593:
36:
27:
438:
Having previously focused on steady incremental growth throughout the desktop environment's development, showcasing dramatic and innovative workflows not currently used in the desktop environment was a controversial subject. In late 2006, GNOME released an official statement that there were no plans
337:
With the release of GNOME 3.2, shell extensions as a feature, similar to the "applet" of GNOME 2, was added. Such extensions allow developers the ability to add modular, separately-versioned customizations to the desktop environment, without having to integrate code directly into the mainline GNOME
577:, publicly expressed his dislike of GNOME 3, and called the version 3.4 release a "total user experience design failure." He also described it as "one step forward, one step back". Torvalds initially switched from using GNOME to
460:. Vincent Untz, part of the release team, noted that designers and developers "tried to forget the current GNOME and see what thought would make sense." As a result of the event, initial mockups were created, and
365:
took on a unified naming scheme, by utilizing simple, descriptive names such as "Files" instead of "Nautilus" or "Videos" instead of "Totem". Added to the set of core applications in version 3.10 was
554:
called the new GNOME Shell a "good starting point for building something even better", and predicted "backlash from users" who would be upset about missing features. Steven
Vaughan-Nichols of
435:, regarding "Project Topaz". In this presentation, Waugh demonstrated mockups that had been compiled from numerous community ideas, and a brainstorming session occurred thereafter.
355:
added experimental compositing. As the most-used graphical environment for Linux, this set-up a significant change for distributions to eventually be able to switch from the aging
413:
was posted on the GNOME website that detailed loose brainstorming of compatibility-breaking ideas from project co-founder
Federico Mena and several other GNOME contributors.
266:
While loose planning began as early as 2004, it was not officially announced until 2008, and received an initial release in 2011. It was superseded by GNOME 40 in 2021.
805:
558:
said that it "made GNOME less usable", and that it was a "step backward". However, he later expressed that GNOME 3.4 was a "return to a useful Linux desktop".
835:
497:
Originally scheduled to be released in March 2010, GNOME's release team delayed version 3.0 several times before finally releasing it on April 6, 2011.
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initially collaborated on development, but eventually became disillusioned, and halted their efforts. This became the catalyst for development of their
416:
The community developed the nickname "Project Topaz" for the development effort, as a reference to an acronym of the version phrase "three point zero".
397:, the system used for storing configuration-related settings in the desktop and applications, was deprecated in GNOME 3, and replaced by GSettings and
442:
In June 2008, Andy Wingo, a GNOME contributor, published an influential article on his personal blog, decrying a stagnating direction of GNOME.
1092:
974:
880:
581:, but then switched back in 2013, citing the use of GNOME Shell Extensions as a fix for shortcomings, and called it "more pleasant".
903:
1046:
517:
desktop environment, which follows more traditional desktop metaphor conventions. The first adoption of GNOME 3 in a major
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shell. Canonical eventually began using a customized version of the GNOME Shell in 2017, when it released Ubuntu 17.10.
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809:
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662:
685:
342:
249:
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GNOME 3 received mixed reception. Its succession as the ongoing focus of The GNOME Project was the impetus for the
494:. Canonical eventually began using a customized version of the GNOME Shell in 2017, when it released Ubuntu 17.10.
409:
By late 2004, two years into the release of GNOME 2, discussion of the next major release had started occurring. A
236:. A major departure from technologies implemented by its predecessors, GNOME 3 introduced a dramatically different
158:
948:
729:
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s
Whitson Gordon preferred the stock GNOME 3 desktop environment over Canonical's Unity and other alternatives.
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514:
260:
382:
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80:
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592:
510:
298:
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Possibly the single-most significant feature change that GNOME 3 introduced was the replacement of the
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workflows. Eschewing the beige colors present in GNOME 2 in favor of a modern black and gray, a new
109:
525:. Canonical, who had stopped contributing to the GNOME 3 codebase, chose to break from bundling a
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8:
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noted that GNOME 3 represented "shocking changes", but was "cleaner" and "simpler".
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updates directly through GNOME Software. GNOME 3.22 integrated GNOME Software with
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170:
116:
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453:
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341:
On
September 25, 2013, GNOME 3.10 was released, which introduced support for the
241:
217:
191:
1147:
1093:"Linus Torvalds finds GNOME 3.4 to be a "total user experience design failure""
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changes were based-on attempts at simplification and rethinking of traditional
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51:
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428:
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A greater public-facing GNOME 3 discussion began in late May 2005 when
374:
46:
1047:"Fedora 17 & GNOME 3.4: Return to a useful Linux desktop (Review)"
756:"6th Annual GNOME Users and Developers European Conference Programme"
449:
378:
370:
121:
538:
386:
331:
317:
35:
836:"A shiny new ornament for your Linux lawn: Ars reviews GNOME 3.0"
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and system update utility. GNOME 3.18 added integration with the
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143:
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GNOME 3 was officially announced at the 2008 edition of GUADEC.
