GNOMEbuntu Set To Arrive In October 157
First time accepted submitter Rzarector writes "Good News Everyone! Thanks to the Ubuntu Gnome Community and Jeremy Bicha, it seems that the popular distribution will ship a flavor with a relatively pure GNOME experience in the next release cycle, on October 18. At this point the effort is community based, but hopefully GNOMEbuntu will make it as an official Canonical spin, similar to Kubuntu, Xubuntu, et cetera, in the 13.04 release. This is the story: At the Ubuntu Developer Summit in May, some discussions took place on the need for a Gnome spin. On August 13, Jeremy Bicha posted on Gnome mailing lists about looking a name for the new Ubuntu derivative. After that, I had no news till Stinger gave us a thread in Ubuntu Forums. On there, Jeremy talks about working on an Alpha version! So I contacted him and he verified that GNOMEbuntu will be released together with Ubuntu 12.10."
Re:Which Gnome? (Score:2, Informative)
From TFA: "Unity won’t be included"
From TFA: "Gnome Display Manager (GDM) and Gnome Shell will be obviously included!"
Well... looks like Gnome 3.
Re:Which Gnome? (Score:3, Informative)
If you base your Gnome 3 experience through your interactions with Unity, please realize that you are practically talking about two different things (even if it is the same libraries)
I know plenty of people who like Gnome 3 but hate Unity, so there is a difference in user experience.
If you really want Gnome 2, well there's two libraries which were targeting making that kind of desktop experience better, with less bloat and cruft. So, why do you want the big, bloated, slow, version of that desktop back? Move on to Xfce or LXDE.
Re:Which Gnome? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm a former hater but I really like Unity now.
I think Unity could be amazing with the 12.10 release.
I previously used Gnome 3, which is a perfectly serviceable desktop, but I prefer Unity.
Re:Whis is this not a meta-package? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why the Slashdot anti-Unity hate? (Score:5, Informative)
It's a lingering hatred from Unity's early days when it was still buggy and lacking in customization options. It's less buggy now but still doesn't offer the level of customization that some geeks like to have. As Unity matures, though, I find myself agreeing that it is in fact quite usable.