Originally posted by Britoid
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GNOME Shell + Mutter 3.33.4 Released
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Last edited by Wojcian; 22 July 2019, 05:27 AM.
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Originally posted by aufkrawall View PostHas anyone tried the recent beta with Wayland? Is the mouse cursor free of stutter now?
Btw: I use Plasma on a slow Gemini Lake SoC, works like a charm with Compton as compositor and with ~360MB of RAM consumption after logging in (including GvFS & Dropbox). Don't make yourself a fool by claiming Plasma would not be usable on slow systems...
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I don't really use extensions, not sure why people think it's useless without them, I guess it goes on 'per case basis'. The only extension I use at this point is 'Hide Dash X', and it's because my system is cofigured that way from the times when Gnome Shell would cause stutter in opening/closing animation when dash draws some elements at random, killing dash completely was only solution for it (not even dash to dock would help it, because it uses same code = same way of drawing). That reminds me, I should probably check if the issue is fixed by now, last time I've checked was at 3.2x version maybe even earlier.
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Originally posted by Britoid View Post
Then you're using GNOME wrong. GNOME isn't Unity and isn't a Windows or macOS clone.
If you hold over power off, it becomes suspend.
And this is what I need to feel comfortable as a user.
Unity was nowhere near a Windows or MacOS clone.
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Originally posted by Hibbelharry View PostOk Mez,
you didn't get that pressing the menu power button a little longer or pressing ALT changes the button. That's well hidden, i agree.
Originally posted by Hibbelharry View PostWhere I really disagree:
I played around with that in compiz times, i was a fun effect, but I never looked back when it was gone. I don't want my brain to focus on any wobbling, and I don't think thats more natural. Ever moved something like a pen across your desk? Does it wobble? Windows ain't no water. And if it's more natural: why didn't any graphical environment (Windows, OSX, KDE, Gnome, Android, IOS, XFCE...) that up? I think you're rather alone with your point of view.
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