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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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Sabayon is not needed when Kiosk is here

Hear me out!

Open source and free software was about sharing code and ideas, not about erecting artificial barriers between projects. The truth of the matter is that kiosk is here now and it works today.

And the nice thing is that the kiosk back-end is distinct from the front-end, so gnome devs could write its own GUI gnome-HIG compliant tools without having to reinvent the wheel. We, gnomers, would also get the benefit of being able to use one single app to control and lock down any app, whether KDE or Gnome.

Most normal people are not fundamentalists like you that despise everything else. K3b and the KDE educational apps are superb and Gnome has nothing like them. Should I now as a gnome user have to make my choice of desktop apps based on which system configuration tools are available to do policy management?

Get real. The ideal situation would be to have one common way to do this in both desktops so that I can control and lock down kde apps within Gnome and viceversa. Kiosk is a great tool and Gnomers seem to be having a very bad case of the not-invented here syndrome, a syndrome which drove many a great company into the ground.