[LAU] ANN: monoBristol - a mono front end for the diverse bristol emulators

Jostein Chr. Andersen jostein at vait.se
Tue Jun 2 09:18:10 EDT 2009


On Tuesday 02 June 2009 13.59.59 Peder Hedlund wrote:
> Quoting Nick Copeland <nickycopeland at hotmail.com>:
> > David Horvath has put together a front end to the bristol
> > emulations. It is written in C# using Mono and GTK:
>
> No disrespect for his work (and it looks really nice), but with the
> slight controversy and overhead of Mono I would've liked a pure GTK or
> QT solution.
>
> I even hacked up a crude Xdialog app
> (http://www2.park.se/~peder/files/Bristol) for AVlinux that probably
> could be improved by someone better than me.

This is no attack on you, just some general OT toughs that made me think about 
toolkits and other geeky words:   :-)

IMHO, toolkit issues are one of the really big problems when talking about 
"Linux on the desktop" and making people try it. I wonder how many times I see 
text like this when developers and fans describes applications to the public 
(IE. home pages): "Myapp is a GTK/Gnome/FLTK application that...", or 
"...application written in C++ with the Qt4 framework..." in the first 
meaning.

What do a musician coming from Windows or Mac think when they see stuff like 
this? Perhaps "GTK, is that a new communication standard?, or maybe "is 
framework a plugin standard?"

When I try to convince people to use Linux stuff, they often say that "I don't 
want to learn new systems" after looking at the apps, not realizing that one 
for example use File/Open and so on in almost every app no matter OS. No 
wonder that they think things are scary when Gtk, Gnome, KDE, QT, C/C++ and 
other non usage related stuff shows up early in the description of the 
programs - it's like begging that the app should continue to be used only in 
the Linux Geek Club.

Look at "http://www.ardour.org/", that's the way to do it. The whole front 
page is dedicated to the people that are supposed to use the program, not 
geeks and other hard core computer nerds. When Windows and Mac people see that 
page, then they can relate to the information. 


Jostein





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