On Wed, 28 May 2014, ttoine wrote:
I do most of my multimedia production with Unity desktop and it is fine... I
don't want to change anymore to another desktop, and I would be for just
letting people choose what they want.
You are destined to be disapointed :) I am sure Ubuntu will find anot
On Wed, 28 May 2014, leo wrote:
What is a DE?
Desktop Environment. Everything that makes up a session, starts with a
window manager which positions and decorates new windows. Then add dual
monitor support, workspaces, a taskbar, a systray, a backdrop/background,
a menu, sound server, clock.
On Wed, 28 May 2014, ttoine wrote:
I do most of my multimedia production with Unity desktop and it is fine... I
don't want to change anymore to another desktop, and I would be for just
letting people choose what they want.
After all, Ubuntu has Unity per default, why not use Unity for Ubuntu Stu
On Wed, 2014-05-28 at 13:37 -0700, leo wrote:
> What is a DE?
You're aware that this is the development mailing list ;)?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desktop_environment
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Window_manager
Some of us using X with GUIs only run a WM.
--
ubuntu-studio-devel mailing l
What is a DE?
On Wednesday, May 28, 2014 10:43 AM, "lukefro...@hushmail.com"
wrote:
The new DE's are all more popular than the old ones with folks who
did NOT start using computers on desktops. That means both elders
using them for the first time, and younger folks whose introduction to
The new DE's are all more popular than the old ones with folks who
did NOT start using computers on desktops. That means both elders
using them for the first time, and younger folks whose introduction to
computing was phones or tablets.
When what the Windows team called "NewShell" was under de
On Wed, May 28, 2014 at 12:37 PM, Helios Martinez Dominguez <
helios.martinez.doming...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm simply *needing* a distro that i don't have to install over again
> every two months, having to back-up, re-install most of my work-flow apps,
> choose a different OS to experiment with
On Wed, May 28, 2014 at 10:42 AM, ttoine wrote:
> I do most of my multimedia production with Unity desktop and it is fine...
> I don't want to change anymore to another desktop, and I would be for just
> letting people choose what they want.
>
> After all, Ubuntu has Unity per default, why not us
I'm simply *needing* a distro that i don't have to install over again every
two months, having to back-up, re-install most of my work-flow apps, choose
a different OS to experiment with to *develop or create*.
✡
. . : : הליוס שמש : : . .
Helios Reinaldo Martínez Domínguez
+34 657 633 848 helios.
On Wed, 2014-05-28 at 10:42 +0200, ttoine wrote:
> After all, Ubuntu has Unity per default, why not use Unity for Ubuntu
> Studio ?
There are several reasons why experienced computer users likely don't
use Unity. One of the famous examples is this one:
"On 7 December 2012, Richard Stallman said t
I do most of my multimedia production with Unity desktop and it is fine...
I don't want to change anymore to another desktop, and I would be for just
letting people choose what they want.
After all, Ubuntu has Unity per default, why not use Unity for Ubuntu
Studio ? Less time on DE customisation,
Personally, having used Gnome3 ever since it was released, I have no use
whatsoever for a traditional DE. The main upsides with Gnome3 for me are
two things: 1.speed 2.simplicity.
Also, the menu is not central for Ubuntu Studio. It's only needed for
DEs that have menus, as those menus otherwise get
On Tue, 27 May 2014, lukefro...@hushmail.com wrote:
I have found that for video editing and news audio use nothing seems to beat
the basic
Win95 taskbar concept extended by multiple workspaces. GNOME2, MATE, Cinnamon
LXDE, XFCE, and even IceWM all support this concept and thus are essentially
I have found that for video editing and news audio use nothing seems to beat
the basic
Win95 taskbar concept extended by multiple workspaces. GNOME2, MATE, Cinnamon
LXDE, XFCE, and even IceWM all support this concept and thus are essentially
used
the same way once set up.
Honestly, nothi
And some personal feelings as well.
In the past I have tried lubuntu, xubuntu and KDE as they relate to use
with the studio metas. I tried unity and gnome shell, but was not able to
evaluate them well as they seemed to require more than my system had to
offer. They seemed "exclusive" to those w
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