On Fri, 17 Jun 2011, Evandro Giovanini wrote: > I'm not really sure I get what you're asking for here. GNOME 3 does have > the "classic" (Win95-like) design installed by default and all you have > to do is enable fallback mode in order to use it. 1) I was not aware of "classic mode", it was clearly not obvious anymore. 2) F15 should have started in "classic mode" with a pointer on how to upgrade to a more modern method if it detected the fedora install was an "upgrade". 3) you still did not describe how to enable "fallback mode" By now, I have returned to F14, with plans to skip F15 alltogether and hoping F16 will not make the same mistake of turning my desktop power setup in a single-task tablet environment based on some bad copycat behaviour that even MacOSX pretty much abanonded as a mistake. > In addition to that the GNOME Shell is highly customizable and you can > have a traditional application menu right on the top menu bar if you'd > like. You can check out the extensions available in Fedora, the ones > here [1] and several others you can search on Google. The GNOME > developers are also working on a website to make installing and managing > extensions as easy as it is with Firefox. I look forward to see that support in F15/F16 Paul -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel