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On Sat, 11 May 2024 14:16:18 -0400, Chris Ahlstrom wrote:
>Andrzej Matuch wrote this copyrighted missive and expects royalties:>
On Fri, 10 May 2024 17:33:22 +0000, RonB wrote:
>On 2024-05-09, Andrzej Matuch <andrzej@matu.ch> wrote:>On Thu, 09 May 2024 06:47:55 +0000, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
>On Wed, 8 May 2024 08:27:04 -0400, Andrzej Matuch wrote:>
I think the most common complaint of people using Linux CLI or GUI
tools is that they look dated.
Are they taking Microsoft, of all people, as arbiters of good taste?
There are definitely more people out there who are fans of the
Microsoft aesthetics than there are people who appreciate the dated
interfaces of open-source software. All of them will admit that the
"ugly" software still does the job, but it appears that the way a
program looks is as important as whether it completes the task.
I don't admit it. And I don't like the Windows "aesthetic." I do find
it a bit amusing that Windows' users simultaneously claim that 1)
Linux copies the Windows desktop and 2) It has a dated interface.
Both are true, 1) Linux indeed copies features and aesthetics of both
Windows and Mac OS but 2) does a very poor job of getting it right, in
my cases. The lack of consistency is very noticeable, and you'll have
something like the default desktop of Ubuntu which looks incredible...
until you open up a program which doesn't fit with the overall look at
all.
Like Microsoft's own system apps that revert to some old-style GUI
rather than the flat-ass Win 10+ interface?
Or applications that provide their own window decoration no matter what
OS they're on?
To be fair, no one uses Windows' system apps. WordPad's lack of use, in
particular, is a shame. It really was more than most people needed.
>Actually Linux has a LOT of interfaces. Windows only has one, and it's>
"dated" and ugly in my opinion.
I like the look myself, but find that it quickly gets boring. In fact,
that's probably why I like installing Linux and trying something else
out all the time.
I hear you on that one. Though I kind of fixate on Fluxbox (or Xfce4)
and use lxappearance, gtk-chtheme, gtk-theme-switch2,
xfce4-appearance-settings, Fluxbox themes, or qt5ct to get a more
harmonious look).
I alwaus end up missing the Buuf icons. I kind of wish I could use them in
Windows. The fact that my desktop looks like everyone else's (except for
the animated wallpaper courtesy of ArmouryCrate), does a lot to bore me.
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