GNOME 2.12 Released 495
Moderator writes "At long last, Gnome 2.12 has been released! Among the many new features are clipboard management, a menu editor, an improved search tool, and a spatial-tree view in Nautilus. Check out the start page for more info."
Hot off the presses (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:2)
Unless I'm missing something - I am new to Ubuntu, and even to Synaptic. If all I want is Stable (5.04), plus GNOMEv2.12 and Evolutionv2.3.7, but not to upgrade the whole dist to Breezy, can I do that?
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:4, Insightful)
If a Hoary user tries to pin Gnome or even just major Gnome apps then the parent post is correct. It will pretty much result in upgrading to Breezy. The only other way out is to pull down the source debs and build them against Hoary's -dev libraries. You can avoid some hair pulling here by using your friend checkinstall to have renamed versions of some upgraded libraries under
I'd just wait for Breezy to release and stabilize and get it then if a working system with a minimum of effort is important to you.
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:3, Informative)
Just so you know...I'm using Breezy right now with Gnome 2.12 and its very stable. The hardest part is over! Sorry you rode then and not now!
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You just pointed out... (Score:3, Interesting)
Ubuntu emphasises the x86 and PowerPC arches and for high profile pieces of software, changing over very very quickly. Debian insists where possible on code that is bit and endian clean that will work correctly on as many arches as possible. This incidently often results in better upstream projects for every
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:3, Informative)
Breezy should be stable in another month or so. As a newbie, the easiest thing you can do is just wait that month. I know, that's not as fun, but that's what I'm doing.
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:5, Informative)
As one of the more active Ubuntuers, I can tell you that major stable changes (new kernel, new Gnome, etc) only come with new releases. Gnome 2.12 just hit Breezy today. The month between now and its release is the time it will take to work it into Ubuntu. It is possible for you to do it yourself, but I would suggest waiting.
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:2)
BTW, your ad [slashdot.org]
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:5, Informative)
You asked the right person- I care way too much about xcompmgr.
As it is xcompmgr does not have really active development. Pretty much the "final version" was released and is in Ubuntu....but that does not mean nothing has happened. You have two options:
1. (the one I recommend) I am using Breezy right now and I can say that it works much better with xcompmgr than before. The biggest bug for me- artifacts when playing full screen video- is gone in Totem-xine. GONE! The only xine to do that. Its what I really wanted for Christmas. The other bug- the log out screen one- still exists but I have found an elegant work around. Using these directions [ubuntuforums.org] you can create a panel button to turn it off and on (no crashing). So just turn it off before you log out. Because Breezy likes xcompgr more (the developers were nice and compiled Gnome 2.12's Metacity without its featureless compmgr like they did in Hoary because they heard my begging-it helps to be the second biggest poster in the forum) I found a way to make it stable for you. If I remember correctly you did not like the fading trick, right? Thats awesome for you. Run xcompmgr with this command:
xcompmgr -n
and it will just use the GPU. No tricks, no crashing (me and another Ubuntu fan hammered on this and with just that option it was very stable compared to the fading and drop shadow options)....it just flys! I personally don't do that command (I love the fading) and so I have to deal with some random crashes-much less than Hoary though. You are lucky you do not. Then you must make it start when Gnome starts (go to "System," the "Preferences," then "Sessions." Click the last tab and hit "Add" and the "xcompmgr -n" command and run it in "order 48" -thats what I do, some say use "0" but that only worked for me in Hoary, not Breezy). I must admit that when it boots the desktop might be a little out of focus (or really out of focus with a little garbage) but as soon as you maximize a window everything works like a charm.
2. Use KDE. KDE forked xcompmgr and integrated it into its Window Manager. If you have your xorg file set up, then it gives you a "transparency" tab in the "window decoration" settings box. Its cool, and I hear a lot of the effects (like the fading and such) will be more stable by 3.5. The Gnome guys seem to refuse to do anymore than make Gnome work with xcompmgr because it requires non-OSS drivers to work (Gnome was started because of such strong principles). But since you don't ask much (in the way of effects)...either way will work for you. As you can tell, I care a lot...and the Gnome approach is enough for me for now...
Re:Hot off the presses (Score:2)
In other Gnews... (Score:4, Funny)
Burn Karma, burn!
Re:In other Gnews... (Score:2)
No Gnome dialog box should ever have "yes," "no," and cancel as buttons.
