Gnome 2.18 Released 253
xdancergirlx writes "Gnome 2.18 was released today (on time as usual). Detailed release notes are available. Nothing revolutionary in this release but definitely some nice new features, bug fixes, and improvements."
Gnome (Score:5, Funny)
I can't feel any responsiveness improvements. (Score:5, Interesting)
In any case, earlier today I built GNOME 2.18 on my system. I've been using it for a few hours now. And compared to the KDE 3.5.6 installation I was using earlier today, I think it's significantly slower. Evolution is far more heavy-weight than KMail. Nautilus takes longer to display directories. I have one directory with about 15000 photos in it. Nautilus crashes when viewing it, while with Konqueror I can easily scroll through the thumbnails within about a second.
Maybe it's just a quality control problem with GNOME. While I don't follow the development mailing lists very closely, I've heard from co-workers that GNOME is suffering from some pretty serious organizational issues. Low-quality code is being accepted into GTK+ and GNOME itself, and many people are noticing a decrease in its quality as of late. Maybe somebody can shed more light on whether or not these rumors are true?
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I reported a bug in Metacity's focus-follows-mouse behaviour years ago. It turned out to be a dupe of another bug where we were told that the behaviour (different to every other WM I have ever used) was "by design". When a few other people chimed in agreeing and suggesting that the traditional behaviour restored or a (possibly hidden) preference added to control it, the bug was unceremoniously closed. The Metacity developer preferred some tweaky special casing approach that could " [gnome.org]
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Yes. Just check out bugzilla.gnome.org or the bug tracker of your distro.
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Re:I can't feel any responsiveness improvements. (Score:5, Insightful)
Nautilus is in dire need of a code audit, just to ensure that everything in there is up to par. Hells, if I were in charge at GNOME, I'd probably stop developing new features in Nautilus and work on the audit for the next cycle.
Honestly, though, the one thing that hurts GNOME the most is the six month release cycle. If they'd even just use a single one-year release cycle, just to clean things up, they'd be in much better shape.
All that said, though, GNOME is my desktop. It's what I learned first, and honestly, KDE's configurability just scares me. Also, I remember too well a time when KDE looked like shit out of the box. Thankfully, that's no longer a problem.
Re:I can't feel any responsiveness improvements. (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, with the focus on Mono applications, Gnome seems to be getting slower and even more bloated with every release.
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Re:I can't feel any responsiveness improvements. (Score:5, Funny)
I know what you mean. I had to configure my background in KDE once. Christ, it gave me THREE options! 'No picture', 'Picture' and 'Slide show'. I mean, WTF? I'm not a rocket surgeon.
Then I wanted Konqueror to open links in tabs. People are right when they say KDE has a cluttered interface. It dragged me into Settings, then into something called Web Behaviour, and then forced me to click the box saying 'Open links in new tab'. After that I had to rest with 2 hours of TV.
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but in all honesty the default behavior for opening new links should be in tabs. that is the sane option and the user should have to specify if you want them seperately
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No, Evolution Exchange functionality is slow, but very functional.
Normally, I'd be the first to complain loudly about Evolution, but for all the things I dislike about Evolution, the reason I (have no choice but to) use it is because it's the only usably way to access my corporate Exchange email (no, I can't convince them to turn IMAP back on). It's slow, but functional. If it weren't for Evolution, I'd be forced to choose between the web interface or a second com
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It does crash, but not regularly. I fire it up in the morning, use it all day for email (and occasionally to put things on my calendar), and then shut it down normally before leaving work. Maybe 2 or 3 times a week I'll get a message that some process has gone away unexpectedly, but I've never lost any data because of it. It only costs me the time it takes to read the message, kill any remaining evolution framework, and then re
KDE configurability? (Score:2)
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And some of the Gnome apps, like deskbar and dictionary applet, are the main reason I'm still using Gnome.
Well, that and the fact it looks better (and Gnome themes are much nicer than KDE ones).
Actually, if E17 could swallow the dictionary applet, I think I'd never look back...
