More features do usually not lead to better UI/UX
As someone who used Gnome 1 in school, tried KDE 1 and 2 on the family PC for a while, then later switched their private PC to that same Hardy Heron Ubuntu Gnome 2 install and moved from there to Gnome 3.2 or 3.4 when it became available in Ubuntu - this was nice, the cheese theme especially.
I don’t really know what kind of demographic misses switching to different window managers in this way though. I never did. But I don’t really get the tiling window manager craze either - that is certainly easy enough to set up as a different session.
A few things he missed though:
- Previewing media files in the Nautilus side panel.
- Gimp had no menu bar, most everything needed to be done from the context menu. The saving grace was that most menus could be torn off into little palette-style windows though.
- The Gimp installation with the orange window he shows is just a user setup wizard. I remember that e.g. at my school, it was important to fix the DPI setting for our monitors on the first run because the window manager wasn’t reliable on that front.
- I believe there was a sliding animation when hiding a desktop panel with the <|> buttons at the side. That was nice at the time.
- I am not completely sure whether Sawfish had that feature or whether it was only available on the KDE window manager, but you could double-click the title bar of windows to hide the window content and show only the title bar.
gnome 3 even all these years later isn’t api stable enough for me to want to use. took way too much inspiration from nodejs imo
We’re at gnome 48 now 🤙
oh so they adopted the firefox versioning scheme. i hate the future
Yeah ngl I also wasn’t a fan of the new versioning scheme. But the new desktop is great so who cares