


i agree, i choose wm's by their functionality and efficiency, gui is usually needless crap.madisonicus wrote:Easier is a matter of opinion. Personally, I can't stand icons since you're never really sure what they mean. Plus, to this day I can't figure out whether I'm supposed to single click or double click them because it changes from context to context. And Xgl... I get seasick watching it all swoop and dance and wriggle when I'm just trying to log out. Who needs all that bling bling on a moment to moment basis? It's like driving in one of those drunkenness simulators.
Now, don't get me wrong. I'm no luddite. I use fluxbox and plenty of kde/gnome apps. I just have no interest in watching my computer play with itself just because it can or in trying to decipher pictograms (didn't we develop alphabets thousands of years ago because no one could use pictograms effectively??).
Honestly, I think GUI's and the graphics obsession make computers much harder to use and much less intuitive. I think graphics are essential to modern computing, and I love them when they don't interfere with my use of the computer. That's why I use something simple and straightforward like fluxbox.
Overall, it makes much more sense to me (and would be much easier to teach, I'd think) to open up a terminal and type the name of the program you want to start, rather than hunting through 4 layers of drop down menus (and watching them roll bcak up because you moved the cursor 1 pixel too far) to locate the thing you're looking for.
For this discussion, Eric Raymond's Unix Koans are a must read: http://catb.org/~esr/writings/unix-koans/. The one on GUI's is absolutely brilliant.
-m

GNOME just fits the school enviroment requeriment (more than any other WM previously mentioned).ratch3t.x wrote:im proposing to my school to use linux, (fedora core) or suse actually. but probably more likely fedora core. I wanted to know the best desktop interface for a school enviornment. I was thinking xfce would be a good choice because not many people would understand the lighter enviornments (fluxbox/blackbox) or e17, but e17 isn't stable :/ so I'm mostly leaning towards xfce.

I think that with that hardware you can run Gnome without problems.well im hoping that the school will take up a grant from a vendor or something. for my gfx class were running intel pentium 3(s) with about 256 mb of sdram. which can barely run window's apps for the gfx software. and about 30 gb hd, if the school gets a grand i don't expect anything huge but it would be something like 512 mb ddr ram, and intel pentium 4 2.5+ ghz and 40 gb hard drives, unsure still, just looking ahead so i can answer the questions i'll be asked : )
This is the reason why OSX and Windows will always lead.dark_speedo wrote:i agree, i choose wm's by their functionality and efficiency, gui is usually needless crap.madisonicus wrote:Easier is a matter of opinion. Personally, I can't stand icons since you're never really sure what they mean. Plus, to this day I can't figure out whether I'm supposed to single click or double click them because it changes from context to context. And Xgl... I get seasick watching it all swoop and dance and wriggle when I'm just trying to log out. Who needs all that bling bling on a moment to moment basis? It's like driving in one of those drunkenness simulators.
Now, don't get me wrong. I'm no luddite. I use fluxbox and plenty of kde/gnome apps. I just have no interest in watching my computer play with itself just because it can or in trying to decipher pictograms (didn't we develop alphabets thousands of years ago because no one could use pictograms effectively??).
Honestly, I think GUI's and the graphics obsession make computers much harder to use and much less intuitive. I think graphics are essential to modern computing, and I love them when they don't interfere with my use of the computer. That's why I use something simple and straightforward like fluxbox.
Overall, it makes much more sense to me (and would be much easier to teach, I'd think) to open up a terminal and type the name of the program you want to start, rather than hunting through 4 layers of drop down menus (and watching them roll bcak up because you moved the cursor 1 pixel too far) to locate the thing you're looking for.
For this discussion, Eric Raymond's Unix Koans are a must read: http://catb.org/~esr/writings/unix-koans/. The one on GUI's is absolutely brilliant.
-m
but, as i said before, 98% of the people in my high school wouldn't know what to do with a terminal if their life depended on it. addressability > functionality when it comes to cases like this. people are used to windows and gui is all they've ever known (and i don't blame them for favoring the gui, xp's command line is poop).
This is also why there is KDE, Gnome, Fluxbox, Openbox, WMII, FVWM, PekWM, DWM, among only a few hundred others. The GUI is a nice tool, but like anything else, its just a tool - it has limited uses, and for anything else its a pain to work with. Alot of people think a term is outdated, but until they have a mind-to-machine interface, for alot of crap is beats anything else made (for people who know what they are doing).Bornio wrote:This is the reason why OSX and Windows will always lead.
Terminal? As much as I like it, and I have it open ALL the time and use it from anywhere... We are in 2007 people! Terminal is just so 1970s
