by
Peter on
29 Jun 2007 in
Apps

Following up from my recent post reporting that Google were planning to release more applications for Linux, it seems we have a new addition to the Google Linux family.
Google Desktop is Google’s desktop search solution which has been available for Windows for quite some time and recently also had a Mac version.
Google have a list of the Linux version’s features, which include their Quick Search Box, support for popular Linux filetypes, smart indexing and versioning.
It’s worth mentioning that Linux already does have a desktop search solution - Beagle, which is, unlike Google Desktop, open source, has been around for a while now and integrates much better with GNOME.
Still, Google Desktop for Linux is definitely worth a try, especially if you’re not currently using Beagle. Google Desktop is a free of charge (but not open source) download which should work on most modern distributions.
To install Google Desktop, head to the Download page, choose either the RPM or Deb (depending on your distribution) and then download and install the file (in most distributions you can double-click the file to install it).
by
Peter on
18 Jun 2007 in
News

As companies go, Google is often pretty Linux-friendly and pro-active about making their products work with Linux. Obviously, it helps that most of their products are web-based, but we already have a couple of desktop offerings for Linux from Google, such as Picasa and Google Earth.
The unofficial Google Operating System blog is reporting that Google are making plans to launch more desktop applications for Linux:
In a presentation [PDF] from Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit, Google announced they’ll release important Linux desktop applications this year.
The post there points out that us Linux users are missing things like Google Talk, Google Desktop and Google’s SketchUp drawing tool.
Google recently renewed their commitment to building desktop apps for the Mac and have a Mac-specific downloads page and a Google Mac blog. Hopefully this move will get us Linux users some love too in the form of software and support.
I think this can only be a good thing and I’m all for more application support for Linux on the desktop.
by
Jacob on
8 Jun 2007 in
Apps
In my last post, I noted that the major upgrade to Feisty as of Tribe 1 was The Gimp. Now it’s time to see what has changed in the latest installment, which will be released under the name Gimp 2.4.
The major change for this release seems to be a big usability overhaul. New defaults are now in place that make the Gimp look a little bit like Photoshop, but still has many features that make it unique.

Read the rest of Gimp 2.3 (preview of 2.4)