this: Gnome (disambiguation)
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GNOME Blogs
Shaun's Blog. Diego, el gnomo. Life is so good, it gets better every day. GNOME Foundation ... Migrating your pyblosxom blog from www.gnome.org. Fixes & Features ...blogs.gnome.org/Trey's Travels
I'd like to introduce you to my blog! ... Posted by Trey Gnome at 10:30 AM 25 comments ... I wanted to start this first blog post introducing myself. ...treygnome.blogspot.com/Calum's Wee GNOME Blog
accessibility bee birmingham blog books british camera canon comedy compiz ... Calum's Wee GNOME Blog is proudly powered by WordPress MU running on GNOME Blogs. ...blogs.gnome.org/calum/PhoneGnome - Blog
home. features. buzz. blog. pricing & sign up. login. Call Skype users with PhoneGnome ... You can also enter the address into a contact in your PhoneGnome ...phonegnome.com/blog/Gnome-Blog at GnomeFiles
... premiere GNOME/GTK ... of a day, popping gnome blog open and closed as you ... Fix blogs.gnome.org XML-RPC URL (Olav Vitters) * New and updated ...www.gnomefiles.org/app.php/Gnome-Blogthis: Gnome (disambiguation)
GNOME ( ) is a desktop environment—the graphical user interface which runs on top of a computer operating system—composed entirely of free software. It is an international project that includes creating software development frameworks, selecting application software for the desktop, and working on the programs which manage application launching, file handling, and window and task management.
GNOME is part of the GNU Project and can be used with various Unix-like operating systems, most notably those built on top of the Linux kernel and the GNU system, and as part of Java Desktop System in Solaris.
The name originally stood for GNU Network Object Model Environment.
Aims
The GNOME project puts heavy emphasis on simplicity, usability, and making things “just work”. The other aims of the project are:
- Freedom—to create a desktop environment that will always have the source code available for re-use under a free software license.
- Accessibility—ensuring the desktop can be used by anyone, regardless of technical skill or physical disability.
- Internationalization and localization—making the desktop available in many languages. At the moment GNOME is being translated to over 100 languages.
- Developer-friendliness—ensuring it is easy to write software that integrates smoothly with the desktop, and allow developers a free choice of programming language.
- Organization—a regular release cycle and a disciplined community structure.
- Support—ensuring backing from other institutions beyond the GNOME community.
History
In 1996, the KDE project was started. KDE was free software from the start, but members of the GNU project were concerned with KDE's dependence on the then non-free Qt widget toolkit. In August 1997, two projects were started in response to this issue: the Harmony toolkit (a free replacement for the Qt libraries) and GNOME (a different desktop not using Qt, but built entirely on top of free software). The initial project leaders for GNOME were Miguel de Icaza and Federico Mena.
In place of the Qt toolkit, GTK+ was chosen as the base of the GNOME desktop. GTK+ uses the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), a free software license that allows GPL-incompatible software (including proprietary software) to link to it. The GNOME desktop itself is licensed under the LGPL for its libraries, and the GPL for applications that are part of the GNOME project. Having the toolkit and libraries under the LGPL allowed applications written for GNOME to use a much wider set of licenses (including proprietary software licenses).
In 1998, Qt became open source. While Qt was dual-licensed under both the QPL and the GPL, the freedom to link proprietary software with GTK+ at no charge made it differ from Qt. With Qt licensed under the GPL, the Harmony Project stopped its efforts at the end of 2000, as KDE did not depend on non-free software anymore. In contrast, as of 2009, the development of GNOME has not stopped.



























