I to would be apoplectic if my only method of interaction with reality was a gnome desktop. Give me a task bar and system tray . would go insane if I had to be constantly disoriented by “activities overview” or had to rely on plugins that break with every update to restore basic functionality.
I liked using Gnome because it was my first introduction to virtual desktops. I am very thankful that it encouraged me to make use of them and to put 1 window per desktop. However, I tried KDE and it turns out that
In a nutshell I liked Gnome because it encouraged me to use KDE in a fun way. The actual thing that made me try KDE was finally getting fed up by their whole “we refuse to implement server side decorations and also a bunch of other basic features/customization stuff middle finger emoji” thing.
I to would be apoplectic if my only method of interaction with reality was a gnome desktop. Give me a task bar and system tray . would go insane if I had to be constantly disoriented by “activities overview” or had to rely on plugins that break with every update to restore basic functionality.
I liked using Gnome because it was my first introduction to virtual desktops. I am very thankful that it encouraged me to make use of them and to put 1 window per desktop. However, I tried KDE and it turns out that
In a nutshell I liked Gnome because it encouraged me to use KDE in a fun way. The actual thing that made me try KDE was finally getting fed up by their whole “we refuse to implement server side decorations and also a bunch of other basic features/customization stuff middle finger emoji” thing.