To each his own, I guess. We're all going to die sometime.
Re:In other Gnews... (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, it's not enough. Prime example: In Quicken (2006 for Mac, anyway), if you are in the middle of the account creation wizard, and click the Cancel button, Quicken pops up a sheet with the usual "Are you sure you want to do this?" type question, and gives you the buttons "Cancel" and "Close." There are plenty of people out there (myself included) whose first instinct is to click the "Cancel" button because Cancel is the first button I clicked and Cancel is what I want to do. Of course, it's also the wrong answer.
Re:In other Gnews... (Score:4, Informative)
Why don't you change it then? Add the following text to your ~/.kde/share/config/kdeglobals to change the button order:
[KDE]
ButtonLayout=1
Re:In other Gnews... (Score:2)
[KDE]
ButtonLayout=1
Thank you!
"features" (Score:4, Funny)
what a concept!
maybe they will go back to letting me change the icon of the damn foot menu
such features, years ahead of the alternatives..
mod me troll bait or whatever, but im sorry gnome really urks me sometimes.
Re:"features" (Score:4, Insightful)
No shit. I hadn't tried Gnome for a few years, figured I'd give it a shot when I installed linux on a new box recently. I was all ready to add my most used programs to the foot menu...and...couldn't find a way to do it. I assumed it was buried somewhere, but began to consider the possibility that the paternalistic Gnome people knew better than me what programs I need to use, and had decided I simply didn't need to add programs.
I quickly switched back to KDE. Although I've since moved to blackbox since it isn't a memory hog, and is insanely easy to configure.
What I don't understand about Gnome is how it can have so few features and take up so much memory.
Re:"features" (Score:3, Insightful)
Red Hat does quite a few studies on user interaction on the Linux desktop
Re:"features" (Score:4, Informative)
Please check your facts before writing huge flames.
Re:"features" (Score:2)
Re:"features" (Score:2)
This version of GNOME looks nice, so I'll give it a go. Might be something that I'll like using, but I suspect the footprint will annoy me again. Looks good enough to pursue for Windows to UNIX conversions, at least.
Re:"features" (Score:2)
I do it on my laptop because it's a pentium 133. Gnome would kill it.
As far as my workstation goes, it's not because of gnome per se - it's because of metacity. I really, really hated metacity (haven't used it in a while so I dunno what it's like now) so I switched to fvwm... then I kinda quit giving a crap about gnome compliance and all that.
FVWM is a pain in the ass to configure - just like it was back when I firs
Re:it was buried (Score:2)
The lack of any decent menu editor has been a hot topic for quite some time...
Re:"features" (Score:2)
Here you go. Not an environment variable, but does the same basic thing. ;)
ln -s /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc.blackbox ~/.xinitrc
Re: (Score:2)
Re:"features" (Score:2)
Oh good grief. It's dead easy to change the color scheme in gnome. Go to gnome control center, then theme. All themes have the same color scheme choices.
You get at least as many, if not more, color choices per theme than you do with Windows.
Ubuntu (Score:5, Informative)
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BreezyReleaseSchedule?hig
Karma! (Score:5, Informative)
http://torrent.gnome.org/gnome-livecd-2.12-i386-e
Different strokes for different folks (Score:5, Insightful)
I just wish a little more effort would go into the user-interface aspect, which is really the whole point of a GUI right? It should be flicker-free. When I want to run a program it should come right up rather than changing the mouse pointer and making me wait. The fact that its logo is a foot doesn't help matters any.
Are there any window shells out there that have a little more pizazz than Enlightenment but retain the crisp response to user-input? Because that's what's needed to get the desktop crowd.
Re:Different strokes for different folks (Score:2)
Things like firefox/k3b/thunderbird/synaptic would be almost impossible to get up right away, even on a moderately fast computer. What would you prefer instead of the mouse pointer changing? Do you want it to bounce? Do you want it to act like nothing happened?
Re:Different strokes for different folks (Score:3, Insightful)
First you have Gnome/KDE which dictate everything are huge projects that suck in all sorts of stuff and seek to standardize everything through brute force.