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479:
457:
432:
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Having shipped GNOME as its default graphical environment on
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decorations do away with maximize and minimize icon buttons.
230:
26:
578:
410:
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and added integration with other key technologies such as
1017:
1015:
133:
975:"Canonical Ubuntu splits from GNOME over design issues"
792:
1012:
663:"GNOME 3.10 arrives with experimental Wayland support"
240:. It was the first GNOME release to utilize a unified
829:
827:
1121:"Linus Torvalds switches back to Gnome 3.x desktop"
618:– the graphical user interface of GNOME 3 and later
513:desktop environment as well as the creation of the
968:
966:
824:
686:"GNOME 3.10 Updates the Open-Source Linux Desktop"
308:as seen in previous versions in favor of a simple
633:
631:
1139:
1070:"Linux Desktop Faceoff: GNOME 3 Vs Ubuntu Unity"
464:agreed to contribute development to the effort.
1090:
1044:
1021:
998:"Linus Torvalds would like to see a GNOME fork"
995:
963:
881:"GNOME 3.0 officially announced… and explained"
628:
475:of GNOME 3 was debuted on February 23, 2011.
640:"GNOME 3: Shocking changes for Linux lovers"
684:Kerner, Sean Michael (September 27, 2013).
996:Vaughan-Nichols, Steven (August 3, 2011).
637:
490:shell to be used in place of the standard
34:
612:– design language introduced with GNOME 3
1091:Vaughan-Nichols, Steven (June 4, 2012).
1045:Vaughan-Nichols, Steven (May 14, 2012).
1022:Vaughan-Nichols, Steven (May 24, 2011).
431:gave a presentation at the sixth annual
972:
660:
286:was implemented, which became known as
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1067:
901:
806:"Timeline: The Greatest Show on Earth"
683:
448:From October 6-10, 2008, GNOME held a
1118:
946:
856:
803:
776:
661:Duckett, Chris (September 25, 2013).
248:. It also introduced support for the
1068:Gordon, Whitson (October 26, 2011).
949:"GNOME 3 Beta 1 (2.91.90) released!"
878:
833:
638:Gilbertson, Scott (April 11, 2011).
467:GNOME 3 pre-releases used a 2.91.x
304:. With it, came the removal of the
13:
973:Jackson, Joab (October 25, 2010).
947:Rocha, Lucas (February 23, 2011).
229:is the third major release of the
14:
1169:
926:"GNOME 2.91.x Development Series"
86:3.38 / September 16, 2020
1024:"Fedora 15's five best features"
758:. GNOME Foundation. May 29, 2005
591:
385:for hardware vendors to provide
25:
1112:
1084:
1061:
1038:
989:
940:
918:
904:"Gnome 3.0: the complete guide"
902:Sharma, Mayank (June 5, 2011).
895:
872:
859:"GNOME In The Age of Decadence"
850:
804:Waugh, Jeff (March 15, 2011).
770:
748:
722:
700:
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654:
404:
1:
1119:Heath, Nick (March 4, 2013).
622:
541:included it in version 12.1.
383:Linux Vendor Firmware Service
377:daemon, serves as a complete
40:GNOME 3.2 Activities Overview
879:Paul, Ryan (July 14, 2008).
857:Wingo, Andy (June 7, 2008).
834:Paul, Ryan (April 6, 2011).
777:Waugh, Jeff (May 30, 2005).
500:
16:Third major release of GNOME
7:
603:
533:, and instead released its
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10:
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779:"Project Topaz Storyboard"
708:"GNOME 3.10 Release Notes"
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1153:Free desktop environments
610:Adwaita (design language)
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509:of GNOME 2 known as the
369:, which in concert with
363:GNOME Core Applications
1072:. Lifehacker Australia
598:GNOME 3.4 on Fedora 17
312:that distinctly lacks
310:image-based background
63:; 13 years ago
261:development lifecycle
88:; 4 years ago
544:Scott Gilbertson of
423:engineer and former
736:on December 8, 2004
234:desktop environment
164:Desktop environment
21:
951:. GNOME Foundation
710:. GNOME Foundation
521:was version 15 of
519:Linux distribution
373:metadata, and the
274:Much of GNOME 3's
61:April 6, 2011
19:
573:, creator of the
482:since its debut,
469:versioning scheme
280:desktop computing
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216:(archived at the
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808:. Archived from
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732:. Archived from
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346:display protocol
306:desktop metaphor
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454:user experience
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357:X Window System
316:. Dropping the
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242:graphical shell
218:Wayback Machine
205:/20131229015754
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192:Wayback Machine
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58:Initial release
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883:. Ars Technica
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838:. Ars Technica
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642:. The Register
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571:Linus Torvalds
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367:GNOME Software
359:as a default.
