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Hi, you're gonna fry me for that.
I'm currently reviewing a couple of Linux desktop systems to be used by my parents (both in the late 60s). While I do have serious Linux background (20+ years), they do not. Not at all. Currently they struggle with Windows 10, and up to now I've failed to find a convincing substitute. What really bothers them is the complexity of all those bells and whistles, trying to capture attention, isolating the user from simple basic concepts, but not helping at all.
I'm honestly repelled by how the Linux desktop has become more and more complex in recent years, but not equally more useful. The addition of more layers and concepts and services has led to an incomprehensible conglomarate of, excuse my french, pure shit. If you disagree take paper and pencil, and without looking at your screen, name all running daemons, their purpose and interdependence.
I am a strong proponent of the KISS principle. And while I'm aware of the existenct of inherent complexity in some subsystems (e.g., networking, user-mountable file systems, …), I believe that the way Linux Desktop (in general, i.e., not limited to XFCE) has developed is overkill, feature creep and a demonstration of UI/UX students gone wild.
However, compared to GNOME 3, the XFCE desktop looks pretty sane, and that's why I've started looking into it in the first place. Also, because XFCE advertises itself as “lightweight” and “user friendly”, I'm hoping to find some open ears for my, admittedly, not very positive feedback.
In this thread I'm going to post some (IMNSHO) usability fuckups which I observe on the Linux desktop with XFCE. I'm hoping other users would join in, in the long term maybe leading to a change in direction of XFCE developement.
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Showing fake file names to users
How does it help a user (simplicity) to show them fake file names, as can be seen for “Geary” in this screenshot?
Especially if one ends up with different files having the same name? Of course the real names shown in the terminal are not very explanatory, but that's reality.
While it seems en vogue to show users fake file names, it adds a layer of complexity, invisible to the novice. Also it relies on all components of a system using the same “translation”, or otherwise lead to utter confusion. In the example, the terminal and thunar do not agree on the translation.
Last edited by stefan (2018-05-04 18:24:29)
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The Thunar Side Pane
What's the benefit of offering multiple different entry points to the FS hierarchy? Is the root directory (“Wurzelordner d…”) really a device? Why should the user be bothered with `/boot`, and why can't he remove it?
Last edited by stefan (2018-05-04 18:24:45)
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The Thunar Side Pane — tree view
Not really a tree view, but rather a forest. Now offering four entry points to “Desktop”. Can you imagine a 70 year old guy getting confused by moving files between directories?
Last edited by stefan (2018-05-04 18:25:36)
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What's the benefit of offering multiple different entry points to the FS hierarchy? Is the root directory (“Wurzelordner d…”) really a device? Why should the user be bothered with `/boot`, and why can't he remove it?
You can hide them if you want. Right click the empty space in Side Pane and uncheck the items you don't want to see. Personally, I like having quick access to my root directory.
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Showing fake file names to users
How does it help a user (simplicity) to show them fake file names, as can be seen for “Geary” in this screenshot?
https://screenshotscdn.firefoxuserconte … d4c8f9.png
Especially if one ends up with different files having the same name? Of course the real names shown in the terminal are not very explanatory, but that's reality.
While it seems en vogue to show users fake file names, it adds a layer of complexity, invisible to the novice.
A couple of comments:
1. If Geary is creating multiple menu items in /usr/share/applications that is confusing, then the issue is with Geary and not Xfce. The same problem would exist with other environments like Gnome (in fact, this is how the xdg standard works that many of the desktop environments follow).
2. Most users won't go to that location and won't experience the potential confusion. Users tend to access these items through menuing systems like WhiskerMenu, which clears up some of the confusion.
Also it relies on all components of a system using the same “translation”, or otherwise lead to utter confusion. In the example, the terminal and thunar do not agree on the translation.
It's not clear to me where the translation issue is. Can you point it out? Each of the desktop items (as per the xdg spec linked above) allow for the inclusion of translatable strings and if they don't exist, then again it's an issue with the package. If it's an Xfce component that is not translating properly, then a bug report should be created for that component.
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Thank you for joining the discussion.
