The current standard/specifications followed by most of the major UNIX
desktop enviromnents, such as Gnome, KDE, XFCE, LXDE, and ROX, is
called freedesktop.org. See http://www.freedesktop.org/ for detail.

Freedesktop.org is formed by a group of developers. Developers
duscusses on the so called ‘xdg’ mailing list to come up with some
specs which will be followed by major desktop environments. The specs
developed by Freedesktop.org are not formal standards, but they are
widely used in Gnome, KDE, and XFCE.

Freedesktop.org standards defines the way window managers work, they
way how file types are recognized, how icons are named, the way to
define the main application menu, to exchange data between
applications and different desktop environments, and more.

The process to form those specs, however, is quite inefficient and
problematic. All discussions are held on their xdg mailing list. If
someone has a proposal, he/she then writes a draft of the spec for it,
and then post it to the mailing list. Then, if you’re lucky enough, or
you’re a big guy (famous Gnome or KDE developers), you’ll get
attentions and some feedbacks. After lenghthy discussions, if there
are no obvious objections, the draft will be added to freedesktop.org
repository, and was posted on their wiki. This is roughly how the
specs are formed. Nevertheless, if there is no one implement your
spec, your spec soon became useless. That means, either Gnome or KDE
should support your proposal, otherwise no one will use it. How can
something be called ’standard’ when nobody is following it?

Later, if someone has some good ideas regarding to improving the spec,
he/she can post his/her proposal in the mailing list with a patch, and
if there is no objection, the patch *might* be applied to the spec.
However, once the original author/maintainer of that spec doesn’t like
your idea, your proposal will never be accepted. Or even worse, your
messages got omitted by the original author/maintainer of existing
specs, then there is no way to improve anything in existing specs.
This is a real problem in freedesktop.org.

Besides, another big issue here is, most of the specs/standards are
advocated by Gnome or KDE developers, and they don’t even consider the
needs of other desktop environments. The so-called cross-desktop
standards are actually well-implemented in Gnome and KDE only. XFCE
tried hard to follow all those standards, but never get everything
work flawlessly. LXDE tried to follow those specs, too, but found that
many of the specs are very complicated and inefficient, which can slow
down our desktops and add bloatness. Nowadays they are trying to add
more things, and get modern desktops more and more complicated. It’s
nearly impossible to keep lightweight if you want to follow ‘all’ the
standards developed by Gnome and KDE. So that’s why we only supports
the parts we need.

Recent changes in freedesktop.org, like PolicyKit and ConsoleKit, are
mainly developed and implemented by Gnome-related developers. Then the
KDE guys are forced to follow them. They even drop their well-designed
and high performance IPC mechanism, DCOP, and adopt dbus, which is
mainly advocated by Gnome developers. Some people even suggested that
KDE should replace their own VFS with GIO/GVFS developed by Gnome.
Some new technologies are developed by Gnome first, and then they
wrote freedesktop.org specs for them. Later, those things are copied
to KDE and they soon have their KDE equivalence. Unfortunately, all
other desktop environments are forced to follow those standards
whether they really need it or not, to keep the compatability with
those two major desktop environments.

Why should we always be forced to follow all those things we don’t
like or don’t even need? If we don’t follow them, we lost
compatibility with many existing Gnome/GTK+ and KDE programs. In
addition, they modify the specs frequently, and always break backward
compatibility. So our precious time are wasted on re-implement
everything in their new specs and try to fix all broken compatibility
left by them. It’s enough!

Sometimes things developed by the two major DEs are quite awesome and
useful. However sometimes those specs just don’t suitable for other
DEs and they didn’t consider the needs of users of DEs other than
Gnome and KDE.

So, every enthusiastic developers/users of lightweight desktop
environments, please join their xdg mailinst list and join their
discussions and let them listen to your voice. If you don’t want to be
forced to use things developed by Gnome and KDE, please let them hear
your voice in the mailing list. Since they are now moving gnome libs
into GTK+, like it or not, all gtk+ applications will be affected.
Desktop environments other than Gnome and KDE might have some special
needs and goals and those Gnome standards might not suitable for us
sometimes. So we need to let them hear our voice and we should be part
of the decision making.

So, please, join the xdg mailing list and get involved if you can.

Subscribe to xdg mailing list at
http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/xdg .

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