I am playing with the words; Gnome’s Hell stands for Gnome Shell and I am listing the 10 worst bugs of Shell as I think they are. I am sure everyone can have his/her own list ..and even larger ;)

And I write a little bit more beyond this.

10 worst bugs in Shell

I’m including Shell versions 300-340

10. Shell crashes with a fast double “r”

Ok, this bug isn’t important to many of you, but it personally drove me nuts. I was trying to port a silly game I had made in Canvas HTML5 (some bouncing objects with gravity etc) into a Clutter/Cogl shell-extension in Gnome 320.

To reload a shell extension after you do some coding, you have to restart shell by Alt+F2 & “r”. If you do this twice inside 30-60sec Gnome Shell will crash. This bug was reproduced both with nVidia and Nouveau drivers.

And the worst part was that relogin again you had to open code editor, nautilus, set the workspaces etc.. I tried for 3-4days to make this extension, but I quit as I didn’t want to end up into madhouse.. not yet!

9. Alt+Tab & Alt+~ / Cycling Apps

While Shell’s overview provides a smart and nice way for switching between your apps, isn’t so fast as Alt+Tab. So, Gnome introduced the first Alt+Tab that requires both hands as you need arrows keys to pick your app.

Having 3-4 workspaces with Chromes/Firefoxes opened with some tabs, cycling between them is a pure nightmare. I can’t blame directly Gnome Shell for it, as every other Desktop OS faces the same problem. But I was hoping that Gnome would had come up with a better solution.

This is another feature that in Gnome are looking for better techniques.

8. Memory Leaks

How much memory Shell needs? In some occasions up to 2GB! This bug hit, and hit hard mostly at Gnome 320 with hundreds of users complaining. A quick workaround was to restart the Shell, but restarting Shell was making apps placement in workspaces gone (another bug).

While in 340 things are better, some people still face this issue. By the way a normal RAM that shell needs is about 80-200MB.

7. < Alt > ernative shut down

An irritating easter egg from Gnome developers to naives Gnome users! This bug grew big, bigger than really is, because Gnome devs forgot to mention a small detail; how we can shut down our boxes, and many users had to log out first and then shutdown.

Jakub Steiner (if I can correctly recall the name -but if not him; another major Gnome designer) said that logging out and then shutting down is the right away to turn off your Linux. So if that is true, why you removed log out option from single user boxes (in 360)? …

Do not also forget that Touch Screens have not an “Alt” ..Oh well let them on ;)

This awful design approach of one small detail done so damage in Gnome3 reputation, that a year and a half after this issue is still reminded. They say better late than ever, and Gnome Devs fixed that on 360.

6. Two or more monitors

I never had two monitors to cope up with it but I have heard so many people to complain about dual monitor support under Gnome that I have absolutely no choice but believe them.

It is really shame because this bug mostly affect users that do video (and image) editing which is one of the strongest points on Gnome/Linux. I am not sure what they are exactly planning for 360 but I know they are trying to solve this issue.

5. Notifications & Empathy

Gnome made impossible possible! You get all the notifications that you don’t want and you lose the notification that you don’t want to miss. And Jesus, why I am persistent notified that my second partition is mounted?

But the worst thing by far is the way that Empathy communicates with Shell. You cannot open your contact lists directly from Shell (which is a feature that was supposed to be included) and if you give focus to an opened Empathy window which is being to another workspace, Shell will move you to that workspace which I personally find it annoyed, as I have to switch back to continue my work.

The good news here is that there is totally revamp of notification system in 360!

4. Tweaking

Remember I’m talking about for Shell only, and no GTK or icons. The first thing I found annoying here is that I cannot drag n drop Shell top bar icons or remove them or change some options, for example use an analog clock.

Extensions gained some nice features in 340 like gsettings access (and options!), and an update button from extensions.gnome.org. Also I am using lots of them and I haven’t any compatibility issue between them.

In 360 we get an auto-update for extensions and of course a better documentation so people can write more and better extensions!

3. Shortcuts

I am very disappointed from Gnome Devs in this area, because they haven’t included combos. And I have a suggestion for them: To introduce combinations of 30+ buttons inside 3sec and winners will have their name written in Golden Gnome Users Book and a ticket (with all expenses included) to Tokyo, Japan for the World Final Tekken Tournament!

Getting back serious, this is an awful awful usability bug, specially for an OS that targets Touch Screens. I don’t know how they will deal with it, but there is already a discussions about.

And if you think that you know all Shell’s shortcuts check the cheatsheet guide.

2. Dynamic Workspaces

One of the strongest points of Gnome Shell is also one of the its strongest weaknesses. I don’t want to analyze this further coz it needs a full page; I am just closing the bug with a question: How many times you have been forced to re-arrange your Apps in workspaces?

Workspaces should act as real workspace, a space that particular apps that serve a purpose are placed. In 360 there is also a work in this area, with best thing a simple work around; an option to maintain a fixed number of workspaces (in the upcoming Gnome Tweak Tool).

1. Gnome Shell and Catalyst

The fiasco of the century! It isn’t worth to examine and analyze who the fault is but I can say this: I will never ever buy and ATi/AMD card and if I had a 400$ ATi card, I would never ever used Gnome again. Both sides lose. And users of course.

Are these all?

I am sure everyone can have his/her own list and I’ll be honest; I did this list super fast. Wasn’t hard to get 10 bugs in Gnome-Shell. I can easily make 10 more, but I still like it!

Continue

What I really love in Gnome is Red Hat’s open developing community which makes you able to see what’s coming next. And awesome things are planned for the short future!

And you people have to understand something. Gnome is not Gnome-Shell, Gnome Shell is not Gnome. Gnome consists of about 200 projects which Gnome Shell is one of the smallest (considering the code).

Gnome Shell attracts so much attention because is the interaction Shell, but.. is nothing but a Mutter’s plugin, easily to be changed and modified. And this is the real magick and success of Gnome Shell. I am totally sure that we will get a large number of varieties of Gnome Shell to choose from, not far from now.

Where are we standing now?

The fact is that Gnome leads the evolution of open Desktops and the rest are just following. Just check the competition:

KDE: KDE’s developers are quitting because are disappointed by project’s prospect, companies and organizations drop KDE support, the future feels uncertain and even the superior QT hasn’t made a major debut.

And remember the KDE’s CnC (Click and Crush) feature in 4.0 release. And I am not trying to blame KDE, but I want to show you that re-building a Desktop system isn’t the easiest thing in the world and bugs are unavoidable.

XFCE and rest: They just maintain a stable user base, you cannot actually compare the two systems (Gnome & XFCE) as they serve a completely different audience.

Cinnamon & rest: A forked Mutter and Shell. By making a better Shell we get a better Cinnamon. And more “Cinnamons” are going to follow! It is a nice alternative that exists thanks to Gnome’s original work. But innovation is an unknown word there.

Ubuntu/Unity: Ubuntu using more Gnome’s Technologies rather Canonical’s, and Unity has worse critics than Shell even inside Ubuntu community. Also Unity lacks technology specifications and innovation and also missing fanatical support by its user base (that means that Ubuntu users don’t contribute a lot in the project).

To be Continued..

I wanted to write much more but I run out of time and besides this post is already big, so I’ll make a second part. Next time I’ll show you that Shell is a Lamborghini, but not for few, as you might think!

Remember the above are my personal opinions; I claim any right to be wrong, and you have any right to disagree ..with a polite way, hopefully but not obligatory ;)