You can hide them if you want.
I cannot remove Desktop and home directory. Maybe I want to. Maybe that's a stupid wish. But considering the tree view I would not find it utterly wrong to want to remove everything except the entry for the root directory.
If it was just a collection of bookmarks, they should be called bookmarks, and the user should be free to edit them.
Personally, I like having quick access to my root directory.
And there's nothing wrong with your choice. I'm not saying there should be no shortcuts. But I'm saying the way it is presented is misleading, starting with the categories “devices” and “places”, the latter not including the network (it's not a place?), but rather being a substitute for “folder”, which was a substitute for “directory”. But also considereing the limited possibilities for editing.
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1. If Geary is creating multiple menu items in /usr/share/applications that is confusing, then the issue is with Geary and not Xfce. The same problem would exist with other environments like Gnome (in fact, this is how the xdg standard works that many of the desktop environments follow).
I might be picking on Linux Desktop in general, rather than XFCE, except for maybe the fact that following a stupid standard is no excuse. Thunar pretty much gives the impression of being a file manager, but suddenly, transparently, with no indication, does not show files, but interprets their contents. As a developer, imagine the shell command `ls` would sometimes, transparently, show something else than the filename, instead of the filename. Wouldn't that be seriously wrong?
2. Most users won't go to that location and won't experience the potential confusion.
So the ability to show something else than the file's name was built into thunar because/although it won't be seen by normal users? And what benefit does it have for “pro”-users wo would not die of shock when seeing the real file name?
Also, simple users don't go there is no excuse, because in the end someone will, especially that directory is not too far off to imagine some poor soul might be led there.
And the deeper problem is that thunar has the ability to lie about file names.
Also it relies on all components of a system using the same “translation”
It's not clear to me where the translation issue is. Can you point it out?
Yeah, that was an unfortunate formulation on my side, sorry. With “translation” I meant the way how thunar extracts the name to display for a file. While `ls` uses the file's name, thunar may choos the name field in the file, another one may use the generic name field, another one may decide on something else. This just opens pandoras box. Sorry: open*ed*.
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Naming programs what they are not
Mail Reader, rly? “Hey son, how do I attach a file to an email?” — “What mail program are you using?” — “Mail Reader!”.
If someone asks the user what he uses to surf the web, what should he say? Web browser? He would not know any better.
Giving programs “generic names” is a bad idea: It stops the user from learning what software they are using. Imagine everyone would say “Desktop” instead of “XFCE” or “KDE”. Or confusing Windows with Linux. While the intention may be good, it stops users from learning. Assuming so much lack of knowledge on the user's side is a self-fulfilling prophecy, which has brought us the current state of Desktop environments, and this statement spans even operating systems.
And no, I don't give a flying toss whether that's in the Linux Desktop standard. How can XFCE be the better desktop if it just follows stupid decisions made by others?
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What you see depends on the distro, right? We have no such thing...
MX-23 (based on Debian Stable) with our flagship Xfce 4.18.
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As Jerry says, alot of what you see is dependent on the distro. And Xfce is very configurable.
Mail Reader, rly? “Hey son, how do I attach a file to an email?” — “What mail program are you using?” — “Mail Reader!”.
That's because people can run a multitude of email programs and the simpler method is to just "start my email program". The actual program that is being run is configured via the Perferred Applications manager (in Settings Manager). But, according to the standard, you can very easily remove this entry by adding:
NoDisplay=True
...to the /usr/share/applications/exo-mail.desktop file. The actual email programs will be listed in the "Internet" folder.
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If someone asks the user what he uses to surf the web, what should he say? Web browser? He would not know any better.
Add:
NoDisplay=True
...to the /usr/share/applications/exo-web-browser.desktop file.
You can also use a graphical menu editor to make those changes if thats your thing.
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Giving programs “generic names” is a bad idea: It stops the user from learning what software they are using.
Or, it makes it simpler for those who don't care what the program is as long as they can access their email. How many people know or care what the difference is getween geary, evolution, thunderbird, etc, as long as they can get to their email.
