The Plenitude of Arboreal Beauty

…a vague essence haunting the multiplicity of finite trees.

Announcing GNOME Do 0.5: “The Fighting 0.5″

with 79 comments

It has been 41 days since we released GNOME Do 0.4.2, and today I’m honored to present GNOME Do 0.5: “The Fighting 0.5″. Without further ado, here are the main improvements and new features, accompanied by plenty of sexy screenshots (click for larger images).

First off, the Open with… action has been re-enabled!

Open with...

The biggest new feature in GNOME Do 0.5 is our new preferences window and plugin manager. You can now browse, download, install, and enable or disable all available plugins from right within Do thanks to Mono.Addins:

Plugin manager


You can also visit a wiki page with information about each plugin, and you can do plugin-specific configuration. This means no more configuration files, and no more editing preferences through Configuration Editor (gconf). As an example, here is the configuration window for the Files and Folders plugin:

plugin config

We’ve added a plugin category called “community plugins” that contains cutting-edge plugins written by many different contributors. If a developer were to write a great new GNOME Do plugin today, we could have it in the community plugins repository and available to Do users everywhere by tomorrow. That being said, community plugins are not rigorously screened or held to the same quality standards as official plugins, so users beware.

community plugins

One of my favorite community plugins is the new Skype plugin, which allows you to make calls, initiate chats, change your status, and more. The Skype plugin is also fully integrated with Do’s contact system, so you can simply type a contact name, and then chose to send an instant message to that person with Pidgin, email them, or initiate a Skype chat or call:

Skype

There’s an awesome new plugin by Jason Smith called “WindowManager.” It lets you manipulate and rearrange windows on your desktop. You can focus, shade, minimize, maximize, tile, and cascade your windows. This plugin is so feature-packed, I don’t even know everything it does yet! Check out these screenshots, then try the plugin for yourself.

WindowManager plugin 3
Minimize all Firefox windows.

WindowManager plugin 2
Bring a GIMP window into focus by searching for its name.

Alex Launi has done some amazing plugin work, making great contributions to the Twitter, File and Folders, and Pidgin plugins to name a few. He also wrote new Flickr, Gmail contacts, and Google Calendar plugins. Here’s a preview of his work:

Tweet!
Twitter plugin now supports replying to Twitter friends.

Pidgin set status
Set Pidgin status (also searches saved statuses).

Upload to flickr
Upload images to Flickr

Google Calendar
Search and create events on Google Calendar

These are only a few of the new features and improvements in GNOME Do 0.5. We’ve also fixed tons of bugs, and we’re going to have some intensive wiki-updating sessions over the next couple weeks to bring documentation up to speed. There are a few more changes that just barely missed the cut, so you can expect to see a 0.5.1 release within a few weeks. Special thanks to Alex Launi, Jason Smith, Chris Halse Rogers, Jorge Castro, Jason Imison, Jason Jones, Jacob Andreas, Guillaume Beland, Ken Simon, Mathieu Cadet, Rick Harding, and all the rest. Ubuntu users may get 0.5 packages from our Launchpad PPA, and you can find source packages on our downloads page.

Finally, GNOME Do is free software, and we work on Do because we love it. Do is free to use, but if you could spare a few hundred yen to help us cover hosting costs and other Do-related expenses, please click the ugly yellow donate button at the bottom of the page and we will be forever grateful. Thank you and enjoy!


Written by Dave

June 9th, 2008 at 8:54 pm

Posted in GNOME Do, GNU/Linux

Tagged with , , , , ,

79 Responses to 'Announcing GNOME Do 0.5: “The Fighting 0.5″'

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  1. Awesome work everyone! This has been an awesome team to work with.

    Alex Launi

    9 Jun 08 at 10:02 pm

  2. If bandwidth is really that killer, I’ll host a mirror free. Get in touch.

  3. Very nice!

    But what the heck does Gnome do in KDE or other desktop environments ?

    “Do is free to use, but it’s not free to work on or host on the web.”

