Matthias Clasen <[email protected]> wrote: >> to be fair, I'd envision this as a completely separate session that >> you need to install and select, similar to what Ubuntu does — >> especially if we want to call it "GNOME Classic".
Agreed. > I don't think a separate session will work very well for this - for > one thing, setting this up will require a number of settings to be > tweaked (e.g. the one for the minimize button), and alternative > sessions don't have the right infrastructure for that. A separate user session would be the best user experience, IMO. > The session > chooser on the login screen is not the best designed part of the login > experience either. That's a non-argument. We can improve it. The Tweak Tool is *completely* the wrong place for this. In what way is completely changing the shell a "tweak"? How does it make sense to be able to completely change the experience using a setting that is included in a non-core application, and which could later be removed? What kind of experience will you get when the shell transitions to "classic" mode right in front of the user's eyes? The Tweak Tool shouldn't have anything to do with extensions. They are something that you install and run as a part of the system, not something to be "tweaked" via settings. Allan _______________________________________________ desktop-devel-list mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list
