The top right side of the GNOME 3.10 desktop is getting an improved integrated menu to provide users with updated system status information and access.
3Scrolling Gives Way to Paginated Application View
Instead of scrolling through a long list of applications, GNOME 3.10 has paginated the folder view for applications. Users now flip through pages of applications, rather than scrolling through one long page.
4Header Bars Land in GNOME Windows
Individual application windows are also being improved in the GNOME 3.10 release with the new header bars element. With the header bar, both the title bar and the application toolbar have been merged into a single interface element.
5Improved Geolocation Will Improve Time and Date Setting
GNOME 3.10 benefits from improved geolocation capabilities that can help users with automatic time zones for clock setting.
6Finding Your Way With Maps
Another benefit that users will get from the improved geolocation capabilities is the new Maps application. GNOME pulls data from the OpenStreetMap project, which provides open data for maps.
7Takes Notes, With Notes
GNOME 3.10 introduces the open-source project’s latest take on a simple note-taking application, simply titled Notes. Notes gives users the optional ability to store their notes using the open-source ownCloud cloud-sharing technology.
8GNOME Moves Away From Google for Web Search
GNOME 3.10 includes its own Web browser, which was once known as Epiphany but has been renamed simply as Web. The rebranded Web browser has also shifted its choice of default search engines to DuckDuckGo.
9Finding Software With the ‘Software’ App
Users can now explore and discover new software applications for GNOME 3.10 via the new “Software” application.
10Running Other Systems in a GNOME Box
GNOME includes its own virtualization system called “Boxes.” In the 3.10 release, Boxes has been improved to enable files to be easily transferred via drag-and-drop between a virtual machine and the user’s desktop.
11Wayland to Improve on Legacy of X Desktop Server
With GNOME 3.10, the Wayland display server protocol takes root, replacing the legacy X server. Matthias Clasen, member of the GNOME release team and supervisor and software engineering at Red Hat, told eWEEK that the main benefits of Wayland are initially for developers. “The Wayland protocol has learned lessons from 25 years of X, and things that are hard or impossible to do with X will become a lot easier,” he said.
AI 3D Generators are powerful tools for many different industries. Discover the best AI 3D Generators, and learn which is best for your specific use case.
I spoke with Zeus Kerravala, industry analyst at ZK Research, about the rapid changes in enterprise networking, as tech advances and digital transformation prompt...
I spoke with Amit Agarwal, President of Datadog, about infrastructure observability, from current trends to key challenges to the future of this rapidly growing...