    LaunchPad says: Licenses: * GNU GPL v2
    so I’m really not very clear about the license…

    Dread Knight

    10 Jun 08 at 1:45 am

  4. Dread, Do works well in KDE and most other environments with sane window managers (don’t try it with xmonad).

    Do is GPLv3. By “it’s not free to work on or host on the web,” I meant that I incur some costs by working on Do and hosting Do files on the Internet. I have clarified this, thank you.

    Dave

    10 Jun 08 at 2:04 am

  5. Wow. This is going to be so awesome.
    Feel free to ping me if you need any icons made for Do :)
    It’s definetly one of my favourite and most-used apps.

    Kalle Persson

    10 Jun 08 at 3:24 am

  6. Congratulations everyone!

    I’m pulling my copy right now :)

    Mathieu Cadet

    10 Jun 08 at 5:06 am

  7. Some notes:

    i’m not able to ‘enable’ lots of the plugins .. what’s going on?

    I can’t find a handwritten configuration anywhere, so how do I enable the other plugins, in the mean time? I mean, until you fix the preferences thingie ;-)

    Still love it though !

    Ralf Nieuwenhuijsen

    10 Jun 08 at 5:43 am

  8. I’m having trouble in the preferences dialog too.
    I can enable them sometimes, but it sure takes long! Other than that, great work once more!

    (I confess: the only thing missing for me is to be able to make the rhythmbox plugin do a filter search instead of queuing up/playing :P Or even a clear queue command.. Had I the knowledge :( Maybe this summer I’ll give it a go (highly doubt it, though) )

    Congratulations ;)

    Arlanthir

    10 Jun 08 at 6:45 am

  9. [...] the official release post in order to get more information. All pics were taken from Dave’s blog. No Comments so [...]

  10. Congratulations everyone, that’s some real amazing work you’ve been doing here.
    As soon as I get home, I’ll download my copy.

    Just wrote a blog post (http://linil.wordpress.com/2008/06/10/gnome-do-05-is-out-in-the-wild/) about this new release and used some of your pics. Let me know if there’s any problem.

    Rodrigo Araujo

    10 Jun 08 at 8:57 am

  11. Inofficially bug reporting, too: cannot enable some plugins at all, sometimes it just takes multiple attempts. The problematic ones are: Pidgin, SSH, Window Manager, Twitter.

    Other than that release 0.5 sounds great!

    Fabian Neumann

    10 Jun 08 at 9:16 am

  12. This looks awesome David! Do is really a cool app with a fun and enthusiastic group of developers. I’m looking forward to trying out this new version :-)

    guignome

    10 Jun 08 at 9:41 am

  13. For anyone having trouble enabling plugins, the problem may just be that the server hosting our plugins can’t meet up with demand. The first time you enable a plugin, it must be downloaded. If problems persist, we will have to move to a more responsive server.

    Dave

    10 Jun 08 at 10:18 am

  14. What about offline installation? We could download a pack and have it install from there.. And a file for download is easy to host.

    Arlanthir

    10 Jun 08 at 10:56 am

  15. The plugin installation problem is not server-related, it turns out. We just found out that plugins are VERY picky about the version of Do you are using. We did a last minute version change from 0.5.0.0 to 0.5.0.1 to fix a minute bug, and that caused many plugins to refuse to load (even though they work just fine). We are working to fix this and ensure that it doesn’t happen again. Make sure you’re using 0.5.0.1 and all plugins should install fine.

    Dave

    10 Jun 08 at 11:00 am

  16. Ouch.. I think I’ll wait for updated repo then =/

    Arlanthir

    10 Jun 08 at 11:40 am

  17. [...] in GNOME Do 0.5.1 “within a few weeks.” David includes a number of screenshots in his announcement plus he goes into a few more details than I wanted to duplicate here so go read his [...]

  18. I was able to enable all of the plugins (that I wanted to) after removing the plugins and re-installing as suggested here, by you! : http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=5158177&postcount=269

    nice.