***But all of this is configurable. Don't like the menu? Change it. Re-create it to your liking. Or use other menus like the Whisker Menu or the Application Finder.
And no, I don't give a flying toss whether that's in the Linux Desktop standard. How can XFCE be the better desktop if it just follows stupid decisions made by others?
Xfce is a standards-based desktop environment. From the Xfce entry on wikipedia:
Another priority of Xfce is adherence to standards, specifically those defined at freedesktop.org.[4]
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I am a strong proponent of the KISS principle..
KISS basically means that a feature is missing it not meant to be simplier.
Eg: Suse with yast or debian with debconf are simple Linux distributions, however they are not KISS. On KISS based distros like Slackware or Gentoo you have todo everything by yourself. And this is a shitload of work. Sure, it might bring your some very very little advantages at certain areas, but for your daily desktop PC its very very unuseful.
Also, I personally dont consider Xfce a complete desktop environment because compared to MATE, KDE or GNOME it misses some very common parts as a desktop environment that even exist for window managers like enlightenment eg. there is still no polkit-client and without thunar isnt even able to do basic stuff like mounting hard disks, there is also no frontend for managing your network connection so you basically can not connect to a wi-fi with an xfce desktop, same goes for bluetooth, audio and many many more stuff...
Last edited by sixsixfive (2018-05-04 15:32:56)
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What's in the Desktop
Is it a good idea to have icons on the desktop which do not appear in the Desktop folder? Then why is there a Desktop folder if it cannot represent the desktop in the first place? Why is it called Desktop and not “Files to show on the desktop as well”? How would a naive user, the primary addressee of a desktop environment, tell where the other icons come from? How can I create/delete them? How can I tell the two kinds of icons apart by just looking at them on the desktop?
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What you see depends on the distro
That thunar shows faked filenames? That I cannot freely edit it's side pane? That programs are hidden behind generic terms? I guess none of them depends on distro.
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And Xfce is very configurable.
Okay, please show me how to set it up so that the side pane shows only one tree, namely the root of the file system. And please explain this in words a simple user would understand.
The actual program that is being run is configured via the Perferred Applications manager (in Settings Manager).
And writing this you actually believe that makes anything simpler?
But, according to the standard, you can very easily remove this entry by adding:
NoDisplay=True
...to the /usr/share/applications/exo-mail.desktop file.
While that would be a systemwide change, a user could not do that without root permissions. Also, using a text editor as root to add some magic to a file which I cannot even see properly in the file manager (discussed above), in order to remove an item from the menu... this is so laughably grotesque, I can't believe anyone considers this a sane idea.
You can also use a graphical menu editor to make those changes if thats your thing.
My dad didn't find one (me neither).
Giving programs “generic names” is a bad idea: It stops the user from learning what software they are using.
Or, it makes it simpler for those who don't care what the program is as long as they can access their email. How many people know or care what the difference is getween geary, evolution, thunderbird, etc, as long as they can get to their email.
Now I totally don't buy this argument. You could equally say they should not care about whether they use Windows or Linux, or go by bike or by foot. And if they don't, they should: When they seek help, they need to know what they are asking about anyways. Following your argument just breeds stupidity, as I've said above. I do agree that it should be clear what a program does (names like “thunderbird” or “thunar” don't help here). But the user should always be confronted with the name of the tool being used.
Xfce is a standards-based desktop environment.
I've been looking at the concoction (aka. standard), but I did not find the information that a file manager has to show the `Name` field taken from inside a `.desktop` file instead of that file's name. edit: I do understand, and agree, that the name is shown in menus.
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KISS basically means that a feature is missing it not meant to be simplier.
Nope. Well, OK, according to Wikipedia there are many interpretations of that term, but I was referring to the KISS principle, and I should have probably said Unix philosophy.
In this context, for me, KISS means:
Trust the user to be able to understand: One simple file system tree. There are executable files, and non-executable files. How to find them, and how to apply them onto each other.
Do not concoct a system of daemons, and conflicting different views on the same directory, and useless abstractions from program names, and managers of managers of configuration to handle them.
Last edited by stefan (2018-05-04 18:19:05)
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Please be respectful towards those who are posting here.
