Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I like GNOME too. It's the most usable Linux GUI I've tried to far, with Cinnamon a close second.

I like the fat title bar with controls. It's like the Windows 7/macOS aesthetic without wasting space for a title bar above it.

To me, the people complaining that the save button should be on the bottom instead of the top have the same limited view as the people who complain that macOS has the window controls on the top left instead of the top right. It's an arbitrary difference that they claim goes against human intuition but I have seen no proof of any of that, only assumptions based on what direction they read in.

I don't use the save button, I hit enter after typing a name. I don't hit the open button, I double click. Maybe that makes me weird, but I think the "problem" is grossly overstated.

Seems to me like some people just want to go back to the GNOME2 days and that's fine. I may think it looks janky and outdated, but that's what some people like.

Luckily, they don't need to use modern GNOME, there are projects out there that replicate the older design style. I don't see what constantly harping on the newer UI adds if you're not going to be happy with it anyway. Unlike with Windows, where I sorely miss the glory days of Windows Aero, there are alternatives one click of a button away. Just install something else, anything else. KDE and LXDE allow you to recreate your weird old setup with some tweaking, go use that.

However, I do have some problems with the way the GNOME team operates sometimes. There have been attempts to address the file picker problem that went absolutely nowhere. The decision to completely abandon all styling options also disappointed me. The unreasonable demand of forcing client side decorations onto everyone because of their preference annoys me greatly. I like the stuff made for GNOME on GNOME but I wouldn't use it on any other desktop environment or operating system because the "let's do everything ourselves" approach makes applications look incredibly out of place.

Of course, the constant ranting about any change that doesn't turn GNOME back into GNOME2 only drives forward the segregation between devs and their users. After all, if nothing GNOME does is ever any good according to the loud minority, why even bother listening to them?

The most used Linux distros out there are Debian, Fedora and Ubuntu, all of which ship GNOME out of the box. There's a good reason for that.



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: