Sounds interesting. It is a whole new world
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I have tried using workspaces on Mint (without tiling) and it felt decent. PopOS has a different philosophy about workspaces which I feel makes more sense with tiling. I will give it a shot.
They will probably gradually change things. A sudden change to the DE can be jarring and confusing to most beginners (to whom it is marketed)
I don’t know anymore. I used to think the same thing but then Popos does it automatically.
What do you use it for? How much does it make your experience better?
Honestly I am new to this, so I could not find anything for it. But I think YouTube will have a video or two.
Which TWM? What is the advantage over the default one?
npdean@lemmy.todayto Linux@lemmy.ml•[Unpopular Opinion] There are too many distros. The diverse distro-landscape hindering Linux adoption.1·1 day agoI agree with the sentiment because it is a pain to find a distro which you want. But the reason for this is that Linux has given you the luxury to pick and choose what distro and DE you want. When you go to Windows or Mac, people just accept that it is what it is.
That being said, I will blame the Linux community to some extent for promoting “complicated” (like Arch) or too barebones distros (like Debian) to newbies. The shock of moving from Windows to Linux is already a hurdle for most. When you add the need for tinkering and troubleshooting from day one, I can see why people would quit.
We are indirectly focusing on a handful of “distros” as most distros ship with KDE, Gnome or something similar.
I have 19" screen. It saves time, especially when you open a tab for minute, then minimise it.