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by crashdancer
750 days ago
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The themes didn't work well for me and I've talked to lots of other users who had the same experience. It was a broken feature and it was correct to remove it. If you're denying my experiences and telling me they're not real then you are the one who is pretending to speak for other users of GNOME. So please cut that out. I don't follow development closer than anyone else, I just periodically read the dev blogs and changelogs like any user should. The difference is I don't assume that developers are hostile entities that are apparently spending all their spare time being passionate about their open source project just to annoy some users? Come now, think about it, isn't that a ridiculous notion? I mean really, I'm complaining about a broken feature and you're saying that's damage control. Wouldn't it be more "damage control" to insist that GNOME 2 somehow fixed all its theming bugs by doing something mysterious and unexplainable that no one can figure out 20 years later? When I comment I try to counter the negativity and focus on making constructive comments, I strongly urge you to do the same. It's not like the developers are aliens that can't be understood by mortal humans, if you really need something explained you can just go in the Matrix channel and (respectfully) ask them questions. |
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Considering Mate and Cinnamon still exist and are healthy projects would indicate there's many developers who share this sentiment. Nobody maintains older versions of KDE, apart from a single distro using Trinity (KDE3). That's quite a contrast as well.
I wasn't, and very few are, treating developers hostilely, we are just sharing whatever experience we have. That this isn't altogether positive, is not our fault or responsibility. That's the 'risk' you run creating products for end users who just use it. Nobody forces anyone to code for them.
Please stop putting words in my mouth, nowhere did I write that Gnome2 was bug free.
I suggest you take your constructive criticism to hand yourself.