Comment on Painful day for tech titans as EU finally sinks its regulatory teeth into them
TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world 8 months agoProbably because Gnome is used in more businesses and Gnome is pretty good at implementing accessibility features, which was one of the main conditions of the grant.
And it’s not a big deal, KDE is already getting a lot of support, and the work Gnome is doing is going to be an open, cross-desktop framework. It benefits KDE too.
rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 8 months ago
At the same time yes and … they are very unorthodox in their understanding of what makes things more accessible.
TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world 8 months ago
Not making their DE yet another Windows clone does not mean it’s inaccessible.
I get it, you clearly have a personal issue with Gnome. Just don’t use it then. There’s no need to be upset about an amazing open source project getting support and improving the accessibility stack for the entire Linux desktop.
rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 8 months ago
I use FVWM with 2-pixel solid borders and no window titlebars or buttons or panels, except for one FvwmButtons instance with digital clock, all keyboard-controlled.
The issues with Gnome are that it’s resource-heavy and inconsistent in UX, and setting it up is PITA.
Cinnamon as its fork is much better.
TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world 8 months ago
k
No it isn’t. Stop making shit up.
Gnome is easily the most consistent DE out there. By far. Honestly, by far and away the most consistent. Even MacOS is less consistent, and that’s saying something.
? Install it and it’s done. I change a couple of keyboard shortcuts too but that’s unnecessary.
So a Windows UX clone. Not everything has to be yet another Windows clone.