Multiple tool kits with long term continuity that work well together are a free software strength. I regularly use best of class applications from KDE, Gnome, Trinity, Window Maker, and others on E16. I'm able to share information between these programs, on multiple computers, in ways that are impossible on non free platforms. UI and toolset whiplash is something I hate and is regularly forced on non free software users. Those other platforms are hardly more consistent and are almost always less functional. Free software has given me both beautiful new things and UI continuity with a time scale of decades. Here, have a look,
http://50.80.140.55/photo_album/chron/desktop/trinity16.html http://50.80.140.55/photo_album/chron/desktop/thinkpad/thinkpads.html Please do not call the software I love "ugly" or say that I do not care. I'm going to some effort to keep things stable for myself. Your goals are better than those negative terms. Talk about things you consider beautiful and tell people specific things you consider helpful to people with disabilities. On Friday 08 April 2016, Fabio Pesari wrote: > One of the accusations made against GNU/Linux is that there is no > established "native" look-and-feel on it - GTK programs look different > from Qt programs, JUCE programs look different from Qt programs, Tk > programs and FLTK programs look different from everything else and so on. > > This claim isn't false, it's just that most of us simply don't care > about it and often (unjustly) accuse those people of being superficial. > ...
