Hi Pirmin,

On Fri Dec 20 2013 at 10:18:05 PM, Pirmin Braun <[email protected]> wrote:

> do we need another GUI?
> Since 30 years thousands of programmers try to build graphical desktop
> environments. Probably billions of dollars were spent. Now we've seen
> Chromium, Ajax, Android, OS/2, GEM, Windows 3.11/95/XP/7/8/8.1 GNOME, KDE,
> Xfce, LXDE, Enlightenment, Unity, Cinnamon, MATE, NeXTSTEP, MOS.. just to
> name some. Most of them suck. Very few of them are popular. Maybe this is a
> task too big for mankind. Maybe the whole concept with this one-dot
> pointing device is wrong. What will GNUstep with no budget and only a dozen
> programmers do different to bring up the final, long awaited holy grail of
> ultimate graphical desktop environment?
> We are trying quite some years now. What makes you hope the big break
> through will happen next year? And even if it would happen, will any user
> of a popular UI dump it in favour of GNUstep?
>
>
NeXT is gone, and OS X is available only on Apple hardware, but coding user
interfaces with Objective-C is more joyful than with anything else I have
tried.

Having a way to write applications the way I want to write them, but target
platforms that my users want to use, is good. Having a nice environment for
me to write the applications in (and seeing my applications nicely
integrate in this environment) is also good.

There is no need for "yet another user interface". There is a need for a
free software implementation of a GUI that can be conveniently be targeted
using Objective-C. Not because end user will notice, but because the
developer will, and the developer will more easily spew out nice apps that
the user does care about.
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