Since the availability of Unity and GNOME Shell, I have noticed widespread confusion over whether the more "traditional" version of the GNOME desktop environment should be referred to as "GNOME Classic" or "GNOME Fallback" in 11.04, 11.10 and later.
What is the correct terminology to use? Also, does it differ by Ubuntu version?
The classic GNOME 2 interface present in Ubuntu up to 11.04 but not in later releases is just GNOME 2 (with the default shell). The name of the session type for this interface was
Ubuntu Classic
, and the name of the session type for Unity was (and still is)Ubuntu
, but that shouldn't be confused with the name of the interface itself--Ubuntu is an operating system, after all, not an interface.Nonetheless, since any mention of "GNOME shell" evokes the idea of GNOME 3, and since Unity is also a GNOME interface, it is helpful to be able to characterize the classic GNOME 2 interface as separate both from any GNOME 3 interface and from versions of the Unity interface that used GNOME 2. Thus it's become almost common to call it GNOME Classic.
We should avoid calling it that, because that's capitalized and thus a proper name, and yet that is not the official name for it. In my opinion, we should instead say "the classic GNOME 2 interface."
The practical reason why it is bad to call the classic GNOME 2 interface "GNOME Classic" is that
GNOME Classic
is the name of the session type in Ubuntu 11.10 (and future versions) that provides the GNOME Fallback interface. The GNOME Fallback interface is a GNOME 3 interface that is designed to look and behave a lot (though not entirely) like the classic GNOME 2 interface.Here's a condensed list of some interfaces and the session types that provide them in Ubuntu 11.04 and Ubuntu 11.10:
Ubuntu
session type. The overarching desktop environment is GNOME 2 in Ubuntu 11.04 and earlier versions, and GNOME 3 starting with Ubuntu 11.10. The window manager has beencompiz
for a while. Install this with theubuntu-desktop
metapackage.Ubuntu 2D
session type. The overarching desktop environment is GNOME 2 in Ubuntu 11.04 and earlier versions (butunity-2d
was only available by PPA back then), and GNOME 3 starting with Ubuntu 11.10. The window manager ismetacity
. Starting with Ubuntu 11.04, install this with theubuntu-desktop
metapackage.Ubuntu Classic
andUbuntu Classic (no effects)
session types. The overarching desktop environment was GNOME 2. This could be installed by theubuntu-desktop
metapackage.GNOME Classic
andGNOME Classic (no effects)
session types. The overarching desktop environment is GNOME 3. The window manager ismetacity
. Install this with thegnome-session-fallback
package.GNOME
session type, starting in Ubuntu 11.10. (In significantly older versions of Ubuntu, the "GNOME" session type had once meant what the "Ubuntu Classic" session type means in Ubuntu 11.04.) The overarching desktop environment is GNOME 3. The window manager ismutter
. Install this with thegnome-shell
package.Kubuntu
session type. (Considerably over versions of Ubuntu had major version 3 of KDE instead.) The overarching desktop environment is KDE 4 (frequently just called KDE these days, as it came out some time ago). The window manager iskwin
(available via the traditionalkde-window-manager
package and, as of Ubuntu 11.10, also available inkde-window-manager-gles
). Install this with thekubuntu-desktop
metapackage.Xubuntu
session type. The overarching desktop environment is Xfce 4 (also Xfce4 or just Xfce). The window manager isxfwm4
. Install this with thexubuntu-desktop
metapackage.Lubuntu
session type; it is also provided with a different configuration by theLubuntu Netbook
session type (this can arguably be considered a different interface). The overarching desktop environment is LXDE. The window manager isopenbox
. Install this with thelubuntu-desktop
metapackage.