On Fri, Apr 8, 2011 at 3:05 AM, Onyeibo Oku <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Thu, 2011-04-07 at 16:56 -0400, J. Adam Craig wrote:
>
> > I don't think the problem is so much that Gnome 3 is "broken", but
> > just that its new right now, and while its definitely more efficient,
> > one doesn't start really realizing that until they stop stumbling
> > around looking for things at their old places, and start finding them
> > automatically where they are now.
>
> I like the way you put it: 'start finding them automatically where they
> are now' .... Historians really pack some punch with words. :)
>
> Well, what I like about Gnome3 (+ Gnome-shell) is that its a DE with a
> lot of possibilities.  I still envision better implementations of the
> new navigation concept and maybe one day they will materialize.  Its
> that potential that makes it interesting.  For now, lets enjoy some
> change.
>
>
What I like about GNOME Shell is that really clean look when you log in..
it's like walking into a clean house with no clutter. Even my macbook shows
a lot of clutter with the dock, menu strip, and all that.. I've started not
like OSX either now (well I never really liked it all that much, but way
better than windows).  I think it's just so brilliant that made expose
actually useful, moving into a more main line use than they did in Apple.  I
just wish I had more space in that overview for other stuff like weather,
system status etc.  I definitely no longer subscribe to having applets on
that bar at all.  I did miss system monitor for a little bit, as I have a
zen feeling when I know the machine is at peace. :-)  But I figure there can
be a more intelligent way of showing that.


sri
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