Second you have the rest... XFCE/Enlightenment/*Box/etc Which for the most part seek to stay out of your way and let you pick and choose. If by "pizazz" you mean a long list of features I don't think your going to find it in the WM's that compete with Gnome/KDE at the moment. If you mean a quality f
Waiting for apps isn't annoying, focus stealing is (Score:5, Insightful)
If you don't understand what I mean, here's the point: I often start up an application that I will use "in a while" and then proceed to navigate further in Nautilus or whatever. When the app starts, it steals back focus even though I already do something else. That is not usability. There's two use cases:
1. User starts application, waits for it to complete. This would cover almost all common use and especially non-power use. Focus remains with started application from the point that I start it.
2. User starts application, proceeds to give other window focus (by click, ALT-tab, whatever). Starting application at this point loses focus and will not regain it.
Ok, so if the app doesn't steal focus, it may not be obvious that it's finished? That's what the new taskbar hints is for, and it's also a matter of how you behave. Any user likely to have problems with this probably wait for each app to start in turn anyways, so it's not likely to be a problem.
Now this I would like to see. It annoys me at least a couple of times a day.
Re:Waiting for apps isn't annoying, focus stealing (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Waiting for apps isn't annoying, focus stealing (Score:2)
Re:Waiting for apps isn't annoying, focus stealing (Score:2)
The polar opposite to this behavior is, of course, Windows, which steals your keyboard focus constantly.
No it doesn't. (Score:2)
Re:Waiting for apps isn't annoying, focus stealing (Score:2)
Starting with Gnome 2.10, applications never steal focus. Instead, if an app wants focus, or you started a new program and switched focus to something else, it's icon and name in the window list gently pulsates.
Re:Waiting for apps isn't annoying, focus stealing (Score:3, Informative)
Have to try it out (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Have to try it out (Score:2)
Re:Have to try it out (Score:2)
Re:Have to try it out (Score:2)
A Red Dwarf fan, probably.
Re:Have to try it out (Score:2)
Maybe the author is not English? Or liked Red Dwarf...
What Gnome needs (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What Gnome needs (Score:2)
You've gotta be kidding. KDE's now-default Plastik theme is clean and attractive, much more so than any default Windows option. Adding semi-transparent bling like Vista does is easy, though IMNSHO it's very annoying.
I haven't used a recent version of GNOME, but KDE already looks very slick. There are a few mind-boggling UI quirks (why can't I keep my desktop icons auto-arranged??), but for the most part it's just as easy or easier to use than Wind
Re: (Score:2)
Re:What Gnome needs (Score:2)
Are you sure you're not confusing it with the old default, Keramik? That was truly awful. If you really do mean Plastik [kde-look.org], what do you prefer?
Re:What Gnome needs (Score:3, Interesting)
Just the same we see a Desktop folder when we open a Nautilus window. First of all that could fool the user into believing that the contents of his Desktop folder actually was copies of what he sees on his real desktop. What if he decides to delete the file in on one of the places. That would lead to loss of data.
Showing the Desktop in two place
Re:What Gnome needs (Score:4, Interesting)
"If set to true, then Nautilus will use the user's home folder as the desktop. If it is false, then it will use ~/Desktop as the desktop."
This makes so much sense. It's great!
Can't agree, sorry (Score:2)
So, apparently the attractiveness of each is a matter of opinion, because I sure don't agree with your assessment! On sheer initial looks I rate GNOME better than OSX, and based on the screenshots, better than Vista too. KDE (Plastik) I rate much higher than XP, but not higher than OSX (only just), nor GNOME.
Sure OSX (and Vista so we are told), have excellent graphical effects and transitions that improve the user-experience. But I still prefer the way GNOME l
Nice (Score:3, Interesting)
About gtk-2.8... What are those new "features not currently available in any other toolkit" that the article is talking about?
Re:Nice (Score:2, Informative)
Only for the uninformed [gnomedesktop.org].
FreeBSD and Gnome 2.12 is ready (Score:2, Offtopic)
until after 6.0 is released. Check out http://www.FreeBSD.org/gnome/docs/develfaq.html [freebsd.org] for info
about installing Gnome 2.12 now!
Awesome! (Score:3, Funny)
- How Jeff Waugh described every Gnome project and technology development at OSCON 2005.
http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/os2005/view/
Evince looks useful (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Evince looks useful (Score:2)
Konqueror has managed to display most of the files I throw at it, is something like that what you mean?
Re:Evince looks useful (Score:2)
Perhaps in the future Evince will be the best thing ever, but I'm not sure why it's getting so much hype. At the moment it just seems to be a prettier ghostview.
