My GNOME 3 experience on Ubuntu 11.04
I’m addicted to gnome-shell!
A week has passed since I installed GNOME 3 on Ubuntu 11.04 “Natty Narwhal”, from the official GNOME 3 PPA.
I remember thinking something like “Looks nice, feels good but lots of things are missing… going back to classic GNOME…” but for some unexplained reason I didn’t make the purge and kept using GNOME 3 and the mighty gnome-shell.
Here’s my GNOME 3 sceeen shot:
This isn’t a GNOME 3 review, Ars Technica already made one that you can read here. It’s just my two cents about some things.
Problems, bugs, weird stuff and a whish list
- Ubuntu 11.04 doesn’t have official GNOME 3 support. You have to use the PPA. I almost went Fedora because of this. Still thinking about that…
- The window decorator couldn’t be more ugly, but I saw lots of screen shots around the web with a great looking interface. Why wasn’t mine good looking?! Seams that the problem was that the theme (Adwaita) wasn’t there. After a quick search, I found out that the theme was in a package called gnome-themes-standard that wasn’t in the GNOME 3 dependency list and that I couldn’t install because the package itself is broken. The solution was to extract the contents of the package and place the Awaita theme where it should be (/usr/share/themes) manually.
- I also remember thinking “where the *FWORD* are my desktop icons?!” and after taking after a deep breath I read all about the philosophy of GNOME 3/gnome-shell and it kind of made some sense, although I am/was too used to having stuff all around my desktop. This was only the first weird thing I had to adapt to.
- There are no applets in gnome-shell, the nice panel (top bar) isn’t customizable. I have a trillion passwords to memorize and I have been using revelation until now (GNOME 2) because of the nice applet that it has. I used it exhaustively because it allowed me to search within my passwords very quickly. I really miss that applet.
- The notifications changed. In a general way I like the new notification system, it’s cool and really doesn’t bother you when your’re working and it’s a complete WIN to be able to check the notifications some time after they occurred. Yet, another habit, I use pidgin as my default IM client and I want to be able to stick the icon somewhere visible (top bar) and see when the icon changes it’s status. I liked the way that worked out in GNOME 2. It’s just weired not to have it there now.
- Keyboard has lot’s of shortcuts. WIN! But hey some of us have razors, mx 5xx or some other mouse that has more buttons than we have fingers. There should be mouse shortcuts as well! With compiz I used two useful shortcuts within the desktop wall. I used the two buttons placed on the left side of my mouse to change to the previous and to the next workspace. This is another thing I really miss.
- Nautilus changed the shortcuts. Now I have to press two keys to delete a file. I liked it better when I only had to press del for that.
- Mutter breaks transparency in non-maximized windows, like gnome-terminal that I use allot. It’s a known bug but still no solution.
- As well as some other users, I haven’t figured out how to remove the unnecessary accessibility menu from the top bar.
- Another “philosophy” issue is that by default window controls only have the close button. No minimize or maximize. That’s because you can maximize windows with a double-click on the title bar and because you don’t have anything to see (besides your wallpaper) on your desktop, so you don’t need to minimize windows, only switch between them. That was weired at first and I added both missing controls, but sincerely after a week of using gnome-shell I don’t use them at all.
- Lack of customization. This is a problem. I like to tweak my desktop and so do other users. I think future success depends on this issue.
- Places should also have the option to be added as a Favorite. I have the sensation that nautilus alone isn’t enough.
Things that keep me hooked in!
- The coolness factor! I don’t know why neither can I explain it… but it just feels right to use gnome-shell! Almost as if it was cool to use it and if you don’t.. you’re not just cool anymore.
- Gnome-shell. I’m still adapting but I like the changes.
- The application switcher.
- The workspace management is just awesome. The way they extend one after another or how they are removed when no longer necessary is just how they should always have worked.
- I use a laptop + a LCD screen at home. The second screen, the LCD, doesn’t change when I switch workspaces. When I switch workspaces only the laptop screen workspace changes. The LCD workspace is always the same. I don’t really know if this is the default behavior, but I love this. I can put my “always showing apps” in the LCD “always showing” workspace and move throe the laptop workspaces.
- I’m more focused on my work. Congratulations to the GNOME 3 team because this is one of gnome-shell’s objectives and I really feel it.
- Gnome-shell extensions. They represent additional functionality for gnome-shell. There is a collection of extensions available at the GNOME GIT source code repository. I two articles: one about those extra extensions available at the GNOME GIT and another article with nice code examples and explanations. Adding to this while browsing the web for some kind of gnome-shell integration with pidgin I found this extension that integrates pidgin with gnome-shell the same way Empathy is integrated (thanks to Mohd Izhar Firdaus Ismail).
- There are lots of nice themes emerging (Smooth Inset and Elementary). This Tron Legacy gnome-shell theme is for an older version of gnome-shell but you can get the idea.
I’ll keep posting my GNOME3 experience and who knows, some extensions of my own.





