this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2023
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Linux

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[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I don’t get why most comments here are so negative. It’s Linux, if GNOME no longer fits your needs, you can always switch to another desktop. There are lots to choose from!

Which don't mean that we cannot criticize GNOME while discussing 😉

I can agree that there could be a problem with too many windows on a desktop but the solution they propose is the worst possible one.

For a user it make no sense that when you add a window to the desktop (say open a terminal) all the other window move to other places (or you switch to another workspace entirely)

Aside the fact that usually I (and people in general) remember where a window is, the big problem is that I positioned the applications as I need and I want them to stay there because I need them that way, even when I add another one. It is my problem where to put the new window, and I will probably put it where I need it.

Put it that way: it would be a good idea if in a IDE every time you open a new panel, all the already open panels change their arrangement ?

It is just another case of "we know better than the user what the user needs" from the GNOME developers (remember when they remove the advanced option of the printers because "users would be confused" ?)

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Which don’t mean that we cannot criticize GNOME while discussing 😉

No, but I think one should try something first and then criticise. Sometimes new stuff just has a learning curve because it is different to what you are used to, but after learning it, it turns out that you actually like it better.

Aside the fact that usually I (and people in general) remember where a window is, the big problem is that I positioned the applications as I need and I want them to stay there because I need them that way, even when I add another one. It is my problem where to put the new window, and I will probably put it where I need it.

That's the approach with floating window managers. But some people like window managers that do window arrangement for them, i. e. tiling window managers. GNOME seems to try to combine elements of both approaches into one new idea. ;)

Personally I actually hate having to manually re-arrange my windows. If a window manager managed to do this for me in an intuitive way, working on my PC would be more pleasant for me. That's why I think that I might like GNOME's new idea.

Other projects, like Windows 11 or Cosmic desktop also experiment with overhauling window management. Windows 11 includes several different tiling layouts that you can select manually and Cosmic includes auto tiling functionality. GNOME's proposal just seems to go a bit further, similar to how GNOME workspaces are one step ahead of virtual desktops on Windows, since GNOME's workspaces are dynamic, whereas on Windows you have to manually add and remove them.

It is just another case of “we know better than the user what the user needs” from the GNOME developers

No, it is just another case of GNOME trying to improve the user experience on regular computers.

(remember when they remove the advanced option of the printers because “users would be confused” ?)

I would argue that there shouldn't be two settings menus for printers. There should be one that is able to do all common tasks. So I agree with the decision to remove one of them, but I disagree with not offering essential settings (e. g. Sound Juicer lost the ability to specify compression ratio).