    Streetdaddy

    10 Jun 08 at 6:21 pm

  19. Wow, GNOME is like totally COOL. I love it.

    JT
    http://www.FireMe.To/udi

    John Thomas

    10 Jun 08 at 8:20 pm

  20. What’s with the Leopard wallpaper on Linux machines!?

    Liono

    10 Jun 08 at 8:45 pm

  21. Will xmonad support ever be in the cards, or am I a silly, silly boy?

    John

    10 Jun 08 at 8:48 pm

  22. Is anyone else not noticing this is a complete ripoff of Quicksilver on the Mac? The exact same look and functionality, though with less features than the Mac software. At least credit them as a source of inspiration or something.

    Reid

    10 Jun 08 at 9:00 pm

  23. [...] Fuente [...]

  24. yeah… Whats with the Mac wallpaper in the background?!?

    Bill

    10 Jun 08 at 9:41 pm

  25. I agree with Reid. It looks like you have a nice implementation going here but cite your source. I don’t mean to rain on your parade but this is a complete rip of Quicksilver on the Mac. Take a look here: http://docs.blacktree.com/quicksilver/what_is_quicksilver
    The entire concept, the GUI (right down to the semi-translucent rounded corner boxes with the triangle in the upper right and the underlined letters as you type and the drop-down scroll areas…everything) and, apparently, the basis of the plugin interface… all of it has been in Quicksilver on the Mac for years.
    Considering that the code for Quicksilver is also released (On GoogleCode under the Apache license) makes this project even more sketchy. Admittedly, that code is probably pretty tightly tied to Mac OS X but it still exists.

    James

    10 Jun 08 at 10:53 pm

  26. Even the wallpaper is stolen from Mac OS X.

    People go on about making Linux a good desktop.
    Engineers need to learn how to innovate instead of copy.

    Linux needs to come up with it’s own UI elements to stand out.

    The only element truly centric to the Linux expxerience at this point is still the command terminal.

    osaka

    10 Jun 08 at 11:06 pm

  27. [...] Fuente | Davebsd [...]

  28. If you bothered to get any further you’d find that the official Do site pays homage to Quicksilver, as does the entire chapter dedicated to it in Dave’s white paper (which also cites the differences in implementation)… I think most users would recognise Do as a clone, if not instantly, then eventually…

    open source is about encouraging creativity, not stifling it…

    Streetdaddy

    10 Jun 08 at 11:39 pm

  29. I dug a little and there is mention of the link to Quicksilver but it requires that you actually read through the whitepaper and/or slideshow that was posted previously. It would probably be in your best interest David to put up a project page somewhere that summarizes what the project is and why that you can link to from your blog entries. Maybe put it in your Links section to the right of the page. Otherwise, you will be getting snarky comments whenever you write up a new blog entry.

    Your ideas from the whitepaper seem interesting but I think you undervalue the simplicity and ubiquity of the GUI as well as the learning features of the interface. Also, the default scanning behaviours in Quicksilver are fairly comprehensive. The examples mentioned for improving the “poor design” of the Catalog are to add scanning of recent and open documents and the documents folder. All of these are scanned by the Quicksilver on my machine. These may have been added since the whitepaper was written but I definitely did not have to configure those behaviours.

    It seems that what this project brings to the table is a fork of the Quicksilver project on an alternate codebase tailored for Linux with an alternate (potentially better) indexing engine. Which is definitely not a bad thing.

    James

    10 Jun 08 at 11:53 pm

  30. [...] up to QS; with these new plugins though, i think it might be the other way around. very cool stuff.read more | digg [...]

  31. [...] Yesterday (at time of writing), the latest version of Gnome Do was released. [...]

  32. Wow! this is great! :)

    Abdel Olakara

    11 Jun 08 at 5:46 am

  33. Great job!! Twitting from GNOME Do is so cool! :D

    Lore

    11 Jun 08 at 6:04 am

  34. Still looks like Windows

    Jeff Little

    11 Jun 08 at 7:20 am

  35. I really don’t see the need for Gnome, or any other Linux window manager for that matter, to create unique UI elements. There are a multitude of universal UI elements that are OK to use given that the end use is GPL’d and credit given.

