2011/9/19 david <gnome@hawaii.rr.com>
Simon Wise wrote:
On 16/09/11 04:06, fred wrote:


Le 15/09/2011 21:03, david a écrit :
My existing musicbox (running an older versin of ArtistX) uses LXDE. My server
(running Aptosid) uses XFCE. My personal laptop is still running KDE3. I've
noticed that a number of KDE4 and GNOME3 have become quite hefty, and music
distros seem to be dropping them.

Maybe, hum, Linux is a reflect of the society we are living in : more and more
for the eye candy, less to peoples' needs ?

Some like their eye candy, and luckily for them some are willing to provide it.

But Linux offers choices - XFCE and others are there for those of us who prefer that way of working.

And it looks to me like GNOME is trying to cater for the touch-screen side of things ... a phone or small tablet certainly needs an interface that can be used efficiently without a keyboard, on a small screen and with a finger as the only pointer. That would take a lot of customising, and a lot of work by the user, in XFCE or any other keyboard-oriented desktop environment.

That's true, but you see, phones and tablets aren't really meant for creating text-based content. They're really meant for consuming content. So it's quite appropriate to have a different UI designed for those environments. Just like the Palm OS UI was designed and optimized for use with a stylus, and GoCorp's old Penpoint OS was designed from the ground up for use with a stylus.

I've never liked the GNOME desktop and particularly its apparent philosophy of restricting user customizability and functionality. I've firmly convinced that the first thing the GNOME design team asks itself at every session is, "What can we take away from users next?" Jokingly, I expect the GNOME desktop to eventually consist of a single button labeled "Shutdown" ...

Ever seen Ubuntu's Unity interface on a netbook? It's an interesting compromise between the needs of a small screen and the use of a keyboard & integrated pointing device.


--
David
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Nice comments, people.

Just one more question about the topic.

I'm thinking about a workaround meanwhile there's a solution for the problems I listed.
Is there an X config option or so to disable left clic on the touch screen? that way I could move the cursor without touching buttons and moving windows when I don't want to, and do clic on the A/B button when I need left/right clic.

Thanks again in advance.

--
Carlos sanchiavedraz
* Musix GNU+Linux
  http://www.musix.es