▲ | reissbaker 4 days ago | |||||||
This generally isn't my experience with GNOME. You have to install an extension to get a dock at all. No, there's an auto-hiding dock built-in. Pressing the Super key acts like better version of Apple's Expose feature: it shows the windows you have open, auto-opens the dock, and focuses the application launcher search bar so you can just start typing and launch an app. You had to install a system tray extension I'm sure you needed to at some point, but (as you mention), that's no longer the case: it's built in by default. clipboard manager If you mean clipboard history... That's true. Although macOS doesn't have a built-in clipboard history viewer either, and I never particularly missed having one. There are plenty of GNOME extensions with clipboard history if you want one. Generally speaking I like GNOME much more than KDE, since GNOME's gesture support is much better than KDE's. I also personally dislike Windows-style infinitely-nesting-menu taskbars, which is what KDE uses, whereas GNOME is more macOS-like (although it has its own, IMO slightly cleaner style... And of course, it's much more modifiable than macOS). | ||||||||
▲ | jorvi 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> No, there's an auto-hiding dock built-in. Pressing the Super key acts like better version of Apple's Expose feature: it shows the windows you have open, auto-opens the dock, and focuses the application launcher search bar so you can just start typing and launch an app. So, not a Dock. People don't want their whole desktop to fly everywhere and zoom out when they just want to quickly switch or launch an application with the mouse. They just want to mouse over the bottom of their screen and click. Same for launching an application via keyboard / doing a calculation / finding an emoji. People just want something akin to Spotlight (think uLauncher on Linux). Something lightweight that pops over and allows them to quickly do the thing, without a lot of visual clutter happening and then happening again in reverse. | ||||||||
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▲ | abhinavk 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
> No, there's an auto-hiding dock built-in. Pressing the Super key acts like better version of Apple's Expose feature: it shows the windows you have open, auto-opens the dock, and focuses the application launcher search bar so you can just start typing and launch an app. It either requires using a keyboard or moving your mouse to the opposite direction of where the dock appears. | ||||||||
▲ | prettymuchnoone 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
bit unrelated, but the newest version of macOS (Tahoe) does now have a clipboard manager |