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I dislike the new gnome. I only tried it a little, and it was just too alien. However, a coworker said something I couldn't let go. "You are too young to resist change" and it struck me that computer scientists should probably not resist change.
With this in mind, I went to upgrade my gentoo box to the new gnome. I was determined to try it until I got used to it to give it a fully educated review.
I went to the gentoo upgrade guide , and quickly changed my mind. I left out the default options being wierd. That was a given. The things that bothered me beyond that are quickly adding up. The eselects are long and cryptic, the gs configs are overly complicated, I no longer have a choice for audio and have to use pulse audio, there is no compiz support at all, many of the gnome2 apps have not been ported so they won't work, nvidia cards are pretty well not working and cause several errors, and there are many work arounds for things that don't work already.
I don't think it's a good time to change. What bothers me most about that is now I have to mask it to do a system update, and in a couple months they say they will no longer support the old gnome. If I don't mask it, I have to add lots of ~arch stuff in my update file, meaning it's not ezackery stable yet (though they say it's stable). Why do they make it stop my update?
I think I will keep it masked for now, and wait for it to actually become stable.
Anyone have thoughts on this?
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It's a big change for gnome... every time a product makes a big evolutionary change, you can expect growing pains as well as people that are unhappy about where it's going. For now, I think you can safely continue to use the older versions of gnome, if you simply can't adjust to the new gnome in the future (once they stop supporting gnome 2), there's always kde.
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I'd be more likely to switch to xfce or lxde.
I was prepared for the growing pains. It's just that it pretty well seems like nothing will work on my machine yet. I have a new nvidia graphics card, which pretty well shoots the new gnome in the foot.
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I don't have an nvidia card... so can't comment on that specifically... but at least in Linux there's alternatives... with gnome being the most popular desktop environment, I'm sure the support for a large number of video cards will only continue to improve with time. Unless of course, too many users decide they don't like the new interface and decide to opt for something else, but I honestly don't see that as happening. Hopefully gnome will learn from their mistakes and try to please a wide user base.
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I haven't switched to xfce yet. My decision was to wait until the new gnome and nvidia get along and try it again. I'm determined to give it a good shot before leaving. If dropping support for the old gnome causes problems before the new one is up and running on my machine, then I may switch to something else.
Hopefully it won't be long. With people out there using it now, I'm sure it will move swiftly. All they need is users able/willing to submit reports and useage information and I'm confident they will iron out the wrinkles. After it works with nvidia then I'll make the switch.
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Good luck!
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I too have an NVIDIA on my dell so gnome 3 does not work - Literally. I've switche to XFCE on my mac and am using unity and lxde on my dell.
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I went looking tonight to see how close we were to having nvidia running on gnome 3.2. Either it is fixed now, or I did not read closely enough the first time. My version of nvidia drivers works in both of the noted bugs (or it's supposed to).
I've found the gentoo install/upgrade wiki and am upgrading now. I hope the curve for learning this is not too steap for me. Either way, it's compiling now.
-- Edit --
Well, the desktop booted up. It took a very long time, but to be fair I have not updated my system yet and I need to run etc-update still... And sometimes new stuff just opens slow the first time It does not seem too clunky just now. If I figure out how to organize the applications menu so I can get to my stuff quickly then I think it will go ok. I got an application added to my favorites already.
I don't think learning to navigate in general will be terrible. If someone has links to some information on using some of the features, that would save me some time.
-- End Edit --
modified 15-Jan-12 23:39pm.
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It's not so bad once you get used to it...
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Yeah, I can navigate now. I found where the applications are stored in the menu, and how to put them on my favorites. I even changed my wallpaper. I still prefer the old gnome, but it's not been very long so I suppose that will change in time.
It makes me want to hook a graphics tablet to it instead of a mouse.
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loctrice wrote: It makes me want to hook a graphics tablet to it instead of a mouse.
I think that's what they're striving for... being able to have a "common" environment that will support touch screens and mouse clicks. That way it doesn't matter where you go (tablet or desktop or laptop), you'll be familiar with the interface and be able to work as usual.
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as long as you can support 3d
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It took me forever to figure out how to get my browser to open in a new window instead of just take focus. I use multiple browser instances, as well as tabs. I couldn't find anything on google at all! I felt - insert choice here - when I finally realized you could right click the icon >,<
I like the alt tab thingy though. I can't say I like it more than standard alt tab, but having a sub menu under the "group" looks pretty snazzy.
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Hey, at least discovering new features is always neat.
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Well, I couldn't really get used to it. As a general user it was fine. Was a little different, but not really a big deal. It looked nice.
However, when I was trying to work it was ... well, it was costing me too much time to continue. I could still work, and even kept trying. I just was not efficient. I didn't try it for very long I know, but I was starting to lose some valuable time on some projects.
I installed xfce today. I might try gnome again this summer when we have a slow season at work.
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Every time there's a major change like this, it's going to be hard to get used to it. Plus, the dev team has to learn what's working and what's not working.
There was actually a small study done somewhere (can't remember the source now) that found the very same exact thing you're experiencing, that even though people generally liked the experience, productivity actually went down because it took longer to find things you were looking for. I'm sure GNOME will learn from this and make changes accordingly.
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Dear All member code project
I wanna to know, how to create translater like google translate.
please help/tell me about it.
Thanks b4
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Well you could always include the google translate script somewhere in the page. That way users can change the language of the contents with just one click, as described at Google translate tools[^].
As to creating your custom translate engine, that would be a lot of work including:
- scraping or buying multiple dictonaries for every language
- linking words in dictionaries accross the various languages
- finding a way to stem words to the basics
- building a correct matching algorithm to match one word or group of words to another
And even if you do all that (which is a lot of work) it will still probably work crappy. Though google translate is nice to sorta now what a page tells me (if it is in a foreign language) it is far from perfect. In fact most of the time the translations are more likely to be funny and wrong then right.
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Hi...!!
I am beginner of PHP.
I want to make registration page which displays user name after the successful registration.
I have made three files :
register.html ==> to make form and enter the data which redirects to another file called submit.php
submit.php ==> to enter the values to the database and redirects to the home.php
home.php ==> This must display " Welcome registering user name !" message.
how to retrieve the name in the last file ??
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It depends on how you are submitting your form for the username and password. If you are using POST, then something like:
$username = $_POST['username'];
$password = $_POST['password'];
Otherwise, if you use GET:
$username = $_GET['username'];
$password = $_GET['password'];
The "username" and "password" names are whatever you named your username and password input boxes in the html form.
Let me know if this helps
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Hi,
You can post the username with the redirecting url, and from that page you can access
the name by
Let the redirecting URL should be like this,
URL: http://localhost/home.php?user='Sunu'
<pre lang="PHP">
$user_name = $_REQUEST['user'];
</pre>
Cheers
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After the post you cn also asign user information to a session variable so you do not need to repost it from page to page.
To do this just assign the post to a session variable like...
$_SESSION["uname"]=$_POST["uname"];
To set and use the session values you must start your pages with...
<?php
session_start();
...the rest of your script below.
This brings up an important topic too. You must scrub your input from users so you can avoid sql injection (if you are storing your data in a database). Please be sure to read up on this topic in any live code you make.
Chris J
www.redash.org
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