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I've found KDE to feel simply -less- slow. Could some of this "slowness" be due to a lack of threading? I don't understand how it all works but my intuition was: if lots of services are working in serial and each has to send up a flag for the next to do something, and then nothing happens until the next service refreshes and checks up on the previous se
"[OK] [Cancel]" vs. "[Cancel] [OK]" ? (Score:2)
To me, the prime UI difference is that in dialogs, there is "[OK] [Cancel]" in one, and "[Cancel] [OK]" in the other. That is the #1 thing that keeps me from trying it out, because I instinctively mix those two up. I use mostly the keyboard to answer dialogs, so in Gnome I have a grim tendency to choose the wrong option...
Do you have a way around that? Or do you just not have as much muscle memory (or whatever it is that applies)?
Knome skin (Score:5, Funny)
Is GNOME stagnating? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Look, kid, don't put words in my mouth. I didn't say GNOME rules. What I said is that the functionality you want isn't in metacity and you're going to need Beryl to get there. It's all Free and free, so I'm not sure what you're complaining about.
In fact, I don't think you really understand the Unix mindset, which is that everything starts small and sim
Gnome 2.18 with performance improvements! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Gnome 2.18 with performance improvements! (Score:5, Funny)
Did they include... (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.linux.com/article.pl?sid=07/02/16/1937
Re:Did they include... (Score:4, Interesting)
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In fact, probably 90% of usability is finding what people want to do and making it trivially easy. The stuff the majority don't want to do remains hard or impossible. It sounds a little strict, but it seems to pay off for, say, Apple.
The reason Linus doesn't like it is because he wants every little byte to be configurable, like a lot of Linux users. That's fine; he can use KDE instead. The stupid things about this situation is:
1) That people give a crap what Linus s
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Actually, Linus uses and prefers KDE but was raked over the coals for publicly stating that was his preference because of what he saw as flaws in GNOME. It was the GNOME g
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Re:Did they include... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Did they include... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Did they include... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Did they include... (Score:5, Insightful)
They remove an unnecessary and artificial restriction -- and also apparently simplify the code, which is always a good thing.
they add one feature.. in particular, the ability to configure left, right and middle click to do what you like. Which, ya know, is useful to like 3 people.
It sounds pretty useful to me... Obviously the MS-raised proles will never use it, but many more clueful people use Gnome too ("like, ya know").
Priorities (Score:5, Insightful)
What's more important, for the first time we ship online games, chess with a 3D look, and endless Sudoku entertainment.
Good thing we've got our priorities straight.
Re:Priorities (Score:4, Insightful)
Obviously they're being facetious.
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> Good thing we've got our priorities straight.
It's a problem of manpower. My understanding is that there was a sudden and unexpected number of Gnome documentation people who were unable to contribute as they have in the past, which is what prompted this post by Quim Gil [desdeamericaconamor.org] calling for help.
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I did not see in the KWallet docs (http://docs.kde.org/stable/en/kdeutils/kwallet/in dex.html) anything about it being a frontend to gpg. KWallet appears to be closer to the gnome password manager than the newer gpg management feature. Since I removed KDE from my system a year and a half a
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Sounds like you're looking for KGpg then.
Re:It has nearly caught up to KDE......... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Scroll Wheel (Score:2)
Re:Scroll Wheel (Score:4, Informative)
I'm using Ubuntu 6.10 with Gnome 2.16
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Nothing revolutionary (Score:4, Funny)
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That's Nice (Score:3, Insightful)
Just as some examples:
Are open source desktop developers so focused on trying to make it "easy" for Windows user to convert they get Microsoft tunnel vision and can't innovate?
It's the year 2007 and we have desktops with the same intelligence as those back in the early 80's.
Re:That's Nice (Score:5, Funny)
*ducks*
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Well, they did. Really. In the early 80s, you were using computers because you were in some geeky CS/number crunching job, which means you probably were above average intelligent and more often than not had domain-specific knowledge. Desktops are a lot more user-friendly, but in general a desktop isn't supposed to be "clippy"-style intelligent. You can still commit harakiri like "rm -f
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Do you have any idea how difficult something like that would be to code?
