▲ | chrsw 6 days ago | |||||||
Thanks for this. So, if I were to run GNUStep as my desktop, what would I be missing from KDE, GNOME, XFCE, etc? | ||||||||
▲ | lproven 6 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Hmmm. Interesting question. Obviously enough there are not a great many native GNUstep apps. It's Linux, though, so there are a million alternatives, but they won't share GNUstep's look, feel, keystrokes, etc. It comes with a file manager, both plain text and rich text editors, image viewers, a chat client, a pretty good email app, a terminal emulator (possibly a choice of them too), and GSDE also provides a web browser, although it's a wrapper around Chromium. It works pretty well. There are lots of programming tools available too, including Gorm, which broadly replicates NeXT's Interface Builder. Pic from one of my own machines here: https://regmedia.co.uk/2023/07/05/deb_11_gsde.jpg I wrote about it (and Lomiri): https://www.theregister.com/2023/07/06/two_new_debian_deskto... I think it's beautiful, myself, but then I consider NeXTstep to be the high-water mark in desktop GUI design thus far. I find GNUstep's choice of accelerator keys weird and frustrating, though. I do not run it as my daily driver, but I am thinking about it. The installation takes a while but it's a `git clone` followed by a few scripts. It's not actually difficult. It took me a few hours but that's because my VM kept crashing. | ||||||||
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