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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
byIdiomatick ( 976696 ) writes:
Well it was a few years ago. Hope ubuntu has enough weight it can set standards.
bymonoqlith ( 610041 ) writes:
I think Ubuntu implicitly has set the standard. Ubuntu comes standard with GNOME, GNOME uses GTK, GTK is therefore the de facto standard.
The more relevant complaint seems to be that GTK isn't good enough. I agree that Ubuntu and GNOME could do a lot to improve it.
byefalk ( 935211 ) writes:
And yet Debian Gtk chose to recently arbitrarily rename the glib package, breaking binary compatibility. Why? Who knows? Will they ever fix it? Who knows?
Why does this Linux community have such a deep and abiding hatred of backwards compatibility? Library versions, device drivers, audio systems, hot-plugging, device naming, anything even remotely related to multimedia. This list goes on and on.
Until the Linux community decides to settle on some standards, it will never be ready for the end-user deskto
byvadim_t ( 324782 ) writes:
There's no "Linux community". There is a lot of communities of different sizes, many of which don't give a damn about each other, plus individual developers doing their own thing.
It's like asking, why does the "programming community" keep inventing new languages? Can't we just all settle on C?
There's a guy somewhere working on some project who got really fed up with say, artsd, and decided that writing a successful sound daemon would look good on his resume. And we end up with yet another sound system. And if you come to him complaining about the lack of unification he'll tell you he's doing it on his own time, has X very happy users and doesn't really care about what you think.
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bymonoqlith ( 610041 ) writes:
I agree, the lack of unification works to create a lot of options, some of which are excellent and which create happy circumstances among a very select and relatively very savvy group of users.
That said, I don't buy this idea there is no Linux community. I think there's a sustained effort by a large number of developers and users to make across a number of distros to make a Linux desktop that is competitive against Windows and OS X. If that's not something of a community I don't know what is. And if compet
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