i think that if a distribution with MS WOS XP and 7 look and feel based on Gnome and Ubuntu or debian is released a lot of people would migrate.
People is comdortable with what they know, even Gnome is easy to use, they like Control panel, Documents and Settings and Start vuttons from MS WOS.
If program Icons should be in desktops, an start button with a control panel, My documents and so one, where Linux programs should be and If you want to install a program for wine it will put the icon in the desktop and programs fordelrs. A Linux running, but very little diference between using XP or 7 for users.
Of course a differnt add/remove programs for linux and wine in the control panel, but a non traumatic experience for lamers should be a great advance for this project.
Thanks in advance if anyone begins this distro - or patch or script - there are some scripts for gnome, but not enough, and of course not the integration with wine.
Of course a My PC with virtual units, that, in my opinion should be in a /home partition, and with a D: for the CD -rom, E for programa files, and F for My documents and Program data for a good experience in a long term upgrade install.
Wine distro with MS WOS look and feel
Wine distro with MS WOS look and feel
On Thu, 2010-08-26 at 04:53 -0500, mitcoes wrote:
sued M$ because Windows was too similar to Lisa and the Mac.
Martin
...and would likely get sued by M$ over look&feel issues just as Applei think that if a distribution with MS WOS XP and 7 look and feel
based on Gnome and Ubuntu or debian is released a lot of people would
migrate.
sued M$ because Windows was too similar to Lisa and the Mac.
Martin
Wine distro with MS WOS look and feel
mitcoes <[email protected]> wrote:
James McKenzie
Take a look at ReactOS. Realize that this is a nest of available lawsuit material, and that the wizzards in Redmond have a fleet of lawyers and such looking out for their interests. Look and feel lawsuits are not reliable for presedence but they do give enough for those folks to target anyone that creates a Windows7ese like interface.Sent: Aug 26, 2010 2:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Wine] Wine distro with MS WOS look and feel
i think that if a distribution with MS WOS XP and 7 look and feel based on Gnome and Ubuntu or debian is released a lot of people would migrate.
James McKenzie
Re: Wine distro with MS WOS look and feel
While Linux is fundamentally different in some locations, distros like Ubuntu try their hardest to make it as easy as possible to migrate. Do we really need to look like Windows? Let's analyze:mitcoes wrote:i think that if a distribution with MS WOS XP and 7 look and feel based on Gnome and Ubuntu or debian is released a lot of people would migrate.
People is comdortable with what they know, even Gnome is easy to use, they like Control panel, Documents and Settings and Start vuttons from MS WOS.
What do you mean here? The Gnome menu does all of this - it has three separate menus for applications, places and system tools, and it puts Wine apps in Applications->Wine... This can't be made much easier.an start button with a control panel, My documents and so one, where Linux programs should be and If you want to install a program for wine it will put the icon in the desktop and programs fordelrs. A Linux running, but very little diference between using XP or 7 for users.
By the way, you can make application shortcuts on the desktop. In fact, Wine even does this.
Isn't add/remove already as easy to use as possible? It's well-categorized, puts the best suggestions on top, gives you a lot of information and sometimes screenshots for each program, and more secure than downloading the software from an external site to boot. Of course, "user friendliness" is in the eye of the beholder, but seriously, the way the software tool is right now, does it really warrant an overhaul?Of course a differnt add/remove programs for linux and wine in the control panel, but a non traumatic experience for lamers should be a great advance for this project.
You mean like the "Computer" option in the Places menu in Gnome? Because that shows all your disks in a row, including CD-ROM devices. Mapping to drive letters is a bad idea as there is never enough certainty that D: is still the same when you connect more than one disk (external harddrives, USB disks etc). Gnome automounts each device with its label name (or an unique ID if there is none), which gives the certainty to the user that (for example) /media/mydisk IS, in fact, the drive they expected it to be.Of course a My PC with virtual units, that, in my opinion should be in a /home partition, and with a D: for the CD -rom, E for programa files, and F for My documents and Program data for a good experience in a long term upgrade install.
But speaking of this, the Eee PC had this; that is, it symlinked drive letters in the user's home directory for each connected device. It really didn't work very well because of the above stated problem.
While I realize it takes some time for a Windows user to get used to the differences, you're just suggesting completely unnecessary changes here.
Wine distro with MS WOS look and feel
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 10:52 PM, Jim Hall <[email protected]> wrote:
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-------------- next part --------------On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 11:39 AM, James Mckenzie <
[email protected]> wrote:
Personally, I don't want my Linux to look like Windoze. As for currentmitcoes <[email protected]> wrote:on Gnome and Ubuntu or debian is released a lot of people would migrate.Sent: Aug 26, 2010 2:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Wine] Wine distro with MS WOS look and feel
i think that if a distribution with MS WOS XP and 7 look and feel based
Take a look at ReactOS. Realize that this is a nest of available lawsuit
material, and that the wizzards in Redmond have a fleet of lawyers and such
looking out for their interests. Look and feel lawsuits are not reliable
for presedence but they do give enough for those folks to target anyone that
creates a Windows7ese like interface.
James McKenzie
desktops, point & click is point & click. If the desktop has to look and
feel like Windoze to convince someone to switch to Linux, I don't want them.
Jim
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The idea is to make some windows gamers play with a wine oriented distro and feel good.
The XPDE project itself makes the ilegal objections posts irrelevant.
But I do like Gnome.
My idea is a distro where you can execute a desktop as a wine program to use wine with a MS WOS desktop interface.
And where the Gnome interface can be configured in an easy and OPTIONAL way to look as MS WOS (there are packages that changes the look and feel)
XPDE is OK, but it has it own wm and, sure is not a s good as Gnome or KDE.
Or even better a DVD distro with all the MS WOS free and OS games with folders in the Gnome desktop with links to the games, and some linux games too.
Quakelive is as good as in MS WOS.
The XPDE project itself makes the ilegal objections posts irrelevant.
But I do like Gnome.
My idea is a distro where you can execute a desktop as a wine program to use wine with a MS WOS desktop interface.
And where the Gnome interface can be configured in an easy and OPTIONAL way to look as MS WOS (there are packages that changes the look and feel)
XPDE is OK, but it has it own wm and, sure is not a s good as Gnome or KDE.
Or even better a DVD distro with all the MS WOS free and OS games with folders in the Gnome desktop with links to the games, and some linux games too.
Quakelive is as good as in MS WOS.