159 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
159 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2304
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Title: HPR2304: Using Gnome 3 for the First Time
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2304/hpr2304.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 01:03:14
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,304 entitled, using home free for the first time.
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It is hosted by Shane Shannon and is about 11 minutes long and Karina Cleanflag.
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The summary is, Shane just switched his desktop environment from XFC to home free.
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Here is this experience, so far.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hacker Public Radio listeners, welcome.
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My name is Shane Shannon.
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I recently stopped using Zubuntu and I switched to using Ubuntu with the GNOME desktop environment.
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So I wanted to tell you a bit about my experiences, the things that I liked, and a few puzzling
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or awful things.
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Maybe you can help me with those things.
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This episode might be a bit timely because not too far in the past, canonical announced
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that they are dropping the Unity desktop and that they are going to use GNOME on Ubuntu.
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Just about the time I heard that announcement, I was getting a bit bored with Zubuntu and
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the XFC desktop.
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So I decided to take GNOME for a spin and these are my adventures.
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I should probably say that I'm using pronunciations from the website, OMG Ubuntu.
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A little while ago they published this little graphic that says how things like Zubuntu
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and GNOME are pronounced and I'm using those pronunciations.
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Maybe there's better pronunciations or different ones that you've heard but just because
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of this graphic I've seen, I'm going to be saying Zubuntu, GNOME and things like that.
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So I blew away my old installation of Zubuntu and I installed Ubuntu 1704 and then I put
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the GNOME desktop environment on top of it.
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And the thing that I liked right away was the Superkey search.
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So hidden the Windows key, superkey, you can type right away what you want to search
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for and I believe it searches through your files and things like that but it also looks
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for apps.
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So especially at first when you have first installed an operating system, at least for
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me I'm trying to install a lot of different things and explore in different applications.
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So this was especially useful.
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It's brought up an icon for the different apps and then by clicking on that or pressing
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enter I guess it would take you to the app store.
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I forget what it's called in GNOME but I'll call it the app store.
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Something else I really liked is that extensions are easy to install.
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Here in GNOME you've got this black bar at the top.
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That's where your time is and your Wi-Fi indicator and your volume indicator and things
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like that.
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And you can install other indicators pretty easily by going to the GNOME website, signing
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in and then doing a search and when you're found an extension that you want to install
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you just click a button and it'll install it on your machine.
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I found that really cool.
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I'm going to look here in my extensions and I'll tell you what a few extensions that
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I've been using that I really enjoy.
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I have to have a clipboard indicator so the first thing I did was I installed clipboard
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indicator and it works really well.
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It's not too fancy but it's pretty good.
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I also installed something called dynamic top bar.
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I'll read the description because it's kind of hard to describe apart from the description.
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In my previous recording of this episode I spent two minutes trying to describe what this
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app does.
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I'll just read a dynamic top bar.
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Let the top bar become transparent when no window is maximized.
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That's a great description.
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My desktop I usually leave pretty empty.
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I like having a good wallpaper up and I like this feeling in the site of the mostly
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empty desktop.
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So having the black top bar of GNOME transparent most of the time, it's great.
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I really like how that looks.
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Just a really clean look.
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Another extension I just had to install was the removable drive menu extension.
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Once I'm using an external hard drive sometimes and flash drives all the time, it's great
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just to have that eject button up there on the top bar for when you want to open or eject
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a drive that you're plugged in.
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Now I think it's time to talk about some of the puzzles and the frustrations of using
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GNOME so far.
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I'm only a few weeks in so I may discover solutions to these or maybe you can contact
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me and let me know how to deal with some of these things.
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Maybe even do a response episode and let me know what you've learned or what you already
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know.
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Okay, here's the strangest thing about GNOME.
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I use an IRC program called Hexchat and I use Audacity and the strange thing is that
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there's a weird transparency issue when I'm using these programs on GNOME.
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I'm looking at Audacity right now and I've got a wallpaper that's kind of orange and purple.
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And if I look at my title bar in Audacity, I can see some transparency just above the
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title bar and just below it.
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So I can actually see the color of my wallpaper peeking through just above and below where my
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title bar says Audacity.
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This happens in Hexchat as well.
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Super strange.
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I don't really want that to happen and it only happens when the application is maximized.
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Let me know what you know about that if you have any answers.
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Another puzzler is that I've tried to install extensions that promise to be system monitors.
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I just want to see a little box up there in the top bar that'll let me know what percentage
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of my computer is working at.
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For example, when I launch something like Vivaldi Browser, it takes a while.
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But in Zubuntu, I'd always just glance up there at the system monitor and tell me that
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the computer was working hard but it was starting to do the job.
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So I'd know that Vivaldi would eventually open up.
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But I've tried to install three or four extensions here in Genome that are system monitors
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and none of them have worked.
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As soon as you click on the on button that will install it onto your computer, a second
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or two later, that on button switches off automatically so I don't know what's going
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on there.
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For me, system monitor extensions are just not working.
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I really like to customize my machine visually so I love mouse themes.
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I go to places like gnomelook.org and I pick out mouse themes.
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I just want different cursors.
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But I follow instructions online to put the mouse theme folder in the certain place and
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then open up another file and make sure that it's that mouse theme will work globally.
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I follow those instructions carefully but I'm still getting problems of the default mouse
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theme.
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I forget what it's called here in Genome.
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Being present in some windows and on the desktop sometimes.
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But in other applications, the mouse theme that I actually installed and I actually want
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shows up.
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So I have the difficulty of two mouse themes showing up in Genome, even after I've logged
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out or restarted.
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And because I like customizing so much, there's one other puzzler.
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It's not really a puzzler, I can see that it's what the designers of Genome wanted.
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But the bar on the side where you can kind of a taskbar where you can pin the applications
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that you're going to use all the time, it's not very customizable.
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It's not customizable at all.
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You can change the transparency of it.
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I haven't found a way to change the size of the icons on it.
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Things like that.
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I like programs like Plank, where you can change the theme of the taskbar, is that the
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correct term for it?
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Or you can, I'll call it the launch bar, you can change the theme of the launch bar or
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the transparency or the size of the icons, things like that.
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So it's a little frustrating to me that the sidebar on the left hand side of Genome doesn't
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let you change anything.
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I imagine that the developers of Genome want things to be super simple, and I'm just
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not sure if that's going to work for me in the long time, in the long term I mean.
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So we'll see.
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To tell you the truth at this point, I am thinking fondly of Zuban2 and the XFC desktop.
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I like how customizable things were there.
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But who knows, even if I stop using Genome in a few weeks, I'm probably going to
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keep it installed on my system, and just use a different desktop environment.
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And then as Genome changes in the next few months and years, as Zuban2 is helping develop,
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sorry not to be as canonical as helping develop Genome, and other organizations are involved.
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Maybe things will change more to my liking.
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I'm probably going to stick with it for a few more weeks.
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I'll do some more search in and discover new things I assume.
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But so far, there's some things I like, and there's some things that just bug me because
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the customization isn't working as smoothly as I wanted to.
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Let me know what you think, let me know any answers that you have, and do a response
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episode if you're up for that.
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Thanks so much for listening, I'll talk to you later.
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You've been listening to HECCA Public Radio at HECCA Public Radio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
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how easy it really is.
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HECCA Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
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and is part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
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the website, or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution,
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Share a Life, 3.0 License.
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