I feel strange that Ubuntu-Gnome project disappeared only because main Ubuntu uses now more Gnome components.
Ubuntu from v11.10 to 17.04 with Unity really was with a very patched Gnome environment. Current default desktop still seems same Unity because it's still a patched Gnome. Could this new desktop be considered as a Unity 8.1 because of real software components? Why Ubuntu Gnome project abandoned main principle to be «mostly pure GNOME desktop experience» and then the project abandoned project itself? I think an Ubuntu GNOME (real) flavour has fully sense today, and it seems even easier to maintain. El 25/01/18 a les 12:16, Marius Gedminas ha escrit: > On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 10:15:27AM -0700, Aaron Honeycutt wrote: >> By default on Intel you'll use GNOME and that will use Wayland with 17.10. > > Yes, but while the default Ubuntu desktop in 17.10 is GNOME, it's > customized GNOME. > > vanilla-gnome-desktop seems to be the package to install if you want the > upstream GNOME experience. > > (I didn't know about the existence of this package before today. I > think I had gnome-session installed, and I manually switched the GDM > theme to gnome-shell.css with sudo update-alternatives --config gdm3.css > as per https://didrocks.fr/2017/09/11/ubuntu-gnome-shell-in-artful-day-11/) > > Marius Gedminas > -- Ubuntu-GNOME mailing list Ubuntu-GNOME@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-gnome