GNOME really LOST a lot of features... A look at GNOME 1 and what it offered
GNOME really LOST a lot of features... A look at GNOME 1 and what it offered

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GNOME really LOST a lot of features... A look at GNOME 1 and what it offered

I dropped Gnome when 1.0 or 1.1 was released (it was a while ago, I don't remember which one it was). At the time, they were already full swing in their "bondage and discipline" mode, removing stuff here and there, knowing better than their users (which they already completely ignored), while KDE was doing the exact opposite.
Now I'll be the first to admit that Gnome has done some interesting things every now and then. But in my eyes, it hasn't been worth all the aggravation and the general reduced functionality. Even if you can mitigate it a little with plugins. Also it's now going for a tablet-like single app interface (where you have only one window on the screen at the time) which I find idiotic given the huge screens we now have, and the way Unix (and Linux) GUIs in general are wonderfully designed to deal with numerous windows. So although I give it a try every now and then, I haven't actually used it since those 1.0 days. And good riddance. Fuck you Gnome. You could have been great.
I mean that's not exactly true considering there's some built in tiling.
Ah, well as you can see, I'm not using it much. But then, imposing one usage mode (tiling) to have several windows is a typical gnome move.