On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 11:01 PM, <[email protected]>wrote:

> I admit that was a bad analogy (I should have thought of a more solid
> one). Bicycles are cheaper than motorcycles and are used for exercise,
> while motorcycles are used for quickly moving around. The difference
> here is that GNOME 3 and GNOME 2 are meant to do the same thing, which
> is not the case with this analogy, so it's a bad one as I said, and I
> apologize. GNOME 3 aims to be better than GNOME 2 at the same job (and
> in many areas it already is), so a "what's good for you might not be
> good for me" argument isn't really appropriate here.
>


I think a better analogy is switching one of the old pedal brake bikes for a
newer, handlebar brake model. I learned how to ride on a bike with pedal
brakes, and when I first got a bike with handlebar brakes, I felt lost and
confused. I just wanted the pedal brakes back, because they seemed like a
better system and I was used to them. However, it was standard wisdom in the
bicycling world that the handlebar brakes are better, and every high end
bicycle has them. So, after giving it some time and working with the new
system, rather than pining for the old, I found that the handlebar brakes
are much better, and now I find it extremely odd and inefficient to go back
to the old system.

One could also remain in the bicycle world and make an analogy from
switching from a "regular" bike to a road bike, or from switching from a
bike without gears to a bike with gears. However, I think the brake analogy
is the best, because you're not gaining any new functionality; it's just a
better way of doing things. You just have to take the time to get used to it
and trust that the people who designed it had a legitimate goal in mind.

Namaste.

-- 
Take a few minutes just to sit and breathe.
The world will wait for you.

My Google Profile <http://www.google.com/profiles/msplanchard>
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