    Until Quicksilver is ported to Linux, projects like Gnome DO are necessary and welcome. Gnome DO is a testament to the tenacity and hard work all Linux devs have towards making create apps.

    Mutt

    11 Jun 08 at 8:43 am

  36. can i request for a win do? i cant find one that resembles the big clean style of a mac than this.

    can it be ported to windows???

    dude

    11 Jun 08 at 9:52 am

  37. [...] vedi il fervore che c’è dietro a molti progetti della comunità Open Source? Prendiamo la nuova versione di GNOME Do, la 0.5 rilasciata oggi: ha tante di quelle novità che QuickSilver (l’utility per Mac OS X [...]

  38. Why are some talking shit about DO, what if it is a ripoff? was there already an app like that on linux?

    well then go an install quicksilver on your linux box, ooh I think you can’t!!

    Why can’t an idea come from another idea? it could be even better that the original one.

    Angel

    11 Jun 08 at 10:40 am

  39. Gnome-Do is great. No one is ever going to port Quicksilver for Linux, because even though its open source as I believe its written in Objective C or Cocoa or one of those Mac OS based languages.

    Plus if you go to the Gnome-Do site (http://do.davebsd.com/), right on the front page it says:

    “GNOME Do is inspired by Quicksilver and GNOME Launch Box.”

    riazm

    11 Jun 08 at 11:57 am

  40. Awesome love it, spent the morning messing with the plugins, so many nice ones. Wish it could be ported over to windows, currently using launchy, always thought it was great, but after messing with this new gnome-do, launchy seems limited (never thought I would say that)

    BCK

    11 Jun 08 at 1:53 pm

  41. Can anyone create some Ubuntu 7.10 packages? I am too lazy to compile :D

    Alex

    11 Jun 08 at 2:20 pm

  42. Any chance this could be later ported to Windows? I see it’s built using a lot of C# and so I would assume it’s possible to port to Windows, what would be the main road blocks for doing that?

    PatrickTulskie

    11 Jun 08 at 2:27 pm

  43. Patrick, there’s a great change. The main road block is (wo)man power. You want to work on the port? I already have way more work than I can handle just supporting GNOME, not to mention the other 1000 variations of Linux desktops, window managers, distros, etc.

    Dave

    11 Jun 08 at 2:52 pm

  44. I know C#. I don’t have a ton of time to dedicate to a project like this right now, but at the very least I could look at it and maybe come up with a more comprehensive punch list of stuff to do.

    Wanna shoot me a quick email and we can discuss there?

    PatrickTulskie

    11 Jun 08 at 3:00 pm

  45. [...] Per ulteriori informazioni cliccare qui. [...]

  46. [...] Y mas informacion aqui. [...]

  47. Anyone know if this will work on XFCE?

    Bryan

    11 Jun 08 at 5:40 pm

  48. Bryan-

    I’m running Hardy Xubuntu, and it works perfectly.

    And Dave, I must say that as a former XP guy, I was really looking forward to the Linux port of Launchy…but now I’m not so worried about it. Thanks for this!

    Aaron

    11 Jun 08 at 6:11 pm

  49. [...] semaine également, mais les choses sont restés calmes dernièrement en fait. Hier, Gnome-Do 0.5 a été anoncée. Cette application vous permet d’accomplir plusieurs tâches avec seulement quelque touches [...]

  50. oh wow. Everyone saying this is a ripoff of Quicksilver is trash. Yes it is a ripoff of quicksilver. He says that on his homepage. The major difference is that in this case, ripoff is not a bad thing. What would this world come to if everyone had to “innovate” EVERY SINGLE TIME SOMETHING WAS DONE. All inventions would remain in their most primitive stage. Whats more, opportunities for “innovation” would systematically disappear because they might have been tried before.

