hi
Being objective is a little difficult, since I've switched back to mate,
but i'll give it a shot. Hear goes.
Gnome is great if you don't want to have a customized panel with
different applets on it. The gnome panel is set and can't be changed
easily. It requires an extension or gsettings keys to do so.

As a resultt, once you learn where everything is it won't ever change.
This is an advantage if you just want to run your apps and not have to
go looking for stuff on the panel. On the other hand, gnome has taken
out a lot of functionality that mate, being a fork of gnome 2 before all
this stuff was removed, has. In gnome, you can't select a different
sound theme than the default except by using gsettings.

You can't create your own desktop icons, and removing a drive through
the gui is buried in nautilus. Whether you care about this stuff mostly
depends on what you do with your computer. Mate is much lighter on
resources, which won't matter unless you have a computer that gnome
doesn't run well on. On the other hand, mate's panels can be very odd
with orca, sometimes getting stuck and requiring a reset of orca or the
panel to fix things.

Mate is a lot more configurable, but has the disadvantage of not being
able to run apps as root accessibly. At least for now. This is being
worked on right now and should be fixed shortly. Mate has a nice menu
system, with apps organized into categories. Sound and video, office,
etc. You can't search for apps like you can in gnome, to find them you
have to use the menus or add them to the desktop.

You can of course create keyboard shortcuts to launch them and so on. I
can't tell you which is better because each one is preferred by
different people. But mate tends to be better on computers that don't
have a lot of power or memory. Gnome has more desktop effects and can
search, but has a lot of the more advanced functionality removed. It's
really up to you, in the end.
Thanks
Kendell Clark


Daniel Crone wrote:
> Hello.  I am curious about the advantages of gnome shell over mate, or vice 
> versa.
> What do you think?


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