So a few months back I asked about you guys os in c/asklemmy, so this time I wanna ask about your desktops you use on this same account.
(I use kde but plan to move to cinnamon I find kde buggy and gnome tracker3 randomly broke for no reason + themeing so yh idk if these happened to anybody)

  • dino@discuss.tchncs.de
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    7 minutes ago

    KDE at home “gaming” desktop, but would love to move away from it, for various bugs and non-working configurations. At work and home laptop I am using WMs, riverwm / i3.

  • Luna@lemdro.id
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    8 minutes ago

    Gnome. I actually started with KDE. It’s a good DE, but it’s got so many options that I had choice fatigue. I constantly tweaked my taskbar instead of focusing on what I wanted to do. And it was easy to get it to a “looks broken” state

    When I tried Gnome, I fell in love with it. I love the unique workflow, lack of distractions, the modern adwaita design, etc. Everything felt so polished

    That being said, I don’t like how Gnome devs seemingly can’t agree on anything with other desktop environments. And I don’t like how they refuse to support server-side window decorations. Like, I agree that CSD are better than SSD, but it would be reasonable to support SSD for toolkits that haven’t/don’t want to implement CSD themselves, right? Well, Gnome devs in their infinite wisdom disagree

    I’m excited for Cosmic. It looks like it combines the best of Gnome and KDE, and the devs don’t have the “my way or the highway” mindset

  • steeznson@lemmy.world
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    18 minutes ago

    Typically I don’t use a DE. I’ll go for dmenu + dwm usually if I only want a WM. I find the default bindings and behaviour for the tiling is the most ergonomic when comparing it to other WMs like i3.

    When I do have to get a DE setup then I’ll use XFCE because I like how it stays out of the way and I find it easy to customise.

  • ddh@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 hours ago

    GNOME, because I started with Red Hat 6 and I’m used to it, on Fedora Silverblue, because I have a long history of fucking up my PC and that makes it harder. For remote machines XFCE because the mouse is cute.

  • r3dw4re [null/void]@hexbear.net
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    2 hours ago

    Currently I use gnome cosmic because of PopOS, integration and stuff. When I get around using Arch I’m certainly gonna get myself Plasma, because it’s pretty af

  • JTskulk@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    I love KDE. It’s got easy to use power user features and is very robust.

  • _lunar@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    trinity because it’s lighter than almost everything else while having more features than almost everything else

    • theshatterstone54@feddit.uk
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      16 minutes ago

      Last update 27th Oct 2024? Trinity is still kicking around? I have so many questions…

      Will there be Wayland support?

      What is the purpose of it?

      Does it even use later versions of Qt?

      How lightweight is it (how much RAM and CPU does it use on a cold boot?)?

  • dirtbiker509@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    KDE Plasma. It came on my steam deck which was my first intro to it, it blew me away and installed it on my laptop and finally ditched Windows shortly after. Works great for me.

  • wer2@lemm.ee
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    6 hours ago

    XFCE. I also like tiling WMs, but I often have to share computers and they are too unintuitive for the rest of the family.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    KDE on my main gaming PC, or if I want something that looks really modern and sleek without tons of setup/tweaking on another PC.

    Mint with Cinnamon if I want a #justworks setup that is rock stable and I don’t need to look sexy.

    My side business laptop uses LMDE with Cinnamon for that reason. I need that thing to be rock stable and dependable at all times.

    Cinnamon has been more stable for me than any other DE, and in my experience, is just as performant as other low-spec favorites like XFCE. My fresh install of LMDE with Cinnamon right after boot uses about 850MB of memory. My testing with XFCE was about the same, maybe 50-75MB less, which for my use case is effectively identical.

    Not crapping on XFCE though, I like playing with it on one of my old thinkpads. Not a fan at all of Gnome, I’ve tried to like it for years, but I just don’t care for it, and I experience quite a few bugs.

    I plan on trying the new Cosmic DE soon, it seems like Gnome done better, and I could see myself liking it from the reviews I’ve watched.

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        2 hours ago

        Easy to force a tracker reset, or enable disable. Or even reinstall. Seems easier than findinf a new DE no?

        Also tracker ahould not be using up so much diskIO or CPU like people mention, if it is it is tripping up on a files internal data, and status/logs will show which file(s)

        • Mwas alt (prob)@thelemmy.clubOP
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          1 hour ago

          Oh, I couldn’t figure out how to reset or reinstall it so I just went back to kde.(also themeing which I didn’t mention)

    • nanook@friendica.eskimo.com
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      5 hours ago

      @BCsven @Mwa I disabled tracker and use plocate from a shell to find stuff. The reason, tracker’s crawl of the disk space is extremely inefficient, but plocate keeps track of things like directory update times so does not recrawl a directory if the time stamps have not changed, thus saving a lot of disk I/O.

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        2 hours ago

        Tracker should not be recrawling everything, unless you delete the index with a tracker3 reset

        Once it builds the initial index only new files or changed files should be recrawled for meta data.

        The only time I have seen Tracker use cpu was when it got hung up on a file that had special code in it that was messing with parsing the data and so it would fail and retry over and over.

  • frankwilco@lemm.ee
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    8 hours ago

    XFCE.

    I recently switched to it after a year or so with KDE. Deff see some improvement in terms of battery life with my laptop, but I’m still not used to the lack of WinKey+Num shortcuts (I’m aware of docklike, but I need labels for open windows).