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Improving the User Experience for Desktop Sysadmins - Sabayon

GNOME
GNOME

Seth wrote: The three immediate design stakeholders in the 'enterprise desktop' are: end users, help desk staff, and desktop system administrators. Most design work for GNOME has gone into improving the end user experience, which is really the dominant stakeholder of those three. Some improvements aimed at end-users, like promoting preferences instead of settings you can get wrong, have also made life a little easier for help desk staff (as people are that much less likely to hose things). Recently Mark's work on Vino has added a very large improvement for help desk staff: the ability to remotely view and operate user's desktops (there is nothing more frustrating than blindly stepping people through computer operations over the phone).

So what about sysadmins? Sabayon is GNOME's first major design targeted at improving the user experience for people who administer GNOME systems, and hopefully the start of an initiative toward designing for this important group of users...

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KDE Kiosk vs GNOME Sabayon

I guess that this is the Gnome reaction to KDE Kiosk technology. And, as usual, GNOME is creating the second generation of the technology: improved, more usable.

Why is kiosk or KDE not mentioned in the article? It seems petty politics, because after all they are the pioneers in this field, and provided the first implementation and ideas.

Also, I am sure that sysadmins would be happy to use Sabayon to control KDE apps as well. After all, Seth is talking about including OOo and firefox *even if they do not use GConf*. And KDE apps would be even easier to add.

Just because a company uses GNOME, that does not mean that all applications are GNOME applications. And Sabayon should be an universal tool.