In another thread the other day I mentioned something about a GNOME developer's statement regarding the design of the GNOME 3 desktop. Finally found it:
http://www.christoph-wickert.de/blog...te-of-the-day/
Has anyone done any research to determine whether GNOME 3 has actually attracted new users? I'm genuinely curious about this, because my suspicion is that it probably hasn't. Much like I doubt that Windows 8, with all its simplification, flattness, and whiteness, will attract new users.
http://www.christoph-wickert.de/blog...te-of-the-day/
When I asked how to do all this in GNOME 3, Bastien (who helped to invent this nice mechanism in GNOME 2) after a little back and forth told me how things work in GNOME 3. They don’t…
This “We are not designing a desktop for people who …” has become a new meme. GNOME 3 is not designed for people
and many other people I forgot. If GNOME continues to narrow down their target audience like this, I wonder if there is actually somebody left.
“Because we’re not designing a desktop for people who like to choose their own terminal emulators.“
- who want to minimize windows
- who want to change the theme, icons or fonts
- who want to configure power management actions
- who want to use panel applets/extensions that can easily be added or removed
- who want to select their native language on the login screen instead of having to re-login after they have changed it in the control center
- who want to use their keyboard layout so they can actually log in
- who want to shutdown their computers from within a GNOME session
and many other people I forgot. If GNOME continues to narrow down their target audience like this, I wonder if there is actually somebody left.
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