An Unabashed Geek at that. As much as I like the way Apple looks and feels, I detest that you are locked into it. The same goes for Windoze.
With GNU/Linux you have multiple #Desktops. #Gnome is probably the most popular (but please for Gawd's sakes don't quote me). Then there's #KDE (which makes me think of Windoze). Then #Mate, #Cinnamon, #Budgie, #LXQt, #Deepin. These are just a few. Each has it's own pros and cons (LXQt is extremely light on resources but not very customisable). Deepin has incredible graphics and animations, but is extremely resource hungry. Mate uses Gnome 2 (because the author hated Gnome 3). etc etc etc...
Shout out to Text Pieces! I needed to URL-encode a big ugly string (creating a template form from URL parameters, yay!) and yep, sure enough, it made it stupidly easy.
The next time you need to encode, transform, or convert some text on Linux, reach for this pretty little offline app instead of pasting your data into some random website. 👍
I voted in my first ever GNOME Foundation Board election today. If you're a foundation member who haven't done so, I strongly encourage you to read the candidate statements and vote, vote, vote!
I often feel like #Gnome could leverage right click in it's UI a lot more, all I can do if I right click on an app icon for example is open a new window, pin to dash and app details. App details is relatively useless because it's build into the Software Center and only recognizes apps installed from their, a "go to files" button is missing which would be very helpful, I can't hide a app from there using the GUI and for open Windows there is no right click to E.g. force quit or similar.
Anyone attending GUADEC in Denver want to chat about metered data and resource scheduling? I might have inherited some stuff there and I think it would be amazing to sync up with what everyone’s working on.
I was sad to find a surprising lack of visual scripting apps for Linux. Apple's Shortcuts app is very powerful and can be incredibly useful. It's not like we don't have the technical ability to make something similar.
So I started working on one myself :blobfoxfloofcofe:
As the #Nautilus team keeps making progress in refactoring and optimizing #GNOMEFiles, we can see #GNOME's file manager steadily becoming faster.
Among the few performance issues remaining, I believe the probable "Final Boss" of search performance is this issue, which would require some refactoring across the views. Anyone up for a challenge? https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/nautilus/-/issues/3452
I'm no developer, so of course I don't know shit, but it feels strange to me that applications individually decides whether or not ctrl+q will close them. Alt+F4 is decided on a system level, so why not also ctrl+q?
I hope future #gnome will actually be able to pre-render these thumbnails without me having to open files first.. it's a bit ridic.. even my sway/thunar setup does that..
You know how on #Gnome you always have a new virtual desktop to the right, and the application list below, but then there's nothing above or to the left of the default virtual desktop?
I think it would be really awesome if one (or both) of these spaces was utilized as a space for widgets. Like iOS has a widget screen/layer, and some Android launchers have virt. desktops to the right and a news feed to the left.
You could choose any number of user created widgets, including RSS news feeds.
Is #firefox really the best way to sign a #pdf document on #linux with a touchscreen? I somehow cannot believe that even after trying 5 different programs...
@holgerschurig I'm absolutely willing to do a) on a limited range of programs (mostly spacemacs). However, for b) it goes both ways. Do developers make it easy to report issues and feature requests? Do they actually want to see feature requests or are those a nuisance for them? Users don't want to create the nth account on a custom bug tracker, waste time looking for possible duplicates on bug trackers with poor search functionality (I'm looking at you, bugzilla) and in the end run into a dev who poorly communicated the scope of their project to start with.
Do I want a non-Firefox way of signing PDFs? No, I already scratched the itch (signing the document and setting Firefox as default for opening PDFs). I'm just surprised that organizations like #GNOME spend development effort into #evince. But yes, I guess that's your point, it isn't PM driven...
Spotify has gotten an update to its desktop UI, and I'm once again going to argue that it would look so much better on a general basis if it used an integrated header bar on Linux systems. The app is practically begging for it.