353:window manager
321:window manager
276:user interface
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1158:2011 software
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812:on 2011-08-23
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439:for GNOME 3.
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314:desktop icons
311:
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299:larger-scoped
296:
291:
289:
285:
284:look and feel
281:
277:
267:
264:
262:
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254:
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247:
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190:(archived at
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81:Final release
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52:GNOME Project
50:
48:
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37:
32:
28:
23:
1125:. Retrieved
1114:
1102:. Retrieved
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1074:. Retrieved
1063:
1051:. Retrieved
1040:
1028:. Retrieved
1002:. Retrieved
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979:. Retrieved
953:. Retrieved
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920:
908:. Retrieved
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885:. Retrieved
874:
862:. Retrieved
852:
840:. Retrieved
814:. Retrieved
810:the original
782:. Retrieved
772:
760:. Retrieved
750:
738:. Retrieved
734:the original
724:
712:. Retrieved
702:
690:. Retrieved
679:
667:. Retrieved
656:
644:. Retrieved
575:Linux kernel
569:
559:
551:Ars Technica
549:
546:The Register
543:
523:Fedora Linux
504:
496:
477:
473:beta version
471:. The first
466:
447:
444:
441:
437:
418:
415:
408:
361:
340:
336:
327:, users saw
323:in favor of
292:
273:
265:
226:
225:
176:GPL-2.0-only
47:Developer(s)
906:. TechRadar
616:GNOME Shell
527:GNOME Shell
492:GNOME Shell
452:focused on
405:Development
302:GNOME Shell
295:GNOME Panel
259:during its
246:GNOME Shell
140:Predecessor
1142:Categories
1127:August 29,
1104:August 29,
1076:August 29,
1053:August 29,
1030:August 29,
1004:August 29,
981:August 29,
910:August 29,
864:August 16,
842:August 16,
816:August 10,
784:August 10,
762:August 10,
740:August 16,
646:August 29,
623:References
561:Lifehacker
429:Jeff Waugh
375:PackageKit
338:codebase.
106:Written in
93:2020-09-16
68:2011-04-06
955:August 9,
932:August 9,
887:August 9,
714:August 9,
692:August 9,
669:August 9,
501:Reception
484:Canonical
450:hackathon
421:Canonical
379:app store
371:AppStream
348:, as the
297:with the
244:known as
187:gnome.org
150:Successor
122:Unix-like
604:See also
539:openSUSE
515:Cinnamon
387:firmware
332:titlebar
318:Metacity
270:Features
199:.archive
153:GNOME 40
129:Platform
1123:. ZDNet
1049:. ZDNet
1026:. ZDNet
1000:. ZDNet
688:. eWeek
665:. ZDNet
585:Gallery
462:Red Hat
391:Flatpak
343:Wayland
288:Adwaita
257:Flatpak
250:Wayland
227:GNOME 3
182:Website
171:License
144:GNOME 2
91: (
66: (
20:GNOME 3
531:Ubuntu
480:Ubuntu
458:Boston
433:GUADEC
350:Mutter
329:window
325:Mutter
211:.gnome
207:/http:
1148:GNOME
1098:ZDNet
565:'
556:ZDNet
535:Unity
488:Unity
399:dconf
395:GConf
231:GNOME
209://www
194:) or
1129:2022
1106:2022
1078:2022
1055:2022
1032:2022
1006:2022
983:2022
957:2022
934:2022
912:2022
889:2022
866:2022
844:2022
818:2022
786:2022
764:2022
742:2022
716:2022
694:2022
671:2022
648:2022
579:Xfce
529:for
511:MATE
507:fork
411:wiki
213:.org
203:/web
201:.org
159:Type
456:in
197:web
134:GTK
1144::
1095:.
1014:^
965:^
826:^
794:^
630:^
401:.
393:.
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263:.
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220:)
110:C
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70:)
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