this post was submitted on 03 Sep 2023
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Linux
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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I am a daily Gnome user. There are many things which I actually dislike about Gnome, but I have solved them all through extensions. Fine, I'm not bothered because it can be customized.
But every time they introduce something like this, it takes me a while to get a functional desktop back. It takes time for those extensions' developers to respond to these things. They have to research the change, implement it, test it, go through extra work to stay backward compatible, etc. These people aren't being paid for this, so it takes some time.
I'm just frustrated about this. I know someday I will run updates and suddenly find all my extensions broken.
Agree, my work flow is basically entirely broken without dash-to-panel, which is maintained by like one guy lol.
I really, really hope Cosmic turns out to be a good DE, because Gnome does a lot of cool stuff that I really like, but the actual experience of using it is miserable for me. It always feels like it's fighting against everything I want to do.
I'm glad Gnome exists, but we need an option that does some of the cool and unique things they do while also being less opinionated.
I mean there are a bunch of GTK based desktops besides Gnome already. Mint team's Cinnamon, Budgie, Pantheon, Mate and of course: XFCE
None of them support Wayland, though.
I know, and I've used all of them. I'm currently using Cinnamon. There's a lot more to Gnome then just gtk though.
I literally just moved to Gnome 44 from a long time Gnome 3 setup. I only found one extension that makes Gnome 4x feel usable the way gnome 3 was and that's v-shell. If v-shell breaks then I'm never moving to gnome 45.
The ideas behind the GNOME Shell desktop metaphor have stayed consistent through the 3.x cycle, at least from ~3.10. The "problem" with GNOME 3.x is that it implements core ideas in the workflow that the user needs to grasp. Either you use it as they thought you should or you are better off with some other DE.
Sure, you may need some extension to feel more comfortable. I do use a couple, but if you need extensions to make it functional you really should consider switching to another DE/WM.
I really like a lot about Gnome. It's things like getting rid of the system tray that don't make sense to me. I understand it's not in the system's ideology, but you can't force that on every application developer who still has to support that feature for other desktops. If it's a common application feature, then it's just broken on Gnome. That's a hard thing to sell me.
This is why I feel more comfortable using Cinnamon in my main PC, but I still use GNOME in my laptop.
Yeah, it's kind of ridiculous. At this point my most starred git repos are all patches to get various extensions working on the current gnome release.
I've been looking to switch away but nothing I've used has had the it factor I want.
One of the reasons I prefer KDE or MATE. Too many extensions needed to make it usable. I also don't like the fact that they're installed through their website instead of your local package manager.