A survey to give feedack to devs that don't want to hear it? I'll get right on that as soon as I'm done pissing in the wind...
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A survey to give feedack to devs that don't want to hear it? I'll get right on that as soon as I'm done pissing in the wind...
This will never count as feedback. This is blowback. The reason to do this survey is *clicks* not anything that could benefit gnome. It is a bit interessting though. Not because it will tell anything about gnome though. It will demonstrate the synergies between ad-funded yellow journalism and a hate crowd.
My guess is the main conclusion would be "hate and yellow journalism are persistent* But we all knew that being a bunch of open source geeks. It is our nature. Hating today, hating tomorrow.
What? Do you even use Thunderbird? On a modern PC? They stopped developing it because it's precisely very far away from being finished and it would bring back very little benefits (if any) to Mozilla if they did invest more in it. I used to love Thunderbird, but that was when my PC was connected to a 4:3 screen and the best alternative to it was Evolution. It's a pathetic experience on 16:9 screens, not to mention all the plugins and extras (that tend to break a lot between versions) that are required to implement some functionality that is present in other decent email clients (like calendar, google sync, conversation view, etc). Most software is never "finished". If development stops it usually means something is wrong or people have moved on to other alternatives or technologies.
What a waste of bandwidth. Why not having a survey on Linux desktops in general?
Uh, have you? I use Thunderbird daily on on Windows 7 and Linux Mint 13 @ 1600x900, 1366x768 and 1600x1200. It works perfectly for my needs managing 8 email addresses.
The addons are why it's a finished product, you add in only the functionality that you need and don't add in the bloat you don't. Adding every possible feature to a single application is a recipe for a total and complete disaster.
Can some who knows how to use the gnome shell let me know how to work with multiple windows at the same time? For example I am watching a stream in a browser and taking notes in a vim. Is this possible in the gnome shell?
ofc that's possible in gnome shell. Every normal window in Gnome has the "Always on Top" feature which apart from Windows DE's probably almost any modern DE has.
You can drag and resize windows via your mouse. Or via shortcuts. The super key with arrow key is the default. If you want to change this setting: open dconf Editor below org → gnome → mutter → keybindings
Workspace settings and other settings are below org → gnome → mutter.
As notes taking app gnote is currently my favourite.