TheGrandNagus, 1 year ago I use blur my shell, but I don’t really need it. I started liking Gnome a lot more once I let go of trying to recreate the Win95 UX that pretty much everyone else uses. It was such a pain at first, but then it just clicked and now I couldn’t go back to that clunky workflow. I know most people like it that way, but IMO Microsoft didn’t create the perfect UX paradigm back in the early 90s
I use blur my shell, but I don’t really need it.
I started liking Gnome a lot more once I let go of trying to recreate the Win95 UX that pretty much everyone else uses.
It was such a pain at first, but then it just clicked and now I couldn’t go back to that clunky workflow.
I know most people like it that way, but IMO Microsoft didn’t create the perfect UX paradigm back in the early 90s