@dgchrt@mastodon.social On Gnome I am always installing Dash to Dock, Blur my Shell, No Overview on Startup and something to deal with notifications and clipboard history.
On KDE I don’t need any of this and just run trusted upstream code.
I am usually activating minimise via tweaks, since a lot of programs, Gnome and non-gnome, don’t have as proper session management as something like the Gnome Text Editor... Christian Hergert just writes exceptionally good software.
Part 1 of 4… sorry
@janvhs FWIW, GNOME doesn’t primarily rely on session saving to temporarily hide windows, but rather workspaces. If you’re not using a window / a group of windows, you can move to a different workspace instead
@bragefuglseth hmm maybe I should utilise this more
@janvhs The GNOME workflow is very workspace centric. That’s also why the overview is shown on launch by default :)
@bragefuglseth yeah somehow I never use my system that way. I was working on implementing the Mosaic concept from Tobias Bernard, but paused the development, because I uninstalled Asahi Linux for the last 6 Months. Without having a “new workspace on maximise behaviour”, it just doesn’t work for me. Plus tbh I find it really annoying to use with keyboard and mouse, on Laptop it’s great tho!
@bragefuglseth should pick up the development again, because I’m now running Gnome (Fedora Silverblue) on my Suse provided work laptop :D