I'm pushing Debian Squeeze and GNOME 2 as hard as I can

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debianlogo1.jpgI never really considered myself a GNOME user. Though I am. I've used Xfce, Fluxbox, Fvwm2, LXDE, even JWM (Joe's Window Manager) in Puppy and FLTK in TinyCore. But most of the time I stick with the default desktop environment offered by a given distribution.

And more often than not, that's GNOME 2. And I've been using Debian Squeeze with GNOME 2 since November 2010 -- almost a year now -- and using it for more of my work than ever.

I don't consider myself a "power user," but I am pushing this desktop environment and this distribution pretty hard. I've got a lot of software installed -- most from the Debian repositories, some from other repos and a few packages from third parties (usually the upstream developers themselves). I run Dropbox. I create, edit and mix audio, I edit video. I crunch hundreds of images. Code web pages. Write. Browse the web with Iceweasel and Google Chrome. Watch TV shows from Hulu and various other sites, including CBS.com.

I can suspend/resume without rebooting for days at a time. That's probably the best thing about this particular instance of Linux and my particular hardware (the not-terribly impressive Lenovo G555). I've never had this level of functionality before in Linux or BSD.

NetworkManager has been great. I've used it to connect to wired, WiFi and 3G networks, all seamlessly. My old-school ext3 filesystems managed under encrypted LVM have run perfectly the whole time. I do backups via rsync.

It all just works. It's Debian Stable with the now old and abandoned GNOME 2.

What will happen to Debian's default desktop environment by the time the current Testing distribution, Wheezy, itself becomes Stable sometime in early 2013? Will GNOME 3 have settled down by then, or will Debian turn to another DE, maybe Xfce, for its main desktop? I'll worry about it then. If this hardware holds out, it'll probably do so with Debian Squeeze and the 2.6.37 kernel that handles this hardware perfectly.

GNOME's supposed to be slow. I've really never found that to be true -- and certainly not on this laptop made in March 2010.

It's not "pure" Squeeze. I have Debian Backports, the Mozilla Debian APT archive, Liquorix (and now newer kernels from Backports if I want them), Debian Multimedia, plus repositories for Google Chrome and Dropbox. But the core is a distribution that "froze" some time in mid-2010 and released in February 2011. It keeps on working, and so do I. Can't argue with that.


9 Comments

Xfce is rapidly becoming the choice for Linux users who want our desktops to actually look like *desktops* instead of overgrown smartphones. GNOME 3, Windows 8, and *especially* Ubuntu Unity are all happily trotting towards the overgrown smartphone mentality.

I hope they soon wake up and realize that what works on a tablet is terrible on a computer with a keyboard and upright screen.

oldrocker99 said:

I agree. I tried 11>04 this morning and was completely disgusted with the UNITY interface. GNOME 3 is no better. I just went back to Ultimate Edition 2.9, built of Ubuntu 11.10, with GNOME 2.x, KDE4.x, LXDE, Lubuntu, XFCE and Openbox already installed.

pouic said:

XFCE augmented with Cairo-Dock to have a fast and pretty interface
It allows to keep most of the GTK applis we used under Gnome, and runs smoothly on any PC.

Paul Martin said:

I have also found Openbox to be a great alternative to xfce for power users. It requires a lot of configureation before you get anything spectacular, but the possibilities are quite amazing. I made a tutorial for a pretty good configuration that can be found here if anyone is interested

Bauke Jan Douma said:

What -- no twm?

Peter said:

Hi Paul, I can only agree but Openbox is easy to configure and the result is very fast and beautiful. Since I do not need Microsoft more - everything works! A good start is also the Distri CrunchBang(based on Debian) and the Forum to see how easy it can be configured Openbox. So why Gnome, KDE or even Unity? To all: try it with Openbox, you will not regret it!
Have fun ... Peter

friv said:

I got to say that I agree with Paul Martin there saying that this is a great alternative for xfce. I will try to do some research on my own and come back with the results.

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friv on I'm pushing Debian Squeeze and GNOME 2 as hard as I can: I got to say that I agree with Paul Martin there saying that this is a ...

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Paul Martin on I'm pushing Debian Squeeze and GNOME 2 as hard as I can: sorry it cut out my link. that can be found at https://sites.google.co ...

Paul Martin on I'm pushing Debian Squeeze and GNOME 2 as hard as I can: I have also found Openbox to be a great alternative to xfce for power ...

pouic on I'm pushing Debian Squeeze and GNOME 2 as hard as I can: XFCE augmented with Cairo-Dock to have a fast and pretty interface It ...

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