[Discuss] Ubuntu 17.10 / Gnome first impressions
David Kramer
david at thekramers.net
Wed Dec 20 14:08:27 EST 2017
I've been focusing mostly on Ubuntu because I want my skills to be with
something very popular that I'm likely to run into elsewhere. Maybe I
should focus more on something for power users, as you say.
If I go with the Fedora KDE spin, that will bring me bleeding edge
software and also RPM package management which I'm more likely to see at
work (in RHEL/Centos). I think I would be frustrated with Debian's
multi-year release cycle, and Arch and Gentoo seem like a LOT of work.
This is my daily everything-but-gaming computer, and having it work is
also of value to me.
Any other distros I should consider?
Thanks. I was really seeing this as a Gnome vs KDE thing but you're
right, the problem may be partly with the distro.
On 12/20/2017 07:02 AM, Shirley Márquez Dúlcey wrote:
> Ubuntu has been treating the non-LTS versions as betas for a while
> now. Sounds like this one is no exception. I expect some of the rough
> edges you saw (like the inability to run Synaptic as root) will be
> smoothed out for 18.04. But the orientation toward non-power users
> will remain because that's where Ubuntu has been targeted for a long
> time, at least since the original introduction of Unity.
>
> On Wed, Dec 20, 2017 at 3:55 AM, David Kramer <david at thekramers.net> wrote:
>> My main Linux computer (tracer), was running an old version of Kubuntu,
>> because I really didn't like what either Gnome or Unity became. But that
>> decision was years ago. My main objections to both were a removal of choice
>> and control, and a move away from having multiple fixed desktop ( I usually
>> have 4 distinct desktops for 4 different purposes and different apps running
>> on them). And the overall attitude of the project, which was a very clear
>> dismissal of anyone who wanted to work differently than their vision.
>>
>> When Ubuntu went back to Gnome/Wayland, I thought I would give it a try
>> again. I planned on reformatting and installing from scratch anyway. A
>> personal goal was to be a big boy and separate out things that objectively
>> don't meet my needs, from things that I was just not used to or didn't like
>> subjectively, but could get used to. This list is only about the former,
>> because the rest is my problem.
>>
>> * There has been an increasing trend of shoving components into
>> distributions well before they are ready, "because clearly we need
>> them, and we can't wait for them to be perfected". First one I
>> remember is pulseaudio. I know many in our group feel the same way
>> about systemd. I feel Wayland might fall into this category. It
>> appears to work well for the most part, but I ran into serious
>> problems, like applications like Synaptic can't run as root. I
>> ended up switching to Xorg.
>> * There still seems to be the same "We know what's right" attitude and
>> a dismissal of any objections. All of my googling found results
>> like "Just run this command before you launch apps like synaptic.
>> No official documentation, no response to the bug reports, and no
>> solutions that solve the problem so you don't have to run a command
>> before running the command each time. Much of the other basic
>> functionality I was looking for required third party software and
>> GnomeTweaks.
>> * In KDE, all sorts of gadgets appeared on the panel, and more can be
>> added. In particular, apps running in the background had indicators
>> in the panel to they can be brought up (eg: SimpleScreenRecorder,
>> Sococo, VPN, Mega, etc). By default, you get nothing and like it.
>> You have to install gnome shell extensions to get some of them
>> showing up, and some never showed up. I have to run Sococo from the
>> command line in my terminal, otherwise there's no way to exit the
>> application.
>> * Another related problem I had is suspend. I set up a keyboard
>> shortcut for suspending my computer, which I do several times a
>> day. Not only is there not an event to map to a keyboard shortcut,
>> but if you click on the power thing in the upper right corner,
>> there's no suspend option. You actually have to hold down the Alt
>> key while pulling down that menu then there will be a suspend
>> option. Totally ridiculous gymnastics. There is another Gnome
>> Shell Extension that will add a suspend button, but when I installed
>> that, clicking on the suspend button did nothing. I eventually
>> found a setting to suspend when the power button was pressed once,
>> but that's ergonomically more difficult than a keyboard press for me.
>> * About those Gnome Shell Extensions... You have to install a back end
>> program, and then install a browser plugin in order to install them.
>> There is a perfectly fine package manager in Debian, and there are
>> several other popular ones that don't involve such nonsense.
>> Amazingly, they don't appear to be categorized at all. There's
>> almost 100 pages of extensions and no categories or groups. Yes
>> there's search, which helps if you know what's available
>> * Multiple desktops, as I mentioned, are much harder to set up, and
>> require extra software. Desktops can only be arranged vertically in
>> one column, and there doesn't appear to be a way of going directly
>> to a desktop with a keystroke. That's not a deal-breaker, that's
>> more into the "not what I'm used to" level. However, with KDE, I
>> can bind specific apps to specific desktops and even specific
>> monitors. When I start up, all my apps start where they belong.
>> That doesn't seem possible under Gnome. And I run many apps at
>> startup, across the 4 desktops.
>>
>> I'm not saying Ubuntu/Gnome/Wayland is bad. I'm saying it's less likely to
>> appeal to power users who like things the way they like them, and use lots
>> of applications at once. And that I'm going to install the latest Kubuntu.
>> While it was way better than years ago, I don't see Gnome moving in a
>> direction that works for me anytime soon.
>>
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