The only problems coming is that we only will now the real performace of unity very near to the release date, and that is bad for US. If we already have problems with 3d and RT kernels, imagine how much more people will have problems with a 3d desktop wihout a fully supported driver for its kernel. more over pushing the user to the usage of propietary drivers etc...
I would stick for Gnome 2.x if it is available (and I believe it will be, since ubuntu needs a fallback for non 3D ready computers),or then switch to XFCE. I am of the opinion that if we have to change from desktop enviroment, then it should be a lightweight one. LXDE its also a possibility. Of course all of this needs testing. Maybe we could try to install stuff from the base up trying XFCE to see how it works. bye 2010/10/28 Luke Yelavich <[email protected]> > On Thu, Oct 28, 2010 at 06:02:01AM EDT, mark wrote: > > If we're no longer tied to gnome, that's excellent news. We can finally > > say goodbye to pulseaudio. > > To be clear, switching to unity for Ubuntu does not in any way mean a move > away from GNOME completely. Unity is an alternative shell. The underlying > desktop components will still be GNOME. > > As I said, its up to the Studio developers as to what they choose to do, > whether they move to using a different desktop, stick with traditional GNOME > with panels etc, or unity. > > Luke > > -- > Ubuntu-Studio-devel mailing list > [email protected] > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-devel > -- Fagote / Contrafagote Bassoon / Contra-bassoon http://myspace.com/ricardolameiro
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