texanpenguin
Registered Penguin
GNOME is fine for people who know what they're looking for. The problem is, it just plain doesn't scale well. At all.
Oh and (relative to Aqua and even XP) it looks pretty bad.
There is just such a horrid sense of hiding options away in contextual menus that runs rife through every WM I've ever used. I assume that comes from the developers being far more comfortable with things being quick.
Let me present an example:
At Uni, my design lecturer uses a Mac. You know how if you have a multi-session CD/DVD it appears as multiple discs on the desktop upon mounting it? Well he has a DVD-R which he's been using (obviously) for YONKS. It has (guessing here) about twenty sessions. When he's finished with what he's doing, he drags EVERY SINGLE ONE to the trash. He doesn't select them all (with the mouse, the keyboard, whatever); he drags EACH and EVERY one to the trash.
When he's got Photoshop open and wants to get to Illustrator, he doesn't head for the Dock three centimetres away from his mouse; no he goes to the Apple menu, goes to Recent Items, and selects it there.
When he wants to switch between applications, he doesn't Cmd+Tab or Exposé his windows; he minimises all the ones in the way.
And he's perfectly happy with the way he does things. If you put an idiot like that in front of a Linux terminal (speaking mainly about KDE here, GNOME is much better IMO, but still the same point), he'd be dumbfounded.
I think all those projects need to gather donations and employ a UI expert to rewrite their way of doing things.
Oh, and every version of KDE I've ever used crashes at least twice a session (sometimes to the point of having to reinstall from the image on the Uni server).
It's still not ready for the big time.
I think for OS X to be the only really usable alternative to Windows and also to have ZERO viruses; well it's the best machine for ninety percent of people.
Oh and (relative to Aqua and even XP) it looks pretty bad.
There is just such a horrid sense of hiding options away in contextual menus that runs rife through every WM I've ever used. I assume that comes from the developers being far more comfortable with things being quick.
Let me present an example:
At Uni, my design lecturer uses a Mac. You know how if you have a multi-session CD/DVD it appears as multiple discs on the desktop upon mounting it? Well he has a DVD-R which he's been using (obviously) for YONKS. It has (guessing here) about twenty sessions. When he's finished with what he's doing, he drags EVERY SINGLE ONE to the trash. He doesn't select them all (with the mouse, the keyboard, whatever); he drags EACH and EVERY one to the trash.
When he's got Photoshop open and wants to get to Illustrator, he doesn't head for the Dock three centimetres away from his mouse; no he goes to the Apple menu, goes to Recent Items, and selects it there.
When he wants to switch between applications, he doesn't Cmd+Tab or Exposé his windows; he minimises all the ones in the way.
And he's perfectly happy with the way he does things. If you put an idiot like that in front of a Linux terminal (speaking mainly about KDE here, GNOME is much better IMO, but still the same point), he'd be dumbfounded.
I think all those projects need to gather donations and employ a UI expert to rewrite their way of doing things.
Oh, and every version of KDE I've ever used crashes at least twice a session (sometimes to the point of having to reinstall from the image on the Uni server).
It's still not ready for the big time.
I think for OS X to be the only really usable alternative to Windows and also to have ZERO viruses; well it's the best machine for ninety percent of people.