I have installed Volti from a .deb package linked to in the previously 
mentioned story and it works. You need to add a launcher in 
/usr/share/gnome/autostart to start it in GNOME, and add  the line "volti &" to 
the startup file for IceWM. In IceWM no issues, works fine, I would assume the 
same for any DE where the systwem tray and notification area are together, in 
the traditional way. There is a problem in gnome-shell, but not a severe one: 
Because volti puts it's icon in the notification area, in gnome-shell it is 
hidden until you reveal the notification area, something no new user would  
know to do unless they installed it themselves and poked around or saw it 
before. I don't know enough about writing gnome-shell extensions to move it to 
the system tray.
With gnome-shell frippery's bottom panel you have to click on the ! at the far 
right side of the bottom panel to bring up the notification area, adding an 
extra click. Of course, the big desktops in which I use gnome-shell are all on 
sound systems with analog volume controls, and the laptop without such a device 
runs IceWM for previously stated reasons.
GNOME3 has potential, in large part due to it's extension system that allows it 
to be reconfigured for different needs, something I have NOT seen in Unity even 
with CCSM. I think the GNOME team is aiming at a common DE for everything from 
smartphones to workstations, something that really does need to be configurable 
for entirely different workflows. By the time they get that, they no doubt 
assume OpenGL/memory badwidth problems will be a thing of the past as CPU's 
with on-chip GPU's displace the GPU on northbridge/memory controller on CPU 
problem. I guess they expect older machines to run older DE's as software 
rendering has got to be a major load on the CPU unless it can "idle" when no 
window is changing size or popping up subwindows.
Apple really created this situation with their iPhone, and since that is now 
the path a lot of people first use to get online and therefore the iPhone, 
iPad, and their numberless clones will be the OS people are familar with, 
turning up their noses when they can't find what they expect on screen.. 
Windoze has actually been among the slowest to respond to this, their Windoze 8 
tile screen start being something both Unity and Gnome-Shell could do simply by 
displaying their existing menu overlay on startup if they ever fixed their 
menus. All have to support a traditional desktop as well because that one task 
at a time interface is NOT suited to multitasking, something some of those 
phones aren't even capable of! This is not an issue for a specialized studio 
(or engineering, etc) distro, but it is an issue for a mainsteam distro like 
Ubuntu, and for GNOME. This is 1984-1995 all over again, and we don't want 
Linux to become another DOS. Actually, for studio and other specialized distros 
there is another paralleel here: Windows 95 had to include DirectX so game 
developers could use the hardware as they did under DOS and not lose 
performance.
I bring this up even though I do not use smartphones for security reasons and 
tablets because typing on one would destrroy my fingers. I've seen others use 
them and I have in fact come to regard the iOS top bar as "gee-it looks like 
gnome-shell!"
Here's what I see in GNOME 3's future: Enough extensions to mimic any DE from 
GNOME 2 to iPhone to Windoze 8 to Windows 95 to whatever Apple is putting on 
their desktop, all using the same core and the same packages except for the 
extensions. That way, if I am setting up a Linux box for someone new to Linux, 
I need only know what they used to use to give them a familiar environment. At 
a distro intall, it could be as simple as asking a user what type of desktop 
they want, and mostly the same packages would be used, unlike selecting a DE 
today. Of course, they will have to remember Page's :Law, and that's one good 
reason to keep other DE's around for those times when absolute maximum 
persformance is the only need.                                        
-- 
Ubuntu-Studio-devel mailing list
[email protected]
Modify settings or unsubscribe at: 
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-devel

Reply via email to