I think this is a good move. IMO Ubuntu's Unity-based interface is awkward and difficult to use. I hated it. It's why I'm using Kubuntu instead of Ubuntu. I can certainly appreciate that some people like it and that people have different tastes and work styles. It's one of the great things about Linux. There are so many distros there's bound to be one to fit your ways.
One of the biggest things I hated about the new Ubuntu was the way LibreOffice's interface worked under it. You couldn't pull down a menu with Alt+[a letter]. I use that all the time. For example, I'll hit Alt+FS to save a document. I use that because I've reassigned Ctrl+S to something else, something that's important to me. It's great to have those Alt-based commands to help you work more quickly. In some cases, I've re-assigned the Ctrl-based command to something else. In other cases there is no Ctrl-based command. It drove me nuts having that taken away in Ubuntu. There may have been some way to turn it back on, but I was loving this Ubuntu variant named Kubuntu.
I have another laptop, an Asus netbook, with Kubuntu. At first I toyed with the idea of using a different distro on it, like Mint/KDE, but I really didn't have any compelling reason to do so. I do use Puppy Linux on a bootable USB drive, but that's just a tool for repairing Windows-based machines. I probably wouldn't use Puppy as a main OS.
Excerpt:
One of the biggest things I hated about the new Ubuntu was the way LibreOffice's interface worked under it. You couldn't pull down a menu with Alt+[a letter]. I use that all the time. For example, I'll hit Alt+FS to save a document. I use that because I've reassigned Ctrl+S to something else, something that's important to me. It's great to have those Alt-based commands to help you work more quickly. In some cases, I've re-assigned the Ctrl-based command to something else. In other cases there is no Ctrl-based command. It drove me nuts having that taken away in Ubuntu. There may have been some way to turn it back on, but I was loving this Ubuntu variant named Kubuntu.
I have another laptop, an Asus netbook, with Kubuntu. At first I toyed with the idea of using a different distro on it, like Mint/KDE, but I really didn't have any compelling reason to do so. I do use Puppy Linux on a bootable USB drive, but that's just a tool for repairing Windows-based machines. I probably wouldn't use Puppy as a main OS.
Excerpt:
Ubuntu's ditching Unity's global menu, returning to in-app menus
Unity's global menu was just too darned confusing.
By Ian Paul, PC World | Operating Systems, Canonical, Ubuntu
February 21, 2014, 1:57 PM — There's a major change coming to the Unity interface this April when Canonical releases Ubuntu 14.04, Trusty Tahr: Application menus are going back into their separate windows instead of existing in a global menu at the top the screen, as shown above.
The move is a return of sorts to Ubuntu's pre-Unity existence, when the Gnome desktop was Ubuntu's primary interface. This will be the first time, however, that application menus inside the window are officially a part of Unity.
[continued]
full article: http://www.itworld.com/operating-sys...ning-app-menus
Unity's global menu was just too darned confusing.
By Ian Paul, PC World | Operating Systems, Canonical, Ubuntu
February 21, 2014, 1:57 PM — There's a major change coming to the Unity interface this April when Canonical releases Ubuntu 14.04, Trusty Tahr: Application menus are going back into their separate windows instead of existing in a global menu at the top the screen, as shown above.
The move is a return of sorts to Ubuntu's pre-Unity existence, when the Gnome desktop was Ubuntu's primary interface. This will be the first time, however, that application menus inside the window are officially a part of Unity.
[continued]
full article: http://www.itworld.com/operating-sys...ning-app-menus
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