Sure seems like LibreOffice would be better off investing in stability than in this sort of thing. Honestly, one of the things I like about LibreOffice is that the UI is fairly traditional. I'm all for innovation, but in my opinion most of the changes in desktop UI since about 2000 have been questionable change masquerading as innovation. Maybe I'm just old.
1) As the blog post says, it's optional, so if you like the traditional interface, you can still use it.
2) Regarding "investing in", it's a free and open source community-driven project. The community decides what to work on. If you think the community should "invest" in something else, please feel free to join the community :-)
1. It's optional, but its existence increases the testing burden for all other parts of the application, because now there are more options to test. See here:
2. Communities, like individuals, sometimes make mistakes. It's OK to voice ones opinion that a mistake is a mistake. And they are free to ignore me if they disagree.
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[ 0.23 ms ] story [ 15.8 ms ] thread2) Regarding "investing in", it's a free and open source community-driven project. The community decides what to work on. If you think the community should "invest" in something else, please feel free to join the community :-)
https://mail.gnome.org/archives/desktop-devel-list/2002-Apri...
2. Communities, like individuals, sometimes make mistakes. It's OK to voice ones opinion that a mistake is a mistake. And they are free to ignore me if they disagree.