On 10/21/2012 10:45 AM, Peter Alcibiades wrote:
Two solutions really.  If you are set on staying with Ubuntu, install
Cinammon.  I wouldn't for two reasons, one being the crazed desire to
dictate what other people do with their desktops, the other being the crazed
six month rlease cycle.  But, if staying with Ubuntu, probably Cinammon.

I found Cinnamon awful. Chacun a son gout, mon vieux.


I never have understood the cult of Ubuntu.  I know lots of people who rave
about it, but none of them are using it as their only or main workhorse.
Its very striking - you hear someone telling you enthusiastically how
wonderful Unity or Gnome 3 is, and it turns out he has played with it a few
times and his main workstation is Windows 7.

I don't belong to the cult of Ubuntu, far from it, but I do know that I can install the LXDE or XFCE flavours (Lubuntu and Xubuntu respectively - pretty poor imaginations when it comes to names) on just about anything from a Pentium II upwards and get a computer
that runs without having to "fart about" all that much post installation.

I do believe that Mark Shuttleworth ("Mr Slugworth") is getting a bit too big for
his boots insofar as he and his merry men are making judgement calls about
Gnome and Unity (and the recent kaffuffle about some dirty deal with Amazon searches), that seem (and I mean 'seem') to restrict end-user's ability to customise aspects of
the OS to their taste.

However, seeming is as seeming does, and, unlike Apple and Microsoft, the Ubuntu "product" can be hacked, slashed and generally tarted up as much as anyone wants with a bit of effort (recipes
abound on the internet).

I do feel that what quite a few people moan about is that when they install vanilla Ubuntu/Xubuntu/Kubuntu/Lubuntu/Uncle-Tom-Cobbley-and-all-buntu, they don't instantly get just what they want.

Well that is a bit much if one stops and thinks how rigid the Mac OS and the Windows GUIs are.


One hears similar enthusiasm about Windows 8 by people who never seem to
have seriously tried using that, and only that, for a month.

The second and robust long term solution is go to Debian.


Well, my experience with Debian was that I got fried in dependency hell every time I tried to install anything vaguely 'other' than the stuff that came on the install disk. Whatever Ubuntu's short-comings, and there are quite a few, it was rather a relief to go back to it after several fairly painful excursions
into Debian.

  This is the best
and the permanent solution, its completely stable and conservative in its
release cycle and what you install is entirely up to you.

Not really; see my point about dependency hell above.

   Upgrades when
they happen will be painless.  At this point, install 'wheezy', the testing
flavor.  But even that is not going to be fully up to date - you'll get xfce
4.8, and for desktop thumbnails you need 4.10.  For example.

Umm, "release cycle", "upgrade cycle": well, nobody made me upgrade my box from 12.04 to 12.10.

My school sports 4 machines running on a 2010 version of Ubuntu with no obvious reasons why they
should be upgraded.


Properly tested two to three year release cycle.  Complete developer
agnosticism about which desktop is right for me.

If one installs Lubuntu as one's base system, one can install pretty well any desktop one wants
on top (Fluxbox, anyone?), and not suffer unduly.

  Its a hard combination to
beat.  Yes, the thing that is coming towards my guys is at some point gnome
3 is going to result from a distribution upgrade.  Fine, but its a year or
two away, and by then we will either go to xfce and they won't notice, or
maybe Gnome will have recovered its senses.

Seems as doubtful as Windows 8 recovering its senses.  I guess that is the
consolation with Linux, when you fire up that appalling mess on the Windows
8 desktop and realize that its the OS developer that is determined to do
this to everyone and there is no other desktop available!  At least with
Linux this sort of insanity is confined to one desktop team, and you can
just pick a different one from people who have both oars in the water.

Having recently installed Windows 8 on a computer for a friend, I can honestly say that it didn't strike me as "incredibly awful" as a lot of the Linux crowd would have it; I just don't happen to like the one-size-fits-all approach, and the ever present risk of getting a virus in the works.


Peter


Richmond Mathewson-2 wrote
If you. like me, have a "thing" about Avant Window Navigator you may be
seriously fed-ip un upgrading to 12.10 to find that Mr Slugworth has
removed
the possibility of installing it, and, even more mephistophelian, made
sure
it gets removed on system upgrade.

After a dark night of the soul, I found this:

http://askubuntu.com/questions/203362/how-can-i-install-avant-window-navigator-in-12-10/203575#203575

The point, and the ONLY point of my initial posting, was about Avant Window Navigator, because,
coming from a "Mac heritage" I'm into docks in a big way.

And "Cairo Dock" and "Docky" are but pale imitations of AWN. However, the AWN chap hasn't done any work on it since 2010 (and why that is a problem I just do not ken), and "Ole Sluggy" and his pals, who are bugged out of their boxes on the endlessly, restlessly upgrading things have decided because
of that it has to go.

ALSO . . .  RunRev Livciode works remarkably well on 'buntu distros!


Richmond.

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