randomivysaur,

Emacs user:

cows_are_underrated,

I use both. What does that mean for me?

01adrianrdgz,
@01adrianrdgz@lemmy.world avatar
owenfromcanada,
@owenfromcanada@lemmy.world avatar

What does this make Cinnamon users?

01adrianrdgz,
@01adrianrdgz@lemmy.world avatar

cozy reindeers.

Abnorc,

I dunno, the people in the top left look pretty happy.

drcabbage, (edited )

They do, and judging by their environment, pretty wealthy as well. Plus a happy family. As opposed to being unhinged enough to give finger guns to a laptop or be bombarded with “tech stuff”. Great ad for gnome :)

(I’m just joking around. KDE is great too.)

kaffiene,

Right! You use Gnome when there’s good natural light =)

Zerush,
@Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar
LordKitsuna,

I find it amusing that what I can only assume appears to be a professional artist as being used as an example. Considering that gnome is forcing Wayland yet has no color management. Not that x11 is perfect at color management but it at least exists

joyjoy,

I am hacker man.

olutukko,

What about window manager people? Like i3 etc

aleq,
@aleq@lemmy.world avatar

You won’t be able to catch one on camera.

badbytes,

Hah, this is final proof, gnome users are children.

aeleoglyphic,

As a kubuntu user I approve. 👍

kubica,
@kubica@kbin.social avatar

Is the gnome we are talking about that one that for reaching the taskbar you have to move the mouse to the top of the screen and then immediately to the bottom every time?

ReveredOxygen,
@ReveredOxygen@sh.itjust.works avatar

I genuinely don’t know the last time I used the activities button, or the taskbar. To open activity view, I press super. To open programs, I search. To switch programs, I click on them in activity view

kubica,
@kubica@kbin.social avatar

I'm new to linux. Having things at hand is useful because I don't know the names to search or what keys to press.

omnissiah,
@omnissiah@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

You do you! It’s about what works for YOU, not what others think is best.

If you’ll keep using you will cross a point where you can make your own choice anyway (and that might be sticking by to what you’ve been using)

MeanEYE,
@MeanEYE@lemmy.world avatar

Yes, the one with great score when it comes to Fitt’s law which plays a huge role in UI design. When you put it that way it seems stupid to go from one edge to the other to reach an option. In reality it’s an easiest target to hit since it’s huge and requires no precision, edge to edge scroll.

kubica,
@kubica@kbin.social avatar

I don't know if my screen is too big or my mouse is at a different speed. But for me it takes a lot of effort to do those big movements.

MeanEYE,
@MeanEYE@lemmy.world avatar

For me as well, as I keep very low sensitivity. Am not even sure they imagined it being used like that most of the times. Am suspecting idea is to use Super key to open window preview and options are access from there. In that case it’s on average half of screen away.

But idea is there. Pretty much all OS designers implement this law in some way. Mac does it with their task bar and application menu. KDE, Windows and similar do it with theirs. However I understand your complaint that you’d have to scroll to the top then bottom, but doing so is easy.

jodanlime,
@jodanlime@midwest.social avatar

If you aren’t using the super key to access that menu you are using gnome wrong imo. Three finger swipe on track pad is also a great way to access the same menu.

KDE is fuckin fantastic, but it aims to replicate the windows ui and workflow. If that’s what you want then I highly recommend it over gnome. But personally I don’t think that desktop UX should be stuck in the early 2000s Redmond style. Once I changed my habits to use my windows button on the keyboard instead of moving my mouse all over hell to access the menu it’s all I ever use. Mouse is just a fallback when the other hand is busy. I try every new KDE version because I kind of hate how the gnome devs act sometimes, but I can’t get used to that workflow anymore.

I hope cosmic is great.

reflex, (edited )
@reflex@kbin.social avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • jodanlime,
    @jodanlime@midwest.social avatar

    Agree to disagree I guess. I’ve tried changing the workflow in KDE to even resemble gnome and it just feels like you have to have a start menu with a taskbar. Sure, you could put that taskbar anywhere but it still operates the same as a windows 98 taskbar.

    Maybe I’m just not used to the KDE way of doing things but next year will be my 20th anniversary of using Linux. I’ve tried every desktop environment and window manager. All of them.

    I respect the KDE project but KDE makes me feel like I’m using a windows gui on top of Linux.

    Vuraniute,
    @Vuraniute@thelemmy.club avatar

    TWM Users/Ricers:

    CaptainHowdy,

    But what if I don’t want to wear a hoodie and sunglasses when I’m inside on my computer?

    merc,

    KDE gives you bad hair?

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