Am 24.10.2011 13:59, schrieb Robert Curriden:
Panels, visual effects, plug-ins, forcing the use of Gnome shell...

This move by Canonical is not unlike Microsoft's changing in their own
UI, and is just as arrogant.

It's not just Canonical, it's everybody! There is a serious conflict between developers with early adopters versus "users". In my role as a user I started with KDE 1 and faithfully followed through KDE 2, 3, and 3.5, which did almost everything I wanted and could be configured to be similar to Gnome, or vice versa. It also worked perfectly with Edubuntu simply by installing the meta package kubuntu-desktop.

Then came the totally new KDE 4, which is cool, but still doesn't work well enough for old "users" like me, who also miss some of the features of KDE 3. I tried it for a while and still have (to have) it installed for KDE-4-only programs like Marble, but have gone back to KDE 3.5, which is much faster and less buggy. I also have the classic Gnome installed of course, but it seems a dead end apparently to be replaced by something completely different soon. Canonical just preemted this with Unity, which seems OK for new users and for mobile devices with small screens, who just want a program starter, but is not something I want to use myself on a large screen.

I also tried Xubuntu and Lubuntu desktops and will probably use one of these when KDE 3.5 becomes untenable (it is already deteriorating and switching between KDE 3 and 4 programs is possible but a bit unnerving because the look and feel is so different.

In short, this excessive high-speed forking has seriously impaired the Linux desktop. I wouldn't know what to recommend a business user or indeed a school. Many organisations are moving from Windows XP to Windows 7. A switch to KDE 4 would be of the same order of difficulty and some distributions like Mepis soften the switch remarkably well (I use Mepis at work). The reason I can't recommend Kubuntu for Edubuntu is because in my opinion the Kubuntu implementation of KDE 4 has "lost" the classic desktop users somewhere. I'm sure it could be tweaked by experts, but it isn't something I can do without losing patience.

BTW, my problems were often a combination of low performance and usabilty, i.e. a warning appears, in the wrong colours, and disappears before I can deciffer it, or a button action appears not to work, so you try a few times and give up, and then after a while you get ten windows at once.

Best, Theo Schmidt

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