Re:Evince looks useful (Score:2)
More supported formats would be useful, and under way, but it is already far, far more than a prettier Ghostview.
Oh sorry, missing one feature from Acrobat: multiple documents
Re:Evince looks useful (Score:5, Interesting)
And then: enter Evince. Does everything I need, has good support for thumbs, ToC, search and it is is really fast too. I can even click those links, both external and internal, very very nice. It also provides thumbnails to Nautilus, further strengthening preview. More formats will be nice, but I mainly do and will use it for PDF. Acrobat's a goner!
The only thing I'm missing is multiple documents, preferably in tabs. Acrobat has this via the "Windows" menu, and most other apps use this as a great way to collect multiple relevant whatevers in the same window instead of cluttering the task bar. Browsers, IMs, editors, well just about anything does this. Sadly it seems the makers of Evince disagree: http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=306060 [gnome.org] - I think they misunderstand the issue though, it's not about interlinking and "remembering to read". Hope it will be reopened at some point as it is both consistent with other apps (like Epiphany) and extremely useful.
Re:Evince looks useful (Score:2)
Also, many pdf files I try to view cause gpdf or gv to spew tons of errors and give up, whereas xpdf or acroread handle them correctly. Hopefully they've made evince a lot more robust...
Re:Evince looks useful (Score:2)
Re:Evince looks useful (Score:2)
Re:Evince looks useful (Score:2)
But I'm stuck in the old school mindset that you use one viewer for one type of document - image viewer for images, browser for webpages, and a viewer for printer-agnostic documents like pdf and postscript. Being able to view everything under the sun with one viewer just
Runs great on DragonFlyBSD (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Runs great on DragonFlyBSD (Score:2)
The fact that it's not going to be in the ports tree until 6.0 comes out is more of a logistical thing... it's certainly ready to use and it only take a minor step to merge Marcus' "stable" ports into your own local ports tree:
http://www.freebsd.org/gnome/docs/develfaq.html [freebsd.org]
It amounts to all of one additional line in your ports-updating script, which I comment/uncomment as needed. From there on, everything is the same.
So you're switching th
meun editor... (Score:2)
... Nothing interesting here (Score:2)
Compositing manager (Score:2, Insightful)
KDE does all this nicely. Gnome on the other hand...
Well, I guess it has some new games and a menu editor this time around...
Re:Compositing manager (Score:2)
ooohh... (Score:4, Funny)
That's so.. uh.. 1982.
Re:ooohh... (Score:2)
But meanwhile, KDE has added an automated menu updating tool that seems to find all my graphical programs, whether they are Gnome-ish or KDE or just plain old X, plus adds a number of terminal programs (e.g. lynx), and adds nice icons for them all.
Not really havin
Re:ooohh... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, you could of course drag & drop items directly to the menu like you've always been able to do, but that would have required you to have actually tried it before you posted.
A few steps back? (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyone using the Gentoo unstable tree has seen some of the more recent Gnome features including stability in Nautilus. Going from Nautilus 2.8 to 2.10 I noticed it was a lot faster, however it crashed every 10 minutes (I'm not exaggerating). However in several of the point releases since then, I've noticed improved stability and even the cool tree view thing in the browser.
I am hopeful for Gnome 2.12. Hopefully it won't suck anywhere near as bad as the initial release of the other Gnome versions.
SumDog
Ah, with Breezy I'm only an update (or two?) away (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, and the pac-man screensaver now has diff colors for the ghosts, a big/flashing pill so pac-man can eat the blue ghosts and finally pac-man dies properly when he touches a ghost! Now that's progress!
Gnome and Nintendo (Score:4, Insightful)
How to kill Nautilus (sort of OT but useful!) (Score:4, Informative)
1) Find a better filer! It's not that hard. Try "gentoo" (the filer, not the distro), and "rox-filer" for starters.
2) Run gnome-session-properties from an xterm.
3) Find Nautilus' entry in the "Current Session" tab.
4) Click "Remove", then "Apply". Bam! No more Nautilus.
5) To make the change stick, close all the apps you don't want to run when you log-in and then log out. Be sure to check the "Save current setup" box.
6) Profit!
GNOME will now start more quickly. However, you will not have a desktop background or icons, unless you're already using a non-GNOME utility to set them. The background is easy enough:
1) Open up gnome-session-properties again. Go to the "Startup Programs" tab.