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Actually, in a roundabout way.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Namely, I'm talking about MusicBrainz. Programs will analyze and produce a fingerprint, and MusicBrainz will do a fairly good job of matching that fingerprint to the track. From there, tempo, mood, etc could all be community stored info. More esoteric tracks suffer, but as Wikipedia shows, things that don't work well in theory can sometimes work surprisingly well i
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That's why we always keep going back to the command line shell where you can do a grep on the output of just about anything. The GUI has a place but I'd rather send an entire file through sed with a short command than move the mouse to the first character of every line, right click, and scroll down to delete, then left click as I have seen some purely bound to the GUI do.
The biggest pr
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In terms of the mp3s, what I really mean is that
OMG, I killed your DSP beat finder! (Score:2)
Defining songs by tempo and beat is as you say..completely possible using DSP and other techniques.
And watch the DSP plug-in, which is more than likely tuned for 4/4 rock or 4/4 techno or both, utterly fail on songs that use frequent tempo changes (e.g. "Kalinka" by Red Army Choir), drum tracks that do not repeat (e.g. "Flutter" by Autechre [wikipedia.org]), mixed meters [wikipedia.org] (e.g. "Changes" by Yes [wikipedia.org]), or polyrhythm [wikipedia.org].
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I believe you're looking for this [squeak.org]
It's got your drag and drop widget goodness. It won't make them magically work of course.
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B, because machine image recognition is an area of tricky tricky research and requires serious computational power. Note that spammers have yet to defeat the wonky text + squiggly lines test for posting on slashdot. And thats just OCR. (While people with very limited intellectual capacity seems to make it through in hoard
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So, when are we going to see smart and innovative desktops that dramatically improve user friendliness?
Just as some examples:
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As far as not requiring metadata for MP3s, Amarok already supports this (a
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This is pointless. The dev has to code the search feature into the app for it work, so let it be up to the dev whether or not a search box is appropriate. GTK provides standard widgets to keep the same look and feel between apps, not to replicate functionality.
(If you want a search box in list views, type '/'.)
I have 1000s of photogr
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Sounds like Apple's OpenDoc?
It didn't work because:
1) They released it too early and it quickly gained a reputation for being too buggy.
2) The only application that really embraced it was ClarisWorks. Oh, there was some lame web browser Apple made that used it too called Cyberdog, IIRC.
The idea isn't *bad*, but it really needs a killer ap
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You forgot:
Why doesn't the cup holder pour me a drink when I'm feeling thirsty?
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Right click on the panel with the "K menu" icon and select "Unlock Panels" (if the panel is already unlocked you can skip this step). Then right click on the "K menu" icon and you'll see an option named "Menu Editor". From there you can drag and drop the programs to whichever category you like. You can also create new categories, rename programs, assign shortcuts etc. When you're done m
i've got a picture of it here (Score:2)
No fishing rod?
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Have they... (Score:2, Flamebait)
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3D Chess is everywhere! (Score:5, Funny)
Apple Chess [gete.net]
Windows Chess [kotaku.com]
GNOME Chess [sourceforge.net]
Feel free to flog me now.
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OS/2 Chess [os2world.com]
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GNOME, Ubuntu, and the colour green... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Ubuntu is ugly because they've gone with browns, oranges, and reds -- the worst part of the spectrum.
What I noticed in the screenshot is that background is almost identical to MacOSX's default background. [apple.com] The only difference is that it's green, and MacOSX's is -- wait for it -- blue. If th
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I thought green was better at soothing psychopathic behaviour. It's also suppoosed to be easier for people with various types of dyslexia to read and absorb information, so yeah, go green
That's Not Release Notes (Score:5, Interesting)
Such marketsprach has its place. But the release notes are even more important. And even more important is not pretending that marketsprach is release notes.
If GNOME release managers don't release that by themselves, then the project is in serious trouble.
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Gnome 2.18 Released (Score:3, Funny)
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Fuckin' Slashdot.
Re:Yawn (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, god, I just can't STAND all this hype.
Slow news day (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yawn (Score:5, Funny)
WTF? The post even says "Nothing revolutionary in this release".
If that's hype, you must suffer from spontaneous ejeculation at a repubrocrats/demican rally.
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Re:Underpants gnome? (Score:5, Funny)
I was wondering where my tidy-whities went...
It's 'tighty'. Those things definitely aren't 'tidy' after you leave that nice racing stripe in them.
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