On 07.09.2011 Jason wrote: > On Fri, Sep 2, 2011 at 11:21, Andre Klapper <ak-47 gmx net> wrote: > > On Wed, 2011-08-31 at 21:48 +0100, Allan Day wrote: > >> > On Wed, Aug 31, 2011 at 14:30, Allan Day <allanpday gmail com> wrote: > >> >> For reference, the existing featured apps can be found on > >> >> gnome.org [1]. Asking whether the applications on that page > >> >> are the best non-core GNOME applications out there today might > >> >> be a good way to proceed. Are there any obvious candidates > >> >> that have been missed? Are there any new applications that are > >> >> worthy of mention? > >> > >> Some possible candidates: VLC, Scribus, Transmission. Any other > >> ideas? > > > > Evolution, Gedit? > > And in case they are not suitable [yet], I'd wonder if we have > > criteria for Featured Apps, and what they are? > > As 'featured' is purely a marketing function, "are they marketable", > is the only criteria. Basically, awesome and appealing to a wide > audience. By that standard, I would exclude Evolution and Gedit; > Evolution for a variety of factors: mainly, its stability and because > it's competing against webmail at a time when the trend is strongly > toward webmail and Gedit because it has a very narrow (though no less > important) audience. > > Scribus and VLC (mostly) are Qt-based and so are therefore only > tangentially in our ecosystem. Scribus does make use of Cairo for it's canvas so it's possible. But scribus is not THAT popular. VLC is - and as it features a GTK frontend it might still be worth taking advantage of it's reputation ;-) > Transmission is cross-toolkit though no less a good GNOME citizen. > > Frankly, we, like all the DE's, don't have a lot of shining examples > to pick from because of the history of needless desktop > fragmentation. Maybe that's a reason to look outside of the 'pure GNOME apps' to things like VLC, Transmission and Scribus. They build upon GNOME technology, or at least, stuff developed within the GNOME community. By that standard we could promote any gstreamer based application, any Cairo using apps (MeeGo?), anything build on Telepathy etcetera. Not saying we should, just providing food for thought. It might be valuable to look beyond our borders ;-) > My recommendation would be to slowly mutate this list on an on-going > basis.
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