2) Click "Add" and input the following: gconftool-2 --type string --set
3) Leave the "Order" field set to 50 (trust me on this one!), hit "Okay", and close the session tool.
Your background should be displayed next time you log in. Note that, if you somehow screw this up (say, by setting a order value that's too low), you can fix it from text mode by editing the ~/.gnome2/session-manual file. Just wipe out everything under [Default].
The icons are a bit trickier, and maybe not worth it. You need a program like desklaunch to create desktop icons. I suggest just creating a new hideable panel and putting launchers on it instead, since desklaunch requires you to explicitly set x and y pixel positions for icons. If anyone knows of a better prog than desklaunch, please chime in.
Strangely, contrary to the KDE whiners... (Score:4, Insightful)
KDE on the other hand seems to pride itself on being as different as possible, seems to be designed to make guesses as to what I want as opposed to asking me or simply doing the logical default, and is largely irrellevant to most supposedly KDE-centric apps when it comes to running them on Gnome. I don't have to change out of Gnome for KDE for them to work in almost every case.
Gnome is a pretty damn decent environment and I can see why it is the FC default.
Re:Strangely, contrary to the KDE whiners... (Score:4, Insightful)
That's because the apps just load the libs they need from kde. Gnome apps do the same in kde, they just load the gnome libs they need. That's how they're supposed to work! Hell, you can use gnome and kde apps in blackbox... They just won't fit in with the 'look' like the rest of your desktop, unless you use the same theme for both DE's, like bluecurve.
Me, I like KDE. You like Gnome. It's all good.
First impressions: (Score:3, Interesting)
First of all, congrats to the Ubuntu folks on a fine Live CD system. It's rather nice and very intelligently makes use of the Debian Installer system for hardware probing. Also, props to the Gnome guys for their hard work on this release.
Now, having said all that, I don't get it. I try every single Gnome release because so many people in the Linux community whom I respect seem to think the world of Gnome. And I just tried it again and yet again I'm left thinking that there's some fundamentally philosophical misunderstanding between myself and the Gnome developers.
The first thing I checked was how well Gnome and KDE integrate in a hybrid environment. Sure enough, Gnome still insists on ignoring the X Windowing system's DPI information and overriding it (and all other applications started after gnome-settings-daemon) with it's favorite 96 DPI. Without a copy of KDE on the Live CD I wasn't able to see if Gnome has adopted the Freedesktop.org MIME standard in this release so that downloads in Epiphany and Firefox will default to the same applications that Konqueror does (it doesn't in 2.10).
Moving on, three failings on the Live CD itself: First, the video and audio samples that are supposed to be used to show off Totem don't work at all. Totem declares that "Cannot play: the resource file:/// isn't writable". Second, Abiword, the word processor defaulted to handle the Gnome philosophical documents on the CD has several problems rendering glyphs on its page. For instance, a lower-case "g" will have the bottom of it cut off because Abiword hasn't correctly set the line-height of the font in question. This is an example of font rendering problems all over Gnome 2.12 apps. Third, the network browser application correctly found my local browse master but instead of listing any server or desktop which responded to its smbtree requests, it requested a username and password to connect to my local browse master. When I rejected it because I didn't want to log in, it failed to show my network entirely rendering the entire network browser system useless (no information of any kind displayed).
Usability: my two pet peeves are still there. Window snapping can only be activated by an undocumented holding of the ALT key while dragging. The file open/save dialog boxes STILL don't have a URL field. One can only access this field by hitting an undocumented CTRL+L (that's usability!?).
I didn't have time to check to see if this version of Evolution has working support for Maildir's that doesn't crash the system when moving large numbers of messages around.
Other things I noticed: a couple of new Gnome apps (Tom Boy, Minue) are moving to Mono/(Linux's
And feel free to flame me. But these are my experiences.
Re:First impressions: (Score:3, Informative)
"Sure enough, Gnome still insists on ignoring the X Windowing system's DPI information and overriding it (and all other applications started after gnome-settings-daemon) with it's favorite 96 DPI."
I agree that it should default to the X DPI information, the GNOME DPI-settings are per user, rather than per machine. A much more sensible way, especially since people's eyesight vary wildly.
