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In addition, GNOME Shell is obviously a touch oriented interface, not a mouse oriented one. To me it smells like GNOME Shell is taking the same approach as Ubuntu; market it to tablets, the desktop people will always find workarounds to get work done. The difference is that while Ubuntu outright said that Unity is an attempt to have the same interface on the Desktop and Mobile devices, GNOME hides behind cryptic statements such as "Revolutionise the desktop", "Maximise Efficiency", "Simplify controls" etc.
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Well on this point I think the same, but now it's not the same topic.
Gnome has always been like this anyways, trying to make things as simple as possible by "hiding" advanced customisation and by trying to "force" a default setup. In Gnome 3 they just went further in this way.
They've made their ideological choice. Some people like, some people don't. It's a matter of taste and it's impossible to please everyone since we all have different needs.
Personally like I said, I don't, and I prefer to use a DE that suits my needs.
That's also why the Linux world is so great, because there's no default forced choice you can use whatever you want and change whenever you want. There's enough DEs to satisfy most of the different needs.
You aren't forced to use it, so yeah it may be a piece of shit for you but maybe not for touch users or grandmas or the OSX-addict audience.
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So yes, GNOME 3 is the one to blame for providing a crappy environment. In fact, it's not required of AMD to make free drivers, but they still do; But it is required of people that claim to have released a "revolutionary desktop" to actually make it work on a desktop, and they didn't even try.
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Nope. It's not GNOME 3 or any Window Manager/DE that is responsible for correctly interpreting OpenGL stuff to render the framebuffer and coloring the pixels of your screen.
The fact that there's screen corruption or driver malfunction when using Gnome 3 with fglrx and not other drivers just show problems in the driver itself, that can only be solved by AMD anyways.
If you are talking about the binary blob, it's not free (if you meant open source..). By the way like it has been said, the open source one performs much better than the blob concerning Composited/2D stuff and runs Gnome 3 fine.
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Originally Posted by Arafails
(PS: My suggestion is to not use Piece of **** binary blobs, including catalyst or nvidia drivers, with linux. They do not integrate well and no one can make them do so).
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Well.. Now if only the open-source drivers were on par with proprietary ones concerning 3D performance and features...