I don't think that Ubuntu is to be held accountable for making the
desktop "unusable" as it stands (I personally do not even share that
belief) - if anything, they have indeed added another "option", as
houstonbofh asks... the default being gnome-shell, nowhere close to the
classic desktop paradigm. It is the gnome devs who decided gnome2 was
done for, so what are Ubuntu to do? - they can accept the decision and
make gnome-shell the default, or offer an alternative they believe they
would like gnome3 to provide. Indeed, I think Unity is closer to gnome2
than is gnome-shell, even though I like and enjoy them both - in Unity,
you have the old workspaces, the old classic menus in the form of
lenses, the old way to change the wallpaper, the good old Compiz, etc
etc etc. Gnome-shell is almost an alien phenomenon, though I like what I
saw, and I stuck with it on my Arch and Debian Sid installs... As for
gnome2, it simply does not exist anymore, at least actively, and the
only possible path is to move on - more and more apps will start with
gnome3 libraries, and eventually everyone shall be forced to move
elsewhere away from gnome2.

I think if you handed the Unity desktop to the average grandma, I think
they will have a much easier time than with the old one - pressing the
'Sup' key and just typing in what you want - now that's simplicity! I
would humbly like to suggest a change of perspectives to appreciate the
positives, as opposed to holding on to ghosts of the past.

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Title:
  Microsoft has a majority market share

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