http://www.webupd8.org/2012/02/ubunt...rface-for.html
I noticed the qt dialog in the Kubuntu Precise repositories a couple weeks ago, so I installed it to try it out. It didn't work well, but neither did the gtk version. They both crashed every time I tried to load them. I had to use my browser to move stuff between my local files and UbuntuOne. Monday, an update fixed UbuntuOne and the both versions began working beautifully, and I made the Qt version default in the menu. Looked better, too. I am wondering why they took the time to fix the Gtk version if they were going to drop it?
Is removing from UbuntuOne all traces of Gtk & Python bindings a pattern that could extend to Ubuntu itself? I hope not, at least until the many apps that may possibly be affected have good Qt equivelents. This raises questions about Gtk dependent apps like GIMP, AbiWord, Dia, GnuCash, Gnumeric, Glade, Anjunta, Ekiga, Chromium, GRAMPS, InkScape, LiVES, Midori, Pidgin, gconfig and many others on the Ubuntu platform?
When one considers the dozens upon dozens of applications that are dependent on the pygtk library the carnage carnage could be even worse:
PyGtk Applications
Hundreds of applications could be removed from the Ubuntu repositories. Adding in the supporting libraries and the number of files in the Ubuntu repositories could drop several thousand below the 30,000 now resident. This could have a disastrous affect on the usability of distros spun off of Ubuntu.
I hope this is not a pattern, and doubt that it is, but if it is Kubuntu may be going upstream to Debian faster than anyone realized.
A new Ubuntuone-Installer version was uploaded to the Ubuntu 12.04 Precise Pangolin repositories today and with it, Ubuntu One has switched to a new Qt interface by default, replacing the old GTK version.
According to a bug report, the Ubuntu One team is no longer supporting the GTK interface so it will be removed soon.
Among the reasons behind this decision are: deprecated pygtk bindings, uniform interface across all the platforms, usability and others.
According to a bug report, the Ubuntu One team is no longer supporting the GTK interface so it will be removed soon.
Among the reasons behind this decision are: deprecated pygtk bindings, uniform interface across all the platforms, usability and others.
Is removing from UbuntuOne all traces of Gtk & Python bindings a pattern that could extend to Ubuntu itself? I hope not, at least until the many apps that may possibly be affected have good Qt equivelents. This raises questions about Gtk dependent apps like GIMP, AbiWord, Dia, GnuCash, Gnumeric, Glade, Anjunta, Ekiga, Chromium, GRAMPS, InkScape, LiVES, Midori, Pidgin, gconfig and many others on the Ubuntu platform?
When one considers the dozens upon dozens of applications that are dependent on the pygtk library the carnage carnage could be even worse:
PyGtk Applications
Hundreds of applications could be removed from the Ubuntu repositories. Adding in the supporting libraries and the number of files in the Ubuntu repositories could drop several thousand below the 30,000 now resident. This could have a disastrous affect on the usability of distros spun off of Ubuntu.
I hope this is not a pattern, and doubt that it is, but if it is Kubuntu may be going upstream to Debian faster than anyone realized.
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