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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 am a KDE user, but I also really like some gtk/GNOME applications, namely gimp and inkscape.

Personally I think it is very dissapointing that some of the core GNOME developpers like Miguel de Icaza and Nat Friedman never mentions KDE at all if they are talking about desktops.

I really wish there would be more collaboration between KDE and GNOME, e.g. it would be really great if KDE applications could show the GNOME file requester when run under GNOME and GNOME applications show the KDE filerequester when run under KDE. Also it would be nice if KDE and GNOME could use common themes so that they look actually identical. There is at least a solution for KDE with qtgtk, but it's not perfect and it would be nice if GNOME themes could be used under KDE, because some of them are quite nice.

I really think it should not be KDE vs. GNOME, but KDE and GNOME vs. Windows and MacOSX. It is a matter of fact that some of the best applications are gtk/GNOME apps (e.g. gimp, inkscape) and some are Qt/KDE apps (e.g. Scribus, Amarok, Kile, KDevelop). A deskop that really wants to compete with Windows/MacOSX does need all of them and there is no point in showing disrespect to one of the OSS desktop environements by completely ignoring it.

I think it is really great that there are KDE and GNOME because now there is one desktop that focuses more on simplicity and usability and one desktop that focuses more on features and configurability. I think more cooperation between the two desktops would in the end help both.