wms wrote:I wouldn't recommend anybody try Ubuntu or any other gnome 3-based Linux right now. A year ago Ubuntu and others were quite good, but then they upgrade to a new version of the UI called Gnome 3 and there are big problems. The gnome team has ideas about UI design that I disagree with strongly so they took away a lot of the useful features when they went to Gnome 3 and made it very difficult and awkward (and they introduced a lot of bugs in the process). The only way I'm able to get work done is by installing the gnome 2 UI layer on top of gnome 3, and that itself is clumsy in same places.SpongeBob wrote:I just tried out Linux again (Ubuntu), but it can't compete with the maturity and stability of Windows 7.
There may be some Linux distributions that don't use gnome 3, but Ubuntu for sure does, so stay away.
Agreed. I can't stand gnome (any gnome). And now that Canonical is dropping official support of the KDE variant, I can no longer recommend the Ubuntu family at all.
Honestly, I'm a little torn inside, now. I've considered myself an "exclusive" Linux user since around 2002/03; since using Windows (Vista, no less) on my tablet PC, as my main computer, for about a year, I find myself really missing a lot of the really great software that is simply not available on Linux. I think the Linux OS is easily superior to Windows, to the point that, based on just this one metric, Windows is basically unusable, but the software support on Windows is soooo much better. The application-specific alternatives in Linux frequently just fall short of their Windows brethren.
(Oh, and to make the situation even worse, there are some programs for Linux that far outshine any Windows alternatives.)