Okay, please show me how to set it up so that the side pane shows only one tree, namely the root of the file system. And please explain this in words a simple user would understand.
What distro are you using?
It looks like you have more than one drive on your system and multiple partitions. To remove the second drive (the one that does not have the root file system on it),:
1. Set Thunar side pane to Shortcut view
2. Right-click Devices and unselect the second drive from the Devices submenu.
To hide the boot partition, it would depend on your distro. Here are the instructions for Arch linux but it would probably apply to most distros.
ToZ wrote:The actual program that is being run is configured via the Perferred Applications manager (in Settings Manager).
And writing this you actually believe that makes anything simpler?
In some cases, yes. It is the default in Xfce. However, if you don't like it, you can change it.
ToZ wrote:But, according to the standard, you can very easily remove this entry by adding:
NoDisplay=True
...to the /usr/share/applications/exo-mail.desktop file.
While that would be a systemwide change, a user could not do that without root permissions. Also, using a text editor as root to add some magic to a file which I cannot even see properly in the file manager (discussed above), in order to remove an item from the menu... this is so laughably grotesque, I can't believe anyone considers this a sane idea.
According to the standard, user-based changes would be made in ~/.local/share/applications as the desktop files in there take precedence. The menu editors do this.
ToZ wrote:You can also use a graphical menu editor to make those changes if thats your thing.
My dad didn't find one (me neither).
Depends on your distro. Search the repositories for alacarte, menulibre, or xame. Note: these are 3rd party applications that attempt to fill the role of a menu editor. Xfce's official method is manual.
ToZ wrote:Giving programs “generic names” is a bad idea: It stops the user from learning what software they are using.
Or, it makes it simpler for those who don't care what the program is as long as they can access their email. How many people know or care what the difference is getween geary, evolution, thunderbird, etc, as long as they can get to their email.
Now I totally don't buy this argument. You could equally say they should not care about whether they use Windows or Linux, or go by bike or by foot. And if they don't, they should: When they seek help, they need to know what they are asking about anyways. Following your argument just breeds stupidity, as I've said above. I do agree that it should be clear what a program does (names like “thunderbird” or “thunar” don't help here). But the user should always be confronted with the name of the tool being used.
Again, a difference in opinion. Want to know what application you are using? Help>About. Want to the menu to display application names? Change it.
In this context, for me, KISS means:
Trust the user to be able to understand: One simple file system tree. There are executable files, and non-executable files. How to find them, and how to apply them onto each other.
Do not concoct a system of daemons, and conflicting different views on the same directory, and useless abstractions from program names, and managers of managers of configuration to handle them.
Perhaps Xfce is not the environment you are looking for. Have a look at Budgie (Solus) or elementaryOS. Those may be more to your liking.
Last edited by ToZ (2018-05-04 23:30:30)
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I agree with Stefan completely. Every detail one wish to change from default is a challenge. As long one need to be geek to set up Button on the panel to start simple things as Notes (because for unknown reasons the responsible part of the system refuse the to list the file one need to call as executable, even it IS executable - just to avoid this question), as long the connection to a Bluetooth-speaker has to be done time and again (and sometimes the system refuses to do it until a shutdown and restart t the whole system -- one can't even create a button to call the Bluetooth sub-menu and has click through the whole preferences menu time and again), as long one has to be willing to spent hour or probably days to find a way to enable the hibernate function, not to mention the way to restart the GUI-session after changing the run-level down and up again.... it's just not possible to recommend Linux to anybody who just want surf, write, listen with their computer
Why is it not possible write a program that checks the hardware and ask the basic installation question before the installation and downloading then, according to these information, only what is needed and nothing more? Why do I have to install all languages versions for an app if I never need Czech or France? ( unable to get rid of these data-garbage until I became an expert not delete something needed) Why does it needs so many different procedures to set up a button to start an app or service, or just set a shortcut, ...? I get crash information but then- sometimes - I'm not even able to copy the text on the screen - on a Linux system! - so I have to retype it, if I want to ask a question about it - I really do not understand
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You are confusing Xfce (a desktop environment) with a linux distribution. It would do you good to understand the difference.
