my blog

Wednesday 19 October 2005

Make it fun

One of the things we discuss with Dave at the JDLL was Making GNOME fun for users. As Thomas points out, we held a discussion about this yesterday on #marketing. Here's a quick summary of what I think: GNOME is great, it just works, users like it, but users don't get passionate about it. And this isn't right.

So, let's take a look at where we are now. We have an easy-to-use free desktop with lots of really good points (accessible, localized, etc.). There are some areas where we could be better, but some people are working on it (documentation and performance come to my mind). So GNOME will be even better in the near future. People will like it. They will use it. But they won't get excited about it. We get excited about it, but our users are not. They're satisfied with GNOME, but that's all. Nothing more. I believe we should do our best to change that. Making GNOME fun for the users would definitely help for this.

The killing Wanda discussion was interesting. I for one think we should keep her. There's the argument of where we come from, but this is not the main reason why I think so. Let me say it straight: Wanda is totally useless, and that's why we should keep her. When people try Wanda, they wonder why it even exists, why we took the time to include it, why it is so useless. But most people also smile while doing this. They're having a good time while trying it. We should keep Wanda, if only for this. This is something that make some users love the desktop, and not just like it.

A friend of mine showed me Steve Jobs' latest keynote. One thing struck me, and it was not the new products that were announced. What struck me is PhotoBooth: this is a small application, used to take photos with the videocam integrated in the new iMac G5. The way the application was introduced is brilliant: it's just an application you can use to take photo of you making some weird faces. And everyone was laughing when he presented it. Everyone will love this application, although nearly nobody will really use it.

Thomas is right: we need themes that people love. But we also need fun applications. I don't know how we can handle this, since right now, the GNOME modulesets does not really include applications that are fun, but applications that are useful. For example, Monkey Bubble was a great game but it was not included in GNOME 2.6. Creating a new moduleset for such applications would be a solution, but I'm not sure it goes well with the idea of a GNOME Certification. I don't think we can say to the user looking for something fun go on GNOME files and search there, because what's important here is to include some fun things by default.

We need GNOME to do more than its job. We need GNOME to be fun for users.

JDLL 2005 report

Last week-end was an event week-end for GNOME-FR: we were at the JDLL 2005. There were a lot of people helping on the booth and I'd like to start with a big thank you to everyone involved.

Talking about the booth, here it how it looked:

Dave can probably tell the difference between this booth and the booth we had last year ;-) We now have posters, more computers, CDs, things to give, nice screens, etc. The GNOME Event Box was really helpful to achieve this. Here it is (I can't find a photo with the box open...):

Diamond Editions kindly sent us some Linux Pratique magazines, since the latest issue featured the GNOME 2.12 LiveCD. They also sent us some LiveCD and we distributed everything:

We also had a nice surprise:

We had a Nokia 770 to show. A lot of people were really interested in it and wanted to buy one as soon as possible.

It was also a good place to meet some people and some friends. Let me mention that Dave is really great. We should have more people like him :-) Each time I discuss with him, there are tons of new ideas in my head. And those are useful ideas.

Again, a big thank you to everyone involved: GNOME-FR people, but also Nokia, Diamond Editions, the organizers (the ALDIL), Murray and everyone I'm forgetting :-)

I'm really glad because GNOME was very well represented there. Since we also held a successful booth at the RMLL, I believe we can say that GNOME-FR is starting to do a good job. Yay for us!

Thursday 6 October 2005

GNOME-FR is born (again)

Since the beginning of GNOME, there's been a french-speaking community around GNOME. This was GNOME-FR.

Nearly two years ago, we finally created a nice website and a mailing list, to help promote GNOME in french-speaking countries. This was GNOME-FR.

And here is GNOME-FR now: we have created a not-for-profit organization in France (what we call association). This organization exists for all the french-speaking GNOME enthusiasts out there. It will assist the french-speaking community (and the broader GNOME community) in the promotion of GNOME and act as an easy-to-find french-speaking point of contact.

You don't need to be French to be a member. You don't need to be a GNOME contributor to be a member. You can even be a member if you don't use GNOME! Everyone can join us.

You can find more informations about the birth of GNOME-FR and about GNOME-FR in a french post I made earlier today, or directly on the website. I forgot to mention: all the linked pages here are of course in French :-)

Tuesday 13 September 2005

Announcing pessulus

pessulus is a lockdown editor for GNOME, written in python. I've released version 0.1 today.

I'm pretty sure that pessulus is not HIG compliant, but guess what: it's the goal for the next release. The UI probably need a big overhaul to be more logical. I'd be glad if some people could take a look at it (or only at the glade file). And a patch would be fantastic ;-)

Also, if you know of some settings that should be in a lockdown editor and that are not in pessulus, let me know.

Contributions are of course welcome: patches, translations, documentation, etc. As it's written in python, it's really easy to start coding on it, fixing bugs and adding features. The code is in CVS (module: pessulus).

This is my first pygtk application. I wanted to create one since months but I didn't want to create something useless and I lacked some free time. But thanks to Murray's idea and some bad weather this week-end, I could take a look at pygtk. Some functions I needed were not wrapped, so there are some workarounds in the code, but that was not a big problem. I absolutely love pygtk.

Tuesday 6 September 2005

2.12 Splash Screen

I'm surprised nobody noticed that we now features a cool new splash screen:

GNOME 2.12 Splash Screen

It rocks, doesn't it? :-)

Thanks to Thomas for making the splash screen contest possible on GNOME Art and jimmac for choosing the winning entry. You can see why he chose it on GNOME Art.

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by Vincent