Are there any plans to palliate the interface shift on the transition from Unity to GNOME Shell?
Alfredo Hernández
aldomann at ubuntu.com
Fri Apr 14 06:19:12 UTC 2017
In short, we are considering shipping a few extensions by default (nothing
crazy; Dash to Dock and a couple more) to both improve a bit the UX, with
the goal to ease the transition from Unity (also some of the criticisms on
GNOME Shell are fair). But this still has to be studied further.
Cheers,
Alfredo
On 14 Apr 2017 04:12, "Awjin Ahn" <awjinahn at gmail.com> wrote:
> Or if the "slam the mouse cursor to the left corner first" gesture
becomes too cumbersome after a certain amount of time?
Hitting `Super` key shows the window overview
> Sadly, I am yet to find a single article praising the decision, and most
of the comments on the topic suggest to either install a plugin
Extensions are a huge attraction of Gnome. They let you tweak the desktop
to your liking. For example, this extension
<https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/307/dash-to-dock/> displays the
taskbar by default. Perhaps a short how-to guide can be shown upon boot-up
for new Ubuntu installations.
I believe that with good on-boarding documentation and some open-minded
experimentation, users will be able to make the shift smoothly.
- Awjin
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 9:13 PM, Carlos Solís <csolisr at azkware.net> wrote:
> As it is well known already, the interface of GNOME Shell is very
> different from the one in most other desktop environments, and even
earlier
> versions of GNOME itself. With the statement that Ubuntu will drop support
> for Unity in favor of GNOME Shell, and further statements from both main
> Ubuntu and Ubuntu-GNOME developers that customization will be
intentionally
> minimal, in order to keep the desktop as the upstream GNOME developers
> intended it to be, this means that a major interface shift is about to
come
> for the standard Ubuntu user.
>
> The problem existed back in 2011, when Ubuntu decided to avoid GNOME Shell
> by creating the Unity desktop environment, and it still exists now: the
> handling of windows and tasks is different from the one most other desktop
> environments offer to the user by default, perhaps with the exception of
> tiling windows managers, which are more intended for power users. In
> particular, the complete removal of an always-visible taskbar with the
> currently open programs, a staple of the vast majority of desktop
> environments, being replaced with a mouse gesture to display a list of
> windows. Sadly, I am yet to find a single article praising the decision,
> and most of the comments on the topic suggest to either install a plugin,
> or to switch the desktop environment entirely. This design decision has
> apparently proven unpopular with everyone but the GNOME interface
> developers, but given the context, all points to Ubuntu 17.10 keeping it
> intact, effectively removing the taskbar by default for users that upgrade
> next October.
>
> This leads to the normal user upgrading from Ubuntu 17.04, rebooting the
> computer, hopefully reading the help file that will pop up on boot,
> clicking "Applications" to open an app, finding a sole window preview
> laying around, clicking on some app and opening it, repeating the process,
> and maybe by then the change of paradigm will be evident. But what happens
> if this is not the case? Or if the "slam the mouse cursor to the left
> corner first" gesture becomes too cumbersome after a certain amount of
> time? Are there any plans to directly palliate the change of interface for
> these users with tools bundled with the newest Ubuntu (such as a plugin),
> or are they expected to relearn the desktop paradigm upon the first boot
> and accustom to it?
>
> Hoping this mail is the beginning of a healthy discussion,
>
> - Carlos Solís
>
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