Interesting article. Thanks. I'm still partial to GNOME 2 but I'm keeping an open mind. Phil On Aug 19, 2012, at 5:29 PM, Daniel Farley <daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > http://www.datamation.com/open-source/gnome-seven-possible-recovery-strategies-1.html > > Just in response to this as a user of gnome 3, i really like it... i > have used kde4 as well and have used gnome 2 even more but i really > like the way gnome 3 works for me how simple and elegant it is, how to > switch windows with the top left corner and how things keep moving in > each window when this is happening. How to start programs/settings by > just starting to type what i want. I just find my hardware (Lenovo > x100e) can only just cope with it and it does seem to slow my computer > down a bit... and its hard to find a distribution that supports it > well. > > I fell i have pretty much enough customizability using the gnome > extensions, and don't feel the need to traditional menu's at all. > > I know its hard to get the general users to change and like it... i > wish it would work on all my hardware better (faster and cope better > with out graphics acceleration / good graphics acceleration.. or that > i could turn down what it would try and do for this... > > Keep up the good work guys, im sorry its hard to change the world > > Daniel > _______________________________________________ > gnome-list mailing list > gnome-list@xxxxxxxxx > https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-list _______________________________________________ gnome-list mailing list gnome-list@xxxxxxxxx https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-list