The GNOME Foundation is thrilled to announce the GNOME project is receiving €1M from the Sovereign Tech Fund to modernize the platform, improve tooling and accessibility, and support features that are in the public interest.
This investment will fund the following projects until the end of 2024:
- Improve the current state of accessibility
- Design and prototype a new accessibility stack
- Encrypt user home directories individually
- Modernize secrets storage
- Increase the range and quality of hardware support
- Invest in Quality Assurance and Developer Experience
- Expand and broaden freedesktop APIs
- Consolidate and improve platform components
Huge congrats on everyone who got this working. €1M will really go a long way and GNOME absolutely deserves it!
Expand and broaden freedesktop APIs
I am very excite
- KDE fanboi
I really do wish governments invested more in open source. If it’s a generic thing like an operating system that the public could benefit from at large, they would be doing the public a service.
Great News!
I’m very interested in the secrets storage. Hopefully that includes integrating programs with GNOME Secrets, especially firefox
Oh, good. Gnome gets more money.
This but unironically. It’s a very good thing.
are you trying to say that this is a bad thing?
Congrats GNOME!
Does anyone know if homedir encryption will utilize systemd-homed?
This money would have been far better given to KDE instead of the assholes at Gnome.
How so? I miss the old gnome, but I have accepted gnome 3 for what it is. Kde was quite interesting for me back in 2012, but it didn’t perform well with my old setup. What’s new with kde? Id like to give it a try, but I’m too old to break my SO by having both gnome and kde on it.
The KDE guys have been on fire for the past two years. Between their theming, color selection, and session handling they’ve come a long ways. They’ve also implemented some gnome-only features such as the overview, albeit in a very optional way. As opposed to eliminating a panel and forcing you to use the overview to see what applications or windows you have open, or available to launch, it’s just a window management tool instead of a UX paradigm.
Their wayland session is stable and also deals with xwayland in a very different way. If you set a custom scaling factor, the QT apps and GTK apps are talked to in a way that makes the same scaling factor consistent across all your applications, even under a wayland session with xwayland. The Gnome devs hand-wring about how the world has to be perfect before implementing an idea, where the KDE devs try something and then iterate if it’s successful.
I am aware of the difference in philosophy taken by both Gnome and KDE, but would you mind elaborating on the ‘assholes’ bit?
- Calling the Arch Wiki contributor’s clowns
- The public tantrum with System76 because of the poor attitudes on the part of the Gnome project
- The Gnome way: stop making shell extensions and contribute to the Shell or get fucked.
- The overall attitude of the devs regarding user opinions, resulting in the plethora of extensions available, and the tone deaf attitude regarding all of them.
- The world must be perfect before we do jack shit about fractional scaling, despite people moving to HiDPI/4K monitors.
Trundle on over to KDE-land, and you find a very different tone. They’re not too proud to adopt paradigms that conflicted with core design principles if they’re widely beloved (look at Overview as a prime example). Fractional scaling is miles ahead of Gnome in functionality and performance impact, solved in both X11 and elegantly in Wayland so that xwayland apps have a hook to get correct DPI info without looking blurry. The deep customizations available have negated the need for much of their session modifications, as they rapidly adopt good ideas (floating panels anyone? Ahh yes, Plasma has got you).
They’re also extremely nimble when it comes to changing course on their backend. They went from having a buggy Wayland session to having the most stable one by far. They also take criticism far better, either taking it in stride or recognizing then they did something off-base.
Gnome can go to hell, and fuck the stupid ass GTK which is objectively inferior to QT. Redhat can nibble on my shit too for all I care.
Will we finally get properly working system tray? Man can dream…
They’ve been trying to make a cross-desktop standard for a little while now, but progress is certainly slow :/
How are gnome supposed to improve hardware support? Do gnome devs write drivers and such at the present time¿?
Variable refresh rate (VRR), HDR, OLED (e. g. I’d like the panel to become grey and move items around a bit to lessen burn-in) all involve GNOME for hardware support.
Yeah I forgot about monitor support. Guess that’s pretty important. But is pixel shifting gnome’s responsibility or should that be done through monitor firmware so that it’s OS agnostic¿?
Your’re right, ideally wear reduction should probably be done by the display itself. But considering how little manufacuters often care about OS-agnostic approaches, it might be necessary to have software workarounds?
Cool. Now how about image thumbnail in the file picker. I mean seriously…
Wasn’t this fixed finally a while ago? I swear i read somewhere it was.
My understanding is it’s 13 years or so of requests, and still nothing. Something so incredibly basic, and required.
Already done like a couple of releases ago.
Great news! Maybe now they’ll spare a day of work to get desktop icons going again. No more funding excuses for the fanboys now.
Desktop icons 🤢
Why would you want desktop icons? I mean I get it, there were quite popular back in the day, but I don’t see how a big junky place of a desktop has any benefit
Shooting yourself in the foot to dab on the people trying to convert to linux
Also forcing people to go KDE to be again disappointed because their design is bad.
KDE is awesome