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On 17/04/12 07:54, steve wrote:
I've played with unity but I cant seem to find what its meant to be doing that is of any real use to man nor beast. If its trying to do what I think its trying to do then that is easily done by using different logins - or it was before they screwed that up with unity. As a programmer the idea of different workspaces/projects is appealing but as the main tools have their own idea of 'personality' unities attempt is just further inadequate clutter. If its just trying to dumb the interface down for a dumb user its a bit like blanking out the windscreen on a car to not frighten the driver and will just lead to chaos and death for all other road users - or a lack of parking spaces. If its trying to create a unified interface across all devices then I may use it on the lowest capability device ONLY - see last point. Whatever it is its basically a philips head in a multi screw, bolt and meccano set world. And its dropped down the back of the filing cabinet for me.On 16/04/12 17:48, Rob Beard wrote:It's probably worth pointing out that Mint 10 is end of life this month (it's based on Ubuntu 10.10). However Mint 9 is an LTS release which IIRC is supported until April next year, or Mint 11 is supported until about October this year.I'm running Mint 12 on my laptop and to be honest I'm not a big fan of Gnome 3. I've given it a try and it's not bad (compared to Unity) but I'm too much of a fan of Gnome 2. I've installed Mint Debian Edition on another PC to have a play with and it isn't too bad (apart from a bit of breakage with the Mint menu). The Linux Mint Debian Edition now defaults to Mate (which I understand is a fork of Gnome 2), and it's also included with Mint 12 so it works in pretty much the same way as Mint 11 (you just have to select it on the login screen on Mint 12).I can also recommend the LXDE versions of Mint for lower end hardware, runs pretty well even with only something like 256MB Ram (and I dare say only with 128MB Ram).RobI have been using and testing Unity in Ubuntu 12.04 Beta and while I acknowledge it has come a long way, it does not quite suit my work flow.I am now happily using Xubuntu 12.04 Beta, soon to be final release (the XFCE derivitive of Ubuntu).It's fast, it looks and works in a very similar way to Gnome 2, and you have the added benefits of using the latest software and kernel.Also runs pretty well on lower spec machines. Can thoroughly recommend. Regards, Steve
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