heyvern wrote:This may seem weird... but I like the moho interface...
Well we're just used to use different GUI handling I guess...
In which I respect your opinon fully... A simple example I'd give from moho's UI is the mouse scrolling zoom feature with the middle mouse button... It's completly inverted from what I'm used to in every open source app I use to make graphics in

Further more I really like keyboard shortcuts and the only thing being logic to me in moho regarding this is it's ctrl-c/ctrl-v for cut'n'paste.. anyway I'm starting to get used to the small differences.
heyvern wrote:
Most of the open source applications I've seen don't even have... menus at the top of the screen like other apps... they have... wierd ways of selecting things...
I'll bet you it's that damn GTK/GNOME thing

I don't like that window manager very much, it's weird as you describe it, but I do like some of the things in it.. anyway I use QT/KDE and I can't recall many apps written for KDE that doesn't have a menu in the top... But if you only have seen GTK apps or wxwigets (I presume, because that's the easiest to port to windows/mac.. QT hasn't been available on windows yet.. but I seem to recall that they're porting it for QT4/KDE4 ), I'm too tired of how they look and feel on other platforms than linux.. anyway expect a huge change when QT apps shows up on your platform in the near future
heyvern wrote:
... don't get me started on the file browsing in open source apps.... Each one seems to be different... or I should say... different in the same way. I guess this is how the linux OS works or something.
Yeah funky in GTK.. kickass in QT/KDE apps...
heyvern wrote:
I use a program called jEdit which is the best open source app I use everyday. I still get confused sometimes trying to find files to open. I have to... think different (forgive the pun).
Yup.. JEdit is quite nice for an OSS editor.. besides it's java wich is still a bit too slow imho.. that's a whole different UI system aswell (swing innit?)... again I can speak good for QT.. as they're working on a java implemention.. I know I've mentioned KDE a lot now but in my desktop environment as it right now.. Alle my apps follow my current KDE theme.. done by reskinning the GTK apps.. only thing that sticks out is java apps but they're yet to come in KDE4...
heyvern wrote:
That is what I call non standard interfaces. In the past Apple would not "certify" an application unless the menus fit their standards.
Trust me almost every Linux app follow their respectful GUIToolkits "standards"... again having more Toolkits brings more freedom and again there are people working on programs that streamline and tie together the different toolkits look and feel.. Giving the user a really good amount of stuff to choose from.. IceWM, KDE, GNOME, X, XFCE and a couple of others

It's damn nice to have these to choose from instead of being tied to your Teletubbie Windows interface or the smooth Darwin toolkit on macs (I do like the the look, but far from the feel)...
heyvern wrote:
On windows, linux, unix... there was no standard. That is why in the beggining so many apps would have menus set up in anyway the programmers liked. Each application required you to "relearn" how to do basic stuff all over again.
I've worked on a friend's mac.. I couldn't find my way around anywhere on that desktop.. and that damn weird one button mouse

.. again it's just a matter of spending most of your time in front of your desktop of choise.. Then you'll get used to it easily.. That's my experience anyway...
heyvern wrote:
So... compared to THAT... YES! Moho/AS has a beautiful GUI.
We'll never agree on this
...
myles wrote:
Umm, larpon, that's called either "customer service" or "feedback" or even "feature requests", and most commercial apps have somewhere you can do it. Smile
Actually, I see what you're saying, but I think it's often just implemented differently in a commercial context (although some open source apps also have feedback forms or forums rather than direct developer contact).
Yeah.. they way of reaching the devs comes in many flavours, but honestly I don't feel my feature requests nor my feedback is "heard" in the same way that they are in the oss world...
It's like you have to dig through this enormous "shell" of some sort to reach the commercial apps... (I do speak of the majors here.. Adobe, Microsoft, Apple etc.) So I do see your point here.. but with the smaller companies...
There we go.. was what I liked to write this round