    In this situation, the pop-up dialogue and the functionality of the program, while identical to quicksilvers, is still the best way of doing it so far. Why would Mr. Siegel have to waste his time coming up with a method that was inferior simply because the best method had already been done? If we treat inventions like property the progress in this world will end.

    I may have over-dramatized that a bit, but I know that the people criticizing your program are the breed of mac fanboy’s that want to insure the special treatment that Jobs gives them to remain theirs. I may be an open source elitist, but I know that there has to be some imitation in order for improvement .

    Anyway, I cannot compile the latest Gnome-Do. The configure script worked fine but make fails with the following:

    error CS2007: Unrecognized command-line option: `-lgnome-keyring’
    Compilation failed: 1 error(s), 0 warnings
    make[1]: *** [bin/Debug/Do.Addins.dll] Error 1
    make[1]: Leaving directory `/home/john/Desktop/gnome-do-0.5.0.1/Do.Addins’
    make: *** [all-recursive] Error 1

    This is with the latest 0.5.0.1 release. Any ideas?

    John

    11 Jun 08 at 10:01 pm

  51. nevermind. I was using a corrupted version of gnome-keyring-sharp. It works great! good work!

    John

    11 Jun 08 at 10:36 pm

  52. [...] 0.5″. Installarlo ed effettuare l’aggiornamento in Ubuntu È stato da poco rilasciato GNOME Do 0.5, nome in codice “The Fighting 0.5″. Si tratta di una major release ricca di interessanti [...]

  53. just installed this.. its really really good. dint expect this kind of a project at all. i was surprised to see such good s/w guys. Keep developing :)

    FD

    12 Jun 08 at 2:44 am

  54. [...] Gnome-do "the fighting 0,5" [...]

  55. [...] read more | digg story [...]

  56. Wonderful release, great new functionality, but to me it has 2 pretty large problems. Sorry in advance for the long post.

    First off, the community plugins thing is great, and the preferences window is awesome, but for some reason I can’t use any of my own plugins, or test new ones. The documentation says to put them in the ~/.local/share/gnome-do/plugin folder, (the same as in 0.4.0.1) and while it makes sense and it’s there; every time I restart Do to query the plugins, they are deleted, as if with “rm -f”. Is this happening to just me?

    Also, the names for the new commands could use some rethinking. Instead of having “Create Directory” and “Create Empty File”, which require typing almost the whole thing to differentiate the two, having “Make Directory” and “New File” would be much easier to type. Alternatively, allowing the Alias action to modify other Actions would be a fix-all solution. On the other hand, I’m working on a plugin that duplicates their functionality, (along with Append to File) but with the reverse order: [folder|file][Action][title], which I use much more often. Would it be possible for this to be integrated by default? I don’t take credit for the code, all I did was switch the modifier and initial item sections around.

    On a positive note, the “Alias” command is absolutely phenomenal! I can’t tell you how happy I am to see it functional. Also, Rename is coming in really handy.

    One last question: where did the “Last Item” item go? It was great for handling typos, but now it’s gone.

    Again, sorry for the long post, hope the suggestions help.

    Scott

    12 Jun 08 at 2:45 pm

  57. Nicely done. One of the few apps that would benefit from the high-res icons.

    Jakub Steiner

    12 Jun 08 at 6:55 pm

  58. i love it :)

    Congratulations!

    Felipe

    12 Jun 08 at 11:10 pm

  59. I am having problems with the last stage of install and unmet dependencies: here is the error message: Any ideas?

    >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

    The following packages are BROKEN:
    gnome-do
    0 packages upgraded, 1 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
    Need to get 92.2kB of archives. After unpacking 356kB will be used.
    The following packages have unmet dependencies:
    gnome-do: Depends: libgnome-keyring1.0-cil (>= 1.0.0~svn.r87622) which is a virtual package.
    Depends: libgnomedesktop2.20-cil (>= 2.20.0) which is a virtual package.
    Resolving dependencies…
    Unable to resolve dependencies! Giving up…
    Abort.

    Jason

    13 Jun 08 at 1:04 pm

  60. I figured it out…Synaptic Package manager took care of it. Thanks.

    This question is solved.

