed.
Some apps *
Re:yes! (Score:3, Interesting)
You start off trying to get GTK+ compiled, which means pango, atk, and glib needs to be installed. In order to get those installed, I need fontconfig, freetype, some XML crap, and a few other programs/libraries which slip me at the moment. Fontconfig (or Freetype? Forget which) is a notorious pain to compile.
After that you got roughly twenty different programs to get a full GNOME system up and running, each with thier own personality quirks and workarounds.
Re:yes! (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm...that's a whole lot of stuff.
"I've yet to see a KDE app that doesn't require all of QT, kde-base and kde-libs to run."
Actually, those dependencies are false. The reason is that KDE itself only packages things down to that level and the distros don't bother to do otherwise, so kde-libs is only one package. That doesn't mean that a program needs all those libs, it just
Re:yes! (Score:3, Interesting)
Whine to the GCC-guys. KDE does that longer to compile than Gnome does. And the reason for that is that GCC is dog-slow at compiling C++ when compared to compiling C.
Re:yes! (Score:2)
If you really don't care, why don't you suggest the opposite, for a change...
Re:I'd like to try this (Score:2, Informative)
http://isorecorder.alexfeinman.com/isoreco
Re:I'd like to try this (Score:2)
Re:I'd like to try this (Score:2)
Re:I'd like to try this (Score:2)
http://www.cdburnerxp.se/
Paul.
Link to Splash Screen (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Why so modest? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm always amazed at how regardless of what is being announced, there is some ludicrously arrogant dork who complains that the announcement does not make him (one in six billion people on the planet) happy as if anyone would care.
Where do these people come from? Why are they unable to appreciate others' accomplishments? Is their ego so fragile that they can't accept a reality outside their subjective delusions of grandeur?
Mod these "snipers" as trolls, please, and let's get on with talking about Gnome.
Re:Why so modest? (Score:4, Interesting)
But yah, I also see the GUI primarily as a vehicle to more easily handle several concurrent CLI (xterm) instances, so I guess I'm just one of the old school nerds.
Re:Why so modest? (Score:3, Informative)
huh?
I use KDE, but I also have Gnome installed and neither one of them take up any screen real estate. Set your panels to autohide and you can, as I have done for years, use the whole 100% of the screen for whatever program your run.
Re:Why so modest? (Score:2)
Re:Why so modest? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not sure what you mean here, do you want a different implementation of the X protocol? If so, why not try Freedesktop.org's experimental XServer [freedesktop.org]? It's quite a nice fast modular server. Are you looking for something other than X11 protocol? Then why not try DirectFB [directfb.org]? DirectFB doesn't have enough supported applications for you? Why not try Quartz [apple.com], which I imagine at le
Re:Why so modest? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:GNOME armageddon (Score:2)
Re:I don't understand... (Score:2, Informative)
And why should Trolltech do it, they would immediately void their current business model.
Re:The Live-CD (Score:2)
crappy (Score:5, Informative)
I only can define it as "dead project" - you really have to have something more than "button order preferences is wrong", "I hate windows registry" and "spatial nautilus is broken" to fork a project. Wow, "Mac OS X is better" - what a surprise. Tell me something I don't know. Not using gecko, use KHTML? Well...wow.
I'm not against forking projects, but this fork is ridiculous. No real reasons, real gnome problems are not mentioned, half of it can be solved by changing the default preferences and no code, etc etc
whoa (Score:5, Funny)
Gives a whole new meaning... (Score:2)
Re:Window Shadows? (Score:2)