




Mereyub wrote:So GNome 3 is not the same as GNome - I'm thinking that G3 is some sort of framework?
Well I guess i will try Linux Mint 10 and see how that Go's





Mereyub wrote:There was something else i was reading i cant remember what it was - but it was about Ubuntu Changing something that would cause it not to be as compatible with as much hardware as it is now.


sudo add-apt-repository ppa:gnome3-team/gnome3

Mereyub wrote:There was something else i was reading i cant remember what it was - but it was about Ubuntu Changing something that would cause it not to be as compatible with as much hardware as it is now.
Would this type of change effect Linux Mint or would it be a case of Linux Mint although based on Ubuntu is not complete bond to it - Is my thinking right?



kvv wrote:Linux Mint is sticking with the current UI but with Gnome 3.
AlbertP wrote:Linux Mint will keep using a normal Gnome with a panel
GNOME 3 also support a 'fallback mode' in which we run gnome-panel, metacity and notification-daemon instead of GNOME Shell. Note that this mode is not a 'Classic GNOME' mode; the panel configuration will be adjusted to be similar to the shell.
There's substantial difference between KDE 4.0 and GNOME 3.0 release -- while KDE 4.0 was just a premature release, GNOME 3.0 is broken by design. No amount of minor releases can fix that. ... Unless you want a highly usable open-source software for tablet, GNOME 3 probably isn't for you.
GNOME Shell does not work on dual monitors. There is no easy way to make changes to GNOME Shell. There is no minimize button unless you enable it through gconf-editor. Where are my places? There is no easy way to go back to Gnome 'classic'.
There is no easy way to go back to Gnome 'classic.' At least that I can see. I've been fiddling with this all for a couple hours now, and only just before writing this lengthy diatribe did I attempt to move back to Gnome 2 (it appears that gnome-panel 2.91 is installed, but I'm not yet sure if that's a functional part of Gnome Shell, or if there's some way for me to get to it). There is no option at the login menu for me to choose my shell. I could probably force it to do what I want, but (in my mind) I want desktop software that makes it relatively easy to do what I want it to do. I generally leave the command line kung-fu at for server work. There is mention of 'Gnome classic' in the Alpha release notes, but a point is made that it's not actually a 'gnome classic' but more a resource-unintensive mode for lower powered machines.
GNOME 3's fallback mode is not 'GNOME 2 style'. It exists to be used on systems which cannot run GNOME Shell for technical reasons - same deal as Unity 2D. It's intended to function as similarly to Shell as is practically possible; although it uses gnome-panel and metacity, you can't expect it to work the way these components did in GNOME 2. Where practical it will be tweaked to work more like Shell.



AlbertP wrote:I do not know the exact details - only that Linux Mint 11 will not use the complete Gnome Shell by default.




Mereyub wrote:So from all that i have been reading here it seem like a good idea to start with Linux Mint 9 LTS for the support and the Gnome 2
But keep My eye on Ubuntu and Linux Mint to see what the future may turn out to be
But i would really like to know if Ubuntu just disappeared one day would that Mean that Linux Mint would be dead to
or is that why Debian is in play as well



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