"The file open/save dialog b
About Spatial Mode... (Score:4, Informative)
Not keeping up with the Joneses or the latest discussion about the latest version of Gnome, I was left in the dark when it came to know what was meant when the poster mentioned, "spacial tree browsing." I found the following two articles useful:
However, I don't have the foggiest as to what spacial tree mode really means. Can anybody enlighten me or point me at some screen shots?
-AP
GNOME lags behind (Score:5, Interesting)
Well yeah, maybe in 2020.
You see, Nautilus alone is vastly inferior to Finder (the new one). Of all gnome components, nautilus is the one that sucks most. Try browsing a large directory with thousands of files with nautilus, konqueror and windows explorer. The latter ones scan the directory MUCH faster. Nautilus takes about 1-2 MINUTES - unacceptable.
The main point of new gnome bugfix releases should be to improve nautilus. Speed it up, say, to about 100 times its current "speed".
Also, it is evident that once an ORDINARY USER (no hacker, no power user, no admin, no dev) has to edit a config file, the whole design has failed. Of course, this is not gnomes problem alone, but to a great deal the underlying OS; however, we are talking about an OSX killer, right? If you aren't lucky, and the hardware doesn't fit 1:1 with the distro, you have to dig through obscure manpages.
I also read that anyone that is not able to edit configfiles is an idiot and everyone MUST learn how to do this. See, I doubt a biologist that made some photos about a weird plant and want to download them from his cam to his PC is interested in editing config files just to get this to work - he JUST WANTS TO DO HIS JOB and is certainly not interested in learning sh and all about the Unix architecture. Config files per se are ok, as long as editing them is optional. Unfortunately, it still is mandatory sometimes (fortunately, the camera issue is resolved automatically by modern distros - but still, simple samba shares have to be edited by hand for example).
Re:GNOME lags behind (Score:3, Informative)
My AMD Athlon takes 6 seconds to show
Showing huge directories is also an incredible borderline case that hardly defines the operation of the file manager (and now PLEASE don't ignore the previous paragraph just because I wrote this).
What they should do next (Score:4, Interesting)
Right now, they are just doing too many things at once. Sure, there are Evolution users, but most people use Firefox and Thunderbird nowadays. Who needs yet another video player or CD ripper? It's more important to have a good CD burner - right now I still need to resort to the command line to blank a CD-RW. I sometimes have problems connecting to Samaba servers via Nautilus, the use of the mount command is required.
So, focus on the basics and make them better. Don't reinvent the wheel.
Mandriva packages of GNOME 2.12 (Score:3, Informative)
I've prepared packages of GNOME 2.12 ready to be installed with urpmi on your Cooker system:
http://gpwgnome.osknowledge.org/ [osknowledge.org]
There are a few missing features, especially support for the new HAL and D-Bus, this is owed to Mandriva's decision of shipping with the old versions of both in the 2006 version. Otherwise, these packages are working fine, please give them a try.
Re:Jesus... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Jesus... (Score:2)
Re:Jesus... (Score:2)
Re:clipboard? (Score:2)
Yes, they have. It's in TFA. You might consider reading this one, it's full of pretty pictures.
Re:clipboard? (Score:2)
Nobody said you had to use it, but it's certainly helpful for it to be there by default.
Re:Good bye OSX (Score:5, Insightful)
Gnome is the OSX killer.
You are killing right? Its been how many years, better part of a decade and they just added freakin' clipboard services.
Call me back when they:
Re:Speed boosts etc? (Score:3, Interesting)
But most of win98's instability problems _were_ due to the underlying OS. It's hard to separate the OS from the GUI in windows - especially 9x.
In any event, you get the standard UNIXy goodness - if an app crashes, it doesn't take down the window manager or GUI, etc. (with the exception of 3D programs locking up the system with a buggy video driver - rare, but it happens). Gnome applications don't seem to have a crashing problem related to gnome itself.
X, of course, runs beneath gnome'
Re:release notes app font (Score:2)
Dunno about the application fonts, but probably something similar - i.e. something in the default X fonts.
Re:release notes app font (Score:5, Funny)
I've always found that to be interesting, because I'm either stupid, they're cheating, or getting useable fonts in X is just too fucking hard. Much more than it needs to be.
Re:release notes app font (Score:3, Informative)
The window title font is Bitstream Vera Sans Bold 10.
Re:Notes. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Blah. (Score:3, Funny)
My Gnome 2.12 desktop does not look like Windows [ubuntuforums.org] you insensitive clod!