On 12/02/2011 02:26 PM, Manu Gupta wrote:
On Fri, Dec 2, 2011 at 2:05 PM, Nelson Marques<nmo.marques@gmail.com> wrote:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=665370
2011/12/2 Sankar P<psankar@novell.com>:
On 12/2/2011 at 01:54 PM, in message <CAHWXQKPR9dUjsZV+9GNOxfcbU8SvxO8igdFzKpzqbcZgK25K9Q@mail.gmail.com>, Nelson Marques<nmo.marques@gmail.com> wrote: On my work computer (Fedora 16) it's not really working, it claims I don't have GNOME3 installed (might be a browser issue though, using Chrome). I'll test this over today when I go home on openSUSE.
+1
Didn't work with Chrome saying that I do not run the latest GNOME 3. With FF, I didn't get the button that Vincent was getting. May be we should try after few days.
Worked for me.. Try installing gnome-shell-browser-plugin first it should work then
Also I have a question perhaps more suited upstream. Some json files for extensions describe the workable versions as 3.2 and some as 3.2.0, so do we have a standard defining it or is it possible to have both versions working together I am not sure. The reason I ask this because of the following link http://forums.opensuse.org/blogs/knurpht/getting-dock-extension-gnome-3-2-wo... and the dock extension from extensions.gnome.org shows incompatibility with gnome3.2 and the extension site showing
Sankar
Looks nice... I hope malcolm gets the no a11y extension there... I really hate GNOME suggesting I'm somehow disabled :/
NM
2011/12/2 Vincent Untz<vuntz@opensuse.org>:
Go test this, it's amazing! :-)
Vincent
----- Forwarded message from "Jasper St. Pierre"<jstpierre@mecheye.net>
Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2011 16:16:26 -0500 From: "Jasper St. Pierre"<jstpierre@mecheye.net> To: gnome-shell-list<gnome-shell-list@gnome.org>, desktop-devel-list@gnome.org, gnome-announce-list@gnome.org Subject: extensions.gnome.org - Public Alpha Now Available
We're happy to announce that extensions.gnome.org is now in public alpha testing at:
If you have GNOME Shell 3.2 on your system, you should be able to install extensions from the website via your browser. This uses the "GNOME Shell Integration" browser plugin which is likely already installed on your system if you have GNOME 3.2. The plugin only works with Firefox currently - see "Known Bugs" below.
We've seeded the site with a small set of extensions, including the extensions from gnome-shell-extensions. If you are the author of an extension that has been uploaded, and you want to take over uploading future releases, please contact us, and we'll get you access.
The set of extensions on the site is still small compared to the total number of extensions available. We expect more extensions to be available over the next few weeks as authors upload them and they are reviewed.
About GNOME Shell Extensions ============================
GNOME Shell extensions are small pieces of code written by third party developers that modify the way GNOME works. (If you are familiar with Chrome Extensions or Firefox Addons, GNOME Shell extensions are similar to them.)
Since extensions are created outside of the normal GNOME design and development process, they are are supported by their authors, rather than by the GNOME community.
Extensions provide a way to prototype out new possible features for future versions of GNOME, and for advanced users to make customizations in ways that aren't necessarily compatible with the overall design vision of GNOME, but are still cool and useful to a subset of users.
Since extensions become part of the core operating system, they need to be checked for potential security problems. Extensions uploaded to extensions.gnome.org go through code review before they are made available for download. More information can be found at https://extensions.gnome.org/about/.
Known Bugs and Problems =======================
* There are some bugs that currently cause the browser plugin to not work correctly in WebKit-based browsers like Epiphany or Chrome. We will fix these bugs in subsequent releases of GNOME Shell, but for now using Firefox to access extensions.gnome.org is advised.
* Extensions that use GSettings to store user settings cannot be currently installed as a user; this limitation will be fixed for GNOME 3.4. In the mean time, extension authors should avoid the use of GSettings if they want to make their extension available via extensions.gnome.org.
* Due to a bug in GNOME Shell 3.2.1 code, the uninstall button will not work for some extensions. Disabling extensions still works, but if you want to remove an extension entirely, you'll need to manually delete it from ~/.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions.
Reporting Problems ==================
If you find problems with the site, please file them in bugzilla.gnome.org against the 'extensions.gnome.org' component of the website product.
Problems with individual extensions should be reported using the "Help! It didn't work!" link on the extension's page.
Thanks to everybody that made this happen!
-- Jasper St. Pierre _______________________________________________ desktop-devel-list mailing list desktop-devel-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list
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-- Nelson Marques
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I used the extensions using firefox and I have some observations: * Some extensions didn't install saying they were incompatible with my system. It would be better if it informed me that my system was not updated or extra dependencies were required. It could be done by putting a more button beside the message. * Second, why were the extensions and the extension page not compatible with epiphany? (Oh I see now "There are some bugs that currently cause the browser plugin to not work correctly in WebKit-based browsers like Epiphany or Chrome."). I hope they fix it. That way we could run the extensions as a web app! That way the web app feature could be nicely utilized. Or the extensions could be served as an application like Documents or Contacts which would be better. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-gnome+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-gnome+owner@opensuse.org