When you talk about bluetooth, hardware, installed languages, crash information, you are referring to a distribution. You need to take those concerns to the distro support pages, not here. Xfce cannot do anything about that.
We are here to help with Xfce-specific issues.
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... Why is it not possible write a program that checks the hardware and ask the basic installation question before the installation and downloading then, according to these information, only what is needed and nothing more? Why do I have to install all languages versions for an app if I never need Czech or France? ( unable to get rid of these data-garbage until I became an expert not delete something needed) Why does it needs so many different procedures to set up a button to start an app or service, or just set a shortcut, ...? I get crash information but then- sometimes - I'm not even able to copy the text on the screen - on a Linux system! - so I have to retype it, if I want to ask a question about it - I really do not understand
Greetings!
For what its worth, there are 2 "easy" solutions: simply buy a system with Linux preinstalled, like from Dell or System76. Both firms support their configuration which puts their products on an equal footing with MS-bloat, or Apple's OsX -- "stuff" just works, ie wifi & bt.
If bloat is an issue, why not "build as you go". The quickest way i know of: https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2018/02/ubu … all-option and https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Insta … /MinimalCD ... Good luck! I've tried that but didn't like "the cake i baked". Why? I had to learn how to do my own maintaining, that's why. Distro-hopping is of course worth a try, imhe, but turns into a never-ending search. Eventually, you'll have to compromise on some items. In my humble opinion: pick a solid linux-base tweaked from the ground up with and for xfce. Xfce has ONE gem your old folks (and you!) might like: "kiosk mode". No other Linux-DE has that. Trust me. I'm in my 70s and support a few other geriatrics using xfce. They made the transition from windoz just fine (with my hand holding, yes). And they love it. Their systems are "set & forget" systems. Some don't get shutdown for 3 months at a time, with no memory leaks like in Gnome, Unity or Cinnamon. Imho: XFCE rocks
Good luck!
Linux Mint 21.3 -- xfce 4.18 ... Apple iMAC -- Lenovo, Dell, HP Desktops and Laptops -- Family & Community Support
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#2
that's most likely the application's .desktop which may contain localization entries
i see something about generic names, well you don't have to use them, it's an option which is not enabled by default btw
#3
those can be hidden with x-gvfs-hide in /etc/fstab
> Linux desktop
linux is just a kernel
> folder tree
hide it, set path to buttons, simpler werks4me
#17
> buy a system with Linux preinstalled, like from Dell or System76
or just use a normal distro like xubuntu lts
Last edited by sh4tr (2019-01-22 11:10:26)
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KISS basically means that a feature is missing it not meant to be simplier.
Also, I personally dont consider Xfce a complete desktop environment because compared to MATE, KDE or GNOME it misses some very common parts as a desktop environment that even exist for window managers like enlightenment eg. there is still no polkit-client and without thunar isnt even able to do basic stuff like mounting hard disks, there is also no frontend for managing your network connection so you basically can not connect to a wi-fi with an xfce desktop, same goes for bluetooth, audio and ...
This is not the case. ? All you mention works fine for me. Not sure where to start.
K.I.S.S. isn't even universally understood.
-In my preferred mechanics analogy:
Automatic transmissions are the most complex things in a vehicle. Driver sees P-R-N-D, and from there ignores it.
Manual transmissions are very simple by comparison. Drivers need specific training and practice, and continue to pay attention.
So xfce is maybe the manual. Criticism for some, preference for others.
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You could equally say they should not care about whether they use Windows or Linux, or go by bike or by foot. And if they don't, they should:
The majority (>90%) pf people around the world would answer you with a question: Why would I use either?
However, I dislike the generic and common names too. Not that I don't appreciate the effort to make things simpler, I frankly don't think the market for something simpler exist. People using a computer with a desktop to do things now more commonly done on a smartphone are a rarity. I used to offer up support for almost everybody I knew from every context. Now I know handful of people who even have a 'computer'. Ironic maybe, I expect computer users to be a little more savvy now days.
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