Originally posted by 144Hz
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GNOME OS Is Taking Shape But Its To Serve For Testing The Desktop
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Originally posted by tildearrow View PostOh yes, the desktop in where it comes broken by default and you have to fix it (and sometimes needing obscure extensions which will break the next month).
KDE had Neon for ages!
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Originally posted by Veto View PostWow, so the "honorary editor" starts the thread with an inflammatory "KDE is better than Gnome" post - classy!
Just to quote yourself from the "Ban 144Hz" thread:
Physician, heal thyself...
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Originally posted by Veto View PostWow, so the "honorary editor" starts the thread with an inflammatory "KDE is better than Gnome" post - classy!
Just to quote yourself from the "Ban 144Hz" thread:
Physician, heal thyself...
Like this is unfair, how come he and his whole clan (uid313 and Alexmitter) party and pee over the KDE thread and we can't?
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Originally posted by tildearrow View Post
I'm doing exactly what 144Hz did to us in the KDE thread: invade territory.
Like this is unfair, how come he and his whole clan (uid313 and Alexmitter) party and pee over the KDE thread and we can't?
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Originally posted by tildearrow View Post
I'm doing exactly what 144Hz did to us in the KDE thread: invade territory.
Like this is unfair, how come he and his whole clan (uid313 and Alexmitter) party and pee over the KDE thread and we can't?
I've been using Linux for at least 20 years (Xfree86 + Glide days).. Nobody would consider either desktop broken by default, and the usability of each tends to come down to the quality of the QA by the distribution. Gnome had good wayland support first, but KDE has plenty of interesting features (they basically wrote the book on compositing). Even Linus has shuffled between DE's, and I'm willing to bet the Xorg team does too... It's actually good both DE's went down totally different paths too, because there are more options for users now.
Really not sure why anyone would consider this a bad thing, as it helps Gnome to help optimise their user-experience and rely less on distributions to do so for them, and some of these benefits will likely trickle down to many KDE users too.
Maybe the endgame in a decade might be to eliminate some of the distributions overall, and I have no problem with that, if the end result is efficient, fast and usable. Even if this project is used only for testing, more testing of testing snapshots is good..Last edited by Auzy; 23 July 2020, 04:46 AM.
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