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I wonder what really is driving these changes!!!
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Re: I wonder what really is driving these changes!!!
Honestly I think that Shuttlework has simply seen the momentum behind Qt and the stagnation behind GTK+/GNOME. With this, they get the benefits of good Qt apps in the short run, and have the start of a Qt platform as a contingency against the further decline of GTK+.
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Re: I wonder what really is driving these changes!!!
> About Unity:
Founded in 2010, the Unity project started by Mark Shuttleworth and Canonical has gone on to deliver a consistent user experience for desktop and netbook users alike...
The Unity 2D launcher displays a list of running applications as well as a list of favorite applications in a panel at the left of the screen. Notifications from individual applications are also highlighted in the launcher.
depends:
libqt4-dbus (>= 4:4.6.1)
Qt 4 D-Bus module
libqt4-declarative (>= 4:4.7.0~rc1)
Qt 4 Declarative module
libqtbamf1
Qt binding and QML plugin for bamf - shared library
libqtcore4 (>= 4:4.7.0~beta1)
Qt 4 core module
libqtdee1
Qt binding and QML plugin for Dee - shared library
libqtgconf1
Qt binding and QML plugin for GConf - shared library
libqtgui4 (>= 4:4.6.1)
Qt 4 GUI module
..
More >Natty Narwhal Testing and Discussion>> 2d Unity Based on QT
Before you edit, BACKUP !
Why there are dead links ?
1. Thread: Please explain how to access old kubuntu forum posts
2. Thread: Lost Information
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Re: I wonder what really is driving these changes!!!
Originally posted by Rog131=> Unity 2D Launcher
The Unity 2D launcher displays a list of running applications as well as a list of favorite applications in a panel at the left of the screen. Notifications from individual applications are also highlighted in the launcher.
depends:
libqt4-dbus (>= 4:4.6.1)
Qt 4 D-Bus module
libqt4-declarative (>= 4:4.7.0~rc1)
Qt 4 Declarative module
libqtbamf1
Qt binding and QML plugin for bamf - shared library
libqtcore4 (>= 4:4.7.0~beta1)
Qt 4 core module
libqtdee1
Qt binding and QML plugin for Dee - shared library
libqtgconf1
Qt binding and QML plugin for GConf - shared library
libqtgui4 (>= 4:4.6.1)
Qt 4 GUI module
..
More >Natty Narwhal Testing and Discussion>> 2d Unity Based on QT
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Re: I wonder what really is driving these changes!!!
I really doubt it has anything to do with Mono. I don't like Mono just as much as the next guy, but it's still very much possible to use GTK without Mono. It's much more likely that they are using Qt for the technical advantages it has over GTK.
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Re: I wonder what really is driving these changes!!!
Think about the concept of Unity.
To have both GTK and Qt applications available, you have to incorporate both platforms.
Unity will be able to have the best of both worlds, then.
In fact, it appears to me the goal is to allow an Ubuntu user choose whether to have a Unity, Gnome, or KDE UI.
This can only be facilitated if there is functionality for all platforms.
Frankly, I prefer KDE over Gnome and Unity, and would install a KDE desktop as my first order of business.
But my application choices currently are an even mix of GTK and Qt applications anyway, and for a long while I was installing Qt by hand (KDE did not always have Qt capability).
UbuntuGuide/KubuntuGuide
Right now the killer is being surrounded by a web of deduction, forensic science,
and the latest in technology such as two-way radios and e-mail.
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Re: I wonder what really is driving these changes!!!
Originally posted by perspectoff.....
To have both GTK and Qt applications available, you have to incorporate both platforms.
Unity will be able to have the best of both worlds, then.
In fact, it appears to me the goal is to allow an Ubuntu user choose whether to have a Unity, Gnome, or KDE UI.
This can only be facilitated if there is functionality for all platforms.
.....
As I understand it, Unity is built using the Qt4 API but is neither Gnome nor KDE. It is it's own desktop. With the appropriate GTK+ and Qt4 libraries installed Unity can run apps from either desktop, but THE desktop, which controls access to those apps, is Unity. Unity controls its own memory footprint and, more importantly, with the LGPL license, Canonical can connect its own proprietary binaries without having to share the source code. PC OEMs will love that, and most PC users won't care. IF it works, is easy to use and comes preinstalled with lots of free software that other OS's never include, and it costs the PC OEM nothing per unit cost except to ghost an image into a production run of HDs, then everyone is happy. Except Microsoft."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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