    Jason

    13 Jun 08 at 6:07 pm

  61. how to upgrade with hardy from 0.4 to 0.5 ?

    guebreg

    14 Jun 08 at 5:00 am

  62. Can you provide installation instructions please?

    dual booter

    14 Jun 08 at 6:15 am

  63. Superb! Thank you!

    I have discovered a bug in connection with the tomboy plugin. When it’s enabled the tomboy icon also appears in the system tray, also when the gnome tomboy applet is enabled.

    Gnome Do is installed via ppa Repo.

    Any fix to this one?

    sojusnik

    14 Jun 08 at 9:17 am

  64. I have opened a question for this issue:
    https://answers.launchpad.net/do/+question/36261

    sojusnik

    14 Jun 08 at 11:42 am

  65. [...] de como usar o instalar X en entornos unix/linux 12 3 Como instalar Gnome paso a paso 1 2 [...]

  66. Hi!
    Can you tell me how to use the new version in Fedora 9?
    Salu2…

    masch

    15 Jun 08 at 5:15 pm

  67. Really nice theme, is it just clearlooks with the colour modified in the appearance dialog? If so could you post the hex colour.

    spencer

    18 Jun 08 at 4:46 am

  68. When I installed gnome-do for the on Ubuntu Hardy running KDE 3.4.9 first time it was running the way it should be . Then I had a problem with google calendar plugin (I didn’t enter the credentials) which would not let me start gnome-do. Then with a view to do a reinstall I deleted the plugins directory at ‘~/.local/share/’ as well as ‘~/.config/gnome-do’. And then I started getting the error:

    [Error 05:58:10.524] Deserializing Histogram Relevance Provider failed: Could not find file “/home/kousik/.config/gnome-do/relevance5″

    I saw a bug report at launchpad (https://bugs.launchpad.net/do/+bug/240016). Just curious if there’s any progress. Thanks!

    Kousik

    18 Jun 08 at 7:02 am

  69. [...] box (pictured above) backed by a network repository. Which, to be sure, can lead to a new class of scaling problems. But such demand problems are discrete and targetable; a fragmented, disorganized and non-indexed [...]

  70. yeah this is what i call sexy!
    very nice dude, really
    im looking for the amarok plug in, do you know anything about its development??
    is there someone actually trying to fix it??
    thanks in advance

    luismmontielg

    25 Jun 08 at 7:29 pm

  71. [...] Announcing GNOME Do 0.5: "The Fighting 0.5" [David Siegel] – GNOME-Do is by far the coolest application launcher for open-source OSes. It looks exactly like Quicksilver and it’s functionality is almost equivalent. [...]

  72. Actually, it works quite well with xmonad, all you have to do is set it to be a floating window and it works exactly the same as it does in Gnome.

    John

    3 Jul 08 at 5:55 pm

  73. [...] mas informacion aqui. Por otra parte Banshee lanza su versión 1.0, y parece el destinado a ser el digno sustituto de [...]

  74. How do I install this on my OS?
    I’m running centos 5 with gnome.

    TJohnxon

    22 Jul 08 at 3:56 pm

  75. [...] gnome-do es un lanzador de aplicaciones al igual que el Quicksilver de Mac. [...]

  76. Question about the “shelf” plug-in.

    I’m new to GnomeDo…..I have the shelf plug-in installed and I type something in to GD and get the option to add to shelf or remove from shelf. So what does the shelf plug-in do? I’ve searched all over and can’t find an answer.

    thanks

    Dave Way

    15 Sep 08 at 12:42 pm

  77. [...] There’s a new Linux competitor to QuickSilver in town. It’s called GNOME Do, and it just reached version 0.5. [...]

  78. [...] Do (Gnome) [...]

  79. Hi,
    I had similar idea without knowing that GNOME-Do exist. Please take a look at:
    http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/18848/

    Your free to use the idea or concept

    Greetings
    Klau3

    Klau3

    8 Apr 09 at 6:02 am

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