On Mon, Jun 23, 2003 at 02:04:03PM -0500, Michael Heironimus wrote: > On Mon, Jun 23, 2003 at 01:00:38PM -0400, stan wrote: > > My "testing" macines tried to remove gnome-core this mrning, when I did a > > dist-upgrade. > > > > What's going on here? > > > > Is this another case of "just wait a while and it will get better"? > > It looks like GNOME 2.2 is moving in to testing. If you wait a while it > probably will get better, but you can apt-get a few GNOME2 packages and > get a reasonably functional desktop. I'm not sure if there are plans to > eventually allow GNOME 1 and 2 to coexist within Debian or if it's a > complete replacement, though I think I have seen references to a big > debate about that.
Oh no! I tried Gnome 2 on an machine running Debian "unstable" and never did get anything even remotely close to the functionality I have in my Gnome 1 setups. It looks like all kinds of things have simply "disappeared" in Gnome 2. Am I missing something important here? > > If you're really happy with GNOME 1.4, you might not care too much for > GNOME 2.x. It's a major change in design and philosophy, and those > changes have been the subject of heated discussions. You might decide > you like the changes, or you might decide you don't (I don't), but you > should try to use it long enough to give it a fair chance. I'll warn you > that there still aren't nearly as many cool little panel applets or > GNOME2-aware window managers as with 1.4. The panel applets are a key part of why I use Gnome. My panel (on the bottom) is slap full. Let's see, on this machine from left to right, I've got, The Foot, X Terminal weather, clock, Gnome terminal, help, Galeon, CPU load, x eyes, dictionary look up, battery monitor, XMMS, CD player, Last time I looked, most of these were not available in Gnome 2. I have almost no icons on the desktop, which seems to be Gnome 2's preferred (only ?) way of invoking most things. Am I alone here? -- "They that would give up essential liberty for temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Benjamin Franklin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]